A Key Difference Between Science and Science Fiction

June 18th, 2009

Above and beyond the basic skills these areas require, some of which like writing and editing are in common, there is a key creative difference.

When you’re learning to be a scientist, you get trained to say “no” to ideas.

Most ideas are probably not original and wrong, and even the popular ideas are usually not right in their details and need revision.   Teaching students how to be critical and not accept every ideal as likely is central to science.   All ideas are not equal.   Again, most are wrong.

When you’re learning to write science fiction, you need to say “yes” to ideas.

Most ideas are not original, or necessarily interesting, but there is usually a way to make them so with some creative effort.   If you apply the science thinking to the process, you kill off your best ideas, when almost any idea can be made into something glorious and wonderful.   If you figure out the angle that makes it so.   There’s usually one, if you keep looking.

Sometimes it’s hard to go back and forth between the two, but it’s good for scientists to keep in a little “yes” to make insights, and science fiction writers to keep in a little “no” to dig out more interesting ideas.

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