Speculative fiction and Xenobiology: Why scientists should embrace science fiction
Molly Bleach explores how scientific imagination can be a way of explaining data as well as preceding revolutionary findings.
Molly Bleach explores how scientific imagination can be a way of explaining data as well as preceding revolutionary findings.
Asya Tuğlu’s article blends the scientific reality and imaginative speculation that shapes our perception of alien life.
Cameron Hill insightfully explains the philosophical hurdles of time travel, grandfather paradox and how time travel can be reconciled with free will.
Tanmayee Desprabhu describes how the development of de-centalised communication networks are making science fiction ideas a reality.
Mridul Shrestha discusses the relationship between science and science fiction, taking the example of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein.
By Sandra Saade, Rita Kimijima-Dennemeyer, and Laura-Bianca Pasca Image Credit: Daffodil Dhayaa Humanity will not wait millions of years until Mother Nature will hand it a functionally better brain…[Humankind] will directly, openly and consciously take part in evolution. Corneliu E. Giurgea In Netflix’ groundbreakingly popular mini-series The Queen’s Gambit, we witness the prodigious performance of…