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So What Are you Reading?: Generations

I am now over 2/3 of the way through "The Buried Age" by CLB (2007) and it seems to be getting better and better. I finished "Green Political Theory" by Goodin (1992) and changed "Green theory" in Wikipedia a little too.

Finished off rereading "A Preface to Economic Democracy" by Robert A. Dahl (1985) and still see it as a weak argument which is easily knocked down and therefore serves as counter-propaganda against workplace democracy or anti-property egalitarian sentiments. Give the doctrine in a weaker form and then knock it down and you shall immunize people against the stronger arguments. But charity demands I treat the short book as a genuine argument. And, maybe weak is best the argument gets anyway.

I saw the other Chris Pine movie and was interested in the concept of swearing an oath to defend a constitution. If the liberty to own property takes precedence over the possibility of democratic equality there might be a problem. Would it ever be right to influence political science so that no counter-arguments to the American constitution be strong enough to subvert it? Would this mean even countering the evidence that there be counter-arguments. Good conspiracy theory bad Intelligence. (Note I capitalize Intelligence to indicate the organization or institution rather than the product from such an institution.)

I wonder specifically how the Greens come out on "economic democracy" and how much of the "direct democracy" they may have retreated from.

The illustration(s) of military decision-making and civilian decision-making in "The Buried Age" also make it entertaining. The cosmology and its setting are good too. There are many good points to the book. Hope to finish it in the next couple of days.
 
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Currently reading "Caliban", by Roger MacBride Allen. It is an Isaac Asimov Robot novel.
Huh. I thought I'd read all of Asimov's Robot and Federation novels, but somehow I had no idea this existed.
Byron Preiss Visual Publications licensed the rights to do books based on Asimov's Robot cycle back in the late 1980s and early 1990s. There were three six-book series, ROBOT CITY, ROBOTS AND ALIENS, and ROBOTS IN TIME, with novels by Bruce Bethke, Rob Chilson, Arthur Byron Cover, Stephen Leigh, Michael P. Kube-McDowell, Mike McQuay, Jerry Oltion, Cordell Scottsen, Robert Thurston, and William F. Wu. Then there was the "Caliban" trilogy by Roger MacBride Allen, which included CALIBAN, INFERNO, and UTOPIA. (I edited the last three ROBOTS IN TIME books and UTOPIA when I was working for Byron.) All of them were titled with Asimov's name as a possessive (e.g., ISAAC ASIMOV'S ROBOT CITY: CYBORG by William F. Wu, or ISAAC ASIMOV'S UTOPIA by Roger MacBride Allen).

Thanks for clarifying that for me KRAD. I did not intend to give the impression Asimov wrote it himself. Interesting to see one of our authors had a connection to the series as an editor. I was not aware this book was part of a trilogy. Thanks for all the great info:bolian:
 
Thanks for clarifying that for me KRAD. I did not intend to give the impression Asimov wrote it himself. Interesting to see one of our authors had a connection to the series as an editor. I was not aware this book was part of a trilogy. Thanks for all the great info:bolian:
No problem. It was amusing to dredge up that project from the back recesses of my brain, since I worked on those books 20 years go. :rommie:

(Of course, I had help from Wikipedia............)
 
Nearly through A Feast for Crows.

I plan on doing A Dance With Dragons, Christophers new Enterpise novel, then The Fall series.
 
Just finished A Rock and a Hard Place. Pretty good, though I think the Enterprise running off to "Riker went out in storm" a bit too easily. Proto-Calhoun is right. Stone felt like I was reading a slightly more dickish version of Captain Mackenzie. I can understand why PAD created a new version for NF, simply because Stone had just a tad too much baggage to carry it on.
 
I've just finished Brinkmanship, finally wrapping up the Typhon pact series. Not sure what to read until the new voyager book comes out.
 
I took a break from the novels yesterday and read the third digital collection in the Fables comic book series, Storybook Love.
my shelfari review said:
Another great collection. It had a couple of fun small stories, along with a longer story that had some very interesting new developments for the overall story arc of the series.
I gave it a 5/5 rating.
 
I'm reading A Time to heal book 7 by David Mack I can't put this book downIt has an excellent and the Enterprise and Starfleet crews at Tewza are really in a dangerous situation .President Min Zife is a really manipulative villain in this book.
 
A few days ago I finished Star Trek: The Fall: The Poisoned Chalice by James Swallow.

I'm now reading The Kane Chronicles, Book One: The Red Pyramid by Rick Riordan.
 
Finished The Fall: Peaceable Kingdoms last night (only a month behind! :p). Now that I've caught up on The Fall, I'm diving back into Vanguard. Started Precipice earlier today.
 
Finished up Saturn's Children by Charles Stross. I pretty much like all Stross and this was no exception.

I'm going to be seeing around 25 movies in 10 days for Noir City which means waiting between movies and so I'll be reading some Richard Starks to keep the mood going. I just finished up The Black Ice Score and I'm starting The Sour Lemon Score.

Once the festival is over I'll be starting Neptune's Brood by Stross in preparation for my Hugo nominations. Considering how much I like Stross I'm guessing this will be one of my nominations but I need to read it first...
 
After finishing "The Touch of Your Shadow, The Whisper of Your Name", which wasn't a such terrible nightmare (pun intended ;)) I expected after Christopher's warning, I started re-reading "A Time To Be Born". Poor memory has its positive side - one forgets books and can read them again, enjoying just as it's the first time :D
 
Memory Prime by Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens. I'm really enjoying this book. Nice to see another Mira Romaine story.
 
I'm reading Fusion, the second book in the Voyager String Theory trilogy. It's OK, but I'm not in love with it. Well-written, but I think I'd rather be reading one of the books set after the series than one set in the middle of it.
 
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