Peggy Hollinger The planet Mars as imagined and read by science fiction writer Kim Stanley Robinson. Kim Stanley Robinson ...
The National Interest on MSN
Science Fiction Won’t Kill You, but the Terms of Service Will
From Black Mirror to Her to Cyberpunk 2077, science fiction reveals that our real threat isn’t killer robots—it’s the corporate systems quietly rewriting what it means to be human.
Once, science fiction served as a prophecy of the future. Today, technology is transforming these visions into our lived ...
The No. 1 Blast Furnace - SoReal Science Fiction Paradise covers an area of 22,000 square meters and is jointly developed by ...
The National Interest on MSN
We are Living in Their Science Fiction
We are living in the worlds imagined by Elon Musk and Sam Altman—realities shaped by Foundation, Her, and We Are Legion, ...
The Newark Advocate on MSN
Is time travel possible? Denison University planetarium to host roundtable discussion
The Lisska Center for Intellectual Engagement will host a roundtable discussion on time travel at 4:30 p.m. Nov. 5.
MIT Technology Review’s visuals editor shares the birding app, journaling system, and book series capturing her attention ...
In Wang's imagined future, writing is no longer a spontaneous act of creation but a cultural heritage performance. In this ...
Renowned Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson discusses AI, new technology, science fiction, the scientific method and the ...
Opinion
The National Interest on MSNOpinion
When Science Fiction Collides: Building the Future of Autonomous Systems and AI
As AI and autonomous warfare advance, our future mirrors a collision of Minority Report, Star Wars, The Fifth Element, and Idiocracy—demanding innovation with safeguards and clear global engagement.
Efforts like NASA's Planetary Defense Coordination Office aim to detect and deflect potential threats. This isn't just ...
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