"Understanding the laws of nature does not mean that we are immune to their operations"
About this Quote
There’s a quiet rebuke baked into Gerrold’s line: knowledge isn’t a force field. It punctures a modern vanity - the idea that if we can name a thing, model it, or TED-talk it into clarity, we’ve somehow stepped outside its reach. The sentence is built like a safety notice but lands like moral critique: “understanding” feels empowering, yet “immune” is the word that exposes the fantasy. You can know exactly how gravity works and still break your ankle. You can map the psychology of addiction and still relapse. You can read the climate data and still live inside the weather.
Gerrold, a science-fiction writer who made a career out of taking big concepts seriously, aims the quote at a particularly sci-fi flavored hubris: the belief that intelligence equals mastery. In genre terms, it’s a corrective to the omniscient scientist archetype and the sleek futurist promise that tech will exempt us from basic constraints. The subtext is almost political: expertise doesn’t cancel consequence. It can even sharpen responsibility, because once you understand the mechanism, you lose the alibi of surprise.
The context is a culture that confuses explanation with escape. We outsource awe to equations, then act shocked when the equation still applies to us. Gerrold’s insight is bracing because it refuses both superstition and smugness: the universe is legible, yes - but it’s not negotiable.
Gerrold, a science-fiction writer who made a career out of taking big concepts seriously, aims the quote at a particularly sci-fi flavored hubris: the belief that intelligence equals mastery. In genre terms, it’s a corrective to the omniscient scientist archetype and the sleek futurist promise that tech will exempt us from basic constraints. The subtext is almost political: expertise doesn’t cancel consequence. It can even sharpen responsibility, because once you understand the mechanism, you lose the alibi of surprise.
The context is a culture that confuses explanation with escape. We outsource awe to equations, then act shocked when the equation still applies to us. Gerrold’s insight is bracing because it refuses both superstition and smugness: the universe is legible, yes - but it’s not negotiable.
Quote Details
| Topic | Truth |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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