One of the many great things about this blog is its large readership, which makes it useful to me when I'm asking for outside opinions on some matter about which I've not yet made up my mind. As the publication of Thousand Suns draws near (at last!), I've been spending some time thinking about a couple of the follow-up books I want to write for it over the next year or so. One of them is a compendium of aliens, both intelligent and otherwise. I want a simple one-word title to follow the line name -- like Thousand Suns: Starships or Thousand Suns: Technology -- but I'm torn, because of the plethora of words used in sci-fi to describe the study of alien lifeforms.
So, I've set up a little poll to the left. If you have any opinion on the matter, take the time to vote for your preferred term. If you have a better term than those I put forward in the poll, feel free to make a comment about it below and let me know what term you prefer and why. Likewise, while I recognize that the three terms in the poll all have slightly different technical meanings, I'm treating them more or less interchangeably for present purposes. On the other hand, if you feel strongly that one or more of those terms is somehow inappropriate, feel free to comment about that, too.
Thanks in advance.
So, uh, what's wrong with 'Aliens?'
ReplyDeleteLooks like the Xenos have it so far.
ReplyDeleteNothing's "wrong" with it, except that I didn't want to call it that.
ReplyDeleteThough Xenobiology has a nice cachet, the term used by scientists is exobiology. I also like the translated meaning better: 'external biology' rather than 'biology of the stranger/foreigner'.
ReplyDelete"Xenobiology" has a solid pedigree, being coined, I think, by Heinlein.
ReplyDeleteYeah - Heinlein trumps academia - by a mile. :)
ReplyDelete- Ark
If your other supplements are going to be named stuff like "1k Suns: Starships" or "1k Suns: Technology", then this supplement should be "1k Suns: Aliens".
ReplyDeleteThat being said, within the text of the supplement you could refer to the study of alien lifeforms with a specific name. My preference is "xenobiology". I just don't think that it (or the others) makes a good title.
Verification word: BEERAT. Now there's an interesting alien life form...
"Astrobiology" is definitely the most raygun-retro, if you want that.
ReplyDeleteSince I cross-posted, I'll add that if you *don't* want "Aliens" as the title, you really should change the other potential titles; they don't fit. Or, at least, the "starships" one doesn't. Maybe rename it to "transportation"?
ReplyDeleteNothing's "wrong" with it, except that I didn't want to call it that.
ReplyDeleteWell, if nothing's wrong with it, why didn't you want to call it that? : P
I'd say it depends very much on the distribution of the beings to be described, and whether they're 'alien' just because this is a useful term for us or the reader, or whether they actually will be presented as alien to one or more specific groups within the fiction. For example, if 'exo-', what are they outside? If 'xeno-', foreign to whom?
ReplyDeleteThe term 'biology' could be inappropriate too if one or more beings is not actually biological. If not for that, I'd suggest 'astrobiology' as the best of the bunch, even if it assumes in a similar way to 'exo-' that the viewpoint is not already among the stars - which even to us as planet-bound it is of course - or an omnipresence say. Nor does it extend to the possibility life could be imagined to exist in realms beyond the physical among the stars.
I do like the simple 'lifeforms', although this isn't beyond reproach - is 'life' a relevant term? Would 'form' be suitable for some more indistinct and indeterminate beings?
No surprise I voted 'Other'. Maybe 'others'?
"Lifeforms" is an interesting option, but I still want to hear more suggestions.
ReplyDeleteThis is good. Thanks, everyone, for the comments so far; they've proven far more helpful than you know.
I'd say you don't want to use exobiology *because* that's the "correct" term and might imply you'll be all dry and realistic (for certain values of realism, of course). Xenobiology has an appropriate SF pedigree while still sounding properly scientific.
ReplyDeleteI agree with Zak that astrobiology sounds all retro so avoid it unless you want that.
I propose "Biologies"
ReplyDeleteAt the risk of sounding PC, I'd want to avoid the implication that all life forms not native to Earth are fundamentally similar to each other, and defined first and foremost by their difference from the Earth standard.
I was going to suggest simply "Biology," my theory being the study of living things is simply the study of living things and someone who studies birds and fungi would be the first person to ask about wookies.
But then I thought that each instance of non-Earth life could be so different, that it would form its own discipline: Earth Biology, Martian Biology, Saturnine Biology, etc. A survey of all of these would be Biologies.
I voted "Xenobiology" just because it sounded the most fitting.
ReplyDeleteHere's another suggestion: "Thousand Suns: Sophonts"?
Maybe 'us'?
ReplyDeleteI know it isn't what you want to call the book, but I think "Aliens" is right. If the other books are "Starships", "Technology", etc. "Aliens" is the natural sounding counterpart.
ReplyDeleteI was also hoping to find "lifeforms" on the poll.
ReplyDeleteXenology can represent anything alien whether it is biological or totally alien in nature. Think about the Horta in Star Trek or all those energy beings that seem to be everywhere except here.
ReplyDeleteI know it isn't what you want to call the book, but I think "Aliens" is right. If the other books are "Starships", "Technology", etc. "Aliens" is the natural sounding counterpart.
ReplyDeleteI am coming to be convinced of this quite rapidly.
Thanks again, everyone.
I'm with Secret Chipmunk on "xenology," especially if you're going to cover anything more than simple biology (including ecology and/or culture/politics where appropriate.) It sounds like a more macro approach.
ReplyDeleteAlso, I suggest "xeno" as opposed to "exo" because "exo" (like Porky noted) is "outside," where the Greek root "xenos" means "foreign" or simply "strange."
Xenomorphs?
ReplyDeleteAstromorphs?
Instead of "Lifeforms," why not simply "Life?" It seems both more compact and more poetic.
ReplyDeleteFull disclosure: I do not own a copy of, nor have yet played "Thousand Suns."
ReplyDeleteI chose other, because be it xeno-, exo- or astro-, I don't think biology is the draw when it comes to using aliens in a game. From Klingons to Zhodani, Puppeteers to Tynes, what makes aliens interesting and gameable are their personalities and societies. Even if such behavioral quirks are biological in origin, its still the behaviors themselves that matter. "Xenobio" and similar makes me dread empty factoids like such-and-such race being cobalt blooded and so-and-so having a taste for mercury. But call it something like"Xenocultures" and I'd be more interested in giving it a look.
"Lifeforms" goes with "Starships" and "Technology" just as well as "Aliens" does. And it implies "both intelligent and otherwise" better than "Aliens" does, too. So it might be your best choice. But, if you want something even more SFish-sounding than that, then I second Zak's suggestion of "Xenomorphs".
ReplyDeleteIf the book will be a collection of alien lifeforms that you've designed, but won't include a system for designing alien lifeforms, then I wouldn't title it anything with the "-biology" suffix because all those words imply general coverage of the subject, not a collection of specific examples.
I forgot to add:
ReplyDeleteIf the book will cover the subject generally, then I third Secret Chipmunk's suggestion of "Xenology".
Facehuggers, and the Faces they Hug
ReplyDeleteSince that was missing, I went for Exobiology
Astromorphs?
ReplyDeleteRetro and has the useful providence of not immediately calling to mind something else, unlike...
Xenomorphs?
which means 'the alien from Alien' to (I'd guess) a big chunk of the target audience. It also sounds extra-90s.
Any though to Extraterrestrials? Not sure I fully like it, but thought I might throw it out there.
ReplyDeleteBuilding off Brian's suggestion, i like the idea of a series of guidebooks that sound like a series of college texts: 1KS: Biology, 1KS: Technology, 1KS: Geography, etc. Also, Biology would presumably be broad enough a term to encompass non-terrestrial examples of same.
ReplyDeleteBut otherwise :Aliens sounds like a guide to non-human presumably intelligent species. :Xenobiology etc sound like guides to the entire range of lifeforms available in an alien world. (:Astrobiology has the virtue of being a more old-school sounding term.)
I have to agree with LCM. "Life" seems very compact and gets the point across
ReplyDeleteAgreed with everyone above: the natural counterpart of "starships" and "technology" is either "aliens" or "lifeforms".
ReplyDeleteAlso, re "xenobiology" and "exobiology": this term only makes sense if the voice used in the game is humanocentric. I assumed this would be a game where PCs could be other species frmo non-Earth planets, which is why out of the three poll options I went with "astrobiology", which is the one option not defined from the point of view of a single planet or species.
The poll titles all sound like text books, not game books, to me. I don't find any of them compelling.
ReplyDeleteMenagerie
ReplyDeleteThe Xeno Files
ReplyDeleteYou could always make a nod to Pliny the Elder and go with "Thousand Suns: Natural History."
ReplyDeleteCould cover anything you need regarding biology, botany, anthropology (well, xenopology or whatnot)...and be in good company with Pliny.
Although it does make it sound much like a history text.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteI once took an actual course in college called "Bioastronomy". I've always liked that term.
ReplyDeleteIn its absence I went with the contrarian "astrobiology".
I'm also in the Aliens camp, though one could use quotation marks strategically. Compare Thousand Suns: Aliens with Thousand Suns: "Aliens".
ReplyDeleteWhat about "Taxonomy"?
ReplyDeleteOr "Allogenology"?
Or perhaps "Burton's Allegenology" with an unreliable narrator?
How about "Species"?
ReplyDeleteAnother write-in for “Lifeforms,” here.
ReplyDeleteI voted for Xenobiology, but was thinking of twisting it to Xenocopia.
ReplyDeleteThe True and Correct Explication of the CELESTIAL REALM, and the Inhabitants thereof, Together with COPIOUS ILLUSTRATED PLATES.
ReplyDeleteSerious suggestion:
ReplyDeleteEncyclopedia Xenomorphica
(kind of a reference to the Encyclopedia Galactica in the Foundation series).
@formerlawyer:
ReplyDeleteHaving fictional 'sources' might be a good way to give detail to the setting.
Slime As Erotic Symbol In Callestine Poetry, Among the Winged Heathen, Barlowe's 'Guide': History of an Infamous Forgery, and so on.
Lifeforms indeed.
ReplyDeleteOf the various suggestions so far, Lifeforms sounds best to me.
ReplyDelete'Xenolife'?
ReplyDeleteAdd me to the "Aliens" write-in vote.
ReplyDeleteIt fits with the other books, and more importantly, you most probably aren't going to develop a system structure, including constructing a viable taxonomy and determining biological and ecological processes, that make exobiology or xenobiology an appropriate title.
[Which is not to say you won't briefly touch on these matters, just that you won't be developing an organised system of study of them.]
It will instead be a catalogue or gazeteer of aliens, so why not simply call it that?
I would suggest Xenography.
ReplyDeleteI think that "Xenobiology" is good enough, but I suggest "Xenospecies" as another option.
ReplyDeleteCall it Abominations of the True Form, and present it as a translation of a document written by a fallen, xenophobic species.
ReplyDeleteHow about ...
ReplyDeleteThousand Suns: the Others
or ...
ReplyDeleteThousand Suns: Alien Races