Roddenberry and Asimov were friends and corresponded often. I think the relationship went back to TOS.
Yes, supposedly the friendship started after Roddenberry told Asimov to shush right before he was screening "The Cage" at a convention.Roddenberry and Asimov were friends and corresponded often. I think the relationship went back to TOS.
I think Roddenberry was just referring to getting the basics right, e.g. the speed of light is not 100mph.As much as I love TOS, I don't think Roddenberry tried very hard. It was him that wrote that writers shouldn't be trying to explain the science behind the technology we saw.
I think Roddenberry was just referring to getting the basics right, e.g. the speed of light is not 100mph.
Well, the science needs to serve the plot and not the other way around in my opinion.No it was whatever the plot required.
Well, the science needs to serve the plot and not the other way around in my opinion.
Agreed and in fact I never presume that the sci in sci-fi is good science. I wouldn't go looking for good science in sci-fi as a hard rule just like I wouldn't go looking for reliable history in historical fiction, although it may be there.Which is fine. But lets not make the mistake of trying to sell it as good science.
This is a debate that goes back to Jules Verne vs. H. G. Wells. Verne thought that Wells played too fast and loose with science (time travel? invisibility? anti-gravity?) compared to his own books, which were much rigorous and scientifically plausible. A submarine was believable; a time machine was not, etc.
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