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- From: troly@redwood.math.ucla.edu (Bret Jolly)
- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Subject: Re: Balance of Technology and Story
- Summary: Definitions
- Message-ID: <1992Sep3.010941.21520@math.ucla.edu>
- Date: 3 Sep 92 01:09:41 GMT
- References: <14699@mindlink.bc.ca>
- Sender: news@math.ucla.edu
- Organization: UCLA Mathematics Department
- Lines: 22
-
- In article <14699@mindlink.bc.ca> Alan_Barclay@mindlink.bc.ca
- (Alan Barclay) writes:
-
- >My definition of Speculative Fiction ( a group which includes Science
- >Fiction, Fantasy, and Horror ) is "Fiction where one or more of the key
- >problems only exists because of a speculative element."
-
- This definition would be more convincing if you told us what you
- meant by "speculative element." In any case, I don't see how a horror
- story which is neither fantasy nor saifai would fit.
-
- >The various genres are defined by the nature of the speculative element.
- >Hard Science Fiction speculates on plausable extrapolations of the physical
- >universe. Soft Science Fiction speculates on plausable extrapolations of
- >the social universe. Fantasy speculates on implausable extrapolations of
- >both.
-
- Just about all the supposed hard saifai I've seen contains glaring
- impossibilities. As for your definition of soft saifai, I don't know
- what you mean by "the social universe," though evidently it is not bound
- by the limitations of the physical universe. In all three definitions,
- the word "extrapolation" is abused.
-