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Why, primarily, do you read science fiction?

October 26th, 2008

The poll the other day on the Mars stuff was so overwhelmingly one-sided, even for science fiction readers and fans of science, that I wonder about my audience here. Let’s take a poll and please leave comments, too.

Why, primarily, do you read science fiction?

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Personally, I read science fiction for a glimpse into a different world that is based in reality. The here and now doesn’t have to be the way we experience it here today on Earth. Science let’s us see many other possibilities. I want to see the other. How about you?

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7 Responses to “Why, primarily, do you read science fiction?”

  1. IGPNicki Says:
    October 27th, 2008 at 1:25 am

    You said to leave comments, so here I am! Definitely I read sci-fi to be entertained, but what is it about sci-fi that entertains me? pretty much everything else that you mentioned on the list, to varying degrees. I don’t think you can enjoy sci-fi without it speaking to you on a human level (though there doesn’t necessarily have to be any humans!)but I love the escape of reading about other worlds, understanding the way they work, how they differ and how they’re the same. That sorta thing!

  2. Lise A Says:
    October 27th, 2008 at 9:09 am

    I read SF for many reasons. I chose to respons “entertainment”, because if I am not entertained, I stop reading. But I also read it to be challenged about all the sciences (hard and soft), including philosophy and religion. And I write it, in part to try to envision a positive future.

    And I read it because I grew up with it.

  3. S. F. Murphy Says:
    October 27th, 2008 at 9:40 am

    I read it mainly to be entertained and to get some level of escape from my normal life. I also read it because as a historian, science fiction seems like the other side of the coin, even if it does not do a very good job of actually predicting the future.

    Come to think of it, I write it for the same reasons.

    For the record, I do not read it to be preached to about politics. Chances are very high that I have probably heard whatever pet political theory a writer has thousands of times over the course of my college education. If I want to work, I’ll pick up a copy of E. P. Thompson or Eric Foner, both of whom are professionals at their craft and far more stimulating on an intellectual level than someone who is at best, regurging political talking points.

    Crunchy hard science thrown in helps as well.

    Respects,
    S. F. Murphy

  4. Aaron Hughes Says:
    October 27th, 2008 at 9:58 am

    My primary reason for preferring science fiction (and fantasy) to other types of fiction is simply that SF/F is usually better written.

  5. Gerry Allen Says:
    October 27th, 2008 at 11:14 am

    Entertainment in science fiction (no namby, pamby “SF” for me!) is the artificial-cherry-flavored syrup in which the ideas are suspended. Characterization simply provides three dimensional spokesthings for these ideas and action demonstrates the consequences.

  6. Dan Brose Says:
    October 28th, 2008 at 4:54 pm

    You need an “all of the above” option there, Mike.

    Seriously, though, I agree with Mr. Hughes and Mr. Allen, though–in well-written science fiction, I can suspend my worries and concerns and delve into a completely different world. Whether Eric Nylund, Larry Niven, Isaac Asimov, or someone completely unheard of, I like to read one book twice over–once to drink in the story, and again to consider the themes and ideas that are (or are not) there.

    Ever since I took your class, I’ve also tried to analyze the science behind the story and see if it holds true with the laws of physics as I understand them. (Needless to say, I visit sites like Wikipedia quite a lot!) It’s really quite thought-provoking for me–I’ve actually considered toying with the idea of changing majors a couple of times!

    Any way, that’s a lot of blather, but I hope I answered the “something else” question.

  7. Robert Berrington Says:
    October 30th, 2008 at 12:00 am

    I personally think SF is the ultimate in creativity. I am not so rigid as Mike is with hard SF, but view SF as an opportunity to explore the creativity of another, or explore one’s own cretivity. In fact I sometimes feel that hard SF can sometimes inhibit the creativity of a writer. For me it is not so much that the science is correct, but that the world created is intriguing and and well thought out.

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