Hubris Rising: When Science Fiction Starts Reading Like a Policy Brief

a sign that reads we can just imagine

When I released Synthetic Eden last month, I thought I was publishing a science fiction novel. Turns out, I was writing a policy memo in disguise.

That first book — the story of scientists escaping an engineered ecological collapse — hit a nerve because it sounded uncomfortably plausible. Readers told me it didn’t feel like the future; it felt like a Tuesday.

That’s where the Echoes of Tomorrow project began — not as entertainment, but as an experiment. What if fiction could do what white papers c...

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Published on October 10, 2025 01:48
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