james_davis_nicoll (
james_davis_nicoll) wrote2009-04-27 10:35 am
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Why
Do SF authors make up new elements? The elements don't seem to be in Seaborg's island of stability, either.
Actually, what I really mean is why would the sort of person who can't be bothered to look at a table of elements or think about the general decline in half-lives as atomic mass increases past a certain point bother with SF? What's the attraction for them?

Actually, what I really mean is why would the sort of person who can't be bothered to look at a table of elements or think about the general decline in half-lives as atomic mass increases past a certain point bother with SF? What's the attraction for them?

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I can't make fun--in my heart of hearts, I know that's how I got into it as a wee little one.
Whoosh! Spaceships! Pew pew pew!
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(I'm convinced this is the explanation for Adam Roberts.)
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AIUI he's an SF lover but he followed the literary career track, PhD and all, to the exclusion of the science side. So he teaches SF, and writes the stuff, but makes glaringly obvious errors -- not even sophomoric: more the kind that suggest he slept through science classes in secondary school -- and suffers from a bad dose of Dunning-Kruger effect insofar as he doesn't even grasp the extent of his own deficiency.
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I mean, I've done my time in space physics research, and I enjoy books (including your own) that play cleverly on real science, but there's a lot more to SF than that. Just looking at my bookshelf right now, I see stacks of Dick, Ballard, Ellison, Moorcock, all genuinely brilliant SF authors, none terribly bothered by scientific rigour.
Take The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch: even when it was published, any scientifically literate person could have driven a coach and horses through its depiction of Mars, and much of the rest of the novel's background. So what? It's still one of the best SF novels ever written.
Imaginative expansion on rigorous science is one way in which SF can be good, but it is not the only way.
(NB: I have never read anything by Adam Roberts)
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Still, somewhat better than the SF writer who couldn't understand how lift didn't require power (after editing an anthology on the theme).
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This is usually applied to the basics of spelling, grammar, and then higher-level literary structure.
But in SF, it applies equally well to the science, if you're writing that variety of SF where the science is meant to be internally consistent, as opposed to that variety where it's basically window-dressing for a metaphor about the human condition.
Adam Roberts doesn't seem to understand the difference between the two formats -- or rather, to appreciate that when a rocket ship is just a rocket ship, stuff like its mass ratio and the specific impulse delivered by its fuel matters. He seems to be of that caste who relate to video recorders and toasters as magic boxes with runes on the front that cause it to Do Things when you perform the correct ritual, rather than as a collection of subsystems which are amenable to rational investigation.
Dick, in contrast, wrote The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch while stoned out of his box on LSD and amphetamines in a single mad 72-hour rush, and he wasn't trying to describe a plausible future: he was trying to commit a vision of pure hallucinatory evil to paper before the ice weasels ate his fingers. Or something like that.
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It's a little like a figure painter who can get the flesh tones right, but has no knowledge of anatomy.
I also get the vibe that there's some weird class-based willed ignorance going on, where actually caring about the correctness of scientific details is Not Done. That would really put him in a dying caste. (Who can afford to think like that these days? To rephrase Trotsky, you may not be interested in science, but science is interested in you.)
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