Publication Type:
Journal ArticleSource:
Public Understanding of Science, Volume Vol 15, Issue No. 2 (2006)URL:
http://www.tara.tcd.ie/bitstream/handle/2262/51818/PEER_stage2_10.1177%252F0963662506059441.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=yKeywords:
cybernetics, cybersemiotics, information, semioticsAbstract:
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	This article analyzes the use of fictionalization in popular science communication</div>
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	as an answer to changing demands for science communication in the</div>
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	mass media. It concludes that a new genre—Ficta—arose especially with the</div>
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	work of Michael Crichton. The Ficta novel is a fiction novel based on a real</div>
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	scientific problem, often one that can have or already does have serious</div>
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	consequences for our culture or civilization. The Ficta novel is a new way for</div>
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	the entertainment society to reflect on scientific theories, their consequences</div>
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	and meaning. Jurassic Park is chosen for an in-depth analysis in order to</div>
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	bring out the essential characteristics of Ficta, showing how its reflections on</div>
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	complexity, fractals, self-reference, non-linearity and unpredictability in</div>
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	science transform our view of scientific knowledge as being the tool for</div>
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	deterministic control into a second order reflection on complexity and the</div>
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	limits of control and predictability.</div>
