I see no problem with personal faith in Star Trek. The more the merrier, in my opinion.
Everyone is allowed a personal faith except humans it seems. I don't see theocracies existing on Earth any more. Maybe all the religious fundies left Earth and formed their own colony.I see no problem with personal faith in Star Trek. The more the merrier, in my opinion.
I see no problem with personal faith in Star Trek. The more the merrier, in my opinion.
That's highly possible. One aspect that I did like about TOS is that it presented us with the idea of people who just wanted to go out and do their own thing.Everyone is allowed a personal faith except humans it seems. I don't see theocracies existing on Earth any more. Maybe all the religious fundies left Earth and formed their own colony.
Agreed.Religion will not go away in the future. It will be different, but it's core will remain the same. If some people in today's time can still accept witchcraft and other ancient mysticisms then that should tell us there'll still be some form of Judaic belief in our future.
No thanks Serveaux.
Religions can do their own marketing work - they certainly have enough money and power, as well as enough people with a vested interest.
Half of them will be gone or very small faiths (or humanity will have at least changed unpredictably) by the 23rd century if trends carry on in terms of education/rights/conscientiousness and I have no desire to see them shoehorned into Trek on the basis of our current prejudices that they are eternal, rather than the worldly/ephemeral social phenomena they are.
If you want a bazaar scene full of people wearing their various pagentry, someone can write a new franchise in which the rise of education and end of tribalism is less important to the show.
But let Star Trek be Star Trek.
I enjoy it in Star Wars, or Babylon 5, but I have no desire to see it in Star Trek, which is it's own thing.
It would be even more interesting to have human characters whose ancestors are not indigenous to where they were born on Earth to reflect a world where global migration is as normal as moving from one part a city to another.
E.G A brown skinned person with a Mandarin name who is from Shanghai![]()
Religion will not go away in the future. It will be different, but it's core will remain the same. If some people in today's time can still accept witchcraft and other ancient mysticisms then that should tell us there'll still be some form of Judaic belief in our future.
Right now we live in scientifically literate times. We have spacecraft zooming about the solar system and are discovering extraterrestrial planets. Science and knowledge about anything we're curious about is at our fingertips on the internet. Yet a third of Americans still think that orange monstrosity in the white house is a good thing. We should never overestimate ourselves.
It would be even more interesting to have human characters whose ancestors are not indigenous to where they were born on Earth to reflect a world where global migration is as normal as moving from one part a city to another.
E.G A brown skinned person with a Mandarin name who is from Shanghai![]()
People who believe in witchcraft and ancient mysticisms are often considered to be stupid and backward nowadays, out of touch with the modern, scientific world.
Perhaps such a belief system is what Kirk refers to as "The One" in Who Mourns for Adonais.Today I see a new universal faith emerging, a belief in something vague but good I think this emerging faith would be the dominant one in a world such as the one depicted in Star Trek. ...
Frankly, America is an outlier and Americans take religion way (way!) more seriously than westerners in general.Over 90% of Americans believe in a God or Gods and only 3% are positive that there isn't one. This is the reality of our times. Clearly there is a discrepancy between knowledge and beliefs.
Frankly, America is an outlier and Americans take religion way (way!) more seriously than westerners in general.
Percentages of people in European countries who said in 2010 that they "believe there is a God"![]()
Religion is in decline in western countries, this is a fact. It correlates with better education, this is also a fact. Whether this will eventually lead to religion becoming nigh extinct, no one of course can say for sure. It is getting pretty close to that in certain Scandinavian countries already.
As for actual topic, I really find it sad (if quite telling) that how the first response to a post asking for more and non-stereotyped representation of people of middle-eastern descent directly jump to the religion while no such thing was mentioned in the original post.
More to your point, modern migration in the form immigration means that there are all types of people from all types of cultures living in all parts of the world, and that will almost certainly be even more true in the future. The idea that "'region X' will only have peoples of 'ethnicity Y' who all belong to 'culture Z'" will be less of a truism in the future.
I see no problem with personal faith in Star Trek. The more the merrier, in my opinion.
I would like to know what the actual question was that was asked of the people in that poll relative to the question asked in the poll mentioned earlier (the one of which 'Tesophius' said "Over 90% of Americans believe in a God or Gods and only 3% are positive that there isn't one.").Frankly, America is an outlier and Americans take religion way (way!) more seriously than westerners in general.
Percentages of people in European countries who said in 2010 that they "believe there is a God"![]()
Religion is in decline in western countries, this is a fact. It correlates with better education, this is also a fact. Whether this will eventually lead to religion becoming nigh extinct, no one of course can say for sure. It is getting pretty close to that in certain Scandinavian countries already.
As for actual topic, I really find it sad (if quite telling) that how the first response to a post asking for more and non-stereotyped representation of people of middle-eastern descent directly jump to the religion while no such thing was mentioned in the original post.
Frankly, America is an outlier and Americans take religion way (way!) more seriously than westerners in general.
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