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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
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[personal profile] scott_sanford 2024-04-12 07:20 am (UTC)(link)
Any writer who has used wormholes as a way of getting around the Universe...

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.

(Anonymous) 2024-04-13 04:00 am (UTC)(link)
I don't think Greg Egan has ever used FTL in any story. He even has a story where explorers on an alien planet have to make up a fake method of interstellar travel, and even that is slower than light.
patrick_morris_miller: Me, filking in front of mundanes (Default)

[personal profile] patrick_morris_miller 2024-04-13 04:48 am (UTC)(link)

He did write a story involving sending signals backwards in time, which is kissin' cousins to FTL.

(Anonymous) 2024-04-14 07:04 am (UTC)(link)
Technically the ship in the Orthogonal series travels faster than light, but since the whole story is set in a universe designed entirely around having no lightspeed limit, I'm not sure it counts. There's not even a single "speed of light" there.
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[personal profile] scott_sanford 2024-04-16 02:31 pm (UTC)(link)
The flight plan in Orthogonal is more like a relativistic journey, except that in that universe the "relativity" works very, very differently.