Science has always inspired science fiction writers, but what’s really neat is when the favour is returned.
The ever-quickening pace of our society has resulted in many things, but one of the most lamentable is the superficial nature of what we mostly read. Supermarket tabloids have always been lambasted for their absurd headlines designed to catch the curious shopper’s eye, but now we can all surf dozens of online headlines at a glance, and they usually range from apocalyptic, to titillating to just plain dumb. It seems this is a growing trend in the way we read today, which increases the importance of the third reason why science fiction is great: it encourages – indeed demands us, to use our brains.
The early years of science fiction set the bar high, as authors with solid scientific understanding set out to tell tales that made science the centerpiece. Jules Verne and H.G. Wells may have created some “science” that is laughable in the light of today’s knowledge, but at the time nobody knew what the surface of the Moon was like, or what lay at the centre of the Earth. These authors not only asked the questions, but gave their readers imaginary answers that forced us to think beyond our everyday experience. Could people really live underwater in private yachts like the Nautilus in Verne’s Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea? Could an enemy of overwhelming power really be defeated by the common cold like the Martians in Wells’ War of the Worlds?
As scientific discovery progressed, so did the focus of science fiction authors, but they never stopped challenging their readers to think beyond what was already known. As we learned more about the our solar system, for example, stories about space exploration like Arthur C. Clarke’s 2001: A Space Odyssey made popular the idea of orbiting space stations and humankind visiting our neighbouring planets. As the fundamental nature of the Universe itself was uncovered, readers were invited to stretch their minds wide by Poul Anderson’s Tau Zero taking a spaceship and her crew to the very end of time and beyond. Isaac Asimov created the term “robot” to describe an artificial life form created by humans, and in so doing popularized the notion that life was not necessarily confined to biology.
The laws of physics certainly aren’t always adhered to in science fiction, but even when Einstein is flouted he is often done so in a very intelligent way. Gene Roddenberry’s Star Trek had no time for such limitations as slower-than-light travel or the integrity of the strong nuclear force, but even so this space opera has managed for decades to explore thoughtful and sometimes controversial questions about our human existence. And Star Trek even sometimes tries to offer explanations as to why the laws of physics have changed, grabbing hold of modern theories when they suggest a hint of how warp drive or transporters might actually exist.
In my novel, Virtues of War, I wanted to stay as close to the current laws of physics as I could, and I found a great ally in the theory of Dr. Lisa Randall from Harvard, who has proposed a fourth spatial dimension beyond the three-dimensional “brane” in which we exist as a solution to why gravity is so different and so much weaker than the other three fundamental forces of nature. I don’t think that the concept of a fourth spatial dimension is going to be discussed on its own merits at coffee shops and soccer games too often, but with luck, having introduced “stealth ships” that can travel in this fourth dimension known as the Bulk and be battled by heroic young space pilots like Jack Mallory, I might have brought this esoteric concept of astro-physics slightly closer to the popular consciousness.
One of the most intriguing results of this thought-provoking genre called science fiction is that so many ideas that were imagined by authors have become reality. A modern nuclear-powered submarine really could travel around the world submerged for 20,000 leagues. Robots have become ubiquitous servants in our industrial society. Space stations orbit the Earth and probes have visited every planet in our solar system (sorry folks, Pluto doesn’t count anymore…). True, we haven’t invented transporters yet, but flip-phones sure look a lot like Captain Kirk’s old communicator. And while we haven’t travelled faster than light yet either, just a couple of weeks ago scientists think they discovered particles travelling faster than Einstein’s 100-year-old intergalactic speed limit. So who knows…?
Science fiction isn’t just about exploring the far reaches of our knowledge – it pushes past that and inspires us not only to think hard, but to think new. Science fiction writers are artists, inspired by scientific reality but driven by their imaginations, and it’s their dreaming that in turn inspires scientists to ask questions, to take risks, and to create wondrous new things. And even for those of us who aren’t scientists, science fiction forces us to keep our brains engaged, to stay curious and to think about things beyond the latest celebrity scandal or playoff game. Science fiction keeps us smart, and that’s why it’s great.
Read The Next Part Of This Series
Science Fiction And Why It’s Great – Part 1
Science Fiction And Why It’s Great – Part 2
Science Fiction And Why It’s Great – Part 3
Science Fiction And Why It’s Great – Part 4
Science Fiction And Why It’s Great – Part 5 – The Finale
Photo Credits
Early depiction of H.G. Wells Martian Invaders – Public Domain
Astronomers probe the Milky Way with a laser – Wikimedia Commons
Recent Bennett R. Coles Articles:
- A No-BS Tour of Modern Publishing Part 4 – The traditional industry: the bookstores (and distributors)
- A No-BS Tour of Modern Publishing Part III – The Traditional Industry: The Publishers
- A No-BS Tour of Modern Publishing Part II – Making sense of the lingo
- A No-BS Tour of Modern Publishing Part I – Author Motivations
- Star Wars: The Next Generation
Hi Bennett,
Yes, science without math…even I will vote for that. I’ve crossed over to science fiction now and there is no turning back. muahahaha.
Karen
Hey Bennett,
I totally agree with your assessment of the important role science fiction plays in actually shaping our future. It is the the creative leap that the authors make who, because they are not pure scientists, have no problem believing that what they create is possible. Sometimes that is all that the physicists need – an absurd notion which is not mathematical provable today – to spark a new thought to take their research in a direction they would not have normally gone based on “probability”. I for one, as a new Canadian science fiction author myself and ex-engineer, love the freedom of creating worlds based on science but open to a myriad of assumptions and leaps of faith. One day I know technology will catch up to the visions, just as they have done in the past works you have mentioned, and then a new generation of science fiction authors will take it even further. How cool is that?
Karen
Hi Karen,
That is totally cool! I admire your ability as an ex-engineer to see the wonder that exists beyond what is proven. As a non-engineer and a non-scientist, I certainly have had no trouble breaking free of the chains of what’s proveable! Of course, like most sci-fi authors I don’t break the laws of physics willy-nilly, doing so only with good reasons, and only in a way that scientific theory is already suggesting may be possible. I think science is fascinating: if only one could earn a degree in science without having to do math – that, I think, is the brave new world I would embrace!
BRC