Natural Science 310 Science and
Science Fiction Spring
2006
Approved books for term papers
Anderson, Poul, Tau Zero. (1970) Relativistic effects allow
a starship to travel to end of universe.
Asimov, Isaac, The Caves of Steel.
(1953) Detective story
with robots.
Asimov, Isaac, Foundation.
(1951) Secret foundation set up by “psycho-historians” to guide galactic
civilization through dark ages.
Baxter, Stephen, Voyage.(1997) Alternate history:
Baxter, Stephen, Flux
(1993). Life in the crust of a neutron star.
Bear, Greg, Darwin’s
Radio. (2000) The next step in hominid evolution.
Brin, David, Startide
Rising. (1983) A starship crewed by humans, superchimps, and intelligent
dolphins crash-lands on ocean world.
Budrys, Algis, Rogue
Moon. (1960) A deadly maze is found on the Moon.
Clarke, Arthur C., Rendezvous
with Rama. (1973) Astronauts investigate huge, apparently abandoned
spaceship that enters the solar system.
Clement, Hal,
Cramer, John, Einstein’s Bridge. (1997) The Supercolliding Supercollider
allows aliens from another dimension to come and destroy
all life, followed by political satire.
Delaney, Samuel R, Babel-17.
(1966) Beautiful linguist deciphers inscrutable
enemy.
Dick, Philip K., Do
Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? (1968) Existential
angst among humans and androids following nuclear war. Nothing like the movie (“Bladerunner”).
Gibson, William, Neuromancer.
(1984) The original “cyberpunk” novel: a computer attains
consciousness, manipulates cyber criminal to gain freedom.
Gibson, William and
Halderman, Joe, The Forever War.
(1975) Relativistic effects stretch out
a war against “bugs” to centuries. A response to Starship Troopers by a Vietnam Vet.
Heinlein, Robert, The
Moon is a Harsh Mistress. (1966) Revolution in lunar
colonies.
Heinlein, Robert, Starship Troopers. (1951) Space infantry fight
nasty alien bugs. Argues a military junta is the best form of government.
Jones, D. F. Colossus (1966). Missile-wielding supercomputer takes over the world.
Knight, Damon, A for Anything. Machines that can duplicate anything cause
chaos in society.
LeGuin, Ursula K, The Left Hand of
Darkness. (1969) Hermaphrodites and political tension on
ice world.
McHugh, Maureen F.,
Miller, Walter M, A
Canticle for Liebowitz. (1959) After nuclear war,
monks preserve scientific knowledge.
Niven, Larry, and Pournell, Jerry, The Mote in God’s Eye. (1975) Humans meet strange aliens species
who hide a terrible secret.
Pohl, Frederik, Gateway.
(1977) Aliens hide in black holes from other, scarier aliens.
Pohl, Frederik, Man
Plus. (1976) Cyborg created to explore Mars.
Robinson, Kim Stanley, Icehenge.
(1985) Archaeologist investigates mysterious monument on Pluto, struggles
against scientific inertia.
Schroder, Karl, Permanance.
(2003) Stratified human society discovers intelligence is not a stable
long-term evolutionary strategy.
Stephenson, Neal, Snow
Crash. (1992) Delivery boy for Mafia-owned pizza chain is samurai in
virtual reality. And that’s just the beginning.
Stephenson, Neal, The Diamond Age. (1995)
Society with nanotechnology recreate Victorian era.
Varley, John, The Ophiuchi Hotline.
(1977) Humans expelled from Earth by alien invaders, receive message from other
aliens.
Vinge, Vernor (former SDSU computer science professor), A Fire Upon the
Deep. (1991) Unspeakable menace threatens the galaxy; the only defense
crashes on planet populated by intelligent group-mind dog creatures.
Vonnegut, Kurt, Cat’s
Cradle. (1963) Scientist creates “ice-nine” that could freeze Earth.
Willis, Connie, The Doomsday Book.
(1993) Time travel to Middle Ages, Black Death.
Zamyatin, Yevgeny, We. (1924) Russian dystopia: numbers replace names, sexual
partners assigned by the government, imagination outlawed.