"Can you appreciate the crushing hopelessness it brought to me? I, who love science, who see in it, or have seen in it, the salvation, the raising of mankind - to see those wondrous machines, of man’s triumphant maturity, forgotten and misunderstood. The wondrous, perfect machines that tended, protected, and cared for those gentle, kindly people who had - forgotten." (John W Campbell Jr, "Twilight", 1934)
"No average mind can either understand or enjoy science-fiction; it takes an amount of imagination beyond the average man." (John W. Campbell Jr, "Science-Fiction", 1938)
"Too darned good a machine can be a menace, not a help." (John W. Campbell Jr, [introduction] "Cloak of Aesir", 1951)
"Science fiction is the literature of the Technological Era. It, unlike other literatures, assumes that change is the natural order of things, that there are goals ahead larger than those we know." (John W Campbell Jr, [introduction to "The Astounding Science Fiction Anthology"] 1952)
"Science is not a sacred cow - but there are a large number of would-be sacred cowherds busily devoting quantities of time, energy and effort to the task of making it one, so they can be sacred cowherds." (John W Campbell Jr, "Prologue to Analog", [introduction] 1962)
"Science fiction is, very strictly and literally, analogous to science facts. It is a convenient analog system for thinking about new scientific, social, and economic ideas - and for re-examining old ideas." (John W Campbell Jr., "Prologue to Analog", 1962)
"That group of writings which is usually referred to as 'mainstream literature' is, actually, a special subgroup of the field of science fiction - for science fiction deals with all places in the Universe, and all times in Eternity, so theliterature of here-and-now is, truly, a subset of science fiction." (John W Campbell Jr, [introduction] Analog I, 1963)
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