Beautifully Written Fantasy & Science Fiction discussion

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The Left Hand of Darkness
The Left Hand of Darkness
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What planet am I on???
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This is my first jaunt in Le Guin's Hainish Cycle. I found it interesting to learn that in this universe, humankind didn't originate on Earth. This is another one of those world-building nits I like to pick. I wonder if she ever explains how humankind propagated throughout the galaxy, and how she reconciles evolution on Earth.

The "super-advanced aliens spread humanity" trope is really heavily used in space operas, I think because it is one of the only ways to semi-plausibly explain the presence of humans/humanoids on planets that earthlings had never contacted before.
The drawback, that it is incompatible with what we know of evolution (despite the mountains of evidence showing otherwise, humans are not related to apes?), only seems relevant if you're particularly concerned with making sure your science fiction is "hard". Le Guin's never claimed to write hard sci-fi so this trope doesn't bother me in her books. For someone like Larry Niven on the other hand, who uses the same trope yet he's marketed as being hard sci-fi, it bothers me quite a bit more.


That's probably why it popped into my head :P
I'd love for someone to go through ST and pick out all the little plot points like that, working out the ultimate implications. Trying to marry it all together might be a challenge. There's an interesting tension between cohesive world building and awesome plot in ST.
Did anybody else get confused by this? I think it was right at the beginning when Ai talks about how hot it is and that he(she?) is dressed too warmly. We get a description of temperatures on Winter, and I think maybe I assumed that Ai had just come from Winter, and was dressed for weather there. Probably just careless reading on my part.