shadowkat: (Default)
[personal profile] shadowkat
Just too cool to pass up.. Putting the Science in Science Fiction where various experts defunct false information in science fiction, and provide advice on how to write it correctly or realistically.

Breaking common gender stereotypes in the realm of science fiction and fantasy, more than half (64 percent) of the 39 contributors whose essays appear in Putting the Science in Fiction identify as female. Among the essays, you’ll find:

* How To Write Convincing Death Scenes, by science reporter Bianca Nogrady
* A Whirlwind Tour Of The Human Genome, by geneticist Dan Koboldt
* Writing Mental Health by psychiatric nurse practitioner Kathleen S. Allen
* The Science In Jurassic Park, with microbiologist Mike Hays
* Portraying Wolves Fairly & Accurately by environmentalist William Huggins
* CGI Is Not Made By Computers by video game designer Abby Goldsmith
* What’s Possible With Cyborgs and Cybernetics by neuroscientist Benjamin Kinney
* How The Ocean Will Kill You by marine biologist Danna Staaf
* Realistic Space Flight with pilot and aviation journalist Sylvia Spruck Wrigley
* The Weapons Of Star Wars by engineer Judy Mohr

… and dozens more

It's not cheap, but it's cool.

Date: 2018-11-01 07:24 am (UTC)
atpo_onm: (chicken_why)
From: [personal profile] atpo_onm
There are no absolutes, and scientific discovery is only as accurate as the humans discovering it and we are incredibly limited in how we view the universe.

Sample dialog to determine whether one has absolute "faith" in anything related to either science or religion:

A: Many say that there is no god, that the universe just happened, and all evolved from that point on.

B: How can it "just happen"? It had to come from somewhere-- something had to have created it!

A: That is an unanswerable question. Saying that it was created doesn't solve the basic dilemma, because then the question becomes, who or what created the creator? And if you answer that, it just moves the question back again-- and again, and again.

B: But at some point there must be a beginning.

A: No. The concept of infinity is only a mathematical expression, infinity cannot exist in physical reality. The universe may be extremely large, but it can never be infinite. The same is true of time.

B: I don't follow.

A: The question is not why are we here, but why is anything here? That's unanswerable. The universe cannot have vectors of infinite space and time, therefore it must be limited. But even if it's limited, how did matter and energy first occur? You cannot have something appear from nothing. 0 cannot suddenly become 1.

B: Now my head hurts.

A: Welcome to real science. But-- isn't the universe fascinating? Why do we feel compelled to try to explain everything? We couldn't if we tried, because...

B: There... is no literal, physical infinity?

A: You got it.

B: But then, what is our purpose in the universe?

A: Make one up. Try to make it a good one. Be creative!

B: Mmm... huh.

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