Serinanth said:
Smiley Face said:
I call shenanigans
Last I checked Klingons, Daleks and Crystal Singers do not exit in the real world.
Know what the GNDN conduits in Star Trek do? Goes nowhere does nothing.
Scifi is not limited to the mundane and you can us technology to the same extent as magic.
Well how the hell did we just move this planet? Well first we interfaced with the quantum foam using our inter-spacial plank magnifier blah blah blah. Grounding the stories in real science gives them a pretty good feel but you can have a quartet of planets traveling through space relying on the massive amounts of heat that their society generates to survive. Or an inter dimensional god like being that likes to mess with mortals for the amusement factor.
Just like fantasy, scifi is only limited by your imagination.
True, while most science fiction is a logical extension of reality, sometimes it manifests as an illogical extension of reality. The fact, however, remains, that you could have Klingons, Daleks and Crystal Singers (what're Crystal Singers from?) in a sciency fantasy work. And yes, a good deal of sciency handwaving can happen - but then again, we're all familiar with fantasy doing magicky handwaving, and they're also more than capable of doing sciency handwaving.
Science Fiction and Fantasy both have infinite possibilities. However, the difference between them is that science fiction will always be tethered to being an extension of the real world - much like while there are techinically infinite numbers between 1 and 2, they all start with 1.something - whereas with fiction, you also have those infinite variations, except now those variations are any number at all, unburdened by limitations -except, I suppose, that it can't be any number between 1 and 10 - after all, it's not exactly fantasy if it's taking place in the real world? Nevertheless, greater diversity.
Limitations are often good, mind you. The fact that science fiction is grounded in reality gives it more oomph, more potential for commentary on human nature and society, while still being immensely free to do its work. But, the question was what is more diverse, and that HAS to be fantasy - it's just doesn't have those same restrictions.
EDIT: Actually, I think I can think of examples of fantasy that take place in the real world - would the Dresden Files count? I mean, it's dealing with trolls and vampires and whatnot, fantastical creatures, while grounding itself in modern-day Chicago - I'm pretty sure it falls under the umbrella of fantasy, in which case, yay, even less limitations on fantasy than I thought.