Beren
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What are some of your favourite Sci-Fi books? (Throw in Fantasy, if you wish, but try and keep it to Sci-Fi. ;) )
The thread explores participants' favorite science fiction and fantasy books, inviting a range of opinions and recommendations. The discussion includes personal preferences, critiques of authors, and reflections on the impact of literature on science and philosophy.
Participants express differing opinions on authors and their works, with no clear consensus on preferences or critiques. The discussion remains unresolved regarding the impact of personal beliefs on literary appreciation.
Some statements reflect personal biases and subjective experiences with literature, which may not be universally applicable. The discussion includes references to controversial figures and their legacies, which are debated without reaching a definitive conclusion.
Readers interested in science fiction and fantasy literature, literary criticism, and the intersection of literature with philosophical and ethical considerations may find this discussion engaging.
Originally posted by liljediboi
star wars!
how could you not put in star wars?
anyways. the NJO (new jedi order) series are ok. i wouldn't say they are the height of star wars novels, but it is hard for me to give a fair opinion because I'm a star wars nut.
Originally posted by Beren
Lem is a rude individual who mindlessly attacks anything he doesn't understand. But that's just the opinion of the science fiction community.
Originally posted by cragwolf
OK, but consider this. Heidegger was a f***ing Nazi, but his philosophical work was brilliant. Lewis Carroll (probably) had a sexual attraction for little girls, but his fiction was marvellous. Lovecraft was a racist son of a b*tch, but his writings were amazingly imaginative. I think you should separate Lem the man from Lem the writer.
Originally posted by cragwolf
Lewis Carroll (probably) had a sexual attraction for little girls, but his fiction was marvellous.
Gypsies are always passing through town and selling him the latest Scientific Development.
People who look for God at the Big Bang are like that guy.
Originally posted by marcus
... would be loathe to despise a man simply because they aroused his libido. What matters is behavior...
why arent there more cragwolf posts in the main science parts of the board, its actually sleepy in some parts of astronomy and you could stir up some discussion
Originally posted by redrogue
To answer the original thread:
1. Eon by Greg Bear
2. Cuckoo's Egg C.J. Cherry
3. Many books in the series regarding the Dragon Riders of Pern by Anne McCaffrey
4. Rendevous with Rama by Arthur C. Clarke
5. The classic Dune series from Dune to Chapterhouse: Dune by Frank Herbert
6. Songs of Distant Earth by Arthur C. Clarke
Originally posted by Mentat
Eon was great, but did you happen to read Darwin's Radio and Darwin's Children, by the same author?
...Well scratch that. I'm currently reading Contact whenever I get a chance
Originally posted by marcus
Science is a comedy (Hitchhikers Guide) even if it destroys all life on the planet (Cats Cradle--Vonnegut) and although the world views of twentienth century science are bizarre (Italo Calvino/Jorge Borges) people still look to science to satisfy their intellectual and spiritual needs: In Marquez Hundred Years of Solitude there is a man who tries to take photographs of God.
He sets up a camera in various rooms of his house, arranged to snap a picture at random times, because he believes what he is told, namely God is everywhere, but that human eyes cannot behold the Deity, but a camera because it is Scientific should be able to. this guy is a great character---he has experiences with a magnet and a magnifying glass too. Gypsies are always passing through town and selling him the latest Scientific Development.
People who look for God at the Big Bang are like that guy. they think that cosmology is a scientific device which will take a picture of God for them while they are in some other room of the house and not paying attention. Big Bang theory or quantum theory will somehow give them evidence of the divine or the soul.
When I read science fiction I expect it to tell me something about science as a human bemusement and obsession (not about possible future technologies and colonization romance----I am already impatient enough for life to be spread to other stars that I don't need dramatizations) so although Italo Calvino's "Cosmicomics" is not bad I vote for "Hundred Years of Solitude"