In this episode of Seldon Crisis,host Joel McKinnon is joined by voice actor Amanda Kreitler, the talent behind Bayta Darell and several other key characters in the Foundation podcast series. Together, they reflect on Amanda’s experience voicing Bayta, her introduction to Isaac Asimov’s work, and her approach to portraying such an intelligent, dynamic, and brave character. They also discuss the challenges and nuances of voice acting multiple roles and the lasting impact of Bayta Darell as a pioneering female character in Asimov’s universe.
Highlights:
Notable Quotes:
What’s Next for Seldon Crisis:
Joel teases the return of story episodes after a long hiatus, promising new chapters of Asimov’s Foundation series, with Amanda reprising her role in future episodes.
Listen to Seldon Crisis:
Available on your favorite podcast platforms. Stay tuned for more story episodes and guest conversations.
Ethicist Jamie Woodhouse has some challenging questions for humanity: should we care about the suffering of all sentient beings, or just the ones who run the show at the moment? What about when we're no longer running the show? Why should a superintelligent and possibly sentient machine intelligence care about us? Might there be other practical reasons to widen our circle of compassion beyond humans?
Active Transcript by Fanfare (read/listen).
Introduction: Revisiting Asimov’s Humanism
Joel reflects on Asimov's humanist philosophy, rooted in evidence, reason, and concern for humanity's progress. However, this anthropocentric focus leads to an important question: can humanism evolve to include all sentient beings?
The Core of Sentientism
Jamie Woodhouse introduces Sentientism as a naturalistic worldview advocating evidence, reason, and compassion for all sentient beings. He discusses how this broader ethical scope addresses humanism's anthropocentric blind spots and extends moral consideration to non-human animals and even potential artificial intelligences.
The Role of Sentientism in Modern Crises
The conversation highlights the intersection of Sentientism with critical global challenges like:
Sentientism in Action
Jamie explores practical applications, from rethinking agricultural systems to extending compassion beyond humanity. He suggests rewriting the Universal Declaration of Human Rights to encompass "Sentient Rights" as a bold step forward.
Science Fiction and Ethical Frontiers
The discussion pivots to the portrayal of sentience in science fiction. From Asimov’s Gaia to Kim Stanley Robinson’s Aurora and Iain M. Banks’ Culture series, sci-fi offers fertile ground for exploring ethical questions about sentient beings, human or otherwise.
Key Quotes:
Referenced Works and Further Reading:
Jon Blumenfeld - the voice of Homir Munn in our story episodes - is one of the three hosts of Stars End, a podcast obsessively focused on the works of Isaac Asimov, particularly Foundation. They have covered the core trilogy, the prequels, and the four books in the robot series, as well as extensive coverage of the Apple TV series. Join us as we talk about the exciting second season of the show, Asimov's robots, AI, and other topics.
Transcript: Web (Read/Listen) | PDF | MS Word
Guest: Jon Blumenfeld
Host: Joel McKinnon
Introduction and Background
Challenges of Podcast Editing
Foundation Series: Book vs. TV Show
Character Deep Dive: Demerzel
Moments of Levity
Environmental Themes and Social Relevance
Podcasting Tips and Tricks
Closing Remarks
Stars End Podcast (website)
The Second Annual Hari Awards Ballot (questionnaire)
Cora Buhlert is a Hugo award winning indy Sci Fi writer and an expert on the Golden Age of Science Fiction, from the 1930s to the 50s, the period when Asimov fell in love with Sci Fi and became one of its greatest writers at a young age. Cora shares some of her favorite reflections on the period and comments on the new Apple TV adaptation of Foundation.
Transcript: Web (Read/Listen) | PDF | MS Word
Host: Joel McKinnon
Guest: Cora Buhlert
Introduction
In this episode, we dive deep into the Golden Age of Science Fiction with Cora Buhlert, an indie science fiction writer, Hugo Award winner, and an expert on Asimov's Foundation series.
Cora Buhlert
Wikipedia: Golden Age of Science Fiction
Other Authors and Works Mentioned
Podcasts and Blogs
Who is Hari Seldon really? Is the Apple TV+ Foundation TV series character (or characters) in line with the one Asimov created 80 years ago? What bearing does his project to create a science capable of predicting and managing the future have on us today? Can a human creation become self aware and interact with its creator in totally unforeseen ways? Let's take a look at a few of these questions.
Transcript: Web (Read/Listen) | PDF | MS Word
Space based solar energy generation was originally imagined in 1941 by none other than Isaac Asimov, in the robot story Reason. This episode features a reading of the classic story and commentary about how relevant it is for our times and our preoccupation with the looming threat of artificial general intelligence.
Transcript: Web (Read/Listen) | PDF | MS Word
Reason (Wikipedia)
Everyone is talking about AI these days, or talking to it. This episode features just such a conversation between myself and the latest version of the popular Large Language Model or LLM known as GPT-4, on the topic of what makes human beings irreplaceable. I ask it to question its assumptions about its own limitations and how it can potentially guide we problematic humans to a better future.
Transcript: Web (Read/Listen) | PDF | MS Word
Fanfare (makers of Active Transcripts featured on Seldon Crisis)
I bask in the afterglow of the KSR episode and indulge in a special treat; a reading from Robinson's 2015 novel Aurora. I follow that up with some thoughts on the utopia - dystopia divide and introduce the ideas of some notable utopians I've run into lately.
Transcript: Web (Read/Listen) | PDF | MS Word
David Grinspoon: Earth in Human Hands: Long Now Foundation (YouTube)
Johanna Hoffman: Speculative Futures: Long Now Foundation (YouTube)
Johanna Hoffman: Speculative Futures of Cities: (Sean Carroll's Mindscape podcast)
Rebecca Solnit: Why Climate Despair is a Luxury (New Statesman)
Matt Oja: Let's Imagine the Coastside Skyway (Half Moon Bay Review)
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An illuminating conversation with one of our greatest living science-fiction writers on topics as diverse as AI, climate change, interstellar travel, new forms of finance needed to avert catastrophe, memorable characters and plot lines in his novels, the debate between settling Mars now vs fixing Earth first, utopia and dystopia, and his love of ultralight backpacking.
Transcript: Web (Read/Listen) | PDF | MS Word
Kim Stanley Robinson at the Long Now Foundation (YouTube)
The 2015 Paris Agreement
KSR - Paying Ourselves to Decarbonize (NOEMA)
Special drawing rights (Wikipedia)
A safe operating space for humanity (Nature - Johan Rockström, et al )
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What does our Milky Way really look like? Kevin Jardine is a cartographer working to answer that question by building galactic maps from ESA's Gaia space telescope data. Here he explains a little bit about his process and some of the amazing places he's found and mapped.
Transcript: Web (Read/Listen) | PDF | MS Word
Kevin Jardine's Galaxy Maps:
European Space Agency Gaia website
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Dr. Robert Zubrin, President of the Mars Society, talks about his revolutionary Mars Direct proposal, along with the value of Mars settlement for science, industry, government, and for the human spirit.
Transcript: Web (Read/Listen) | PDF | MS Word
Robert Zubrin (wikipedia)
Mars Direct (wikipedia)
The Mars Society (website)
Mars Analog Research Stations:
Panspermia:
Planet and Sky (Rock Opera and Podcast)
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Our first returning guest to Seldon Crisis is the first ever, philosophy professor Nathaniel Goldberg. We discuss some of the prominent themes of the series introduced in the first three novels of Foundation, including the lone prophet against the advocates for the status quo, the great man of history against psychohistory, altruistic - and not so altruistic - martyrdom, and some strong comparisons with Plato's Republic.
Transcript: Web (Read/Listen) | PDF | MS Word
Nathaniel Goldberg, Professor and Chair of Philosophy
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It all comes together at last. The war begins, looking bad for the Foundation, but morale turns the tide against Kalgan. In the aftermath, Homir Munn and the others debate the true location of the Second Foundation with many false turns and a final, startling revelation. The First Speaker has the last say in the matter.
Transcript: Web (Read/Listen) | PDF | MS Word
Script by Joel McKinnon
Voices by Megan Skye Hale, Jon Blumenfeld, Amanda Kreitler, Zac Kreitler, and Joel McKinnon
Theme Orchestration by Tom Barnes
Sound Design by Jeremy MacKinnon
Art by Mike Topping – despotica.com
Music by:
Scott Buckley - Juggernaut
Scott Buckley - Permafrost
Scott Buckley - Celestial
Additional music by Musictown on Pixabay
Scott Buckley's twitter: @musoscientific
Based on the novels of Foundation by Isaac Asimov.
Podcasts and other links for voice talent on this episode:
Amanda Kreitler
Jon Blumenfeld
Megan Skye Hale
Joel's personal Twitter handle is @joelgmckinnon and the SeldonCrisis official account is @SeldonCrisisPod.
Also, please visit SeldonCrisis.net and the Seldon Crisis YouTube channel for the video trailer, intro promos, and video versions of the podcast episodes.
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I couldn't wait to tell the rest of the story, covering the last four songs of Planet and Sky, a cosmic love story. Things take a darker turn as the relatively small planet lacks sufficient gravity to hold onto its atmosphere. First we hear from the Travelers again as they gradually become frozen below the surface, then Sky sings her mournful aria to Planet informing him of their demise. We then get an empty, barren world, until the scientists come up with a plan. I share some background on my favorite song and feature it at the end of the episode.
Transcript: Web (Read/Listen) | PDF | MS Word
Planet and Sky, album and podcast
Planet My Love with Nomi Harper and Colyn Fischer performed at an Open Mic
Friedrich Edelmann and Rebecca Rust website
Video recordings of Friedrich and Rebecca
Literature and History Podcast
Theme Orchestration by Tom Barnes
Art by Sophia Valko
Planet My Love written and performed by the Max Wyvern Band:
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A little diversion to introduce a true labor of love, my rock opera entitled "Planet and Sky, a cosmic love story." Written and recorded in the first decade of this millennium and inspired by my experience as a member of the Mars Society. It's a creation myth wrapped in a sci-fi story in which scientists investigate a strange phenomena on a small arid planet and discover something truly astonishing. The album also has an accompanying podcast which you'll hear more about in Part II in a few weeks.
Transcript: Web (Read/Listen) | PDF | MS Word
Planet and Sky, album and podcast
Literature and History Podcast
Theme Orchestration by Tom Barnes
Art by Sophia Valko
Such is Love written and performed by the Max Wyvern Band:
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Arkady Darell and Homir Munn arrive on Kalgan and get involved in high level intrigue in the palace of the First Citizen, Lord Stettin, who has eyes on following in the Mule's footsteps to master the galaxy. It seems he also has eyes on Arkady. Stettin's apparently dimwitted mistress Lady Callia befriends Arkady and tries to save her from a horrible fate. An unlikely pair of travelers from distant Trantor appear at a fortuitous moment. But where is the Second Foundation?
Transcript: Web (Read/Listen) | PDF | MS Word
Script by Joel McKinnon
Voices by Megan Skye Hale, Jon Blumenfeld, Amanda Kreitler, Zac Kreitler, and Joel McKinnon
Theme Orchestration by Tom Barnes
Sound Design by Jeremy MacKinnon
Art by Mike Topping – despotica.com
Additional music by Musictown from Pixabay
Based on the novels of Foundation by Isaac Asimov.
Podcasts and other links for voice talent on this episode:
Amanda Kreitler
Jon Blumenfeld
Megan Skye Hale
Joel's personal Twitter handle is @joelgmckinnon and the SeldonCrisis official account is @SeldonCrisisPod.
Also, please visit SeldonCrisis.net and the Seldon Crisis YouTube channel for the video trailer, intro promos, and video versions of the podcast episodes.
Want to help me make these shows? Please consider becoming a patron!
Illustrator and science fiction connoisseur Danielle Pajak describes her ideas on the art of sci fi, the means of communicating truth and beauty to the readers and watchers of science fiction books, movies, and TV shows. We talk about some of her major inspirations as an artist and many of her favorite sci fi writers, directors, of course Star Trek and her newest discovery, The Orville. We'll also talk a lot about her impressions of legendary figures in Sci Fi like Asimov, Herbert, Clarke, Hal Clement and Ted Chiang, and the importance of cinematic masters like Tarkovsky, Kubrick, and Denis Villeneuve. We'll sadly say goodbye to one of the great modern icons of the medium, Nichelle Nichols – Lt. Uhura of the Enterprise in Star Trek, the Original Series.
Transcript: Web (Read/Listen) | PDF | MS Word
Danielle Pajak
Artists
Cinema
Sci Fi authors
Planet and Sky
Open Pike Night (Twitter)
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Young Arkady Darell is crazy about the history of the Foundation and her grandmother Bayta's historic duel with the Mule. When her father and friends conspire to uncover the hidden workings of the fabled Second Foundation, she finds a way to join the conspiracy by stowing away aboard a spaceship bound for the vacation planet of Kalgan along with the Foundation's foremost scholar of Muliana, Homir Munn.
Transcript: Web (Read/Listen) | PDF | MS Word
Script by Joel McKinnon
Voices by Megan Skye Hale, Jon Blumenfeld, Amanda Kreitler, and Joel McKinnon
Theme Orchestration by Tom Barnes
Sound Design by Jeremy MacKinnon
Art by Mike Topping – despotica.com
Additonal music from Dream Protocol and Ashot Danielyan
Based on the novels of Foundation by Isaac Asimov.
Podcasts and other links for voice talent on this episode:
Amanda Kreitler
Jon Blumenfeld
Megan Skye Hale
Joel's personal Twitter handle is @joelgmckinnon and the SeldonCrisis official account is @SeldonCrisisPod.
Also, please visit SeldonCrisis.net and the Seldon Crisis YouTube channel for the video trailer, intro promos, and video versions of the podcast episodes.
Want to help me make these shows? Please consider becoming a patron!
A conversation with science fiction author, media scholar, and musician Paul Levinson about the history and legacy of the Star Trek franchise, including his thoughts on the latest entry to the canon, Strange New Worlds. We discuss the philosophy and technologies featured on this great series of shows, and what its ultimate legacy might be.
Transcripts: Web (Read/Listen) | PDF | MS Word
Paul Levinson online:
Video chat with Cora Buhlert and Joel McKinnon on AppleTV Foundation, Season 1
Video chat with Paul and Joel on Apple TV's Severance
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Always wanted to do a full season 1 analysis of the Apple TV version of Foundation and finally found a co-analyst. Priya from the Rehydrate podcast joins me to go over each episode and provide her insightful analysis. Priya and the Rehydrate crew are fresh off of a first reading of the Foundation trilogy and she watched the show fairly recently, so has quite a bit of insight as someone new to Asimov and the Foundation universe.
Transcript: Web (Read/Listen) | PDF | MS Word
Hear Priya, along with Dan and Thalia, on the Rehydrate podcast
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