Sorry, that's still daydreaming. Making people financially equal will do nothing to make them equal in other ways. People will still differ in their skills, physical prowess, mental acuity, etc. Governments may be reduced to management of the masses and the resources they need—without all the excess baggage we tolerate today. And there will always be "glass is half empty" people who focus more on what they don't have, rather than cultivating what they do have.
Even if medical science can invent ways to equalize physical and mental excellence, someone will always feel he can design a better treatment. (Which produces a generation of Khan Noonian Singhs.) "But such science is based on facts."
Now you're really dreaming.
Interesting idea, if (somehow) you could keep it verbal only.I always wanted a racist day (hear me out). It's a day where everyone can pour out any racist statement, stereotypical quip, or bigoted remark as much as they want. It'll help get it all out of people's systems and I'll bet the younger generation will find it the most stupid, which will in turn help cure the world of racism.
That was only a part of it, it was also Cochrane's engine that caused people to look outside themselves, it expanded their "world view."But First Contact then jumped in and claimed that being visited by aliens from another planet is what motivated humans to clean up their act.
Interesting idea, if (somehow) you could keep it verbal only.I always wanted a racist day (hear me out). It's a day where everyone can pour out any racist statement, stereotypical quip, or bigoted remark as much as they want. It'll help get it all out of people's systems and I'll bet the younger generation will find it the most stupid, which will in turn help cure the world of racism.
That was only a part of it, it was also Cochrane's engine that caused people to look outside themselves, it expanded their "world view."But First Contact then jumped in and claimed that being visited by aliens from another planet is what motivated humans to clean up their act.
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No. Humans are too hardwired to a strong degree of savagery/territoriality. Can never happen; at least not for any extended period of time. Some people may suppress their territoriality for some time, but, eventually, enough people will have enough strong territorial impulses to collapse whatever "utopian" system has been created. We're fierce, killer animals first, our neo-cortex (evolutionary overshoot at its finest) second. Kirk's "we're not going to kill--today" speech in A Taste of Armageddon is fantastic, and I love this episode, but the next and logical question is never posed: what about tomorrow? And the day after that? Eventually, given enough time, our animal selves will win out.
No. Humans are too hardwired to a strong degree of savagery/territoriality. Can never happen; at least not for any extended period of time. Some people may suppress their territoriality for some time, but, eventually, enough people will have enough strong territorial impulses to collapse whatever "utopian" system has been created. We're fierce, killer animals first, our neo-cortex (evolutionary overshoot at its finest) second. Kirk's "we're not going to kill--today" speech in A Taste of Armageddon is fantastic, and I love this episode, but the next and logical question is never posed: what about tomorrow? And the day after that? Eventually, given enough time, our animal selves will win out.
Many things happen nowadays that never happened before. We don't know what humankind can or cannot do in the long run.
No. Humans are too hardwired to a strong degree of savagery/territoriality. ... Eventually, given enough time, our animal selves will win out.
No. Humans are too hardwired to a strong degree of savagery/territoriality. ... Eventually, given enough time, our animal selves will win out.
I think it's a bit of a logical fallacy to say that because the aggressive instinct is there, inevitably it WILL be acted on. That's like saying that, in their lifetime, every person WILL commit murder.
No. Humans are too hardwired to a strong degree of savagery/territoriality. Can never happen; at least not for any extended period of time. Some people may suppress their territoriality for some time, but, eventually, enough people will have enough strong territorial impulses to collapse whatever "utopian" system has been created. We're fierce, killer animals first, our neo-cortex (evolutionary overshoot at its finest) second.
No. Humans are too hardwired to a strong degree of savagery/territoriality. ... Eventually, given enough time, our animal selves will win out.
I think it's a bit of a logical fallacy to say that because the aggressive instinct is there, inevitably it WILL be acted on. That's like saying that, in their lifetime, every person WILL commit murder.
Roddenberry was purported to be a humanist, so he had a lot of ideas, some pretty far out, about utopia.
No. Humans are too hardwired to a strong degree of savagery/territoriality. ... Eventually, given enough time, our animal selves will win out.
I think it's a bit of a logical fallacy to say that because the aggressive instinct is there, inevitably it WILL be acted on. That's like saying that, in their lifetime, every person WILL commit murder.
Yes, that's exactly that. And what's more it's denying that on average people are less brutal now than they were millenia ago. For example there was a time when human sacrifice was fairly common in human cultures. Now it's a thing of the past. Who's to say that something practiced today, won't become obsolete in the future?
You keep forgetting that theses sorts of things were COMMON FARE back then. Not extremisms, COMMON! You can see them in every culture, not just in one in several hundreds.I think it's a bit of a logical fallacy to say that because the aggressive instinct is there, inevitably it WILL be acted on. That's like saying that, in their lifetime, every person WILL commit murder.
Yes, that's exactly that. And what's more it's denying that on average people are less brutal now than they were millenia ago. For example there was a time when human sacrifice was fairly common in human cultures. Now it's a thing of the past. Who's to say that something practiced today, won't become obsolete in the future?
Yes, ISIS is so much less brutal now than, say, the Incas were.
You keep forgetting that theses sorts of things were COMMON FARE back then. Not extremisms, COMMON! You can see them in every culture, not just in one in several hundreds.Yes, that's exactly that. And what's more it's denying that on average people are less brutal now than they were millenia ago. For example there was a time when human sacrifice was fairly common in human cultures. Now it's a thing of the past. Who's to say that something practiced today, won't become obsolete in the future?
Yes, ISIS is so much less brutal now than, say, the Incas were.
That's what evolution does. It turns the exceptional into the normative and vice versa.
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