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How Science Shapes Science Fiction
- Narrated by: Professor Charles L. Adler
- Length: 11 hrs and 49 mins
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Publisher's summary
Science fiction can often seem to be pure imaginative fantasy with only the trappings of science. But many authors are more fluent in real science than many readers and viewers may realize. With the success our smaller Audible Original course on this subject, we thought it was time to extend the topic and present a more expansive look at the fascinating intersection of fiction and reality, which is what we have set out to do with How Science Shapes Science Fiction.
Professor Charles L. Adler of St. Mary’s College of Maryland was the perfect choice for this subject, as he is both a longtime science-fiction fan and a real-world scientist. Professor Adler’s talent for using literature to shine a light on science - both the accurate and not-so-accurate versions employed by creators, spanning two centuries - makes this course a great survey for fans of both science fact and science fiction.
PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying PDF will be available in your Audible Library along with the audio.
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Story
Recent years have seen the introduction of concepts from the new and exciting field of complexity science that have captivated the attention of economists, sociologists, engineers, businesspeople, and many others. These include tipping points, the wisdom of crowds, six degrees of separation (or Kevin Bacon), and emergence. Complexity science can shed light on why businesses or economies succeed and fail, how epidemics spread and can be stopped, and what causes ecological systems to rebalance themselves after a disaster.
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Good but basic
- By Spencer on 08-24-19
By: Scott E. Page, and others
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Sci-Phi: Science Fiction as Philosophy
- By: The Great Courses
- Narrated by: Professor David K. Johnson PhD University of Oklahoma
- Length: 13 hrs and 31 mins
- Unabridged
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The science fiction genre has become increasingly influential in mainstream popular culture, evolving into one of the most engaging storytelling tools we use to think about technology and consider the shape of the future. Along the way, it has also become one of the major lenses we use to explore important philosophical questions. The origins of science fiction are most often thought to trace to Mary Shelley's novel Frankenstein, a story born from a night of spooky tale-telling by the fireside that explores scientific, moral, and ethical questions that were of great concern in the 19th century - and that continue to resonate today.
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Weak philosophy loaded with misapplied facts and personal bias
- By KENDRA GOODMAN on 11-22-18
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Written Communications: Being Heard and Understood
- By: Professor Allison Friederichs Atkison, The Great Courses
- Narrated by: Professor Allison Friederichs Atkison
- Length: 6 hrs and 24 mins
- Original Recording
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In the 12 rewarding lectures of Written Communications: Being Heard and Understood, Professor Allison Friederichs, associate teaching professor and the associate dean for academic affairs at the University of Denver, University College, will share the secrets to sharpening your written, oral, and interpersonal communications skills.
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Just Horrible
- By 922Vision on 08-06-21
By: Professor Allison Friederichs Atkison, and others
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The Other Side of History: Daily Life in the Ancient World
- By: Robert Garland, The Great Courses
- Narrated by: Robert Garland
- Length: 24 hrs and 28 mins
- Original Recording
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Look beyond the abstract dates and figures, kings and queens, and battles and wars that make up so many historical accounts. Over the course of 48 richly detailed lectures, Professor Garland covers the breadth and depth of human history from the perspective of the so-called ordinary people, from its earliest beginnings through the Middle Ages.
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Tantalizing time trip
- By Mark on 08-21-13
By: Robert Garland, and others
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The Great Ideas of Philosophy, 2nd Edition
- By: Daniel N. Robinson, The Great Courses
- Narrated by: Daniel N. Robinson
- Length: 30 hrs and 11 mins
- Original Recording
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Grasp the important ideas that have served as the backbone of philosophy across the ages with this extraordinary 60-lecture series. This is your opportunity to explore the enormous range of philosophical perspectives and ponder the most important and enduring of human questions-without spending your life poring over dense philosophical texts.
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A Hard Review to Write
- By Ark1836 on 11-20-15
By: Daniel N. Robinson, and others
What listeners say about How Science Shapes Science Fiction
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Amazon Customer
- 02-05-22
simply wonderful!
Absolutely fabulous blend of science and fiction....truly loved it! Very intelligent and supremely engaging. Great narrative.
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- Stephen Skoller
- 09-17-21
Broad and Colloquial, but lacking Literary Depth
For GC lectures, there are better takes on sci Fi. This one is fun though.
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- Ned Barnett
- 12-02-21
About Damn Time
A real working physicist and physics professor ... a man who also clearly loves great science fiction ... tells how actual science informs science fiction.
In 24 concise and well-delivered lectures, he explores at least that many areas of science and how they are reflected in great SF, with many on-target examples. I'm writing my 4th SF novel, and doing a page-one rewrite on #3 SF novel (published in 2093 but out of print since 2012) and this Great Course is helping me to refine the story and the science.
Highly recommended for serious SF fans, lovers of non-fiction popular works on current and emerging science, and anyone who wants to see how the universe really works.
I'm going to revisit this course with a notebook in hand to write down the names and SF book/movie/TV titles I need to read or watch, either again or for the first time, as well as works by cutting-edge scientists/authors for my reading/watching pleasure. Great Course indeed!
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- Blaise
- 12-04-20
More detailed than I thought
This audiobook is a detailed discussion about main questions, solutions and knowledge of writers and new ideas from the perspective of main sci-fi books creation era.
I am going to listen it again
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3 people found this helpful
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- Grizzo40
- 04-13-22
loses something without the visual
Listening to him trying to explain equations was a bit frustrating, but overall this was pretty excellent. Occasionally I was surprised by which stories he DIDN'T discuss, but the ones that are included were pretty good examples.
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1 person found this helpful
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- Greylin
- 11-06-21
Loved it!
I loved Adler's enthusiasm for the topic. learned a lot and enjoyed reading the novels mentioned.
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- Annabells
- 11-19-20
A+ Science behind Sci-Fi lecture series
FYI I listed the 24 lectures/ chapter titles at the end of my review. They're on the PDF & Great Courses website, but Audible's chapters are not labeled. I've gotten 3 of these "science of sci-fi" & "how sci-fi works" books from Audible. This book from Adler is the best one for what I wanted. The author/ lecturer is enthusiastic & knowledgeable. He covers a wide range of sci-fi topics as well as scientific disciplines, & he delivers the material like a college professor addressing adults. The much shorter Audible Original (which I did not like) was very basic, child-oriented recitations of physics & astronomy principles. The other Great Courses sci-fi lectures are a survey of sci-fi literature (which wasn't useful to me) for an audience that's seeking book summaries/ genre history rather than science. If you are interested in the science of sci-fi, THIS book of lectures by Adler is your best choice currently on Audible.
I should mention that I'm a neuroscientist patent attorney working in biotech, so my review is from the perspective of a scientist rather than a layperson. My field involves neurobiology, biochemistry, electrical engineering & nanotechnology. I'm certainly no expert in physics or astronomy, but I took those college courses & my general scientific knowledge is fairly robust as required for patent practice. That might make it difficult for me to judge how laypersons will perceive this book.
In my opinion, Adler does a great job of making the science interesting and explaining the concepts in a way that most people could understand. Where Adler's book really shines is the breadth of its coverage. The range stretches across speculative fiction from Star Trek, Star Wars & Avatar to Doctor Who, X-Files & The Avengers to Game of Thrones to Neuromancer & Leviathan. It's all here- fantasy, superheroes, space exploration, cyberpunk & even steampunk. He also covers the classics of Verne, Clarke, Heinlein, & Asimov.
Adler is equally ambitious in the breadth of the science he discusses: rockets, lasers, space colonies, time travel, space warfare, teleportation, planetary ecology & AI. Adler even briefly mentions neuroscience & telepathy. To my pleasant surprise, unlike 99% of sci-fi lecturers with a physics/ engineering background, Adler does NOT conflate "thoughts" with neural oscillations (electrochemical fluctuations among groups of neural ensembles in the cerebral cortex that we measure as brainwaves on EEG). This is in contrast to Elon Musk, whose Neuralink project makes most of us cringe. Our ability to measure basic electrochemical data about emotional states & to map motor control in the prefrontal cortex so that monkeys can move a machine with their brains DO NOT correlate with measuring, digitizing & manipulating human COGNITION (i.e., thinking). Irresponsible futurists should stop pretending near-term neuroscience will read, record & change your thoughts. That upsets the public, spawns conspiracy theories, detracts from real research & actually threatens funding sources. Reputable neuroscientists agree such technology is many decades away & will be quite different than ESP. It's unlikely that memories, reasoning & cognition will ever be measured precisely. These are complex processes that differ across people & don't involve fixed data points.
Adler is at his best when discussing rockets, travel, & astronomy. This isn't surprising, since he's a physics professor. As a presenter, Adler is among the best I've heard in the Great Courses. His delivery is as good as most audio book readers. As a professor, he possesses an important quality that's often lacking in readers of nonfiction audio books: an understanding of the material. This makes a big difference. The pace is slow enough that non-native English speakers should be able to follow, & of course you can speed it up or slow it down in your audio playback as desired.
LECTURES/ CHAPTER TITLES
(01) Science & Fiction: The Wayfarers Series
(02) Cheating the Science: Protector (Larry Niven)
(03) Predicting: From Earth to the Moon (Jules Verne)
(04) World-Building in Left Hand of Darkness
(05) Advanced World-Building in Avatar
(06) Action & Reaction in The Avengers
(07) Space Travel in 2001: A Space Odyssey
(08) Interplanetary Travel & The Martian
(09) Space Battles & Energy Weapons: Star Wars
(10) Advanced Rocket Systems in Star Trek
(11) Relativity & Time for the Stars
(12) Black Holes, Wormholes & Interstellar
(13) Time Travel in Doctor Who
(14) Teleportation & Star Trek
(15) Cyberspace & the Singularity: Neuromancer
(16) Steampunk Science & Leviathan
(17) Design Your Own Dragon: Game of Thrones
(18) Planetary Ecology in Dune
(19) Extraterrestrial Intelligence in Contact
(20) UFOs, ESP & The X-Files
(21) Social Sciences & Asimov's Foundation Series
(22) Designed Languages & Arrival
(23) Cosmology, the Mind & Star Maker
(24) Science Fiction's Purpose: Childhood's End
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49 people found this helpful