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I like a little more science in my science fiction

reveal

Adventurer
The title of this thread is a quote from a friend of mine. She said it after seeing someone do something (I don't remember what it was exactly) in the Star Wars "Clone Wars" cartoon DVD. I mean, she is a Physics major getting her Masters degree in that subject, but she also plays D&D, where wizards shoot fireballs out of their butts and Halflings are as common as Humans, and loves the Buffy and Angel tv shows. All in all, I thought it was both odd and amusing. I told her she needed to stop watching sci-fi and playing fantasy because she would be sorely disappointed. :)

I'm sure there are others who feel the way she does. Anyone else think that? That they prefer a little more "science" in their "science fiction" even though you play D&D or some other fantasy game?
 

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If you make it look good, explain it, and make it believable, I will take it, it is when you do not and make it part of the plot that it gets to me.
 

reveal said:
I'm sure there are others who feel the way she does. Anyone else think that? That they prefer a little more "science" in their "science fiction" even though you play D&D or some other fantasy game?
Well, I do miss the technobabble lately, but then it is to be expected now that there is no more Star Trek on TV.

I do agree with HoE.
 

reveal said:
Anyone else think that? That they prefer a little more "science" in their "science fiction" even though you play D&D or some other fantasy game?

Yep. I enjoy both types of stories, but if I'm reading science fiction, I usually prefer hard sci-fi. The difference is that hard sci-fi has a solid grounding in science, whereas most sci-fantasy simply uses technobabble to hide the fantasy elements. Basically, it's fantasy in space. Star Trek and Star Wars clearly fall into this category.

Timothy Zahn is a contemporary author who writes some outstanding hard sci-fi. Another is Robert Forward. Interestingly enough, both have degrees in physics. Fortunately, both are also good writers.
 

I like my sci-fi shock full of science. It's part of sci-fi's appeal; to present wonders which will one day be taken for granted. Things that will, or at least can, happen given the natural laws we live by.
 

To me, science fiction (which is different from sci-fi which is more like just a setting) is the fantastic or the extraordinary used to explore some aspect of humanity. In whatever form that may be in, as long as it makes internal sense, it works for me.
 

I like some science in my sci-fi. I thought that, for example, the Hyperion series was a nice mix of fantasy and science. Star Treks are all babble and no science. Star Wars doesn't bother me though, because it's not sci-fi.

FWIW I got my masters at a physics department, but I majored in math, not physics. I know more physics than your average joe, though.
 

I don't give a damn how much science there is in my science fiction. I accept the premises of the show I'm watching or the book I'm reading.

Of course, if the people involved claim that their scientific mumbo-jumbo could work, then I scoff. But I scoff at them, not the show. I'm entertained by hard and soft science fiction in different ways for different reasons.
 

I think it really depends on the style of the show. I'm typically very able to accept the "rules" of a fictional universe as they are presented. So in Star Wars - which is very low on the science part of science fiction - it doesn't bother me. If someone were doing a movie version of an Isaac Asimov story, I'd be much less willing to take that leap because my expectations would be different.
 

reveal said:
Anyone else think that? That they prefer a little more "science" in their "science fiction" even though you play D&D or some other fantasy game?
Yes. I like my SF to actually have science in it. I can enjoy things like Star Wars, but in general I do have a different set of expectations from SF than I do from Fantasy.
 

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