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      • By engaging in what-ifs that are either far-out and close to home, science fiction stories can challenge assumptions that otherwise would go unexamined. Sci-fi shows us through film, television and literature where our society might have ended up, for better and for worse, had things been different.
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  2. Jun 7, 2017 · I love science fiction because its a mirror and a lens through which we can look at ourselves, at where we’ve been, where we are, and where we’re going. It’s a lens because we’re looking at the human condition through a different set of circumstances than our own.

    • Stimulates my interest in technology and possibility. I’ve never really been a person that is enraptured by the newest technology but imagining the possibilities of what humanity can create fascinates me.
    • Science fiction is a genre of “what if?” In March 2009, the creators and cast of Battlestar Galactica were invited tospeak at the United Nations Department of Public Informationin order to raise the public profile and awareness of humanitarian concern.
    • Challenges my preconceived notions and assumptions about the world. Science fiction takes a mirror to society. I think that entertainment (explored more in the last point) allows people to explore different perspectives without the polarizing lens of political affiliations.
    • Stimulates my brain! The genre is ripe with philosophy, particularly morality and ethics. This is just a personal thing, but I really love thinking about philosophy.
    • fi isn’t afraid to tackle BIG issues. Sci-fi stories can be set far in the future, they can take place on distant worlds. But, really, they’re about the issues that affect us in the here and now.
    • fi makes for great movies. Recently we’ve seen Andy Weir’s The Martian adapted to the big screen, successful original screenplays like Gravity and Arrival, heck, Star Wars and Star Trek have even come back!
    • fi gets people talking (and laughing) The response to the film version of The Martian was especially interesting – some people thought it was a true story!
    • fi is incredibly relevant. This is an exciting time for sci-fi writers. Science fiction has been around for a long time of course, but rather than guessing at random possibilities like some of the old masters had to do (and they did it superbly well), every writer is blessed with a good sense of the direction in which space exploration is heading, the tech we’ll probably use to travel, and even what many planets in our solar system will be like when we get there.
  3. Sep 8, 2018 · Why Science Fiction Is the Most Important Genre. Historian Yuval Noah Harari believes sci-fi has the power to shape public opinion. Jonathan Nicholson/NurPhoto/Getty Images. The...

  4. Jun 14, 2013 · Why do we write, read, and love sci-fi? Arthur Clarke (2001: A Space Odyssey) once said, Sci-fi screenwriter Jenna Avery discusses the role, value, and purpose sci-fi plays.

  5. Jan 4, 2011 · By engaging in what-ifs that are either far-out and close to home, science fiction stories can challenge assumptions that otherwise would go unexamined. Sci-fi shows us through film,...

  6. Oct 15, 2020 · Editors from Tor, Orbit, Asimov’s Science Fiction, and more weigh in on the definition of science fiction and what’s next for the genre. They also pick the best new science fiction novels...

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