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The Science Fiction Effect

Harperdog writes "Laura Kahn has a lovely essay about the history of science fiction, and how science fiction can help explain concepts that are otherwise difficult for many...or perhaps, don't hold their interest. Interesting that Frankenstein is arguably the first time that science fiction appears. From Frankenstein to Jurassic Park, authors have been writing about 'mad scientists' messing around with life. Science fiction can be a powerful tool to influence society's views — one scientists should embrace."

2 of 210 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Science fiction is not about the future... by The+Archon+V2.0 · · Score: 5, Funny

    I've never liked the idea of science-fiction being the genre of the future, or even of reality as we know it today. Most science-fiction authors, from my experience, have a poor understanding of actual scientific knowledge and, instead, rely on omission of fact to glaze over scientific points of interest. Frankenstein, for example, never exactly explains in concrete terms exactly how the monster was brought to life, or how it survived, or what it ate, or actual and exact process undertaken to reproduce the experiment.

    So your complaint about Frankenstein is that it isn't an instruction manual on how to create life/revive the dead.

    I can't tell if you've set your sights for literature way too high or way too low.

  2. Re:Why I like science fiction. by EdIII · · Score: 4, Funny

    Really living up to your sig there huh?