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| Deep Space Nine What We Left Behind, we will always have here. |
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#1 |
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Captain
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Replicator Economics
With the existance of replicators, shouldn't the entire structure of the economy have to be re-imagined? Why should somebody pay latinum for self sealing stembolts when they can just go to a replicator and make them? They could have had an entire episode detailing how the farengi became a huge economy because with the invention of the replicators they were the first to adapt to the new economic model. Nog guffawed at the idea of trading for land, but in a world with no scarcity, wouldn't land be the most scarce good there is? Wouldn't they market non-replicated goods as 'luxury' items, or maybe even try to sell subscriptions to replicator plans instead of selling physical objects? Like, play five bars of latinum a month and you get to be the first ones to be able to replicate new items. That seems like a major missed opportunity, that instead of trying to imagine a futuristic economy they did a simple word-swap on a modern one. |
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#2 |
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Commander
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Re: Replicator Economics
__________________
"You have been examined. Your ship must be destroyed. We make assumption you have a deity, or deities, or some such beliefs which comfort you. We therefore grant you ten Earth time periods known as minutes to make preparations." |
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#3 |
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Fleet Captain
Location: California
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Re: Replicator Economics
It's hard to understand the 'some things can't be replicated' concept. My theory is, if you can transport it through a transporter, you can also replicate it. |
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#4 | |
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Vice Admiral
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Re: Replicator Economics
Let's say you want one kilogram of antimatter. And you have a replicator connected to a matter/antimatter reactor. How many kilograms of antimatter are you going to "burn" in the m/am reactor to produce one kilogram of antimatter in the replicator. One for one? More? If your using up five or ten kilos of antimatter, to make one kilo in the replicator, then producing the antimatter some other way makes more sense. It's the same way with the stem bolts. Trading the land for the stem bolts is 'cheaper" than paying the price of replicating them. We see people in Star Trek still engaged in mining. So if you need a million tonnes of some metal, it's more desirable to obtain those metals through extracting it from rock, transporting it across interstellar distances, and forming them into a shape --- than having the metal replicated. It's more economical.
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#5 | ||
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Commodore
Location: Terre Haute, IN. USA
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Re: Replicator Economics
__________________
My trip to Mackinac Island last summer |
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#6 |
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Commodore
Location: South Dakota
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Re: Replicator Economics
I imagine those industrial replicators would fabricate large but simple pieces for subsequent assembly. |
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#7 | |
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Commander
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Re: Replicator Economics
To the OP: The economy of DS9 was established before the arrival of the Federation. I think Starfleet brought the replicators and the Replimat with them. |
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#8 |
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Commodore
Location: South Dakota
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Re: Replicator Economics
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#9 |
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Commodore
Location: Across a sea of suns
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Re: Replicator Economics
That's like saying "energy" was a thing of the past. He may have been referring to "currency-based economies" but competition for resources was clearly a 24th century reality. The Barzan wormhole, for example. Stubbs' egg, for example - where the resource was knowledge, and then the right to live in peace. Countless bids for vaccines and weapons. Just a few examples off the top of my head. Economics = the physics of desire. Conservation of energy. Equal and opposite reactions. Economic laws still at work. Still plenty of resources to compete for in the future. Captaincy of a starship, for example. I sometimes wonder about this topic, it is fascinating! For instance, in reality if there were replicators, the first thing people would replicate would be replicator-disrupting devices - and of course, sell the anti-disruption solutions. This question makes me wonder one thing: can the medical industry allow cures for disease?
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Last edited by Triskelion; December 6 2012 at 06:05 AM. |
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#10 | |
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Vice Admiral
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Re: Replicator Economics
Whatever natural resources the Cardassians were extracting from Bajor, the replicators couldn't produce those resources. Not at the same cost, or in the same volume.
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#11 |
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Lieutenant
Location: Windsor, Ontario, Canada
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Re: Replicator Economics
I mean, supposedly, Voyager only had (I think) 53 Photon torpedoes when it arrived in the Delta Quadrant, and they made it sound like they couldn't replace them, even with replicator technology on the ship. Yeah yeah, I know they went through way more than 53 Photon torpedoes in the ship, but I remember it being brought up. I figured a part of the reason was because either A) Photon torpedoes are inherently less reliable, or B) They're unable to replicate some component to the torpedo. |
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#12 | ||
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Admiral
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Re: Replicator Economics
Later in the show, the ship had access to the port facilities of cultures far more advanced than those dominating the Kazon lands. Supposedly, the replicators started working just fine, too. Janeway still kept the "replicator rations" as a disciplinary measure for some time, but it makes sense that the ship would gradually grow more self-sufficient again.
Granted, the Maquis would later go and steal industrial-grade replicators in "For the Cause", suggesting their logistical situation before the theft might have differed from that of Starfleet, which supposedly enjoys regular access to such technology. As for replicated food being inferior to "real", I think it's just empty talk. We never see a character recognize a food for replicated by the taste, after all. Timo Saloniemi |
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#13 |
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Commodore
Location: Across a sea of suns
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Re: Replicator Economics
What to do, what to do.... I know! Traverse the galaxy with what I have in my pocket!
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#14 |
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Fleet Captain
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Re: Replicator Economics
Furthermore replicators are very energy consuming so in terms of mining and farming, if it expends less energy to extract minerals from planetoids and planting crops or growing them in hydroponic facilities, then that's what will happen in such an economy. In any time, place or situation, the means to extract the most resources with the least amount of energy expended will nearly always be chosen. On the subject of latinum, perhaps it can be replicated however replicated latinum does not possess all the qualities of real latinum. Consider synthetic diamonds; yes we can produce them, but synthetic diamonds do not have internal refractive light patterns of real diamonds and such a quality is one which adds considerably to a real diamond's value. So if replicated latinum is not as valuable as real latinum, then real latinum will be used for a) it's appeal (just like our race's fascination with gold and diamonds), and b) it's scarcity thus making it very valuable. Finally replicators don't duplicate objects and materials, they assemble them according to a specific set of programs. This is an important difference because it explains why characters complain about replicated food, or why replicators can't make certain items or complex ones. If a device could perfectly duplicate objects, would that make it a duplicator? |
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#15 | ||
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Vice Admiral
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Re: Replicator Economics
Sounds yummy. The replicator makes a lot of sense under certain conditions. If you're going to be aboard a starship, out in the middle of no-where for years on end, the replicator is better than hauling enough food for everyone aboard the ship. The 1,019 people aboard the Enterprise Dee would eat about one thousand tonnes of food a year, and three quarters of a million liters of fluids. 1 Liter equals 1 Kilogram. The inclusion of a replicator extends a ships range and utility. The same would apply for a space station. But what about people living on a planet? There is evidence that farming does take place, even on high tech Earth. And the harvesting of fish. Do the people of Earth get the majority of their food from replicators? Or from tradition sources?
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