Is Science Fiction the Opiate of the Geek Masses? 747
jimharris writes "After reading Geoff Ryman's Mundane SF website, where he promotes a new form of science fiction based on real science, I got to wondering if traditional science fiction is just the opiate of the geek masses? Most science fiction is based on speculative fantasy rather than hard science - the common example being stories built around faster-than-light travel. Einstein rules, and FTL space travel has about zero chance of ever existing. SF writer Ian McDonald replied in his blog, Heads down, there's going to be incoming... and a rather wide-ranging discussion and elaboration of the idea is held over at mundane-sf.blogspot.com. Proponents of the Mundane Manifesto readily admit that traditional science fiction is just harmless fun, but I have to ask, how many people out there have a positive view on life because they believe in Star Trek in the same way that other faithful do."
Who are these 'faithful'??? (Score:3, Insightful)
From TFS:
It's statements like these that make all geeks look bad.
Re:Who are these 'faithful'??? (Score:5, Interesting)
Are you saying that people who believe in religion don't use it as a basis for a positive outlook on life?
Or are you saying that people who have faith in a religion or something similar should not be called 'faithful'?
Or are you saying that believing that in the future, we will live in an egalitarian society without poverty is somehow fundamentally different than believing that the universe was created/is guided by a benevolent, omnipotent entity?
Or have I missed something? I'm just curious.
Re:Who are these 'faithful'??? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Who are these 'faithful'??? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Who are these 'faithful'??? (Score:5, Funny)
We're still a few centuries away from the Church of Star Trek, though, and then the eventual retaliation where-by all fans of the series are killed in the manner most befitting virgins.
Guy: *Tosses Geek into Volcano* He's Dead, Jim.
Try this perspective (Score:5, Interesting)
So what exactly is wrong with hoping that a future of peacful space travel and exploration that does not involve wanton destruction, prejudice and war (all things currently and constantly plaguing our race on this earth), is a bad thing? That thought alone *does* allow me to be a bit happier in life, because if I look around me right now, there aren't a whole lot of things our people are doing to making life better for everyone as a whole.
If you take a gander at the world today you can't help but see the damage the human race brings on itself and it's environment. If you see optimistic things though the extincting of animals, controlling populace through fear and war, and the growing of individual goverments world-power over controlled medicines, unhealthy food production and inequality in living conditions, then *your* opiate is to lie to yourself.
Re:Try this perspective (Score:3, Interesting)
The irony is that a lot of star trek geeks don't get that the utopian universe of star trek is pretty much identical to the utopian world of A Brave New World.
Star Trek is a world without feeling, without art, and without passion. It's a world where the only difference b
Re:Who are these 'faithful'??? (Score:3, Insightful)
It's statements like these that make all geeks look bad.
I think it makes the "traditionally faithfull" look back.
The fact that people are as devout towards a recent, outrightly fictional show further bellitles the devoutness of those that obsess over older, obfuscated works of fiction. Even as both have enriched the lives of many.
Of course, anytime you say anything short
Re:Who are these 'faithful'??? (Score:3, Insightful)
At any rate,
I think it makes the "traditionally faithfull" look back.
It definately demonstrates the innate desire for humans to search after something to obsess after/find truth in. One man might take that piece of evidence to suggest that all of these things we obsess over are clearly wrong, but another man might take it to mean that this desire to seek after a set of ideals or truths suggests that such a
Re:Who are these 'faithful'??? (Score:3, Insightful)
> This is Slashdot. It's defending Christianity that gets you attacked by the moderators-on-crack.
Um, no--I have never defended Christianity in my life, nor am I likely to ever do so (except in the most broad of terms), but I have gotten negative mods nearly every time I've mentioned religion in any way.
> It definately demonstrates the innate desire for humans to search after something to o
Re:Who are these 'faithful'??? (Score:3, Informative)
I suppose Christianity today in America really is so deeply rooted in traditionalism that myopia has set in. I think the nonsense about questioning carbon dating is a good example (if you need me to explain, I will).
Most Christians I've met could have stood to gain more than a bit of wisdom, but I think that goes for non-Christians as well.
Um, no--I have never defended Christianity in my life, nor am I likely to ever do so (except in the most broad of terms), but I have go
"Star Wars" was highlight of my abusive childhood. (Score:3, Interesting)
When I saw "Star Wars", I loved it, and I loved Princess Leia. She was so beautiful. At that time, I had this hope that if I just believed in the values of the Jedi, then I could transcend my abusive childhood. This belief was just like a drug. It created a hallucination that was not real.
Later in life, I simply gave
Re:Who are these 'faithful'??? (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually, my last line was edited -- I guess because it used a specific religion as an analogy.
My point was science fiction has become a kind of faith that brings about a sense of well being that generates a positive hope for the future - not unlike various religions I guess I shouldn't name.
If the Mundane SF comments about traditional SF are true, they are in reality an attack o
So is ... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:So is ... (Score:3, Funny)
I believe the accepted phrase is "leaking the lizard."
Mundane SF = Modern Novel? (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, FTL travel is far-fetched, but it's no less a fantasy than any other science-based predictions an author might make.
Re:Mundane SF = Modern Novel? (Score:2, Insightful)
100 years ago Flight was quite literally a dream for 99.99999999% of the world.
For 50 years one thought they couldn't travel faster than sound.
in the Late 1970's IBM asked would an home person want a computer.
Just because you can't figure out how, doesn't mean someone else can't.
Sci-Fi has presented a lot of good ideas and possibilities. Andromena. Battlestar Galactic, and several others use regular light speed signals for normal space, then use a twist to get them to
Re:PURE FUD. FTL not quite impossible (Score:3, Informative)
FTL is impossible if you assume the following (Score:3, Interesting)
2) You travel entirely within Einsteinian space.
3) You travel in the conventional manner, and your position is a continuous function in three dimensions.
Under these assumptions, FTL is quite impossible. However, if any one of these can be circum
Re:Mundane SF = Modern Novel? (Score:3, Informative)
No, quantum mechanical tunneling is not faster than light in any meaningful sense. In the time-dependent Schrodinger equation, no signal can be made to travel from one side of a barrier to the other and carry information across at a speed faster than light. The speed of the signal (or particle) while it's actually inside the barrier is not even a particularly well defined concept. In quantum mechanics, particles don't even have well defined trajector
Re:Mundane SF = Modern Novel? (Score:3, Interesting)
Sorry, but I thought that Einstein was awarded the nobel prize for his work on quantum physics (the photoelectric effect), not relativity. At issue was his endorsement of Bohm's pilot wave theory (for which Bohm was awarded his doctorate after the endorsement by Einstine and eventually won the nobel prize) and his rejecti
Re:Mundane SF = Modern Novel? (Score:2)
So, either photons have no mass, and therefore don't exist, or that we don't have a complete understanding of all the laws of the universe.
If we all accept that FTL travel is impossible, that breakthru that makes it possible will never be undertaken. That's the positive of science-fantasy, it lets you imagine and dream. Those dreams of 50 year
Re:Mundane SF = Modern Novel? (Score:3, Insightful)
If your definition of "exists" requires that existing things have mass, then you're using a very distorted definition of the word.
Re:Mundane SF = Modern Novel? (Score:3, Insightful)
Agreed. "Speculative fiction" entails a certain level of "speculation". This whole 'mundane' nonsense is grossly oversimplifying matters...there's no SF that's completely 'hard'...if it were, it would cease to be SF. Advocating that authors ought to stick to McGuffins that are more plausible is all well and good...I'm a big fan of so-called 'hard sci-fi' myself...but it's simply not plausible to strip all speculation from the genre...if you do, you have nothing left but modern fiction, exactly as you ob
Re:Mundane SF = Modern Novel? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Mundane SF = Modern Novel? (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, there is a certain amount of extrapolation allowable. For instance there are technologies that are theoretically possible and for which the science exsts, but which are currently beyond our engineering capabilities. A good example, up until just recently anyway, was the space elevator.
Not that the MSF manifest sounds terribly attractive, you understand
So try technology-based predictions (Score:5, Insightful)
Nobody wants science fiction stripped of the fiction, some people just don't want it all stripped of the science. Science fantasy can still be entertaining, but it shouldn't be allowed to slip into otherwise consistent science fiction any more than traditional fantasy should corrupt traditional fiction. I suspect most of the Slashdot readers currently whining about how "why does everything have to be based on real facts" would turn the TV off in disgust if the next episode of "24" featured a nuclear bomb stolen by leprechauns or if "CSI" started occasionally solving mysteries with magic spells.
Re:Mundane SF = Modern Novel? (Score:3, Interesting)
A good, creative writer can work within that constraint, and still ha
Re:Mundane SF = Modern Novel? (Score:3, Insightful)
When I was studying science one of the key things to recognise about any theory of physics was that the theory should be treated as a model which reflects our current understanding of the universe, not as the definition of the universe. The model gets used for as long as it matches all observable phen
Re:Mundane SF = Modern Novel? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Mundane SF = Modern Novel? (Score:3, Insightful)
Eh, biotech advances could repair Vincent and Irene's heart defects too.
And that's only the start. There are more unbelievable things in Gattaca. In fact, it is one of a list of scifi stories suffering from the "single advancement" problem: the author takes us 20-70 years into the future to tell a cautionary tale about one specific technological development, but meanwhile everything else has stayed the same.
S
Hard-SCI Fi is NOT fantasy based (Score:5, Interesting)
(or, in many cases, were on their way towards getting a doctorate in science and writing Science Fiction is how they paid for, in part, their education!)
Often times you can learn a lot about real world science from these authors (albiet some what dated now, as many areas of science have long since surpassed the knowledge possessed when these stories were originally written), something that I find lacking in modern day science fiction.
Re:Hard-SCI Fi is NOT fantasy based (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.davidbrin.com/ [davidbrin.com]
Re:Hard-SCI Fi is NOT fantasy based (Score:2)
If I want to catch up on present day sciences I'll read books about them. God knows I have stuff ranging from cosmology to mathematics for casual reading on my bookshelf. But when I want to read some fiction I like to
Hard-SCIENCE is SOMETIMES fantasy based (Score:5, Interesting)
And yes, he has a first class degree in mathematics and physics at King's College, London...
Lets see, hmm, yes it was in a sci-book.
I agree with having "knowledgeable" people writin sci-fi, but I also remember all I read about nuclear fusion and now I see it made available(ok, in actual testing and producing actual electricity) in a breadbox sized box...
What I really like about sci-fi is that sometimes you see In Real Life situations or Technologies that you already read about, already had a time to dream or think about or appreciate the implications and possibilities of something that is, for the rest of the world, new.
Lets take fusion and/or betavoltaics... (both recent
Now take everything you ever read on fusion, interstellar travel, cheap energy everywhere, human facilities and the such...
I already have 3-4 marketable products popping in my head just from the fact I have a possibly durable, cheap and transportable energy source...
On another subject, lets take solar sails.
I'm sure I read about them in some 50's scifi books.
They're launching the first one in 1 day, 18 hours, and 35 seven minutes as of now...
http://www.planetary.org/solarsail/ [planetary.org]
I always thought that books, and sci-fi books moreover, were made to make me think and dream.
And nowaday, wherever I look, I see the sci-fi from the past in everyday use, and some more sci-fi being announced as coming soon (sic)...
Well, at least I'm more ready than the rest if just because of that. And so are you 8)
Re:Hard-SCIENCE is SOMETIMES fantasy based (Score:3, Informative)
Not quite. AFAIK Clarke was the first person to publish the idea of geosynchronous communications satellites, but the idea of artificial satellites in general is much older.
Re:Hard-SCI Fi is NOT fantasy based (Score:4, Interesting)
The other current sf writer with a PhD in astronomy is Alastair Reynolds, and I like his work.
There are quite a few physicists with PhDs who write great books (Benford and Brin come to mind) and some in other fields like Computer Science (Vernor Vinge). And there are a few others who don't have doctorates, but write very good hard sf (Joe Haldeman, Greg Bear, Syne Mitchell, and Wil McCarthy). You do have to look around a little harder, but that's the name of the game, isn't it.
No (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:No (Score:4, Funny)
You really ought to attend a Star Trek con sometime.
Best argument for euthanasia/compulsory birth control on the planet.
^_^
Re:No (Score:3, Funny)
I went to one when I was twelve (oddly enough, the same year I joined /., I think. But I digress), and William Shatner was there. No one was allowed to get within ten feet of him, and at one point I remember somebody pointing at his Toupe and shouting, "LOOK! A TRIBBLE!"
Yes, for the love of the Gods, none of us need to reproduce.
And not just because of Star Trek. Every person born is another person breathing my precious, precious oxygen.
My oxygen.
Re:No (Score:2)
Re:No (Score:2)
He is just a pessimist (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, and Isaac Newton would just laugh if someone told him about weird quantum effects which we accept as obvious today.
In fact, we know that we know almost nothing about the fundamental nature of this Universe, and it's just pointless to discuss what one can and can not do with it.
Re:He is just a pessimist (Score:2)
If we hadn't thrown the goddamned manual out with the wrapping paper on Christmas morning we'd be much better off.
Re:He is just a pessimist (Score:2)
a) he was one of the greatest physisicsts who ever lived, and so would doubtless find QM quite interesting
b) he was also a bit mad, and so would doubtless find QM quite interesting
Re:He is just a pessimist (Score:2)
Accelerating to the speed of light is demonstrably impossible. However, this doesn't rule out stuff like wormholes, however unlikely. I'm being slightly pedantic, but I think this distinction is important.
Re:He is just a pessimist (Score:3, Insightful)
Your comparison with Newton is quite flawed; Newton bascically founded classical physics as we know it, and other than the work done by Greek mathmaticians, had basically no 'head start'. By contrast, the physicists of today have much more advanced tools, much broader knowle
Re:He is just a pessimist (Score:3, Interesting)
It says you cannot travel AT the speed of light. Important distinction there. Subatomic particles can change velocity instantly without acceleration, one day it may be possible for macroscopic objects to hop up to FTL travel, without actually passing through through the "light barrier".
Another potential possibility is the Alcubierre Drive [usd.edu] although you'd need a large quantity of negative energy to make this work. (Negative energy is a scientific fact, but not in these qu
Re:He is just a pessimist (Score:2)
Re:He is just a pessimist (Score:5, Insightful)
As for science fiction being fantasy... well, duh. There really isn't much difference between the two, except that science fiction is _usually_ speculative, and has more of a basis in our own reality, while other fantasy is free to explore the more farfetched. A careful writer can actually make it very difficult to tell the difference between SF and fantasy. (Frank Herbert, China Mieville, and others.)
As was kind of stated before in this topic, you can only make science fiction so 'realistic' before it's no longer science fiction, but simply realistic fiction.
Re:He is just a pessimist (Score:2)
Is it the opiate? (Score:5, Insightful)
Not that all sci-fi is actually crap. I'm not one to deny the quality of original Star Wars or great novels from Asimov or Heinlein or Stephenson. But it seems to me that many nerds will like anything and everything sci-fi just because its sci-fi.
What bothers me the most is that I'm a somewhat well rounded geek, but most sci-fi TV shows really don't do it for me. And when all my friends like a show they act like I'm lying when I have no interest and they think its the best thing ever. Things are good because they are good, not because they have a robot, alien, spaceship, magic, etc.
Why do you ask? (Score:2)
Does it really matter? If you have a positive view on life and you can function, why's it a problem how you become upbeat? Would you rather those people go around grounded in reality but depressed? This sounds like similar arguments that people have about beliefs in God, ghosts, and saucer abductions. They're mostly harmless.
How about this....... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:How about this....... (Score:5, Insightful)
I believe that it's then called entertainment, and its the whole reason most people watch movies, read books and play games. Whenever some form of entertainment starts to try and make me get some 'new perspective,' I go to something else. If I wanted that I'd stick with real life, the rest of this is to get my mind off things, to be entertained and relax a little.
Re:How about this....... (Score:3, Insightful)
It's this whole thing that "entertainment" is so sanctified, that it is above any reproach. Really, it's fine; I really am not judging, but I guess that it seems worth it to have a life that's not so bad that one needs escape from it. Once can be engaged in games, books, or movies, and experience them as a
Some of it is crap. (The pap that gets popular) (Score:2)
There's nothing with stuff that could be, which lets out almost all 'space opera' but still leaves a great deal to the imagination.
It is called science fiction. (Score:2)
Creating New Technology (Score:2, Insightful)
On another tangent, if you surveyed a large portion of scientists who like science fiction, you would probably see a lot of them having entered the sciences due to the influence of science fiction. So what if FTL is most likely impossible, doe
Re:Creating New Technology (Score:2)
Repeat after me (Score:2)
Yes, FTL travel as we traditionally think of it (as opposed to using wormholes) is probably impossible. On the other hand, since most people *aren't* terribly well versed in the underlying relativistic mechanics necessarily to know this, it's not hard to suspend disbelief, and it makes for some good stories. When it takes 2,000 years to travel between stars, it makes it very hard to craft belivable Sp
Slashdot is the Opiate of the Geek Masses. (Score:5, Insightful)
Doug Moen
New Hard Sci-Fi (Score:3, Informative)
I'm willing to admit that I go in for lots of the more fantastical stuff myself, but I'm sure others here can make good reccomendations.
Einstein doesn't have to be wrong (Score:4, Insightful)
My favorite author, Vernor Vinge [wikipedia.org], writes about a universe where we are in a "slow zone", and the laws of physics allow FTL travel in other places but not here. Vinge has a Ph.D. in math, and writes the kind of hard sci-fi that I like most. In fact it might be that writing with Einstein's constraints helped Vinge since he had to come up with a creative solution.
Warp bubbles are Einstein-compatible (Score:3, Interesting)
The first version suffered from some "trivial engineering problems" like being impossible to turn off from the inside and requiring more energy than exists in the universe. It has since been tweaked so that you could do it with nothing but gravity control and some negative-density matter.
The point is, it's FTL and doesn't contradict our understanding of how the universe works.
Turned On (Score:2)
What in the...? (Score:5, Interesting)
SF or PoliSF? (Score:2)
HMMMM, as a lifelong SciFi Geek, with a real preference (after the GrandMasters) for the "hard" stuff ala' Charles Sheffield (RIP)..it's an interesting question.
which seems to me to beg another question...How of much what we are talking about in inextricalby interwoven with contemporary American politics?
ST:TOS came along during one of the most politicall
WI humans could live 5,000 years? (Score:3, Interesting)
Vernor Vinge (Score:2)
If you read SF and haven't read Vinge you better google for him right now
Faith in the future, more than Stra Trek. (Score:4, Insightful)
Missing the point... (Score:2)
2: While FTL travel
FTL is the same as time travel (Score:5, Informative)
Yes, it is impossible to reach the speed of light, but that's not really a problem. Using slower than light technology, it is perfectly (theoretically) possible to cross the Milky Way in five seconds. Five seconds to YOU that is--the rest of the universe would strongly disagree (probably on the order of many millions of years.)
The problem has never been traveling faster than light, because such a thing is clearly absurd (what's faster than instantaneous travel?)--the problem is cancelling out time dialation which is really just good old fashioned time travel. For those of us that are joining late, remember that as you move faster through space the universe around you seems to speed up AND space itself seems to contract--from your frame of reference distances are shorter, and you thus do not need to travel as far.
Anyway, last time I checked most physicists were not comfortable completely ruling out all possibilty of time travel (if not on the macroscopic scale, then at least on the microscopic scale.) If time travel may still be possible, then so is faster than light travel. The two are, in fact, one and the same.
Appologies for errors, but I'm coming down off of a pretty nasty buzz right now. (Heh... it's a pretty sad state of things when a high school dropout with a hangover has to explain 100 year old scientific concepts.)
Re:FTL is the same as time travel (Score:4, Interesting)
But they don't use them for 'time travel', they put them between solar systems, and fly at slow-than-light (with suspended animation and time dilation shortening the trip) to them, go back in time, and continue their flight, arriving mere days after they left the other planet, after a trip that took hundreds of years.
They have to have a comm blackout and autopilot so they don't transmit messages back in time, and people protecting both the uptime and downtime end. And some of the series revolves around what can happen if the rules aren't followed.
Re:FTL is the same as time travel (Score:3, Informative)
Space doesn't contract for the traveler. The traveler seems to contract when viewed by an outside observer, since the speed of light is constant in all reference frames. It's called Lorentz Contraction [wolfram.com].
Re:FTL is the same as time travel (Score:3, Insightful)
Pointless only for biological beings with our infintesimally short lifespans and ridiculously high metabolic rates. For beings - biological or, even-better, non-biological - that have adapted th
Re:FTL is the same as time travel (Score:3, Informative)
Try Allistor Reynolds, for example. One of the best new hard SF authors, IMO.
Science fiction a revision of our times (Score:4, Insightful)
Science fiction has changed... (Score:2, Interesting)
SF is not an opiate because it's not a depressant (Score:2)
SF may be a mind-altering drug (perhaps a stimulant or hallucinogen), but it is not an opiate.
You had to ask??!! (Score:2)
You had to ask on
Maybe you just wanted a bunch agreeable answers.
I've Been Trying... (Score:2)
It's not easy. [taoriver.net]
However, I have some puzzle pieces.
One of the characters is raised by the N'th generation upgrade of his parent's pokemon data. They started on the Gameboy, transfered them to the N64, then the GameCube games, and then with Revolution, to the Nintendo servers, where the pokemon AI were continually upgraded until such an age where people purchased back the hosting of their pokemon, who were, at that point, highly intelligent creatures.
There is a religious gro
The Hard SF Dogma (Score:3, Interesting)
I teach this stuff. I live this stuff. I'm a working scientist and a published science fiction writer, a big believer in the positive power of science and the positive power of fiction to educate, illuminate, and enlighten.
Sure, write some "mundane" science fiction, but don't pretend it's intrinsically better than anything else. Do recognize you've put yourself in a box that will limit the stories you can do, and will eliminate some perfectly wonderful stories containing very good hard science. I have to say I pretty much agree with Ian McDonald here in his criticisms.
If Ryman wants to be such a "realist" and limit himself to what is known, he and similarly-minded people should probably write mainstream and forget the future entirely. His guesses are going to be as unlikely as aliens visiting us tomorrow, and he's foolish to think otherwise. Robert Heinlein, a visionary writer to be sure, had his characters using slide rules as they flew from planet to planet. While I think we can still use some thoughtful stories about near-future cloning, I think elevating such tales above and beyond those extropolating into a future where interstellar travel is possible is clearly hubris.
My personal manifesto is to use only known science, or new science that doesn't violate known science. I enjoy fantasy as much as anyone, but it does irk me when writers don't understand enough science to write science fiction. Star Wars is a fantasy, and a good one, but it's not science fiction.
Fantasy is the Ghost of Ambition, Strangled... (Score:2)
Fantasy can unlock new ideas to the imagination, and can be a font of material for creativity. Things such as FTL travel, "The Force", etc. can act as great catalytic plot devices, so long as they aren't relied upon to stand place in lieu of an actual plot. (And as long as you don't demystify them with skepticism-tickling 'explanations', like midichlorians.)
Also, anything that we create with our hands was first created within our mind's eye; the nexus
In a word, yes (Score:3, Insightful)
StarTrek and "positive views of life" (Score:3, Insightful)
Is amazing that such an obvious reference to the Marxist utopia came from Hollywood... =)
Star Trek is a dystopia (Score:4, Interesting)
ST and the world from Minority report are very similar in this approach. After analyzing the situation, I would not want to live in either world, yet people (and i assume the creators as well) believe these societies to be goals for the future. (everyone has the same car? and like soviet russia, car drives you? what's up with that?)
Problems with "scientific" science fiction (Score:3, Insightful)
In the end, this turns into a massive speculation. How accurate are your current predictions going to be?
Still, I find realistic sci-fi much more appealing than say, Startrek, because of the possibility of such future ACTUALLY happening. This has a very good potential.
Now - the second problem is, the future might be much darker than we imagine. Suppose you write about a near future (2050) where ecology is rule #1. But recently on physorg I read that global warming cannot be stopped easily and that the current trend is that the planet will heat about 1 degree centigrate per year. This means that in the future there would be a scenario of overheated regions of the planet (i.e. deserts), something like Mad Max. Not exactly a post-nuclear wasteland, but certainly worrysome.
So, the question is: How much realism do we want to impregnate our stories with, and how benevolent are we going to be with the future?
Well, there's got to be some degree of freedom. Besides these obstacles, writing a realistic story is very appealing, at least to me. I've been slowly losing interest for unrealistic sci-fi. Why? I know it's not real. There are no time portals, warp speeds, so I know this thing will NEVER EVER become real. So why think about something that will never happen but PRETENTS to be possible?
When Star Wars was created, I fantasized about all those things becoming real. (After all, that's the catch, isn't it?) Space travel was thought far-fetched, but NOT impossible. And this is what lets us dream.
Because, sci-fi and fantasy is about dreaming, isn't it?
An interesting paper on theoretical FTL travel (Score:3, Informative)
Regardless, I was (once) a physics major and I couldn't easily find a flaw with it. Implementing it would require some funky spacetime/gravity manipulation, however. If you have not read it yet (it's been out a while), it will certainly fire up your imagination!
I find it interesting that all this sci-fi stuff seems intimately linked to gravity, which is not well-understood (yet).
The Death of Science Fiction... (Score:4, Interesting)
The whole point of Science Fiction is to be speculative. The question to ask is "what happens if I change the rules?" not "what can I do within these rules?"
It's not surprising that this came out of a (Score:3, Informative)
Those who have actually been reading SF, and not wanking at SF writing workshops, realize that there is more to SF than human looking aliens in latex prosthetics on badly written TV shows. It seems to me that the authors of the Mundane Manifesto have stopped their navel gazing long enough to set up a straw man and weakly thrash at it in the appearance of doing something cool.
There are plenty of authors out there writing SF that is thoroughly grounded in our understanding of physics and does not rely on any magic such as FTL, time travel, parallel universes, etc, etc, etc, and there have been for years. Of course these authors probably aren't hanging around Clarion East wanking away writing articles with titles such as Was Marx a Mundane.
Sci fi is real life, pretending to be fake (Score:5, Insightful)
Soft science fiction, done well, is generally an exploration of aspects of how the universe really is, projected for expository purposes into a universe that is different in many ways. The original Star Trek, for example, was a discussion of 1960s American gender and race relations, with a veneer of unreality that made it acceptable to broadcast in explicit detail. Aliens and FTL travel were just props; the vision of the future was a black woman on the bridge and nobody finding it notable.
Re:Sci fi is real life, pretending to be fake (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Ya think? (Score:2)
Duh.
I think he's asking if science fiction is the geek religion.
Same answer though.
Re:Ya think? (Score:4, Funny)
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/2218456.
Re:Ya think? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Ya think? (Score:5, Insightful)
The main upside to the Star Trek 'prophecies' is that it is supposed to be based upon cooperation amongst the entire human race (tribalism is death), requires the application of hard science to address our current problems, and stresses that no hand from the sky is going to reach down and clean our diapers for us. We're going to have to do it ourselves. I'll take that over the Great Wet Nurse in the Sky any day. The boneyard of history is littered with civilizations whose motto was "God will provide."
Does it serve as an opiate? It probably does...to trekkies. But then, the really hardcore fanatic is always winged out on something. Better "Live long and prosper" than "Die, unbeliever!" I prefer my loonies sedated rather than armed.
"The Entire Human Race" (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Ya think? (Score:3, Interesting)
Science Fiction (Score:3, Insightful)
The sci-fi channel is even less a part of the same genre. There is a little overlap, but not very much.
Sf purists (e.g. Asimov, when he was around) hate the term sci-fi. They consider it a Hollywood term that has very little to do with sf.