Different Engines: How Science Drives Fiction and Fiction Drives Science (Macmillan Science)

Author(s)

Since its emergence in the seventeenth century, science fiction has been a sustained, coherent and subversive check on the promises and pitfalls of science. In their turn, invention and discovery have forced fiction writers to confront the nature and limits of reality. Different Engines explores how this fascinating symbiosis shapes what we see, do, and dream.

From Johannes Kepler's Somnium to Arthur C. Clarke's 2001, science fiction has emerged as a mode of thinking, complementary to the scientific method. Science fiction's field of interest is the gap between the new worlds uncovered by experimentation and exploration, and the fantastic worlds of the imagination. Its proponents find drama in the tension between the familiar and the unfamiliar. Its readers, many of them scientists and politicians, find inspiration in the contrast between the ordinary and the extraordinary. Brake and Hook's Different Engines is a unique, provocative and compelling account of science fiction as the arbiter of progress.

Name in long format: Different Engines: How Science Drives Fiction and Fiction Drives Science (Macmillan Science)
ISBN-10: 0230019803
ISBN-13: 9780230019805
Book pages: 250
Book language: en
Edition: 2007
Binding: Hardcover
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Dimensions: Height: 7.63 Inches, Length: 5.78 Inches, Width: 1.045 Inches

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