CONCEPT
Galactic Empire
Asimov's fictional twelve-thousand-year administrative structure spanning twenty-five million inhabited worlds — the polity whose collapse frames the Foundation cycle and whose scale makes civilizational intelligence a necessary skill rather than a curiosity.
The First Galactic Empire is the political organization at the center of Asimov's Foundation universe: twenty-five million worlds, a quintillion humans, a capital at Trantor, and a twelve-thousand-year span. Its founding pre-dates the narrative present; its decline is the premise of Seldon's work. The Empire administered the galaxy through a combination of nuclear-powered industry, faster-than-light travel, massive bureaucracy, and (late in its history) statistical governance informed by psychohistory. Its decline is Asimov's model of how a civilization whose complexity has outgrown its administrative capability falls — slowly, with visible signs, while individual participants continue to believe the system works.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The Empire is Asimov's contribution to the genre of civilizational-scale political SF. Edward Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire is explicitly the model — Asimov has said in interviews that he wanted to write a Gibbon-shaped story set in the far future. The Empire's collapse exhibits the pattern Gibbon identified: gradual administrative decay, increasing reliance on precedent
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