Readers of Dr. Asimov's "Foundation Trilogy" concerning the
establishment of the Encyclopedia Foundation on the planet Terminus will
vaguely recall Lewis Pirenne. He was the Chairman of the Board of
Trustees of the Encyclopedia Foundation Number One.
He was also
the man who didn't want to militarize Terminus, or do anything to
prevent it from being subdued by foreign powers. Mayor Salvor Hardin is
regarded as a hero, and one of his claims to fame was subverting the
power of Lewis Pirenne and the Board. He was upheld in his actions by
Hari Seldon, at the time of the opening of the Time Vault.
But
was Lewis the bad guy? I would suggest that he was not. As Chairman he
had certain responsibilities, and he took them seriously. He placed
the needs of the Encyclopedia Foundation first, last and always.
Nothing, even a threat of war, could deter him from his single minded
dedication to the collection and preservation of the Galaxy's knowledge.
What
else would you actually wish from the Chairman of the Board of
Trustees? No one has any problem with Mayor Hardin having pulled the
stunts he pulled to preserve Terminus and it's peoples. That was his
purpose, his monomania. And I'm sure no one would have any problem with
the janitor of the Time Vault - unnamed and unsung! - focusing his
efforts on keeping the place clean!
Each had their task, and for
either to have performed it less well than they could would have been
wrong. Mayor Hardin needed to keep Terminus free, which also helped
preserve the Encyclopedia Foundation. But Chairman Pirenne - stuffed
shirt though he may have came across - needed to be just as firm in
keeping the scholars on track. So that there'd be more point to
Terminus than it just being another planet in the Periphery.
Sure,
it can be said that Hari Seldon himself said, "The Encyclopedia
Foundation is a fraud, and always has been!" But he simply meant that
there was more to it than publishing an encyclopedia. That he wished
knowledge not to simply be collected and preserved, but to expand. His
comment about not caring whether it was ever published, I take as
hyperbole, and apparently the people of Terminus did, too.
For
they continued to work on and publish the Encyclopedia Galactica. And a
good thing - where would the Foundation scientists have learned their
science in the first place, if the knowledge hadn't been preserved? How
far would the Foundation have got in restoring civilization to the
Galaxy if their scientists had to re-discover 20,000 plus years of
science each generation?
I claim then that while the Foundation
rightly enshrined Salvor Hardin and later Hober Mallow as right up there
with Hari Seldon, that some reflection be given to one of the unsung
heroes of the Foundation - Lewis Pirenne.

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