Haruhi wrote:Zwinmar wrote:How to beat a jedi with a lightsaber and hes blocking your blaster? Pick up your scatter gun. They can't reflect lead back at you and they will have a hell of a time trying to dodge that area attack.
Then the Jedi carry a lightshield and with telekinesis bring back the projectiles to shooters.
Jedi do not possess such shields, and have never shown a telekinetic ability to stop a salvo of bullets or shrapnel on film.
Haruhi wrote:Simon_Jester wrote:If this is true, then "fantasy" is a useless word and means nothing, we might as well just copy-paste the word "fiction" every time we say "fantasy."
No, that is not fantasy fiction series Sherlock Holmes, something that could happen but we know that has not happened. Science fiction is fantasy because we do not know if it could happen.
Simon_Jester wrote:The laws of nature don't really care about whether an object has one 'piece' or many. Atoms are atoms, inter-atomic forces are inter-atomic forces. At the basic level, the only reason some "pieces" aren't part of a single object and others are is because the atoms in the separate "pieces" don't have bonds. Heck, sometimes you can just leave objects touching one another and they'll spontaneously form one "piece," because the atoms at the surface DID form bonds.
You assume a form of mechanicism; I do not.
The second reply here is literally gibberish.
The first makes little if any more sense.
You are speaking the English language. In English, "fantasy" refers to a specific type of fiction. It does not refer to ALL fiction. And it does not refer to every piece of fiction that has even one part you don't think could happen.
So either:
1) Recognize that it is dishonest to call just any story 'fantasy,' and to claim that you can ignore physics whenever you want because 'science fiction is a subtype of fantasy...' OR...
2) Stop pretending that you speak English well enough to hold an adult-level conversation on science fiction in it. Either learn what the words mean, or find another language in which they mean what you think they mean.