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What attracts you to SF?

The future. The unknown. A fascination with where humanity is headed.

I like Star Trek because it generally displays humans at their best, I like Babylon 5 because it shows humans struggling to be their best, I like Battlestar Galactica because it's not afraid to show us at our worst, but determined to keep fighting until they can't.
 
This is great stuff, guys. Thanks. This will help a lot.

Now, if I can pose another question: How would you define science fiction in one or two sentences?
 
You don't ask small questions, do you? Aldiss and Suvin have argued these things at length, but I suppose my own definition would be:

"Any story that utilizes an element or elements (device, setting, etc.) foreign to received knowledge of reality, and that element has a grounding in scientific epistemology."

So I'm the type of person who defines science-fiction by its trappings--content rather than form--but I'm fairly liberal on what those trappings might be.

Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
 
Science Fiction is about the effect of extrapolated science or technology (i.e. applied science) on the individual or society.
 
Science Fiction is a format for speculating on what could be or what might be versus what is.
 
To be perfectly honest i'm not entirely sure why i prefer Science Fiction over that of other genres. For some reason i've never felt a real urge to delve into the other genres of fiction, instead preferring to stick to Sci-fi/Fantasy as a whole.
I can pretty much trace the beginning of my sci-fi obsession back to my childhood, one of my earliest memories of watching a film was 'The Wrath of Khan' - for about three months afterwards i refused to sleep without wearing earmuffs so the eels couldnt get into my brain - on BBC2. That coupled with the beginning of TNG on BBC2 drew me into Star Trek and my Sci-Fi leanings expanded from there, to the point where i've pretty much left Star Trek behind in favour of more interesting fictional settings.

I think part of my preference is the escapism Sci-Fi offers. Whilst its true other forms of drama can give us glimpses of other lives, they always feel so...mundane to me. It's hard to verbalise really. But with science fiction, everything is something extraordinary. It allows the exploration of every potential future, past and present without any real limits. Just by grabbing a book from my shelf i can read about Earth being invaded by martians in the 19th century, or the discovery of a hollow asteroid filled with knowledge, or even just Space Wolves kicking heretic arse.
 
Some of my other interests are history and psychology. I think SF gives us a glimpse of what our future can be like or may be like if certain problems are not addressed. It is always interesting to see people's visions of the future and to speculate what may be in store for us and what may lie awaiting among the stars. I also enjoy the human element to the story and to examine how our emotional and psychological issues impact our behavior as society changes. Sometimes I enjoy SF for pure escapist mind candy type of fun.
 
Science Fiction is a format for speculating on what could be or what might be versus what is.
I agree.

read what Clive Thompson wrote a year ago on this:

Clive Thompson on Why Sci-Fi Is the Last Bastion of Philosophical Writing
1.18.2008
a nice tidbit from the great article:
If you run a realistic simulation enough times — writing tens of thousands of novels about contemporary life — eventually you're going to explore almost every outcome. So what do you do then? You change the physics in the sim. Alter reality — and see what new results you get. Which is precisely what sci-fi does.

It's a Wired Magazine article worth reading.
 
Serling had a saying about the difference between science fiction and fantasy. Does anyone remember what it was? Diogenese? You seem to be a fountain of information.
 
^ So is Google: "Fantasy is the impossible made probable. Science Fiction is the improbable made possible." --Rod Serling

Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
 
Partly, it's simply the variety. "SF" can be pretty much any genre of fiction, from superheroes to other boys' adventure stories to romances to mysteries to war novels, even Westerns of a sort.

Further, even in the context of a particular genre, the SF element can have a novelty of its own, some exotic new weapon in a war novel, or exotic new tech in a spy ovel, or an exotic jeopardy for star crossed lovers in a romance novel. Of course, SF still trades on nostalgia for the stories of youth.

The rest of it is the basic attitude. SF as a mode is based on the idea that the future will be different from the past. Although anyone who's been alive very long knows this is a fundamental truth of our human condition, there are lots of writers who don't seem to have noticed. (Unfortunately, these include some SF writers, particularly the latter day Trek incarnations.)

Additionally, SF as a mode is based on the idea that the material universe is a part of the human condition. This too is inescapably true, despite the number of writers who would deny it. Actually playing with ideas about the world around us is entertaining, because it's provokes thought. There is very little SF that swamps the reader with heavy duty science, especially that appropriate to a textbook. Generally most complaints about technobabble are complaints about big words.

If you must couch the attraction of SF in negative terms, what it is not, it is not literature predicated on the absurd and reactionary ideas that human nature is eternal; character is destiny; the sole purpose of literature is insight into the psyche, not society and/or nature; society and nature are fundamentally incomprehensible; things just happen; there are other modes of knowledge than science.

As to a definition of SF, it is a nonrealistic mode of fiction that mimics realism by rationalizing the fantastic elements in it as possible with greater knowledge of the laws of nature. The plausibility of the rationalization is dependent on the knowledge available to the writer, his or her powers of invention and, most problematically, the sophistication of the reader. This is why the plausibility of the fictional science is relevant to how successful the SF is, but doesn't define the mode. Nor is it relevant what particular genre, if any, fiction written in SF mode happens to fit.

There is confusion about fantasy as a mode. In the literal sense, all fiction is fantasy, even Zola's La Debacle. Fantasy is a nonrealistic mode of fiction that uses acknowledged impossibilities without rationalization within the fiction. There is no pseudorealism in fantasy, however much it may adhere to the standard beliefs about human nature or society or whatever.

Conservative people who don't really believe that tomorrow will be different will often confuse SF with fantasy. Also, people less prone to reflecting on structure, theme, style will not notice how the pseudorealism of SF distinguishes it from fantasy. People who view all fictions as entertainment that either appeals to wish fulfillment will be indifferent to the difference between fantasy and SF, because that is what most fiction seems to be. This appears to be a reformulation of Sturgeon's Law, which says that ninety percent of everything is crud.
 
Science Fiction is a format for speculating on what could be or what might be versus what is.
I agree.

read what Clive Thompson wrote a year ago on this:

Clive Thompson on Why Sci-Fi Is the Last Bastion of Philosophical Writing
1.18.2008
a nice tidbit from the great article:
If you run a realistic simulation enough times — writing tens of thousands of novels about contemporary life — eventually you're going to explore almost every outcome. So what do you do then? You change the physics in the sim. Alter reality — and see what new results you get. Which is precisely what sci-fi does.

It's a Wired Magazine article worth reading.
Thanks for that! I'll have to get to it tomorrow, though. Busy tonight.

^ So is Google: "Fantasy is the impossible made probable. Science Fiction is the improbable made possible." --Rod Serling

Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
Good quote. I think that was mentioned upthread somewhere.
 
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