Fantasy: January 11, 2023 Issue [#11745]
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 This week: Predictions
  Edited by: Robert Waltz Author IconMail Icon
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Table of Contents

1. About this Newsletter
2. A Word from our Sponsor
3. Letter from the Editor
4. Editor's Picks
5. A Word from Writing.Com
6. Ask & Answer
7. Removal instructions

About This Newsletter

Every generation witnesses atrocities. People in power try to fulfill prophecy.
         —Nas

Indeed, the hereditary gift of prophecy will go to the grave with me.
         —Nostradamus

I don't make mistakes. I make prophecies which immediately turn out to be wrong.
         —Murray Walker


Word from our sponsor

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Letter from the editor

It is traditional at the beginning of a calendar year for people to make predictions for the coming year.

Well, I'm not going to do that here, except to say that I don't see that tradition ending anytime soon. What I am going to do is bang on about predictions in general.

Call them what you like: predictions, prophecies, prognostications, precognitions, other "p" words... some people claim to know the future, and others claim to know enough about the present and past to extrapolate into the future.

There are, of course, some things that can be predicted. For example, we know that there will be a total solar eclipse visible along a path over parts of Mexico, the continental US, and Canada next year (2024). Thanks to the awesome power of mathematics, we know to the second when, at any given spot along the path, the eclipse will begin and end, and how long totality will last. Orbital mechanics, at least over human timescales, is highly deterministic and can be predicted with great accuracy.

On the other hand, no one knows if it'll rain, snow, or be sunny where you live a month from now. Well, unless you live in the desert, in which case the prediction is probably "sun," but even that is subject to some uncertainty.

When it comes to human behavior, things get even more murky.

But that doesn't stop us from wanting to know the future, or, at the very least, believing that we want to know the future. And predictions are part of many a Fantasy story—in case you were wondering how I was going to relate this topic to the newsletter theme.

Whether it's the perennial "child of prophecy" or "chosen one" tropes, or some seer predicting a character's future, you see it a great deal in fantasy, and to a lesser extent in science fiction. Maybe a kid is born under a certain astrological configuration that makes her destined for greatness, or a fortune-telling session sets up the plot or conflict. It can be a cliché, but such tropes can also be handled in a way that subverts them.

As a writer, you can decide whether the prophecy comes true, or gets avoided, or seems to get avoided while still fitting the prophecy through some twist of language or circumstance. In the actual world that we inhabit, no one (that we know of) has any special power to predict the future; any alignment with actual events as they unfold is coincidental. For example, if I said, "this year, the stock market will crash," and it happens to crash before the end of the year, I'll look like a prophet—whereas really, I was just exercising my usual pessimism.

Arguably worse still is the self-fulfilling prophecy, where someone works to make something happen that is in accordance with the prediction.

We tend to remember the guesses that come true, and forget the ones that don't. Periodically, I'll see a story about science fiction writers who "successfully predicted the future." Well, no. Someone read about some technological idea some science fiction writer had, and made it happen. Like the flip-phones that looked an awful lot like original Star Trek communicators. Would they have happened if Star Trek hadn't embedded itself in the public consciousness? Maybe, maybe not. But since it did, it looked like a prophecy, but it was really nerds who saw Star Trek and paid homage to it with the invention of the flip-phone.

And that's one of the major issues with predictions: if someone really does have special inside information about the future, that alone could change the future and negate the prediction. It can lead to paradox. To use my stock market crash example, if I know for sure that the market will crash, I'd short all the stocks I could. Which would signal the markets that something's going on, and might even avert the crash, so I didn't know it for sure after all, did I?

If a prediction is vague enough, it can apply to many different outcomes. The prophecies of Nostradamus fall into this category. If it's specific enough, it negates itself, causing a paradox. Handle them with care in your stories, and don't believe the ones you see on the internet.


Editor's Picks

Some fantasy for your reading pleasure:

 Dialogue between a Priest and a Magician Open in new Window. [ASR]
two men of magic meet upon the road
by DyrHearte writes Author Icon


 Memory Device Open in new Window. [E]
A device to help memory…perhaps.
by Jatog the Green Author Icon


 When Fairies Dance Open in new Window. [E]
The Story of the beginnings of the Strawberry Moon Fairly Land Fest.
by K. Sullivan Pierce Author Icon


 Mere Mortals Open in new Window. [E]
Someday we will all be faced with a choice we may not want to make.
by Michael Hite Author Icon


 Fountain of Youth Open in new Window. [18+]
Everything has a price
by Prosperous Snow celebrating Author Icon


 Frozen Open in new Window. [E]
Reminiscing about someone special, the memories shared, Frozen on my mind
by Marlon Dacosta Author Icon


Georgie Flies Open in new Window. [ASR]
A boy buys a dream, for only a quarter.
by CeruleanSon Author Icon


 Haunted Dreams Open in new Window. [13+]
A man haunted, a woman from his past, a horror waiting...
by Lonewulf Author Icon

 
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Ask & Answer

A quick note before I get into comments from my December newsletter:

I appreciate all feedback, but if you want your comment to be featured here in this section, please use the form below. *Down* I consider emails to be private and won't share them without permission. Even if you tell me in the email that it's okay to share, there's no guarantee I'll remember several weeks later. Thanks!


Last time, in "ChocolateOpen in new Window., I talked about delicious cocoa.

NaNoNette Author Icon: The effects of chocolate were known not only to Aztecs, but to ancient Greeks also. They knew how powerful the stuff is as they called it "Theobroma cacao" which means "food for the Gods."

         For a while, there was a hypothesis making the rounds that the Atlantis legends were based on trade/communication between the cultures of the Mediterranean and the Olmecs (mostly in the Yucatan area, so they had chocolate); and when Thera erupted, the method of travel was lost. In this story, it turned into legends of Atlantis itself being lost. I don't think there's any evidence to support this, and as I understand it, it's been discounted, but it's certainly worthwhile fodder for Fantasy stories.


Nobody’s Home Author Icon: Of course I love chocolate - and you don't have to sacrifice your principles for it. Purchase chocolate brands marked "Fair Trade" and you'll be on a much better track than when you buy cheaper waxy chocolates made by huge corps. I get mine at our local co-op, but you can get it at upscale grocery stores or online. Enjoy your chocolate!

         Also, they tend to taste better. Not sure if it's because they have fewer extra ingredients, or because the tears of the oppressed don't make very good flavoring agents.


So that's it for me for January! See you next month. Until then,

DREAM ON!!!



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