I just read the description, and now I must go watch this movie.
I would love to see the outer space re-imagining of that storyline. Wow, that would be perfect.
You won't regret it

I just read the description, and now I must go watch this movie.
I would love to see the outer space re-imagining of that storyline. Wow, that would be perfect.
Yes, you must. Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World is probably one of the best historical movies ever made. It even has it's own proxy Charles Darwin.I just read the description, and now I must go watch this movie.
How far in to the future are you looking at? Is the primary drive of the Second Federation (trademark pending) exploration now that they are redeveloping their boundaries?Well we created a FB group to hash out some ideas. A few notions we've agreed upon is that we're dealing with far fewer alien cultures that are anywhere near our level of technology at a given time -- although a few are so far advanced even communication is very, very tricky (shades of the First Ones on Babylon 5 or the Organians, the "ascended" races in the Earthclan books, etc.). Also we've worked out a (very) general timeline that stretches far enough into the future for the "Federation" to evolve into an Empire, then fall, then with time the rise of a second "Federation."
The initial Era--in which we try to stick as close as possible to extrapolated science--has planet Earth suffering a series of ecological disasters, forcing industry and as much of the population as can be managed into space, with the postulated "warp drive" allowing interstellar colonization.
Sounds like a fun discussion. But, it's all a matter of what the focus is for the story and were the world is going.We are focusing right now on the first two "eras" dubbed "exploration" and "federation." Their exact lengths (other than at least a couple of centuries) have not yet been worked out. Everyone is welcome to join in and offer their ideas. Different folks have approached this from various sources, although so far there are only about four out of ten who really do much. We'd all love more participation.
Regardless of how large the galaxy is, and how many stars there are, if you make it too big it can become unweildy in terms of story telling and character development. So, the first question I would ask if how big do you want the member count to be?Keep in mind of course the galaxy is huuuuuuuuugggge. Current estimates are something like 200 billion stars. Cut that number in half for binary systems (not really accurate but close enough for jazz). So 100 billion systems. Assume you were sending a fleet of 100,000 starships with the express purpose of visiting every single system for one day. How would it take? Thousands and thousands and thousands of years--proving you were never interrupted and all you did was visit for one 24-hour day.
Transhuman and other such developments of different populations on other colony worlds is something that fascinates me. I would be curious to explore different aspects, technological adaptations for different planets, cultural differences that might emerge, etc.The galaxy is indeed huge, but it is scientifically unlikely that most of those star systems are naturally inhabitable. It's more likely what many of those systems will have to be terraformed, or settled using pressure domes filled with breathable atmosphere. In some cases, colonists may even have to tunnel miles below the surface of the planet to protect themselves from heat, radiation or meteor bombardment.
Thus, a "federation" would probably be made up of mostly humanoid races, but not because aliens are mostly humanoid, but because those races would be transhuman offshoots of humanity that have adapted to their respective colony worlds and developed their own languages, culture, technology and forms of government. As we expand away from Earth, we BECOME the aliens.
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