The magazine Fantasy & Science Fiction is about all different aspects of Fantasy or Science Fiction. It includes articles written about things like Star Trek.
You can do many things with a degree of associated of applied science. You can teach in museums for example.
Many science fiction shows have rockets, aliens and fantastic weapons. Other big topics are traveling to the future or the past.
Genre is always debatable, but I think that things not seen is science fiction.
There is really no way to morph into things. This is a popular concept in science fiction but not in reality.
Telekinesis is the term used for the ability to move objects with the mind, often associated with psychic abilities or superhuman powers in science fiction and fantasy.
well in gothic fiction are things like castles and abandoned places :)
Usually tradition, superstition, and fiction don't relate to science, but of course there are exceptions. Science Fiction relates to science, in trying to predict and write about things that are really possible. Some religions embrace science, acknowledging that God and science are compatible.
Daedalus - from bronze aged Greek mythology. He was very good at inventing fanciful things which puts him in the realm of gadgetry science fiction.
Because, like all good science fiction, it takes one 'what if' idea and uses it to explore the importance of things which are so familiar to us that we take them for granted.
phosphorus, peneplain, perihelion, petrie, permanganate, potash.
Some science fiction books are Dune by Frank Herbert, Beggars in Spain by Nancy Kress, 2001 by Arthur C. Clarke, the Robot books by Isaac Asimov, and Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury.