Science in Science Fiction

November 22nd, 2008

In response to my post about science fiction as a science blogger, which I wrote in response to the upcoming discussion about using science fiction to promote and teach science at ScienceOnline09, I got an interesting response From a Sci-Fi Standpoint as part of a post titled “It’s science fiction, not science class.”

Yeah, but readers of books and watchers of movies learn from them anyway. Sometimes they learn crap, and it gives them misconceptions about how the world works, and sometimes they learn some true things, which gives them an appropriate perspective.

I am also taken to task there for caring about the people who won’t pick up a textbook or watch a documentary. At the risk of sounding like a Republican, that’s an awfully elitist comment. Plenty of people are too busy for active learning, working multiple jobs, raising kids, or just don’t like the effort of tackling difficult concepts. Putting that information in entertainment makes it easier to swallow and assimilate. Why care?

Because these people vote.

They vote for not only Presidents — and a lot voted for some mind-staggeringly anti-science politicians in my lifetime much to our detriment — but also for school boards. To the uneducated and scientifically illiterate, there does seem to be a valid controversy about evolution. Journalists have done a shitty job conveying the facts to the public on this topic. Why not let science fiction give it a go?

We live in a technologically complex world, and for better or worse many decisions are made by voting, and some woefully intellectually underprepared people actually manifest as viable candidates.

I would love to see stories that show the consequences of this, and the consequences of poor scientific understanding, become commonplace.

And besides, if you don’t want to get the science right in your stories, you should be writing fantasy where it is clear that the laws of nature may not be those of our own world. The worst case scenario is when it isn’t clear that the laws of physics are being broken, either because the writer is ignorant of them and has instilled that ignorance into his characters and plot, or because the writer is lazy and figures it doesn’t matter.

I’ve written about this before, and I’m sure I will again. It’s one of my things, the pinnacle of my triple passions of science, fiction, and education. Others are into this effort as well, like David Brin on his page about Science Fiction that Teaches, and even Seth McFarlane of Family Guy fame, who sits on the advisory board of the Science and Entertainment Exchange, which is trying to get Hollywood on board for promoting science.

And even if you don’t share my passion for this topic, why be complacent and think it’s okay for writers to get their shit wrong? We don’t settle for that in any other field of endeavor, except for perhaps politics, and that is the primrose path to doom when wedded with a lack of scientific understanding.

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