write about isaac Asimov.and tell us that is he right about his perception that it 2157 classes will be digital are not
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In a completely unscientific survey I conducted for the express purpose of writing this article, I sent a WhatsApp message to many of my (what I hoped were) sci-fi reading friends asking what they thought Asimov’s greatest work (or their favourite Asimov work) was. The answers did not surprise me; there was absolutely no consensus. Everyone who had read Asimov had a different answer. ‘Bicentennial Man and End of Eternity FTW!’ replied one. ‘Some would say the Robot stories, but Foundation is more in-depth,’ answered another. ‘Robot Dreams,’ said a third; ‘his short stories definitely…especially the AI ones,’ pinged a fourth; ‘Nightfall. No questions there!’ said a fifth with complete confidence…and so on.
Of course, there was also one who said ‘who’s Asimov?’ Horrified, I explained that he was an acclaimed writer whose work had been made into several movies. ‘Haven’t you seen I, Robot?’ I asked. ‘Is that the one with Rajinikanth?’ came the tentative reply.
Message received. Asimov isn’t everyone’s cup of tea.
But for those of us who revel in the scientific accuracy of fantastic worlds, in the possibility of reimagining the mundane into never-impossible futures, and found ways of thinking about the Big Questions of life through the stories of Multivac and lands where stars were only seen once in a thousand years, Isaac Asimov is a prophet (peace be upon his name).
A Russian immigrant in the USA in the 1930s, a professor of biochemistry, a war veteran, and a writer of popular science books, Isaac Asimov – whose birth centenary it was on 02 January – was also, possibly, the most successful science fiction writer of his generation.
His mind-bending stories of inter-stellar travel, other worlds, strange encounters, and sentient machines have never stopped fascinating readers since he first put finger to typewriter. One of the most prolific of writers, he has authored more than 500 books, edited several volumes, and all of this while also being a professor of biochemistry.
Born in a village called Petrovichi in Smolensk, Russia somewhere between October 1919 and January 1920, Isaac Asimov decided to celebrate his birthday on 02 January. He wrote in In Memory Yet Green, ‘It could not have been later than that... There is, however, no way of finding out. My parents were always uncertain and it really doesn’t matter. I celebrate January 2, 1920, so let it be.’
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