Re: Sci Fiction and The Role it plays in our Future.

Originally Posted by
parietal_03
I was beginning to engage in discussion the allusions of Science Fiction (in whatever form) with a fellow poster in "Equality for all, without God".
Don't want to disrupt the context of that thread anymore than I already have, so I'd like to start a new one here.
Are you a fan or enjoyed observer of science fiction?
Do you believe that there are parallels to science fiction and today's reality?
Would it be foolhardy to call Science Fiction more than just a genre, but a faith that gives flight and fancy to innovative ideas (to an extent) that allow the race to progress?
**And no, I don't mean the adopted Jedi Religion... What I mean by that is faith in the form of theories that upon becoming established fact enables us to draw power from metals, stones and plastics with the result end being a computer.
Man, eh! Even if you ain't into that as CG and Truthseeker call it "psuedo-metaphysical mumbo jumbo" and you just want to argue over who'd win in a "sci-fi clash", Odo or Data. Please, post your thoughts.
Personally, I'd like to see Luke Skywalker (from Star Wars) get his butt handed to him by Muad'Dib from Dune.
By the way, Data'd get break so fast!
Did I call it pseudo-metaphysical mumbo jumbo?
Well, perhaps some of it is.
Then again it can still be entertaining. It can inspire thought.
I enjoy reading anything by Arthur Clarke and I subscribe to his "Second Law" - "The only way of discovering the limits of the possible is to venture a little way past them into the impossible."
Science Fiction has, in some cases become fact. Flying to the Moon, Dick Tracy's wrist police radio, "Smart" bombs, Hydroponics (can you think of any others? There are much more.)
You mention Star Wars. It was Science fiction, but it was more than that. It was a mixture of different world myths, blended together to tell a story, a story that "spoke" to people and always will. You should read what Joseph Campbell, who was extremely useful to its producer, George Lucas, had to say about the movie. He called it a classical mythological tale.
Yes, I like Science fiction - even if some of it is pseudo-metaphysical mumbo jumbo.
May we have wisdom not to fear shadows in the night and courage when the day of danger truly dawns. (Elizabeth, The Golden Age.)
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