![]() ![]() That’s what happens in Margaret Atwood’s new novel, “The Year of the Flood,” her latest excursion into what’s sometimes called her “science fiction,” though she prefers “speculative fiction.” If we have to have a label, that’s a better one, since part of Atwood’s mastery as a writer is to use herself as a creative computer, modeling possible futures projected from the available data - in human terms, where we are now. Plague - unlovely, heroic, unstoppable, might well get us first. Yet fire or flood may belong to an Armageddon whose awful grandeur may not be our fate. Nuclear, ecological, chemical, economic - our arsenal of Death by Stupidity is impressive for a species as smart as Homo sapiens. Since the Manhattan Project, we have learned how to do it ourselves. Our new pessimism no longer depends on a deity to wipe out this wicked world. ![]() ![]() That has changed in Westernized countries, but only relatively recently, and alongside advances in scientific knowledge. Religious thinking has end-time built in, and for most of our sentient life on the planet humankind has been predominantly religious. Fatefulness about the survival of the species is not new. ![]()
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