• Mossy Feathers (They/Them)@pawb.social
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      15 hours ago

      Fantasy is almost alway low-tech, Sci-fi is almost always high-tech. As such, fantasy tech levels could be compared to starting low and going high, while sci-fi starts high and then goes low as it tries to explain the concepts it’s introducing.

    • magnetosphere@fedia.io
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      9 hours ago

      I can’t tell if she’s making an analogy, or merely making a joke about remembering the difference between two similar things. Stalactites form on the ceiling of a cave, while stalag_mites_ form on the floor.

      • EvilFonzy@lemmy.world
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        14 hours ago

        I believe I am currently on those drugs! To me, this means that sci-fi is usually written starting from the universe and then focuses down to the individual, but fantasy is written from the individual up to the world. Sci-fi has more of a universe building focus and fantasy has more of a personal and character development focus.

    • DarkCloud@lemmy.world
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      15 hours ago

      Because in the classical Jungian style of analysis, imagery of the basement of a childhood home was a revisiting of the past.

      Likewise “up from the floor” indicates ancients coming up from caves, ancient monsters to be slain, underground dungeons. The primitive unchained and revisited.

      …and using Freud’s principle of the inversion; down from the ceiling is indicative of from the future.

      Prometheanism, featuring stories of Science only taking us so far before we fall from the ceiling, or rather it chaotically falls on us.

      The idea that a return to primative barbarism and violence can also come from above, from technology, from the future unknown, from advanced beings, complex plans, or outter space.

      So whether it’s up from the floor (ancient past) or down from the ceiling (unknown future) - it’s coming for us, with risks and dangers we’re not ready for…

      …or so the stories go.