He may perceive different authors as representing different "strains"-- which is fine, no one ever said there can't be multiple flavors of ice cream-- but Foundation, Brave New World and 1984 all fit the definition of Science Fiction.
Science Fiction is the extrapolation of science or applied science and its effect on an individual or society. Both words have equal weight.
Yes, but I did not cite him for that. Definitions stem from how words are used, and I was ciitng him as an example of a science fiction writer using the term science fiction.He certainly doesn't give any arguments in favor of a more generic definition.
I agree that Foundation also qualifies as Space Opera, but I would consider it Science Fiction as well. Asimov starts with a postulated science of psychohistory, extrapolated from statistics and predictive models and so forth, which can predict trends and cycles on a broad scale, and adds the applied science of the Foundation to influence those trends and cycles. So I think it would fit the (my) definition.He may perceive different authors as representing different "strains"-- which is fine, no one ever said there can't be multiple flavors of ice cream-- but Foundation, Brave New World and 1984 all fit the definition of Science Fiction.
This depends what you mean by 'the' definition. If you mean your definition, to wit:
Science Fiction is the extrapolation of science or applied science and its effect on an individual or society. Both words have equal weight.
That quote would work well enough for I, Robot, but not for what is essentially an epic space opera version of Gibbons' Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire.
Well, we've already seen that SF writers and editors have as much disagreement as we have. In my view Paolo's "stealth" definition is the baseline definition. The real question is, whether someone is an editor, pro, semi-pro or fan, how do they back up their definition?Yes, but I did not cite him for that. Definitions stem from how words are used, and I was ciitng him as an example of a science fiction writer using the term science fiction.He certainly doesn't give any arguments in favor of a more generic definition.
That Paolo's quote makes it clear he wouldn't call Foundation something that is about 'where you're extrapolating about who are we, where are we going, what our society looks like,' but still refers to it as science fiction is important here.
The problem with trying to come up with some sort of restrictive, ivory tower definition of sf is that, invariably, it will bear no resemblance to how the term is actually used in the real world. Any definition of science fiction that excludes STAR WARS, for instance, is only going to make sense to purists.
This is absolutely true, and succinctly put.
I've always liked Vonnegut's essay on the subject, though his specific remarks about sf magazines (and brown suits) are quite dated now:
LinkYears ago I was working in Schenectady for General Electric, completely surrounded by machines and ideas for machines, so I wrote a novel about people and machines, and machines frequently got the best of it, as machines will. (It was called Player Piano, and it's coming out in hard covers again next spring.) And I learned from the reviewers that I was a science-fiction writer.
I didn't know that. I supposed that I was writing a novel about life, about things I could not avoid seeing and hearing in Schenectady, a very real town, awkwardly set in the gruesome now. I have been a sore-headed occupant of a file-drawer labeled ''science- fiction'' ever since, and I would like out, particularly since so many serious critics regularly mistake the drawer for a tall white fixture in a comfort station.
The way a person gets into this drawer, apparently, is to notice technology.The feeling persists that no one can simultaneously be a respectable writer and understand how a refrigerator works, just as no gentleman wears a brown suit in the city. Colleges may be to blame. English majors are encouraged, I know, to hate chemistry and physics, and to be proud because they are not dull and creepy and humorless and war-oriented like the engineers across the quad. And, because English majors can scarcely sign their own names at the end of a course of English instruction, many become serious critics. I have already said what they then do to the drawer I'm in.
But there are those who love life in this fulsome drawer, who are alarmed by the thought that they might some day be evicted, might some day be known for what they really are: plain, old, short-story writers and novelists who mention the fruits of engineering and research. They are happy in the drawer because most of the people in it love each other as members of old-fashioned families are supposed to do. They meet often, comfort and praise one another, exchange single-spaced letters of 20 pages and more, booze it up affectionately and one way or another have a million heart-throbs and laughs.
I have run with them some, and they are generous and amusing souls, but I must now make a true statement that will put them through the roof: They are joiners. They are a lodge. If they didn't enjoy having a gang of their own so much, there would be no such category as science-fiction. They love to stay up all night, arguing the question, "What is science-fiction?" One might as usefully inquire, ''What are the Elks? And what is the Order of the Eastern Star?''
Well--it would be a drab world without meaningless social aggregations. There would be a lot fewer smiles, and about one-hundredth as many publications. And there is this to be said for the science-fiction publications: If somebody can write just a little bit, they will probably publish him. In the Golden Age of Magazines, which wasn't so long ago, inexcusable trash was in such great demand that it led to the invention of the electric typewriter, and incidentally financed my escape from Schenectady. Happy days! But there is now only one sort of magazine to which a maundering sophomore may apply for instant recognition as a writer. Guess what sort.
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Boomers of science fiction might reply, ''Ha! Orwell and Ellison and Flaubert and Kafka are science fiction writers, too!'' They often say things like that. Some are crazy enough to try to capture even Tolstoy. It is as though I were to claim that everybody of note belonged fundamentally to Delta Upsilon, my own lodge, incidentally, whether he knew it or not. Kafka would have been desperately unhappy D.U.
Quite, which is why I distinguished between use of the word and debated meanings of the word. This is really the important thing here.Well, we've already seen that SF writers and editors have as much disagreement as we have.
This hedging is pretty interesting.I agree that Foundation also qualifies as Space Opera, but I would consider it Science Fiction as well. Asimov starts with a postulated science of psychohistory, extrapolated from statistics and predictive models and so forth,
Very true. We live in a dark age. Literacy is in tough shape, and scientific literacy is worse off. People want to live in a world where low standards are better than high standards.Edit: More thoughts about my original post...the rejection of more serious SF by many also is part of the "rejection of expertise" that is common these days...add to this the rejection of science that seems pervasive...both in learning/teaching it and with the mass population. Conflicting scientific tests on common, everyday issues/tech turn people off to it (since people aren't taught how science works), or again it's relegated to a small few who are too smart for their own good. In the long run, the popularization of science and SF can go hand in hand...one will reinforce the other. I find it distasteful when even the "experts" negatively comment on such popularizers both in fact and fiction.
Well, it's six of one, half a dozen of another. Professionals will use the word according to the definition they like. Paolo will use the term in the more inclusive sense that you favor, while Schmidt will use it in the more descriptive sense that I favor. Both definitions are "in use." The question is, which is more useful?Quite, which is why I distinguished between use of the word and debated meanings of the word. This is really the important thing here.
Debates about science fiction are, as the Vonnegut quote points out, a distinctly old hat affair, but they rarely if ever affect how anyone uses the term. The only meaningful definition is the latter - what people mean when they say science fiction, not what people think it ought to mean... and that's why I gave an example of a writer using the term, rather than attempting to define it.
To put it another way: Someone might insists on using the word 'science' in the sense of the Latin word it derives from, knowledge - which would mean we have culinary science, musical science, and so on. Possibly this same person would want the modern gap between philosophy and science to be altogether closed and return, lexically at least, to Aristotle, so researchers are referred to as philosophers and existentalists are called scientists. This might be an interesting rearranging of the meaning of words but it's not what the words mean now and thus as a definition is not a helpful one.
No, no hedging. Foundation postulates new science based on existing sciences, extrapolates the application of that science as technology, and depicts how it could effect human society. That's the point of the books. Star Wars is straightforward adventure, and the robots and spaceships and so forth are stage dressing-- they are not what the story is about.This hedging is pretty interesting.
So, so long as a book/film/TV show/game has a postulated science at least vaguely derived from the real world, it fits? Alrighty then. Star Wars is science fiction because it has robots, intelligent machine life that can be reprogrammed. These robots are shown to be essentially a servile class with vastly redistricted rights compared to humans but who are largely content in their more narrow roles and mostly quite helpful, although their irascibility can make them unreliable.
Whichever usage is more standard, basically. And standard-wise I don't see people reflexively not calling Star Wars sci-fi. There's a common, peculiar thread stringing together Fritz Lang's Metropolis to John Brunner's Stand on Zanzibar, and we have this rather natty term for it.Paolo will use the term in the more inclusive sense that you favor, while Schmidt will use it in the more descriptive sense that I favor. Both definitions are "in use." The question is, which is more useful?
No, no hedging. Foundation postulates new science based on existing sciences, extrapolates the application of that science as technology, and depicts how it could effect human society. That's the point of the books. Star Wars is straightforward adventure, and the robots and spaceships and so forth are stage dressing-- they are not what the story is about.
Oh absolutely. I think the easiest way to deal with those - definitionally speaking - is to acknowlege genres are more venn diagrams then they are blueprints.But there are always gray areas.
The bookstores at my local mall have all gone, and the local Borders closed recently; all we have left here is a little Barnes & Noble.
Very true. We live in a dark age. Literacy is in tough shape, and scientific literacy is worse off. People want to live in a world where low standards are better than high standards.Edit: More thoughts about my original post...the rejection of more serious SF by many also is part of the "rejection of expertise" that is common these days...add to this the rejection of science that seems pervasive...both in learning/teaching it and with the mass population. Conflicting scientific tests on common, everyday issues/tech turn people off to it (since people aren't taught how science works), or again it's relegated to a small few who are too smart for their own good. In the long run, the popularization of science and SF can go hand in hand...one will reinforce the other. I find it distasteful when even the "experts" negatively comment on such popularizers both in fact and fiction.
Well, it's six of one, half a dozen of another. Professionals will use the word according to the definition they like. Paolo will use the term in the more inclusive sense that you favor, while Schmidt will use it in the more descriptive sense that I favor. Both definitions are "in use." The question is, which is more useful?Quite, which is why I distinguished between use of the word and debated meanings of the word. This is really the important thing here.
Debates about science fiction are, as the Vonnegut quote points out, a distinctly old hat affair, but they rarely if ever affect how anyone uses the term. The only meaningful definition is the latter - what people mean when they say science fiction, not what people think it ought to mean... and that's why I gave an example of a writer using the term, rather than attempting to define it.
To put it another way: Someone might insists on using the word 'science' in the sense of the Latin word it derives from, knowledge - which would mean we have culinary science, musical science, and so on. Possibly this same person would want the modern gap between philosophy and science to be altogether closed and return, lexically at least, to Aristotle, so researchers are referred to as philosophers and existentalists are called scientists. This might be an interesting rearranging of the meaning of words but it's not what the words mean now and thus as a definition is not a helpful one.
No, no hedging. Foundation postulates new science based on existing sciences, extrapolates the application of that science as technology, and depicts how it could effect human society. That's the point of the books. Star Wars is straightforward adventure, and the robots and spaceships and so forth are stage dressing-- they are not what the story is about.This hedging is pretty interesting.
So, so long as a book/film/TV show/game has a postulated science at least vaguely derived from the real world, it fits? Alrighty then. Star Wars is science fiction because it has robots, intelligent machine life that can be reprogrammed. These robots are shown to be essentially a servile class with vastly redistricted rights compared to humans but who are largely content in their more narrow roles and mostly quite helpful, although their irascibility can make them unreliable.
Which isn't to say that there aren't gray areas. Even if we all agreed on a definition, there would still be disagreement about what fits-- unless the definition is literally "everything." But there are always gray areas. That's no reason to abandon meaning altogether.
Science fiction, as the term is popularly used, is a big tent that includes everything from Godzilla movies to Ursula K. LeGuin. "Hard sf" is a subcategory of science fiction, although some people seem to think that hard sf is the only "real" sf, which strikes me as a bit presumptuous.
And, of course, sf is just a subcategory of what we think of as genre entertainment these day, and is kissing cousins with fantasy, horror, and even techno-thrillers. And all these lines start to blur together the closer you look. Is The Incredible Shrinking Man science fiction, fantasy, horror, or all of the above? What about Frankenstein?
Why get pedantic about it?
Because it gives them something to do?Why get pedantic about it?
It also doesn't take into account the true history of the genre in the twentieth century, whose roots are in the pulp magazines, not the scientific romances of Wells.
Well, as I said earlier, it's understandable to me that someone would think Science Fiction when a story has the trappings of Science Fiction even if the story itself is not Science Fiction. What's really weird is when they start to include ghosts and werewolves and dragons and stuff (and, yes, I know you're going to bring up PernWhichever usage is more standard, basically. And standard-wise I don't see people reflexively not calling Star Wars sci-fi. There's a common, peculiar thread stringing together Fritz Lang's Metropolis to John Brunner's Stand on Zanzibar, and we have this rather natty term for it.
Sure it can be amorphous, but I don't think they are nightmarishly messy. A lot of things fall into multiple categories. It's like the tags at the end of a Blog post. There is seldom just one tag; more often half a dozen or more. If Foundation were a Blog, it could be tagged Science Fiction, Space Opera, Allegory, Future History and on and on.This division is pretty amorphous, though. For example, Foundation is also very interested in discussing the decline and fall of the Roman Empire only in space. This is as every bit as important, if not more so, than psychohistory, which is a sci-fi response to the problem of imperial decline.
If science fiction is defined by the level of importance it gives the scientific concepts presented in the work... well definitions should get nightmarishly messy, don't they?
I just think it's better to let the story fall into multiple categories than to use one amorphous (to use the word above) label that carries little information.Oh absolutely. I think the easiest way to deal with those - definitionally speaking - is to acknowlege genres are more venn diagrams then they are blueprints.
Nope, I never said anything about quality. There is good Science Fiction and bad Science Fiction, good Space Opera and bad Space Opera, good Westerns and bad Westerns, good Gothic Romance and bad Gothic Romance. The point is not quality, but that words have meanings.I don't understand. Why would "adventure in space" NOT be science fiction? That's a completely arbitrary, baseless, historically inaccurate, and counter-productive differentiation. In fact, a vast majority of science fiction, including most of the Golden Age stuff, is primarily adventure. What's your real assumption, that for it to be science fiction, it has to be thoughtful? Nonsense. A genre's boundaries are not defined by the quality of the work. There must, indeed, be bad, thoughtless, brainless science fiction, which there is, plenty of. But the fact that it doesn't have a brain or a purpose in its adventure-ridden head does not preclude it from being science fiction.
Because it's better than being cavalier.Why get pedantic about it?
I don't think anyone in this thread has said anything like that, though.Good point. Edgar Rice Burroughs, Flash Gordon, Planet Stories, and The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms are as much a part of our heritage as anything from the John W. Campbell/Astounding school of serious sf. Pretending otherwise is like denying that your grandfather was a bootlegger or sticking your embarrassing relatives in a closet when company comes. It smacks of snobbery.
What's really weird is when they start to include ghosts and werewolves and dragons and stuff (and, yes, I know you're going to bring up Pern).
Sure it can be amorphous, but I don't think they are nightmarishly messy. A lot of things fall into multiple categories.
Multiple categories are fine, but unless the science fiction category is foregrounded - Hari Seldon's prophecies being given more weight than Star Wars' robots - it doesn't get in?
Yes, I'd call that rather messy.
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