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Fantasy and science fiction are both involved in the process of innovation in techno-scientific societies. Long regarded as a hindrance to rationality, and to science, science fiction has become the object of praise in recent decades. Innovative organizations use science fiction to stimulate the creativity of their teams, and more and more entrepreneurs are using its influence to develop innovation. Scientific practice relies in part on an imaginary dimension. The mapping of the technical imagination of science fiction has become an important strategic issue, as has its patentability. The conquest of space, the construction of cyberspace and virtual reality, biotechnologies and nanotechnologies are all at the center of futuristic fictions that participate in scientific speeches and discoveries.
Auteur
Thomas Michaud is the author of Innovation, Between Science and Science Fiction, published by Wiley.
Contenu
Contents
Foreword ix
Introduction xvii
Chapter 1. The Growth of the Imagination in Industrial Societies 1
1.1. A short history of science fiction 1
1.1.1. From Frankenstein to The Island of Doctor Moreau 1
1.1.2. Jules Verne, the founding father of science fiction 3
1.1.3. Albert Robida, a visionary in the shadow of Jules Verne 6
1.1.4. Hugo Gernsback, from fictional invention to innovation 8
1.1.5. Hard science fiction 10
1.1.6. The cyberpunk movement 12
1.1.7. The biopunk movement 16
1.1.8. A map of utopic technologies 18
1.2. The imagination, a cognitive barrier useful for innovation 20
1.3. The organizations' use of science fiction 21
1.3.1. Design fiction and the popularization of technological imagination 21
1.3.2. Science fiction prototyping, a method to innovate 24
1.3.3. Science fiction and the identity of engineering students 27
1.3.4. The filter-philter theory 28
1.3.5. Institutional science fiction 29
1.3.6. Future Visions: Microsoft's science fiction 33
1.3.7. China's interest in science fiction and innovation 44
1.3.8. Forecasting and institutional science fiction 47
1.4. The psychology of organizations and science fiction 51
1.4.1. Normal, subversive or pathological imagination 51
1.4.2. Stimulating creativity with the imagination 54
1.4.3. Psychiatry and science fiction 56
1.4.4. Freudo-Lacanianism and science fiction 57
1.5. Should we organize a patenting system for utopic technologies? 59
Chapter 2. Technological Ideologies and Utopias 67
2.1. The space industry and technological utopias 68
2.1.1. Imagining the human colonization of Mars 68
2.1.2. Terraforming Mars, a great project that remains fiction 77
2.1.3. The colonization of the universe, the future of humankind? 79
2.1.4. Space imagination in Lucien Boia and the ESA's ITSF report 81
2.2. Transhumanism and science fiction 84
2.3. Science fiction and nanotechnologies 90
2.4. Accelerationism for a critical use of science fiction 95
2.5. From technological fiction to innovation 96
2.6. Imagining futures, at risk of the Cassandra syndrome 104
Chapter 3. Science, the Imagination and Innovation 109
3.1. The serious global dangers tackled by science fiction 109
3.2. The great steps in the history of technologies since the end of the 19th Century 116
3.3. Economic cycles and science fiction 121
3.4. Theories on innovation and theories on the imagination 124
3.4.1. Performative imagination and the creation of cyberspace 133
3.4.2. From science fiction to techno-scientific innovations: virtual reality headsets 134
3.4.3. The imagination before, together with and after science 135
3.4.4. The hypothesis of a basic imagination at the root of science 136
3.4.5. From the prophetic unconscious to the technological imagination 137
3.4.6. Historical dynamics and technological utopianism 138
Conclusion 141
Bibliography 149
Index 169