Science fiction
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Science fiction is an oft-argued term. For the purposes of this site, SF is broader than many definitions of "science fiction". Here we include various definitions of science fiction.
- [S]cience fiction is simply fiction in which some element of
- speculation plays such an essential and integral role that it
- can't be removed without making the story collapse, and in
- which the author has made a reasonable effort to make the
- speculative element as plausible as possible.
-- Stanley Schmidt, 1999
- [W]ritten science fiction has become two things—a genre
- and a style ... For my purposes, genre signifies a specific
- type of writing, one that may have some grey areas, but has
- enough boundaries for readers most of the time to be able
- to say whether something is or is not a part of the genre.
- (referencing Schmidt definition above) ... A style is different;
- a style is simply a way of saying something.
-- Matthew Cheney, 2005 (http://www.strangehorizons.com/2005/20050307/cheney-c.shtml)
- Science fiction, for example, most often is set in the future
- and involves some sort of technology that's beyond our
- current understanding but doesn't contradict currently
- known/believed physical laws.
-- Jed Hartman, 2001 (http://www.strangehorizons.com/2001/20011203/editorial.shtml)