Most of the questions in the Science Fiction Category seem to be about Frankenstein or Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde because, apparently, there are a lot of students out there who either don't want to read the books and complete the assignments for themselves, or they don't understand the books or the questions and assignments their professors/teachers have given them, so they come to Answers.com to have someone else do their schoolwork for them.
Science can answer questions about our physical world.
Rogue Trooper is a character from a British comic strip and he is known for his blue skin. He is an elite soldier in the science fiction comic whose skin is able to withstand strong acid. He is also immune to almost all toxins and chemicals.
Yes, science fiction remains a popular genre today, with a strong fan base and a wide range of books, movies, TV shows, and other media being produced. The genre continues to explore imaginative realms, futuristic technologies, and social issues, attracting both mainstream and niche audiences.
An organized way of gathering information and answering questions is called research. Research is an integral part of almost all sciences.
it seems almost like science fiction, but it is realistic fiction. All of the stuff could happen. there isn't any flying unicorns or magic hats or anything. really just regular people in the future.
SciFi stands for science fiction, so by definition, it is fiction rather than fact. A science fiction writer can take a viewer to worlds that don't exist and to times that are far ahead of our own lifetimes. Some of the greatest science fiction writers have said that science fiction must still conform to known science. Isaac Asimov was a prolific writer in the mid 20th century and wrote several famous series of books. The recent film, "I Robot" was based on his book of the same name and relied on the three laws of robotics. Asimov claimed that well written science fiction could not make use of science or technology that conflicts with our knowledge of science today. Conforming to known rules of physics and chemistry means that the work is far more likely to be believable by the reader or viewer. With this in mind, science fiction should have at least some element of truth in it. As a testament to Asimov's adherence to real science in his imaginative works, in the 1950s, he introduced "MultiVac" into his stories. Multivac is a computer system that allowed every home to have a computer terminal linked to a global network driven my multiple data centers. He assumed that Multivac would be able to provide information, computing power and communication in almost limitless ways. At the time he wrote of Multivac, electronic computers were huge behemoths with no communication facilities and the convenient computer screen and keyboard were nothing more than a dream for engineers of the time. 50 years in and the Internet could almost have been created from his Multivac specification. So, his dream of computing was science fiction when he wrote it but has turned into science fact within half a century.
May is a science-fiction writer. Believe it or not she is a woman. Created the Randy Morrow series in the fifties for Popular Mechanics.- later other types of more far-out science fiction in the Pleistocene. In the Morrow tales almost every story began with an accidental discovery- a Geiger counter is observed in a sporting goods store ( in Chicago), a Ham radio operator moves into the neighborhood ( causing TV interferences) and so on. Did not directly deal with UFOs or really meaty science fiction stuff- more with pedestrian- but never boring science in everyday life.
A famous horror writer of the 1920's, most famous for his science fiction-like works, which are now called the Cthulhu Mythos. Almost all modern horror has some influence from Lovecraft.
It can be a noun: "Science is my favorite subject." It can be an adjective: "I am almost finished with my science project."
He studied almost all of the main fields of science.
No.
Questions almost always start with Who, What, When, Where, Why, How, Was, Is, Are, If, Do, Did, Can, Could, Would or Should