I think both sides need to get off the "science" aspect of the argument since it's not really on anybody's side. Chris, "plausible" explanation does not equal "scientifically accurate" explanation, which means "plausible" is only Politically Correct for "acceptable bullshit."
You're lecturing me on something I already know. I'm a professional science fiction author.
Wow. Thank you for returning the favor by spelling out something I figured out kind of a while ago and my apologies for not genuflecting to your published authorhood as I have other preferences in writers.
I've been working with the nuances between accuracy and plausibility for decades. One of my favorite things to say about my work is that it's more important to sound convincing to the reader than to actually be strictly accurate -- as the saying goes about sincerity, "if you can fake that, you've got it made."
So your criticism is off the mark, because I was never pushing for absolute realism, just for the kind of verisimilitude that has always been a trademark of Stan Lee's style and Marvel Comics's style, right there along with the wildly fanciful elements. It's never been all or nothing.
It should be. We are talking about a comic book character. How that comic book character does what he does is the sole purview of the guys writing the stories. Whether what he does makes any kind of scientific sense should only matter if the stories are hard science fiction. Spider-Man can be called many things, but it's never been hard science fiction.
That's what's so distinctive about Stan Lee's style, the way he blends wild opposites. The characters are believably human with realistic everyday problems, but their dialogue is wildly corny and melodramatic. The stories and concepts are insanely bizarre, but still there's an impressive attention to realistic detail.
The closest Stan Lee has ever gotten to "realistic detail" was setting the bulk of the heroes' stories in and around New York. Past that, I've got a seven-year-old niece with a better eye for realism.
I'm not advocating anything that hasn't been part of the Marvel style for nearly half a century already. There have always been some impressive nods to physics and other sciences if you keep your eye out for them, right alongside all the fantasy stuff.
Are you serious? I've been reading Marvel Comics since I was ten! What nods to physics are you talking about? If the writers gave a tinker's damn about physics The Fantastic Four and Bruce Banner would have died of radiation exposure almost immediately after their "origin" events.
And that helps give it verisimilitude.
Yes, yes...I'm suitably impressed with the use of the Big Writer Word.
That word doesn't mean absolute accuracy -- it literally means "resemblance to truth." Even if you write about something fanciful, you can give it verisimilitude by acknowledging some of its realistic consequences and ramifications. It's not about trying to make it exactly real, it's about selling it, presenting it convincingly enough that the audience will be willing to buy it. Verisimilitude. The semblance, the appearance, of truth. Address a few of the audience's concerns about the credibility of a thing, and they'll be more forgiving about the impossibilities you can't explain away. This is a basic part of how it's done, how I've done it throughout my writing career, how it was done by the writers who inspired me.
Which means it's not a trait unique to Marvels writers, and as one of their readers, I can safely say that they certainly don't apply it the most to their stories. Others do it better, and Stan Lee didn't invent the concept.
So many arguments on the Internet would be resolved so much more easily if only people could break free of this cultural fiction that every issue has to be reduced to a clash of opposite extremes.
Not this one. This is about what the old guys like versus what the new kids want, like Greg figured out. One look at the poll demonstrates that. Look where all the votes are going.
That's just not the way the universe works. The truth is almost always found in the middle ground, in the shades of grey.
According to people who don't like absolutes.
That's what made Marvel so special, the fact that it's long been so firmly rooted in the middle ground between extremes, between goofiness and believability, between fantasy and realism, and has benefitted from the dynamic intermingling of those opposites. There's room in the Marvel Universe for everything, and that includes intelligent science and engineering, when it suits the story.
And I thought I was a Fan Of Ol' Marvel. You obviously get their monthly Kool-Aid subscription.
I'll say this again: science is not on either side of this debate. I will add, neither is realism. In a genre where characters don't
age for decades at a time, the notion that its creators deliberately drop in some intelligent science and technology once in a while is delusional. Johnny Storm bursts into flames on regular basis without hurting himself and has been a "young hothead" since
1961, but from what you're telling me his owning an iPad in 2010 gives the Fantastic Four comic more "verisimilitude."
Seriously?