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Three Stigmata Of Palmer Eldritch Chapter 1 summary/analysis: By way of a prolegomena, and to exercise your pre-frontal cortex, Id like to remind

you of something Philip K. Dick wrote for a 1978 speech he likely never delivered (printed in I Hope I Shall Arrive Soon, 1985):
The two basic topics that fascinate me are What is reality? and What constitutes the authentic human being? Over the twenty-seven years in which I have published novels and stories I have investigated those two interrelated topics over and over again. I consider them important topics. What are we? What is it that surrounds us, that we call the not-me, or the empirical or phenomenal world?

Now, it just so happens that one of his favorite philosophers, Immanuel Kant, the recluse of Knigsberg, says in his Lectures On Logic (1800), there are three basic questions that can be condensed to a fourth: 1) What can I know? 2) What ought I to do? 3) What may I hope for? 4) What is man? So, at the end of this first chapter what do we know what ought we to do about what we know, what can we hope for about what we know, what are we as a human being with what we know and, I would add, how do we know it? We have been introduced to several major and minor characters in a setting/context that is out of the ordinary: a near future where the daytime temperature in New York City is 180 degrees, there are resort beaches in Antarctic, robot workmen, a portable psychiatrist called Dr. Smile, a Venusian ming bird kept as a pet, the governing entity is the UN, and there are selective service laws to force immigration to colony moons and worlds. Two of these characters, Barney Mayerson and Rondinella Fugate, are unusual as well; they are precogs. That is, they have foreknowledge or premonitions about future events. One of them, Barney Mayerson, whose last name most everyone mispronounces, has recently gotten his offworld immigration draft notice. He is a pre-fash consultant who has worked thirteen years for a business called Perky Pat Layouts where he is able to pre-judge have foreknowledge about what fashions will look best in a Perky Pat Layout. Roni is a pre-fash consultant as well who has been transferred from Peoples China, and although talented is highly inexperienced. Shes now Barneys new assistant.

Richard and Emily Hnatt are quite ordinary. Emily makes ceramics and Richard, her second husband, helps to sell them, hopefully to Perky Pat Layouts where theyll then be miniaturized (min) for a layout. But it turns out that Emily was previously married to Leo Bulero, head of Perky Pat Layouts. Along the way there are actions/interactions between Barney and Roni, Barney and Dr. Smile, Richard and Emily, Richard and someone from the businessman class on an inter-building commuter car, and Richard, Barney and Roni. So youve got an initial philosophical blending of environment, culture, and politics, with the common denominator being the environment. It largely engenders the other two elements. There is serious global warming going on (a prescient take on Philip K. Dicks part) which transforms the culture to the point of needing mandatory off-world immigration, thermal sealed inter-building commuter cars, and individual mandatory cooling units. Its governed by a political entity (United Nations) that requires off-world immigration and surreptitiously allows a drug-culture (Can-D) to help the immigrants cope with their lives in underground hovels (OED: A shed used as a human habitation; a rude or miserable dwelling-place; a wretched cabin.). And what we start to learn about is how each of our characters deal with all of this. But, why this particular blending, and, these particular characters? What is Philip K. Dick implying? Is it political philosophy? Metaphysics? Ethics? Or, something called philosophical anthropology? Or, if you like, what is the reality and authentic human being of this novel? Has he begun a philosophical novel, or a novel of ideas? (Philosophy can assist the understanding of literature by throwing light on philosophic presuppositions and themes in a literary work. And it helps to deepen our knowledge and appreciation of a novel if we realize the philosophic dimension of the idea(s) presented therein.) This is not a frivolous question. Carefully consider what Philip K. Dick writes in this 1981 Exegesis entry:
I am a fictionalizing philosopher, not a novelist; my novel & story-writing ability is employed as a means to formulate my perception. The core of my writing is not art but truth.Someone must come along & play the role of Plato to my Socrates.

Even more salient is what he states in a June, 1976 radio interview:


The first thing is the idea. A pure idea. The next thing is characters who will be confronted by an environment based on that idea. In other words, I translate an idea into a world. I always try to find somebody whos the victim of the idea and somebody whos the master of the idea, so that you have a bifurcated society with somebody whos going to make if off the idea and somebody whos going to be victimized by the idea.

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