Well, 'post-scarcity' doesn't mean 'socialism'.
It doesn't mean "no ownership" either. It means "everyone owns SO MUCH that ownership becomes meaningless".
As for Jake: That was a silly attempt. As I described, outside of the 'post-scarcity-zone' of the Federation a currency is needed, that's why even TOS already had "Federation credits" in place.
As you can see, this is one of the more intriguing aspects of Star Trek. People actually can figure out how it works (just look at Dek' s thoughts on the idea). But then episodes would become a lecture on future economics. And that's frankly not very exciting. If it were in a book, I would like a bit more explanation (if you read a bit of sf literature, you can actually find some interesting visions of moneyless-futures). But for a hour-long adventure show that's asked a bit too much. SOme writers often times seem to stumble on the prime directive , them explaining a moneyless-society leads to stupid episodes like the one with Jake, where they really weren't taking the concept seriously and mocking it.
So yeah, a bit of explanation would be nice. But Kirk and Picard have already plentyfull done that, enough that people can write whole essays about it. Everything more, and it stops becoming a "story, set in the future" and more "my personal politically biased prediction of the future".
You know, Star Trek also has racial equality. Something that still seems to baffle a lot of people nowadays, and I don't really see racism dissapear soon. And I especially don't see how religion could vanish in the near future. Star Trek did both of those things too. Explain that!
It doesn't mean "no ownership" either. It means "everyone owns SO MUCH that ownership becomes meaningless".
As for Jake: That was a silly attempt. As I described, outside of the 'post-scarcity-zone' of the Federation a currency is needed, that's why even TOS already had "Federation credits" in place.
As you can see, this is one of the more intriguing aspects of Star Trek. People actually can figure out how it works (just look at Dek' s thoughts on the idea). But then episodes would become a lecture on future economics. And that's frankly not very exciting. If it were in a book, I would like a bit more explanation (if you read a bit of sf literature, you can actually find some interesting visions of moneyless-futures). But for a hour-long adventure show that's asked a bit too much. SOme writers often times seem to stumble on the prime directive , them explaining a moneyless-society leads to stupid episodes like the one with Jake, where they really weren't taking the concept seriously and mocking it.
So yeah, a bit of explanation would be nice. But Kirk and Picard have already plentyfull done that, enough that people can write whole essays about it. Everything more, and it stops becoming a "story, set in the future" and more "my personal politically biased prediction of the future".
You know, Star Trek also has racial equality. Something that still seems to baffle a lot of people nowadays, and I don't really see racism dissapear soon. And I especially don't see how religion could vanish in the near future. Star Trek did both of those things too. Explain that!