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Post #1190482

Author
VonKatzen
Parent topic
Diamond-Hard Science Fiction?
Link to post in topic
https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/1190482/action/topic#1190482
Date created
31-Mar-2018, 4:04 PM

This question is basically asking for ‘the opposite of Star Wars’. I do like Star Wars (especially Empire) but I also like really technical, unromantic fiction with obscure premises that aren’t cribbed from mythology and Joseph Campbell templates. I actually enjoy stuff that basically violates all the ‘canon’ rules of how you’re ‘supposed’ to write a story, because I think the ideas are interesting in and of themselves whether or not they conform to apeling archetypes and tropes.

I’ve read a fair amount of science fiction, including the ‘hard’ stuff but with a couple of exceptions I have seen almost none of it that really sticks close to the laws of physics and principles of engineering. Most of the ‘hard sci fi’ just violates different rules of physics, getting into more esoteric (and possibly more unlikely) stuff instead of the usual mass/energy violations.

The stuff that does steer close to physics/engineering/biology tends to be very much not ‘action oriented’, stuff like Hal Clement’s Half-Life which is basically a novel about the Center for Disease Control encountering weird oil and almost getting killed for their trouble. Part of this is probably because any human involved in realistic space combat would die pretty quickly, but I was wondering if you had any suggestions of science fiction novels that deal with space warfare in a plausible way instead of “WW2…in Spaaaaace”?

I am often tempted to think that, given the distances and costs involved and the alternative uses for resources, that ‘Spaaaace’ will basically never happen except for near-Earth orbit and maybe some Lunar stuff. I would not be surprised if in the year 2400 we have superhuman cyborgs with AI minds, fusion reactors and everyone still lives on Terra.

So that’s another question: have you encountered any science fiction which has conservative treatments of space travel and colonization is there? Given the size and suitability of Earth (not to mention its existing development) as opposed to anywhere else we could plausibly go it seems entirely likely that human beings (or their nano-swarm vomiting cyborg heirs) would still choose to stay right here on the third planet from Sol even if they have diamandoid plastics and X-ray laser guns. Yet almost all science fiction assumes that high-tech = space travel, which really doesn’t follow at all since space (beyond Earth-related infrastructure) is almost the worst possible place to invest your money. I mean, how many mineral resources exist on the moon if you’re not looking for slightly radioactive glass dust?