I lost my passion for most Science Fiction about 30 years ago for two reasons: the singularity, and finally accepting that FTL is impossible.Singularity: AI will advance and produce superintelligence. This will create a culture that is incomprehensible to today's humans. That culture will supercede and end the existing culture, so no fictional plots that I can comprehend are real after that occurs.FTL: The speed of light is an actual hard limit. Thus, any fiction that depends on any form of FTL is basically a form of fantasy. It's no different than any type of fantasy that depends on breaking a known law of physics. Therefore, I may as well enjoy all sorts of fantasy, not just this form.This leaves only Science Fiction based in the present or in the near term and that does not include aliens or anything beyond the Solar system, and the "near term" is getting nearer.
That said, I've written a hard-SF novel intended partly to get around your objections 1 and 2. It does that by setting the story in a future in which the Solar System has been heavily settled, with a total population in the trillions, mostly living in millions of small artificial worlds (e.g,. O'Neill cylinders). They have much better spacecraft, AI, nanotech, and genetic engineering that we do, but none of that breaks basic physics AFAIK. Typical travel times betwen nearby worlds are days to months, but a trip across the whole of settled space takes decades. AI is used everywhere, but is tightly regulated for fear that it would destroy humanity otherwise.
Quote from: Exastro on 04/09/2025 07:58 pmThat said, I've written a hard-SF novel intended partly to get around your objections 1 and 2. It does that by setting the story in a future in which the Solar System has been heavily settled, with a total population in the trillions, mostly living in millions of small artificial worlds (e.g,. O'Neill cylinders). They have much better spacecraft, AI, nanotech, and genetic engineering that we do, but none of that breaks basic physics AFAIK. Typical travel times betwen nearby worlds are days to months, but a trip across the whole of settled space takes decades. AI is used everywhere, but is tightly regulated for fear that it would destroy humanity otherwise. I find AI regulation to be highly implausible. As you say, it does not technically break any known laws of physics, but it would be incredibly difficult to implement.
Quote from: DanClemmensen on 04/09/2025 11:59 pmQuote from: Exastro on 04/09/2025 07:58 pmThat said, I've written a hard-SF novel intended partly to get around your objections 1 and 2. It does that by setting the story in a future in which the Solar System has been heavily settled, with a total population in the trillions, mostly living in millions of small artificial worlds (e.g,. O'Neill cylinders). They have much better spacecraft, AI, nanotech, and genetic engineering that we do, but none of that breaks basic physics AFAIK. Typical travel times betwen nearby worlds are days to months, but a trip across the whole of settled space takes decades. AI is used everywhere, but is tightly regulated for fear that it would destroy humanity otherwise. I find AI regulation to be highly implausible. As you say, it does not technically break any known laws of physics, but it would be incredibly difficult to implement.It helps if your future meta-civilization has been traumatized by multiple instances of AI driving humanity close to extinction, and when the regulations are enforced by fanatics who kill worlds that violate them.
Modern SF publishers are very restrictive about what they'll buy, and their restrictions are not geared toward improving quality. I have personally dealt with an SF novel editor who told me he requires "diversity", including "sexual diversity", in SF stories, regardless of whether that makes sense in their plots. Also, explicit references to religion are verboten (maybe with the exception that the story can refer to it as primitive superstition; I didn't ask). I hear that a lot of the best SF authors has switched to writing fantasy in order to avoid this kind of censorship. So if you're looking for better plots and writing in modern stories, fantasy is more fertile ground than SF. And if you're looking for good SF, you're probably best off reading stuff published before the 1990s or so.I think one reason we're startng to see more non-Western SF is that those countries are (ironically, in some cases) freer than the West, at least when it comes to SF.