The Sword and Laser discussion
Looking to create a list of the best Philosophical SF/Fantasy Novels
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I would definitely put the whole Dune series at the top of this list! They get more philosophical as they go on but not everyone finds that to be a good thing :)
Also, the His Dark Materials series maybe?
If you count Life of Pi as fantasy, that's a great one.

https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/1...


I hope you will try out some of those books on my list. I would like to get a book club started as well. Will be looking to start it in Jan 2015. More to come soon.


It was pretty interesting and probably has some nice additions for your list.
Edit: Found the thread.
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...

Such a great series.

Otherwise, off the top of my head, Infinite Jest can be pretty dang philosophical.
Oh, and Samuel Delaney's stuff has got some meat to it, if the S&L pick is anything to go by

1) Dragons Over Spaceships: Fantasy & Science Fiction as Cultural Prostheses http://rsbakker.wordpress.com/essay-a...
In terms of what Heidegger calls the ‘ontological difference,’ science fiction is primarily an ontic discourse, a discourse concerned with beings within the world, whereas fantasy is primarily an ontological one, a discourse concerned with Being itself. What this suggests is that the socio-phenomenological stakes involved in fantasy are more radical than those involved in science fiction. In Adornian terms, science fiction, it could be said, is primarily engaged in the extension of identity thinking, whereas fantasy, through its wilful denial of cognition, points to the ‘messianic moment,’ the necessity of finding some way out of our functional nightmare.
2) Thou Shalt Not Suffer Fantasy http://rsbakker.wordpress.com/essay-a...
If nothing can be more true than the world of God, and the Bible is the living world of God, then the world of the Bible is the truest of worlds. Fantasy worlds, on the other hand, are fantastic because they are the untruest of worlds. Somehow we have reached a point in our cultural evolution where the fundamental structural characteristics belonging to the truest of worlds have transformed into our principle means of identifying the untruest of worlds.
Somehow we have come to a contradiction. What indicates the especially true in a religious context, simultaneously indicates the especially untrue in a literary context. Scripture and fantasy, it seems, occupy two sides of the same impossible coin. For fundamentalists, fantasies are misapprehended scriptures, and for secularists, scriptures are misapprehended fantasies.

Another work I would recommend is God Decays by philosopher Benjamin Cain (also, check out his blog Rants Within the Undead God). This is his self-published debut novel and it's about the zombie apocalypse.
Books mentioned in this topic
God Decays (other topics)Sacrament (other topics)
Everville (other topics)
The Great and Secret Show (other topics)
Imajica (other topics)
More...
1) The Sparrow by Mary Doria Russell
2) The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, the Unbeliever by Stephen R. Donaldson
3) Parable of the Sower/Parable of the Talents by Octavia Butler
4) The Child Goddess by Louise Marley
5) The Chess Garden by Brooks Hansen
6) Islandia by Austin Tappan Wright
7) Litany of the Long Sun/Epiphany of the Long Sunby Gene Wolfe
8) Raising the Stonesby Sheri S. Tepper
9) The Dispossessed by Ursula K. Leguin
10)Captives/Outcasts/Rebels Safe Lands Series by Jill Williamson
That's my list. Any other suggestions?