Re: Science Fiction: Do you find it educational or just entertainement
There's a reason it's called science fiction. It's a great place to develop questions, but a terrible place to get answers.
I am so sick of hearing that glib and totally false generalization. It is not called science fiction because the science is imaginary. That's bull. It is called science fiction because it is fiction (i.e. stories about characters and/or events that do not actually exist) in which scientific concepts are central to the story. Yes, sometimes the science is imaginary, but sometimes it's very firmly grounded in real science and technology, and sometimes it's a mix of the two. Sometimes the science in science fiction is so solid and realistic that it inspires actual progress in theoretical physics and practical engineering.
The power of science fiction as a literary genre is that it can and does inspire people to learn about real science. Many working scientists started out as SF fans. Many working scientists are SF
writers. Many terms used routinely in real science today, like "robotics" and "gas giant" and "genetic engineering," were invented by science fiction writers (respectively, Isaac Asimov, James Blish, and Jack Williamson). There has always been a close symbiosis between science and science fiction, with both fields learning from one another. If actual
scientists can learn about science from reading science fiction, then certainly laypeople can as well.
Unfortunately, what passes for science fiction in the mass media is mostly very far divorced from this proud tradition, since most of it is just made-up gibberish. And that's why people whose awareness of SF is limited to film and television, who are ignorant of the prose works that make up the vast majority of the actual genre, come away with this totally incorrect perception that "it's called science
fiction because the science is all wrong." The good stuff, the real stuff that mostly can only be found in print, is called
science fiction because it's fiction driven by science, inspired by scientific concepts and scientific reasoning, celebrating science and its possibilities.
And I really wish more mass-media SF were like that too. SF can be a wonderful tool for inspiring interest in science, for educating people in an entertaining way, and most film/television SF squanders that opportunity completely. It's a waste of potential.