james_davis_nicoll (
james_davis_nicoll) wrote2024-04-11 10:03 am
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Five SF Novels Inspired by Disproven Scientific Theories

Plenty of exciting hypotheses eventually fall out of scientific favor — but not before they've found their way into science fiction!
Five SF Novels Inspired by Disproven Scientific Theories
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21 articles to go to article 500
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Boy would you get lots of "HOW COULD YOU FORGET XYZ FNARR FNARR..." comments.
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Um, no.
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And Donaldson spent much of his childhood in India where his parents were physicians, so his leprosy probably works like it did back then.
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There probably isn't enough matter there: the total mass of the asteroid belt is only about 3-4% of the Moon, if the internet isn't lying to me.
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(Anonymous) 2024-04-11 07:54 pm (UTC)(link)no subject
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"Ovenden hardly originated the missing planet 5 idea; it goes back to Kepler's16th-century statement, "Between Mars and Jupiter, I put a planet," an idea which was taken up in Bode's Law nearly two centuries later."
It certainly shows up in SF of the pulp era: an exploded 5th planet is part of the backstory of Jack Williamson's "Seetee" stories, in which the culprit is a rogue anti-matter planet (would probably do the job - and sterilize the Earth into the bargain, to be sure).
"There are also writers who use theories that they know to be disproven long before they wrote. My favorite example of this is the late Howard Waldrop's lovely story "...As We Know't," in which an intrepid scientist of the 19th Century sets out to isolate phlogiston and succeeds all too well..."
Then there's Richard Garfinkle's "Celestial Matters", in which ancient Greek "science" is 100% correct. (Of course, so is Chinese Taoist "science"...)
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While the possibility of traversable wormholes has now been excluded by physicists to a high degree of confidence, I'm not quite sure why you're singling out The Forever War, since it was written decades before that was established.
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Steven Baxter, on the other hand, has used them extensively in the Xeelee stories, and he is someone who should know better.
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And no way in hell am I getting in a discussion with the guy over at Reactor who thinks the Alcubierre drive and exotic matter-stabilized wormholes are still a thing.
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Yah, FTL Reply Guy really takes away my will to fight the forum software there.
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(Anonymous) 2024-04-13 06:27 pm (UTC)(link)-Awesome Aud
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Honorable mention to Greg Egan's Diaspora, in which some very smart characters[1] spend a lot of time and resources constructing some traversable wormholes only to discover they're not worth the effort.
[1] Greg Egan doesn't write any non-smart characters, only smart or mathematically brilliant characters.
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(Anonymous) 2024-04-13 04:00 am (UTC)(link)no subject
He did write a story involving sending signals backwards in time, which is kissin' cousins to FTL.
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(Anonymous) 2024-04-14 07:04 am (UTC)(link)no subject
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An addition to "disproven scientific theories": a great many 19th and early 20th century "lost world" pulp fantasy/adventure/scifi was based on isostasis, the theory at the time of how continents rose and sank. "Sunken continents" due to tectonic activity (as opposed to glacier melt) were up-to-date science back then. "Continental drift" was a laughable fringe theory at the time.