Science fiction: Difference between revisions

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'''Science fiction''' is a [[genre]] of story telling setting out alternatives to what is currently considered [[science|scientifically]] possible or creating extrapolations from present-day knowledge. It is generally set in the future and often in non-Terrestrial locales. It is found in [[short story|short stories]], [[novel|novels]], and [[film|motion picture]] form, and also on [[television]] and [[radio]]. Science fiction is generally considered to have been introduced in the nineteenth century by authors such as [[Jules Verne]], [[Edgar Allan Poe]] and [[H.G. Wells]], but became more widely popular in the second half of the twentieth century.


'''Science fiction''' is a [[genre]] of story telling setting out alternatives to what is currently considered scientifically possible or creating extrapolations from present-day knowledge . It is generally set in the future and often in non-Terrestial locales. It is found in [[short story|short stories]], [[novel|novels]], and [[film|motion picture]] form. Science fiction is generally considered to have been introduced in the 19th century by authors such as [[Jules Verne]], [[Edgar Allan Poe]], and [[H.G. Wells]] but became more widely popular in the second half of the 20th century.
==See also==
*[[Fiction]]

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Science fiction is a genre of story telling setting out alternatives to what is currently considered scientifically possible or creating extrapolations from present-day knowledge. It is generally set in the future and often in non-Terrestrial locales. It is found in short stories, novels, and motion picture form, and also on television and radio. Science fiction is generally considered to have been introduced in the nineteenth century by authors such as Jules Verne, Edgar Allan Poe and H.G. Wells, but became more widely popular in the second half of the twentieth century.

See also