- Joined
- Mar 22, 2003
- Messages
- 14,995
How do anyone insist that someone do something over the Internet?
You want to have a conversation about this on the forum. In order to have the conversation with you, you are insisting that the other person first download and read three stories instead of simply explaining the rating system you are using yourself. If you're going to make the conversation difficult for people to participate in, you can't be surprised that they don't think it's a very interesting conversation and don't want to download the stories you insist they read first.
The issue is not the download,
Yes, the issue is the download. If the stories are simply on-line, then more people are likely to read them. People have to pay their servers for how much bandwidth they are using in downloading material. For some people, that's difficult. I don't want to have to download anything, print or audio, in order to have a conversation here, and most people will feel the same.
I did give short descriptions of the differences in how the science is presented between the three works but how can I do a better job of that than pointing out the actual works?
Fair use quotes from the stories to show what you mean.
As far as I can tell I am just getting objections to any kind of system for a quick evaluation of any aspect of SF.
Nope, you're getting objections for a particular system where you seem to them contemptuous of any other form of evaluating stories and critical of them if they don't see things the way that you do.
I would assume that anybody that did not give a damn just would not respond. If people don't care about what I am saying why are they responding to this thread at all? Nobody can make anyone pay attention to what they don't care about over the net. I do wonder why they waste their time telling me they don't care about any rating system.
Because you are constantly talking about this topic in this forum. First off, people try to understand what you are saying. Then they will respond, especially because it seems to them that you're belittling them for not using the same criteria that you use, not simply that you are talking about different criteria. So they are responding in a testy manner, because they think you're trying to provoke them and make fun of them. (And on that front, folks, please do not engage in personal attacks towards psikey. If you have an argument, make an argument.)
I'll show you obsession. :lol:
That's got nothing to do with written SF. Star Wars are movies that have a strong cultural presence. There are tie-in books, but they've had minimal effect on the written SF field. So Star Wars really has no serious role in an evaluating system for written SF. We get that you hate that people refer to Star Wars as SF; we just get tired of hearing you say it all the time.
I understand that you have the view that sci-fi media displanted written SF. A lot of older SF fans have that view and it's led to what I consider some unfortunate choices, like dumping most media from WorldCon and making people less and less aware of written SF. But if you truly are evaluating written fiction and not movies, it doesn't seem particularly accurate or fair to current writers, in my view, to keep dragging in movies and t.v. shows when talking about comparing print fiction writers.
I already said that those stories are used as examples for different treatments of the science in SF and that OTHER CHARACTERISTICS would have to be rated separately and quite likely with different stories as examples.
The treatments of science in SF seem to be the only component you are interested in. I don't think I've seen you ever much talk about anything else. So the assumption was that you were not interested in any other component except the science and for many of us, that's an incomplete method of analysis. Evaluating characterization and such separately from science and setting for many of us does not work, and therefore, we find the rating system that deals with each component separately of limited utility. They aren't complaining that you are rating things. They're criticizing the system you've set up.
You have raised an objection: people don't talk about SF stories always in terms of the science or separate the science from the rest of the story, particularly in reviews. You would like people to change this behavior. We're saying, we don't see this as a problem and we don't find it useful to isolate science components off in their own separate corner. I was saying that I think the science of a story is too intertwined with the story to separate it out well. I was further saying that in most SF stories, including in the past, the amount of detail given to the science information is very limited. Therefore ranking the tiny amounts of difference in how limited the detail is on the science information from story to story doesn't seem, for me, personally, to be worth doing. Nor does it make much sense when dealing with sociological SF and thriller SF. I know it's the key thing for you, and I don't argue against it for you. But your ranking system is liable to elicit mostly a shrug from others. That doesn't mean that they aren't interested in science, though.


