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Cartoonist

(7,309 posts)
Sat Sep 7, 2019, 04:24 PM Sep 2019

Does religion and science fiction mix?

I've read tons of SF in my life. I can recall only minor instances of religion being presented favorably. If a story does involve religion, it is usually in the form of some evil authority.

What are some SF books you've read that have religion as a theme?

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Does religion and science fiction mix? (Original Post) Cartoonist Sep 2019 OP
Frank Herbert's Dune is one neeksgeek Sep 2019 #1
I get the religious trappings Cartoonist Sep 2019 #7
It's been a while since I read it... neeksgeek Sep 2019 #10
The primary religion centers around the Abrahamic God. Act_of_Reparation Sep 2019 #23
You could consider "Speaker for the Dead" to be mostly religious. Igel Sep 2019 #2
I used to like Card Cartoonist Sep 2019 #5
His first book was the only one worth reading. Voltaire2 Sep 2019 #15
Robert Heinlein's Job is one. Onyrleft Sep 2019 #3
Favorable, or a least neutral, example include JackintheGreen Sep 2019 #4
not a book qazplm135 Sep 2019 #6
Does scientology count? Major Nikon Sep 2019 #8
Not by my definition Cartoonist Sep 2019 #9
So Hindus ain't got no religion? 3Hotdogs Sep 2019 #11
You kidding me? Cartoonist Sep 2019 #12
They also consider all of their gods to just Voltaire2 Sep 2019 #13
That definition would exclude quite a few religions Major Nikon Sep 2019 #14
How do you figure? Cartoonist Sep 2019 #16
Many Native American and indigenous religions are pantheistic Major Nikon Sep 2019 #20
Anthropomorphic pantheism Cartoonist Sep 2019 #22
You can't lump all Native American beliefs together and call them the same Major Nikon Sep 2019 #24
"The Algebraist" and "Surface Detail" by Iain Banks DetlefK Sep 2019 #17
Great writer. Too bad he's gone. Cartoonist Sep 2019 #18
Have you read "The Wasp Factory"? DetlefK Sep 2019 #19
Remember his science fiction was listed as "Iain M. Banks" muriel_volestrangler Sep 2019 #21
There was one movie... man swallowed by whale... guy loses family but gets a new one... JustFiveMoreMinutes Sep 2019 #25
game of theones has several religions rampartc Sep 2019 #26
Chalion series by Lois McMaster Bujold catrose Sep 2019 #27
I think Childhoods End, somewhat captain queeg Sep 2019 #28
Been a long time since I read it Cartoonist Sep 2019 #29
The Doomsday Book by Connie Willis sweetloukillbot Sep 2019 #30
if anyone has ever read.... quickesst Sep 2019 #31

neeksgeek

(1,214 posts)
10. It's been a while since I read it...
Sat Sep 7, 2019, 08:37 PM
Sep 2019

But my impression was that the Fremen (the Zensunni Wanderers) were basically followers of Islam, such as it might be ten thousand years from now. I remember at least one reference to the Creator, and also Shaitan (Satan). There are references to Christians and late in the series, Jews, presumably those people worship the same god they do now. Some of the other factions - the Guild, the Harkonnens - seem mostly to have worshipped power.

Of course when the Fremen refer to The Maker, they mean the giant sandworms.

Act_of_Reparation

(9,116 posts)
23. The primary religion centers around the Abrahamic God.
Mon Sep 9, 2019, 03:11 PM
Sep 2019

The Orange Catholic Bible, the main religious next in the series, combines elements from most of Earth's major religions into something novel.

Igel

(35,274 posts)
2. You could consider "Speaker for the Dead" to be mostly religious.
Sat Sep 7, 2019, 05:14 PM
Sep 2019

SF reflects the writer.

Orson Scott Card is religious; you don't find religion disfavorably displayed, by and large. That goes for the Alvin Maker series, either. It's not a current recognizable religion, to be sure.

I'm not sure what to say about Simmon's Hyperion Cantos with the Shrike and the little cross-shaped resurrection parasites. It sort of takes on the rump Catholic Church at the time, but makes it almost a victim (from what I remember).


It's similar to how political ideologies are portrayed. SF reflects the writer.

Cartoonist

(7,309 posts)
5. I used to like Card
Sat Sep 7, 2019, 05:48 PM
Sep 2019

I like his stories, but not the man.

In Speaker, didn't he have the natives use the Bibles they were given as TP?

He's a Mormon, right? In his book The Lost Boys, he portrays a couple of missionaries as complete loons.

Onyrleft

(344 posts)
3. Robert Heinlein's Job is one.
Sat Sep 7, 2019, 05:16 PM
Sep 2019

I'm not sure exactly what screwed up Orson Scott Card, but I have my suspicions.

JackintheGreen

(2,036 posts)
4. Favorable, or a least neutral, example include
Sat Sep 7, 2019, 05:48 PM
Sep 2019

Mary Doria Russell’s The Sparrow
Miller’s Canticle for Leibowitz
leGuin’s Hainish Cycle (Left Hand of Darkness, for example)
Roger Zelazny’s Lord of Light

And while not a book, how about Star Trek DS9’s portrayal of the Bajoran religion

qazplm135

(7,447 posts)
6. not a book
Sat Sep 7, 2019, 05:54 PM
Sep 2019

but both Deep Space Nine and Battlestar Galactica present religion favorably and enhance the overall story.

3Hotdogs

(12,331 posts)
11. So Hindus ain't got no religion?
Sat Sep 7, 2019, 08:59 PM
Sep 2019

What about the Romans?

Religion: Attempted explanation of the unknown.

Cartoonist

(7,309 posts)
12. You kidding me?
Sat Sep 7, 2019, 09:51 PM
Sep 2019

Hindus hold the record for number of Gods in their pantheon with Rome a close second.

Voltaire2

(12,962 posts)
13. They also consider all of their gods to just
Sat Sep 7, 2019, 10:26 PM
Sep 2019

be different manifestations of the one god Brahman, or at least some Hindus hold this view. There are also Hindu atheists.

Major Nikon

(36,818 posts)
14. That definition would exclude quite a few religions
Sun Sep 8, 2019, 02:43 AM
Sep 2019

Include those of many Native Americans and other indigenous cultures, traditional Chinese, along with various sects of many mainstream religions.

Major Nikon

(36,818 posts)
20. Many Native American and indigenous religions are pantheistic
Sun Sep 8, 2019, 02:47 PM
Sep 2019

And within the realm of many religions you have those who do not subscribe to the idea of a deity.

Cartoonist

(7,309 posts)
22. Anthropomorphic pantheism
Mon Sep 9, 2019, 07:13 AM
Sep 2019

Animal spirits, water spirits, the Great Spirit. That's not pantheism. As soon as you assign a personality, a myth is born.

As for those religions that don't have a deity, perhaps they are more a philosophy, like Buddhism.

I am no expert on world religions, especially Asian religions. Name one that you think is a religion that does not meet my definition. I'll look it up and get back to you.

Major Nikon

(36,818 posts)
24. You can't lump all Native American beliefs together and call them the same
Mon Sep 9, 2019, 05:55 PM
Sep 2019

The term "Great Spirit" is not as cut and dried as you make it out to be and in many, if not most cases absolutely describes a non-anthropomorphic force of nature. There was a huge diverse set of views which spans the spectrum of monotheistic, polytheistic, pantheistic, and combinations of two or all of these things at different times.

Possibly the biggest examples are the Lakota and Algonquian tribes who at times subscribed to a spirit force found in all things. As is the case with most indigenous tribes that lacked writing, oral history changed the nature of their beliefs over time.

Just because a religion incorporates mythology, doesn't make the religion deistic. Many Native American tribes knew there myths were just that. They were used as teaching tools to describe their views of spiritual forces which they well understood were incomprehensible.

Buddhism most certainly includes non-deistic beliefs. Although gods were believed to exists, they were viewed as non-omnipotent. Religion includes philosophy by most definitions. It's not really a case of them being more like a philosophy, they all are a philosophy.

DetlefK

(16,423 posts)
17. "The Algebraist" and "Surface Detail" by Iain Banks
Sun Sep 8, 2019, 11:43 AM
Sep 2019
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Algebraist

This novel is about a treasure-hunt for the original script of a theater-play "The Algebraist" that is said to contain a secret. The novel mentions a nihilistic religion that states that reality is just a simulation, so nothing really matters.



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surface_Detail

This novel deals with the question whether it's ethical to create an artificial hell for tormenting evil-doers and it deals with the question what concepts like soul and individuality mean when it's possible to copy and download a person's mind.

Cartoonist

(7,309 posts)
18. Great writer. Too bad he's gone.
Sun Sep 8, 2019, 11:50 AM
Sep 2019

I was really into him and thought I read all his work. What you describe does not sound familiar. I must have missed those.

DetlefK

(16,423 posts)
19. Have you read "The Wasp Factory"?
Sun Sep 8, 2019, 12:15 PM
Sep 2019

It's about a teenager in an insulated coastal village in Scotland. He was maimed as a small child in an accident and has unbeknownst to his single father turned into a psychopath who kills other children.

The novel explores this alternate interpretation of reality he has created for himself, his emotional trauma and his investigation what really happened to him back then.

It's a dark, depressing read, but it's also fascinating in a morbid way, because Banks clearly put a lot of thought into how an insane person thinks.

muriel_volestrangler

(101,271 posts)
21. Remember his science fiction was listed as "Iain M. Banks"
Sun Sep 8, 2019, 04:42 PM
Sep 2019

I can recommend those 2 above - and all his science fiction (most of the rest of his fiction too, though one or two I'm not that keen on).

JustFiveMoreMinutes

(2,133 posts)
25. There was one movie... man swallowed by whale... guy loses family but gets a new one...
Mon Sep 9, 2019, 11:44 PM
Sep 2019

... wicked cities destroyed by fire.. and some global water something or other....

I can't remember the name of the movie right now tho.. shoot!

rampartc

(5,387 posts)
26. game of theones has several religions
Tue Sep 10, 2019, 12:17 AM
Sep 2019

the seven and the fire god among them.

s r Delaney has 2 religions in "stars in my pocket" the family and the sygn.

captain queeg

(10,097 posts)
28. I think Childhoods End, somewhat
Tue Sep 10, 2019, 01:10 AM
Sep 2019

At least it gives some tie-in to religious beliefs, or alternate explanations of where they come from. It’s been a long time, but the overlords and the overmind (I think that was the term?)

sweetloukillbot

(10,972 posts)
30. The Doomsday Book by Connie Willis
Tue Sep 10, 2019, 02:48 AM
Sep 2019

A lot of her stuff had mainline Protestant trappings, but Doomsday Book is pretty explicit in it's Faith.

quickesst

(6,280 posts)
31. if anyone has ever read....
Tue Sep 10, 2019, 02:59 AM
Sep 2019

The Masters of Solitude
Novel by Marvin Kaye and Parke Godwin

..... they will be familiar with the Kriss, a post apocalyptic abomination of Christianity. The only novel I have ever read that made me feel as though I was part of the main characters quest.

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