Any author who tries to put a cautionary tale in a Fantasy novel is out of his mind, as the entire point of a cautionary tale is to say "Beware, reader! This might actually happen!" which is quite impossible to pull off in Fantasy, as any non-child will tell you. I think you're confusing the cautionary tale with mere exploration of human fallibility and/or the inclusion of moralising in an author's writing, which isn't restricted to Fantasy, Sci-Fi or any particular genre.Joccaren said:Ok, I'm sorry, but this all sounds like "Fantasy can't happen, therefore its less fanboyish and 'Squee, this is awesome'-ish than Sci-Fi", which is false.
Ignoring the fact that other types of Sci-Fi exist, and it seems to be mostly you putting the mindset of "The future will be THIS awesome" sort of mindset onto them, the exact same stuff happens in Fantasy. Same cautionary tales. Same "Wouldn't it be awesome if this could happen?" and same throwing magic into the real world sort of shit.
Sci-fi also isn't more possible to happen than Fantasy, as your last paragraph would imply. FTL - no. Pulse lasers than move so slow you can see them? No. Time travel? No.
Yeah, "If we're wrong about the laws of Physics then that could happen" is true, however if we're wrong about the laws of Physics Magic and shit could happen too, it just depends on what we're wrong about.
You're justification for your opinion doesn't really cut it for me. Seems more like your problem of looking to the future enthusiastically, and the extent of what you're willing to believe, than something wrong with Sci-Fi as a genre. Could be misinterpretting something though, but that's what it comes across as.
As for the rest, I saw it mentioned before that there's a difference between "soft" sci-fi and "hard" sci-fi. My first flavour ("The future will be so awesome!") is hard sci-fi, which is considered to be highly plausible extrapolating from current science. The third flavour (throwing random things and seeing what sticks) is soft sci-fi, and while it's definitely better than the smugness of hard sci-fi, it's still unbearable fanboyish in its overuse of "coolness" while still trying to sell the idea of "in a galaxy far away, in the distant future" that sci-fi as a whole is so fond of.
Bottom line is, I don't like people who are certain of the future, much less those who are overly enthusiastic about their views. It stinks of insufferable, smug arrogance. This, of course, isn't reserved to sci-fi authors either. I loathe "high literature" because of its smugness and pretentiousness as well. I cannot stand authors who believe themselves to be geniuses or who think themselves superior to others.