Heya.
I'd like to know a few bits about the depiction of human society in Trek, and how, or IF it evolved in any way. Between TOS and TNG are 100 years, yet it doesn't seem people changed at all. Uniforms, yes. Behavior, no. If you look at how our society changed in the last 100 years, language, style, behavior, itsomehow makes not much sense that between TOS and TNG there's no evolution.
And why are there, even after 200 or 300 years of beaming, phasering, warping, replicating, that there are still 60-, 70-year olds who complain about that technology like they were born in 1950 instead or 2250. It's one of those anachronisms I never liked.
Sisko's father for example made no sense, in my opinion. Replicators were probably in regular use when he was still young. Yet he was portrayed like he was someone from 1990 who sees that slowly food gets replaced with some artificial stuff, and not from 2370, where that artificial stuff is as common as sunshine. If you get what I mean.
Was Sisko's father an AMISH of the 24th century?
And then there's Gene Roddenberry's vision of human society. In the foreword to The Motion Picture (the novel), he describes that there are "primitive" humans serving in Starfleet, and that the civilian society is a strange one, where people have love instructors and no last names and the like. So Kirk and the other Starfleet officers were regarded primitive because they still followed tradition like having last names, and because they were not as intelligent as the normal humans.
Is human society divided into traditionalists and, like, MENSA type of people?
And that was in TOS, in the 23rd century. How did that develop until TNG?
Intelligence is another part. How intelligent is the usual human in the 23rd and 24th century? Starfleet officers in the command positions all seem to be experts in quantum physics, chemistry, biology, etc..., and then they are walking libraries, knowing everything about Shakespeare and alien literature and whatever. Are human brains in Trek's 23rd and 24th century capable of so much more than today?
I'd like to know a few bits about the depiction of human society in Trek, and how, or IF it evolved in any way. Between TOS and TNG are 100 years, yet it doesn't seem people changed at all. Uniforms, yes. Behavior, no. If you look at how our society changed in the last 100 years, language, style, behavior, itsomehow makes not much sense that between TOS and TNG there's no evolution.
And why are there, even after 200 or 300 years of beaming, phasering, warping, replicating, that there are still 60-, 70-year olds who complain about that technology like they were born in 1950 instead or 2250. It's one of those anachronisms I never liked.
Sisko's father for example made no sense, in my opinion. Replicators were probably in regular use when he was still young. Yet he was portrayed like he was someone from 1990 who sees that slowly food gets replaced with some artificial stuff, and not from 2370, where that artificial stuff is as common as sunshine. If you get what I mean.
Was Sisko's father an AMISH of the 24th century?
And then there's Gene Roddenberry's vision of human society. In the foreword to The Motion Picture (the novel), he describes that there are "primitive" humans serving in Starfleet, and that the civilian society is a strange one, where people have love instructors and no last names and the like. So Kirk and the other Starfleet officers were regarded primitive because they still followed tradition like having last names, and because they were not as intelligent as the normal humans.
Is human society divided into traditionalists and, like, MENSA type of people?
And that was in TOS, in the 23rd century. How did that develop until TNG?
Intelligence is another part. How intelligent is the usual human in the 23rd and 24th century? Starfleet officers in the command positions all seem to be experts in quantum physics, chemistry, biology, etc..., and then they are walking libraries, knowing everything about Shakespeare and alien literature and whatever. Are human brains in Trek's 23rd and 24th century capable of so much more than today?
The only way I could actually buy that scene would be to take it as Troi either exaggerating in order to impress Mark Twain, or being deluded. I really don't think that there can ever be perfect equality and no problems with distribution of wealth, jobs, social structure, etc. in a society, and anyone who says "we live in a prefect society" is just being deluded and complacent. The moment you say "this is the pinnacle of human society", is the moment you stop striving to do anything better.

They may not be any apparent racism between Star Trek Humans in the 23rd and 24th century, but we've seen plenty of examples of racism between humanoid races, including the Federation ones, in every show and many of the movies. We've even seen many Federation Starfleet officers and crewmembers use racial slurs, express disparaging attitudes and prejudice, and even downright racial hatred - even towards their fellow Federation races - Humans to Vulcans, and Vulcans to Humans. From the "friendly" racist banter between McCoy and Spock, to the more serious moments like Scotty's outburst against Spock in "Day of the Dove", to the downright hatred of Stiles towards Romulans and towards Vulcans and specifically Spock, just because they look similar. The Vulcans themselves have consistently displayed prejudice and disparaging attitudes towards Humans, Romulans and anyone else who they don't deem "logical" enough. (No, you don't even have to get to "Enterprise" or ST09 - it's always been there, starting with TOS.) And how about the racism and hatred many Starfleet Humans and other Starfleet officers have shown, over and over, towards members of the races they were in war or had been in war before - Romulans, Klingons, Cardassians? From Stiles in "Balance of Terror", to everyone in "Day of the Dove" and Undiscovered Country (including, in particular, Kirk, but also some random crewmembers who had no personal reason we knew of to hate the Klingons), to Miles O'Brien and Captain Maxwell's issues with Cardassians, and so on? And that's all without even looking outside of Federation, and seeing all the racism, distrust, xenophobia, colonial attitudes, even genocide between various humanoid races who look very similar and are apparenetly so similar in their DNA that they are able to have children together. Cardassians and Bajorans, Klingons and Cardassians, Romulans and everyone else. And that's just the humanoid races. Plus, before Changelings became the "Founders" and genocidal oppressors, we know that they had been mistreated by "solids" for ages.