james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] 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
roseembolism: (Default)

[personal profile] roseembolism 2024-04-11 03:44 pm (UTC)(link)
You could probably do a "5 things Niven got wrong about science" article...
patrick_morris_miller: Me, filking in front of mundanes (Default)

[personal profile] patrick_morris_miller 2024-04-11 04:17 pm (UTC)(link)

Boy would you get lots of "HOW COULD YOU FORGET XYZ FNARR FNARR..." comments.

[personal profile] neowolf2 2024-04-11 07:35 pm (UTC)(link)
"Superconductors of electricity are also superconductors of heat!"

Um, no.
bunsen_h: (Default)

[personal profile] bunsen_h 2024-04-11 09:14 pm (UTC)(link)
That one annoyed me, as I assumed that it was true when I read it in Ringworld (or whatever it was) and had it debunked a few years later. Not as badly as when I found out that leprosy is far more treatable than was stated in Donaldson's books about Thomas Covenant. I wouldn't be surprised if the described leprosy treatment had been true a few decades earlier, but I never got the impression that those books were set so early.
bolindbergh: (Default)

[personal profile] bolindbergh 2024-04-11 10:11 pm (UTC)(link)
Per Wikipedia, curing the leprosy infection once and for all wasn't possible before the early 1980s. The first Thomas Covenant series was written in the 1970s.
patrick_morris_miller: Me, filking in front of mundanes (Default)

[personal profile] patrick_morris_miller 2024-04-12 01:03 am (UTC)(link)

And Donaldson spent much of his childhood in India where his parents were physicians, so his leprosy probably works like it did back then.