Apology for bumping, but this thread touched on an issue that is near and somewhat dear to me.
I'm currently in the process of writing a book. It will, of course, be horrible, emo, and many other shades of unreadable which should demand that I should be hung by the neck until dead, or alteast reasonably dead-ish. However, I must pose a question.
If no one has ever read 'the Chariots of the Gods,' or seen Battlestar Gallactica or Babylon Five, the basic premise of the story I'm working on, which probably wouldn't be discovered in the first book (I like to dash peoples' hopes once they'd had a chance to grow emotionally attached to the thing) is as follows:
Humanity did not begin on Earth. Earth is a created thing. Humanity was a vastly older race that, towards the 'end' of its life, grew rather eccentric. Earth was created as a plaything by Humans whose technology had progressed to the level that it was, literally, magic. (Almost) every god that enters into human history was one of the members of this original human stock, manipulating humans as children might manipulate a dolls in a doll house. Eventually, sometime around 700 AD, the Gods, like children playing Sim City on the SNES, get bored, and leave the game running while they turn their attention elsewhere. Islam would have been the last of the 'divinely inspired' religions until recent times.
Basically, and I know I've said that already, the Gods have decided to leave the world alone for a bit, to let it grow on its own, curious to see what would happen and who would get the greatest number of followers
a la Job: A Comedy of Justice by Heinlein
They returned in the early 20th century, and, while not supposed to meddle, some of them did. (Eris, And the Jewish God, whom for my purposes is seperate from the Christian God, among others.)
The plot of the story would revolve around the 'return' of the Gods: 'Magic' and Miracles start to reappear in the world, centered around different people whom the Gods choose, those few who are still interested in the experiment, followers to be their champions in a sudden death game of religion. The basis for all sorts of magic and miracles revealed would be technology, like the Technomages in Babylon 5. A technology sufficiently advanced to be indistinguishable from Magic. Nanites that infect the body that can be mentally controlled to create elaborate effects, creating energy from direct conversion of matter to energy, for an example, among other things. Technology that essentially would make a person a God.
The climax, would, of course, be a 'Second Coming,' where the world is at war, and the Chosen of their Gods are heading for a showdown, and suddenly it's revealed to them, and the world, not the truth of the matter, but that _ALL_ religions/gods predating around 700 AD or so are real and correct in that they are true, and can offer a path to salvation, and then that would be where it ends, with the world dumbfounded, faith in many shattere,d and the general chaos ensuing.
And I apologise for all that preamble, but I felt it was the shortest way of asking the following question and getting an answer:
Given that for atleast the first book (if I ever manage to write it), and probably one or two more, the characters (and the readers) would not know that the work was Sci-Fi, that everything was not caused by magic in the normal sense but by 'magical' technology, would that count as Sci-Fi or Fantasy? Or Fantasy up until it was discovered, and then following that, works be classified as Sci-Fi?
Or does it even matter? Dune is pretty much both at the same time.