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I'm just a ("shit happens so deal with it") realistic-optimist, typical-pisces-starsign dreamer. No crying because my pal "unfriended" me on Facebook here.I'm a special snowflake.![]()
I'm just a ("shit happens so deal with it") realistic-optimist, typical-pisces-starsign dreamer. No crying because my pal "unfriended" me on Facebook here.I'm a special snowflake.![]()
Warp drive. Transporters. Replicators. They might never get out of hypothetical. And I've a feeling there are quite a few gaps in the hypothesis.
Already touched upon this in some other thread, basically the premise of Belters relies on a vision of the future we had in 1920's, during the height of the industrial era, it no longer applies. There are not going to be any human asteroid miners. The Expanse is set in a distant future but somehow with pre-WW2 technology. Makes less sense than a series of well known movies set "Long, long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away"Please explain
To be honest, with so much modern sci-fi shows and movies so intent on trying to be realistic, Star Trek would work best if it didn't worry about realism. That would be fresh and inventive in the modern world. And since realism never has been Trek's strong suit anyway, all is good. Also, it works just fine for Star Wars.
I have to strongly disagree with your assessment that The Expanse is NOT science fiction. The TV show seems (so far) to be faithful to the book series of the same name, and those books are widely acclaimed by many in the science fiction literary community (the first book won a Hugo award for best science fiction novel).
I think the premise of The Expanse makes sense, and I enjoy the both TV series and the book series. The TV show It isn't really that complicated so far, and is a good example of what I call "Literary Science Fiction" (in the style of Asimov, Clarke, Heinlein, Bova, Niven, etc)
The Expanse (TV Show) In a nutshell so far:
There are political tensions between Earth and the independent republic of Mars (former Earth colony). Some of the tensions are due to Mars wanting to flex its independence. There is also a third group of "Belters" who are basically miners of the asteroid belts, from which Earth and Mars get many of their resources. The Belters don't feel any allegiance to either Earth or Mars (whom the Belters disparagingly call "The Inners"), and Earth and Mars have a very low regard for the actual people who make up "The Belters" (even though they need the resources). A subgroup known as the "OPA" commits acts of terrorism on the Inners on behalf of the Belters, spurned by this low regard the Inners have for Belters.
So there is the setting -- and the players -- for the conflicts that arise in our solar system that serve as the backdrop for the story....
....Enter onto this stage/backdrop the "Protomolecule". The Protomolecule is an alien entity from outside the solar system (the first evidence of non-Earth life), but is mostly unknown to anyone else in the solar system -- other than a corporation ("Protogen") who discovered it and is secretly trying to study it, mainly for self-serving profit-making reasons.
Things go wrong during Protegen's study of the Protomelocule on an asteroid base (Eros), killing all of the Belters on that asteroid, and both Earth and Mars (having no knowlegde of the Protomolecule) fear the other had some involvement in those deaths via a weapon of some sort -- or both fear rhe OPA maybe was involved. Then (through a series of events covered in the TV show and book that I'll skip over for the sake of being concise), the Protomolecule begins to show signs of sentience, and sends Eros on a collision course with Earth -- but instead of hitting Earth, the sentience is convinced to crash on Venus instead. Of course Earth (again, having no knowledge of the Protomolecule) thinks that somehow Mars was involved in potentially wiping out Earth with an asteroid, so tensions are raised even higher.
Both Earth and Mars are interested in taking a closer look at the impact site on Venus, and when they do they begin to see weird things (as a result, unbeknownst to them, of the Protomolecule and its apparent sentience)
We the audience see all of this happening (for the most part) through the eyes of the 4-person crew of the ship The Rocinante, who are an assemblage of two Earthers, a Martian, and a former Belter who feel no real loyalty to any particular government, and act independently from any government/group. The crew of the Rocinante is gaining an understanding of what this Protomolecule really is, but Earth, Mars, and the Belters/OPA do not have any knowledge of it...YET.
That was the first season-and-a-half of the TV show, and generally the first book (Leviathan Wakes). The rest of the 2nd TV season (and beyond) will begin to show us what's happening on Venus with the Protomolecule, plus add a few more layers to the Earth-Mars-Belter tensions/conflict. I suppose the rest of the 2nd TV season and the 3rd TV season will cover the events in the 2nd book of "The Expanse" book series titled Caliban's War.
Trek is a vision of the future based on the 1960s. Most of the technology that's comparable is due to engineers purposely trying to make things they saw on Star Trek.
I'm not sure why you are fixating on the Belters' operations to represent your dismissal of the entire story of The Expanse book series and TV show as "not science fiction, but fantasy".This would have been a compelling premise if we were from 1920's, however today, after the publication of such works as Abundance by Peter Diamandis, and the extensive decade-long research and planning conducted by Asteroid Mining corporations such as Deep Space Industries and Planetary Resources, and the emerging post-industrial economics of ubiquitous fully automated 3D manufacturing, - the premise of human laborers being deemed cheap labor and used for asteroid mining is pretty laughable. What happens in the future to all these emerging technologies that we go back to early 20th century manual labor concepts for space exploration?
I can see the appeal of it as a light fantasy show, although the gritty/dark ambiance kind of ruins that as well, but it's hardly a sci fi show.
But from my place as a scientist, what is most remarkable about the show's development is its realism. More than any other TV space-themed show, it gets the science right.
I'm not sure why you are fixating on the Belters' operations to represent your dismissal of the entire story of The Expanse book series and TV show as "not science fiction, but fantasy".
To me, the story is more about the "what if" ideas explored in a political climate that includes Mars wanting to flex its muscles to show its independence and show that it is no longer reliant on Mother Earth, and whats to prove it is no longer under Earth;s thumb.
...And then there's the whole idea of the Protomolecule and the alien sentience that grows out of it as it begins to spread through our solar system.
I mean, it goes without saying that the story of the Protomolecule is the stuff of science fiction, but even the idea of a solar-system wide conflict arising from a former Mars colony struggling to assert its independence from Earth is still the kind of stuff that is not uncommon in some of the best literary science fiction.
Sure -- maybe in reality, future asteroid mining will be done mostly by robots rather than people. However, this isn't reality, but science fiction, and science fiction sometimes has real laborors handling mining operations, even on Star Trek -- such as the Zenite Miners on Ardana (TOS: The Cloud Minders) or the dilithium mines of Rura Penthe (ST VI: TUC).
The Expanse is a retrospective view that looks at the future from the point of view of the height of the industrial revolution era, with class struggles and the need for an exploited proletariat.
I don't think the Earth-Mars conflict, the Protomolecule (with many revelations of the Protomolecule still upcoming in the TV series, if they continue to faithfully follow the books), the quest for Mars to be able to get out from the shadow of Earth enough to begin terraforming operations, farming on Ganymede, and all of the other things we see on The Expanse are examples of the ideas from the Industrial Revolution era.
In fact, I'm not even convinced that there will NOT be a denigrated and disparaged working class of people 200 years in the future. Human nature tells me there will always be a class of people whom others look down upon and step upon. I don't think it is unrealistic at all for a science fiction story set in the future to in part explore the denigration of the labor class.
It seems your definition of what constitutes "Science Fiction" is different than the rest of the world, and even the science fiction literary community. That's fine -- you can personally define it any way you want, but it really isn't realistic to say that The Expanse is not science fiction. The world of science fiction calls it science fiction, even if you don't. You could say that you don't think a dog-show-poodle is a dog because real dogs don't have their coats cut like a show-poodle --- but no matter how you personally feel about it, the dog world would still consider that poodle to be a dog....It's like people in the 19th century were imagining that the amount of horse manure on the streets of NYC and London is going make habitation impossible by the year 2000...
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