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A line in a mostly unrelated post by a friend got me thinking about a maxim I've heard a lot lately: " is not about predicting the , but rather commenting on the present." It's become conventional wisdom rapidly approaching the status of a thought-terminating cliche.

When I sit down to write , "what if" is my primary motivation. The here-and-now obviously shapes my thoughts, but I'm not *deliberately* writing about it—if I wanted to do that, I'd pick a different genre.

Maybe I'm not exactly trying to predict the future, but I am trying to make believable predictions about what *could* happen if such-and-such occurred. And I think most of the SF authors whose work I admire would agree with me, unless I'm just really bad at getting the point!

Of course, “really bad at getting the point” is always a possibility. I’m just going to pretend I didn’t think of that.

@medigoth
Maybe it's just me, but I've always thought most fiction was a commentary on the present. Even the few bits of hard science fiction I've read feel like a commentary on the present, just cuz they describe where we're going. 🤷‍♂️

@kcarr2015 Extrapolation from present circumstances isn't exactly "commentary on the present" the way it's usually meant, though. IMO, YMMV.

@medigoth absolutely, well put.

what if is a great starting point for speculative fiction, of which science fiction I offers unlimited potential.

social commentary is another great starting point.

or maybe the starting itself is the point. there is a reason it feels so exciting.

@falcennial Yeah, to me the starting is a lot more interesting than the commenting, most of the time. I don't object to commentary when it's done well. But I do object to the idea that it's what all or even most SF is about.

@medigoth It's one thing one can deliberately do with Sci-Fi. Particularly as satire.

That's hardly the only thing one can do with Sci-Fi though.
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