GrumpyCatFace wrote:So then your main contention is that the Star Trek warp drive just doesn't feel real enough.Speaker to Animals wrote:And with respect to FTL drives, the Pournelle's future history novels were all relatively hard science fiction, and he did come up with a plausible explanation for how these things work. They became major plotpoints and sources of conflict in numerous novels (i.e. why the Moties were trapped in their system).
No. My contention (and actually fact) is that Star Trek is not science fiction because it does not operate within the constraints of science fiction but, rather, the constraints of fantasy literature. It's fantasy set in space.
What makes something science fiction is not that it was set in the future or that the events take place in space. Science fiction plots require plausible scientific explanations for the events, and where no such explanation is possible, they should compartmentalize that material away from sources of conflict.
If you don't know how to plausibly explain something, then you shouldn't, and if you can't plausibly explain it, then it shouldn't become a major source of conflict in your plot, since that would require explanation. The minute you start making up fake magic words, you strayed into fantasy. LOTS of would-be SF writers make the mistake of doing this and get rejected for it.
That doesn't mean your fantasy set in space is crap either. I absolutely love the Barsoom novels, which are considered space fantasy. That's what Star Trek and Star Wars are, by the way: space fantasy.