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Robert J. Sawyer is Canada's only native-born
full-time science fiction writer--and his latest book Calculating God,
has just been nominated for a Hugo Award for best science fiction novel
of the year.
The Hugo Award is roughly the science-fictional
equivalent of a People's Choice Award: it's voted on by members of the
annual World Science Fiction Convention, which this year will take place
in Philadelphia over the Labor Day weekend.
(Another Canadian writer, Nalo Hopkinson, who is
probably the first black Canadian female science fiction writer and whose
work reflects her Caribbean ancestry, was also nominated for a Hugo for
best novel for Midnight Robber, which is also up for a Nebula
Award--roughly the equivalent of an Academy Award, because it's voted on
by other SF writers. And a third Canadian writer, Douglas Smith, has been
nominated for the John W. Campbell Award for best new science fiction
writer, an honor that has gone to Canadians two years in a row already;
Nalo Hopkinson won it in 1999 and Cory Doctorow in 2000. Canadian science
fiction is hot!)
I had the opportunity to interview Rob Sawyer at
last fall's World Science Fiction Convention in Chicago about the book,
which is interesting because it addresses the idea that the universe
didn't just happen, but instead shows evidence of intelligent design.
This concept doesn't get a lot of friendly attention
from the media; any people assume that all reputable scientists dismiss
the notion out of hand.
Many reputable scientists do--but not all. There are
actually strong scientific arguments to be made that the universe in which
we live does show evidence of a guiding intelligence. In fact, one can
make the argument that it is intellectually far easier and satisfying to
believe in a designed universe than in one that occurred by chance.
Certainly that's the argument made in Calculating
God. In it, a spacecraft lands just outside the Royal Ontario Museum.
An alien emerges and says, "Take me to your paleontologist." Much to the
paleontologist's chagrin (he's one of those atheistic scientists mentioned
earlier), the entire reason for the alien's visit is to look at Earth's
fossil record for evidence of the Creator the aliens are already certain
exists.
Sawyer didn't draw the book's arguments in favor of
a designed universe out of thin air. He attends a lot of scientific
conferences, he says, and a lot of scientists are talking about the
evidence for a designer. Those discussions simply aren't filtering down to
the press. "I think there is a legitimate debate going on," he says. "It's
not fringe stuff, and it's not creation science."
This column is far too short for me to describe in
detail the evidence Sawyer presents in his book (for that, you need to
read the book). It isn't evidence for a created-in-seven-days-out-nothing
kind of universe, but rather a universe whose every aspect has been
tweaked to allow for the appearance and evolution of life.
For instance, we know of four fundamental forces
(gravity, electromagnetism, the strong nuclear force and weak nuclear
force); they all have wildly different strengths, but if the strengths of
any of them were even slightly different, the universe would not exist and
life could not have formed. (One example Sawyer gives is that if the
strength of gravity were different by as much as one part in one times 10
to the fortieth power, stars such as our sun would not exist--they'd all
be blue or red giants, neither of which could support planets like Earth.)
A more familiar example is the way water behaves. It
is the only element we know of that expands when it freezes, which is why
ice floats. If, like every other element, water shrank when frozen, ice
would sink to the bottom of lakes and oceans, and eventually all bodies of
water would be frozen, with only a thin layer of water on top--and life
could not exist.
As well, water has the highest surface tension of
any element except liquid selenium. If it did not, it would not be drawn
into cracks in rocks, where, by freezing (and expanding) it eventually
turns those rocks into soil.
Again, if water were more viscous, our blood would
be too thick for any conceivable biological mechanism to pump--and we
couldn't exist.
Those are just a few examples. Sawyer gives many
more (although, since the book is, after all, a work of science fiction,
he also makes up a few based on the aliens' knowledge of the rest of the
galaxy).
The response, says Sawyer, has been remarkably
positive (at least, positive from everyone except those at the polar ends
of the debate). For instance, Tom Harper, the Toronto Star's
religion columnist, wrote a column around the book.
On the other hand, several religious
fundamentalists, however, have taken Sawyer to task--while also insisting
they will never read the book!
Certainly the God uncovered in Calculating God
is not a God Christians, Jews or Muslims would recognize. But that's fine
with Sawyer. "It is science fiction, it's about speculation," he said.
"The last thing I want to do is to reinforce people's preconceptions."
"I think controversial themes make science fiction
relevant," he added. "By writing science fiction that focuses on
controversial themes, I try to show the public that science fiction is
very much of the here and now."