SCIENCE FICTION QUOTES IV

quotations about science fiction

Historically, I guess that's how science fiction works: you start by using aliens to think the unthinkable -- and then, eventually, another writer, having grown a little more comfortable with the earlier notion, brings it into the human.

SAMUEL R. DELANY

interview, Nerve, June 14, 2001

Tags: Samuel R. Delany


I suppose that literature as it is won't die, science fiction included. But games are becoming an extremely important part of the science fiction world, including games that are adapted from books (or vice versa: books that are adapted from games). It's wonderful to have the opportunity to play and see your favorite characters on the screen, but the opportunity to read a book does not become less attractive.

SERGEI LUKYANENKO

interview, Strange Horizons, November 28, 2011

Tags: Sergei Lukyanenko


I hate the whole ubermensch, superman temptation that pervades science fiction. I believe no protagonist should be so competent, so awe-inspiring, that a committee of 20 really hard-working, intelligent people couldn't do the same thing.

DAVID BRIN

interview, Locus, March 1997


I'm sorry to disappoint science fiction fans, but if information is preserved, there is no possibility of using black holes to travel to other universes. If you jump into a black hole, your mass energy will be returned to our universe but in a mangled form which contains the information about what you were like but in a state where it can not be easily recognized. It is like burning an encyclopedia. Information is not lost, if one keeps the smoke and the ashes. But it is difficult to read. In practice, it would be too difficult to re-build a macroscopic object like an encyclopedia that fell inside a black hole from information in the radiation, but the information preserving result is important for microscopic processes involving virtual black holes.

STEPHEN HAWKING

"Information Loss in Black Holes", July 2005

Tags: Stephen Hawking


Science fiction and the world. They have created each other.... We live, indisputably, in a science fiction world.

JAMES GUNN

Alternative Worlds: The Illustrated History of Science Fiction


Science fiction that's just about people wandering around in space ships shooting each other with ray guns is very dull. I like it when it enables you to do fairly radical reinterpretations of human experience, just to show all the different interpretations that can be put on apparently fairly simple and commonplace events. That I find fun.

DOUGLAS ADAMS

"Douglas Adams: The First and Last Tapes", Darker Matter: Online Science Fiction Magazine

Tags: Douglas Adams


There's a surprising core of fandom that just hates any kind of religion in their science fiction. They really don't want to mix these things together. I'm not quite clear what that's about and why they're so opposed to mixing these things. It becomes a very purist argument. People will say, "If there's any kind of religion in it, it's not science fiction anymore." Well, I don't really buy that. People believe in religions and there are weird, mysterious things that happen in the universe. Why not play with that, too? Why isn't that just as valid as everything else that's part of the human condition, which is theoretically what sci-fi is supposed to be exploring.

RONALD D. MOORE

"You Ask The Q's, Ronald D. Moore Answers, Part 2"


Science fiction is a very special form of auditorium. It's a theater, a box, within which anything goes--but you'd better draw up the guidelines and the rule book before you begin. Otherwise, you end up with nonsense.

RIDLEY SCOTT

"The Replicant: Inside the Dark Future of Blade Runner 2049", Wired, September 19, 2017


I think science fiction still suffers from bad PR from the days when it was considered the domain of nerds and geeks.

CAT SPARKS

"Is the tide turning for Australian sci-fi on the small screen?", The Conversation, August 29, 2017


Science has from the beginning been ... the handmaiden of capitalism. SF has all along been the handmaiden of, as well as the parasite on, science. This is a treason to the profession of writing, which in its serious forms can be a handmaiden of nothing but disdain for, and assault upon, that-which-is.

BERNARD WOLFE

afterword, "Biscuit Position"


Lightship lover
Interplanetary other
Sci-fi brother
If you are somewhere above us
Airwave raver
Cybercrazed savior
Pest resistant, optimistic, send me a sign
I'm a low-meg rapper
Fertile futuristic flapper
Regenerating cells and
Sending out spells
Hear me now, I'm an alien lover

LUSCIOUS JACKSON

"Alien Lover"


I get the feeling that we're living in sci-fi
I get the the feeling that our weapons are lo-fi
Ain't no killer like pride

SWITCHFOOT

"The War Inside"


One of the liberating effects of science fiction when I was a teenager was precisely its ability to tune me into all sorts of strange data and make me realize that I wasn't as totally isolated in perceiving the world as being monstrous and crazy.

WILLIAM GIBSON

The Telegraph, December 2, 2013

Tags: William Gibson


Science fiction films are not about science. They are about disaster, which is one of the oldest subjects of art.

SUSAN SONTAG

"The Imagination of Disaster", Against Interpretation and Other Essays

Tags: Susan Sontag


It's essential to remember that science fiction is not fantasy but could be future reality.

HARSHIKAA UDASI

"The thrill of science fiction", The Hindu, September 12, 2017


Science fiction is often in danger of disappearing up its own a** with involved, too-fussy lore.

NICK WANSERSKI

"In its best episode yet, The Orville goes to trial for a baby's happiness", AV Club, September 21, 2017


Science fiction and tech policy each ask the "what if" questions. That is, what if we deploy this new technology in this way? How will it change society? What will the benefits be? What might the unintended consequences be? Science fiction is a perfect training ground for policy professionals to practice asking those questions (and be entertained in the process).

KEVIN BANKSTON

"How Fandom Is Helping Mold the Future", Slate, September 26, 2017


The "hard" science-fiction writers are the ones who try to write specific stories about all that technology may do for us. More and more, these writers felt an opaque wall across the future. Once, they could put such fantasies millions of years in the future. Now they saw that their most diligent extrapolations resulted in the unknowable ... soon.

VERNOR VINGE

"The Coming Technological Singularity"


Science fiction is the search for a definition of man and his status in the universe which will stand in our advanced but confused state of knowledge (science), and is characteristically cast in the Gothic or post-Gothic mould.

BRIAN ALDISS

Billion Year Spree: The True History of Science Fiction


I've met many people who are very proud that they only read nonfiction, and I feel very sad for them, because we have to be able to imagine something else. In science fiction, we don't have to stay contained within what is possible. We can start with the question "What do we want?" rather than the question "What is realistic?"

WALIDAH IMARISHA

"Why Science Fiction Is a Fabulous Tool in the Fight for Social Justice", The Nation, June 2, 2015