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Related: Culture Forums, Support Forumsa question if i may dear lounge,,,
why are fictional movies about space such as star wars , etc called science fiction? thanks.
TommieMommy
(2,615 posts)Turbineguy
(39,790 posts)as we know it.
Star Wars is like physics as taught by Trump.
OldBaldy1701E
(9,947 posts)And, how, historically, we see that as 'science'.
Science!
(Now I have to post it.)
soldierant
(9,252 posts)They are called fiction because we cannot - yet - visit other planets and interact with their inhabitants. So any writing showing that is going to be fictional. They are called science because the technology required to get humans to places where they could conceivably do the things they do in the written word is part of STEM (science, technology, engineering, mathematics) and in the mind of the public "science" is the obvious umbrella word for all that. (and, IMO, the recent suggestion to change STEM to STEAM in order to include the arts will not change that.)
catbyte
(38,556 posts)justaprogressive
(6,242 posts)It's because the stories propose a link between actual science and the future
rather than pure fantasy: Dragons unicorns witches elves etc..
https://my.micron.com/about/blog/company/insights/future-shock-11-technologies-science-fiction-predicted]
11 real-life technologies that science fiction predicted
Science fiction predicted credit cards, television and the 1969 lunar landing. Bionic limbs, military tanks, antidepressants and submarines emerged from sci-fi, too. Even the concept of the internet originated in a book published more than 30 years ago: Neuromancer by the author William Gibson, who coined the term word cyberspace and defined it (quite presciently) as a consensual hallucination. Gibson, who has been hailed as a modern-day Nostradamus, also foretold reality TV and nanotechnology, among other marvels.
Some science fiction predictions have been dystopic, like the villainous computer HAL 9000 in the Stanley Kubrick film 2001: A Space Odyssey. More than 50 years after the films 1968 debut, HAL 9000 continues to serve as a warning of the malign potential of artificial intelligence.
Many other predictions, however, have pointed to techs potential for enriching and enhancing our lives. From the hologram table in George Lucass Star Wars (1977) to video chats and flying cars in the 1960s TV show The Jetsons, so many modern-day digital wonders and wannabes were first imagined by and inspired by people who werent scientists at all, but writers.