![]() Really? This is considered Hard SF? Any scientist will tell you chance theory and math work differently. ![]() A supposedly highly advanced alien species that can move planets does believe in breeding for luck: a human character whose 5 ancestors all had luck in some lottery must be a “lucky” character, and solely for that reason is selected for a highly dangerous expedition. It’s not only the social science that’s lacking, it’s also basic scientific concepts. Niven’s vision of future humanity is far off anything really conceivably possible, and falls flat on its face because of details that seem cute or original at first, but in the end just expose Niven as a very superficial social thinker: in the book, individual humans enter voluntarily into televised battles to the death, just for the right to have three children? Yet, everybody is allowed 1 child, without the need to risk death at all. ![]() Yet, in this book the characters are caricatures, and the aliens are just odd (orange fur and a ratlike tail!) and different (two heads! 3 legs!), but not alien, since they are just versions of human stereotypes (aggressive brutes, smart cowards). If one wants to write Hard SF, the social science part of the science has to check out as well – for human and alien societies alike. ![]() This book is considered Hard SF, and I can understand why, but to me Ringworld feels more as Sesame Street SF. ![]()
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