Perhaps you'd like to clarify your statement through the lense of my two favourite series, Titan and Vanguard. How do they tell the same exo-political story every time? And what is raygun scifi?Star Trek doesn't dream. It's deteriorated further into raygun sci-fi and tells the same exo-political story over and over.
I've always had the feeling that technology in Star Trek, for pretty much everyone our hero characters interact with, reaches a certain plateau -- and then doesn't go anywhere. There's no real feeling of difference, technologically, between the 22nd, 23rd, and 24th centuries. The difference is one of size. Trip Tucker may not understand Geordi La Forge's engine room intuitively, but I've no doubt he'd be up to speed within a month.I think the original poster was displaying a certain point about how since TOS and TNG debuted not much has come along to advance it. We still fly around in the same ships doing the same things with our same technology.
Humanity...
However, humanity is worth noting for one very important reason. More than any other known species, its history is entirely impossible.
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Anthropologically speaking, it's clear from this evidence what the ultimate fate of humanity should have been. With every society believing itself to be made up of spirits-trapped-in-flesh, from humankind's earliest years there was a clear unconscious desire to leave its collective body behind and achieve a non-corporeal state. On some level all culture conditioned humanity to this idea. Indeed, most of the religious texts produced in this period revolved around the concept of a spiritual Heaven, a place of paradise unburdened by flesh and blood, not a literal prediction of future worlds like the City of the Saved but a self-fulfilling prophecy and a guarantee that the species would one day create such worlds... given the chance.
[SNIP]
By the end of the twentieth century there was sufficient technology on the planet to begin shifting human consciousness into alternative forms; hundreds of millions of humans were already spreading themselves, or at least their information-selves, across the globe on a daily basis; scientific research was mere months away from developing a method of biologically "mainlining" data; and to any anthropologist it would have seemed that humanity was about to reach its crisis point and fulfil its genetic programming, abandoning the biological model forever.
And then, suddenly, everything stopped.
By the early-to-mid twenty-first century, intelligence-form technology was certainly in existence. All humanity needed was the will. But somehow, after millions of years of effort, the will had unexpectedly vanished. On the brink of finding its own personal kind of enlightenment, it was as if the human species has backed down and decided to enter a period of stagnation instead.
The episode about the collapse of warp subspace would be interesting to follow up in a situation centuries hence. What if subspace does collapse and warp drive no longer works? Are there other FTL methods that work? Hyperspace jumps? Wormhole networks? Maybe warp drive is easier to control. Maybe it requires less energy. But it's clearly not the only FTL method in the Star Trek universe, even though everyone uses it.It's always annoyed me that no one's ever come across an alien spiecies that doesn't use warp drive (or a derivative like transwarp or slipstream). No other FTL ideas seem to come up, and we never find a ship at high relativistic sublight speeds on an epic quest between stars.
Imagine trying to communicate with people on such a ship, where time is running at a different rate!
Some of my early Strange New Worlds submissions were science-heavy, because I was heavily influenced by Larry Niven's work. One involved Dyson Trees, another involved high-c kinetic weapons.Don't get me wrong: I know relativity and all that are ignored in TV/film Trek for reasons of simplicity, but novels can get away with going a little deeper.
Good question. Where are the Orions? Where are the Bussard Ramscoops?In other news: Impulse engines are the sublight drive of everyone. Why?
It's always annoyed me that no one's ever come across an alien spiecies that doesn't use warp drive (or a derivative like transwarp or slipstream). No other FTL ideas seem to come up...
and we never find a ship at high relativistic sublight speeds on an epic quest between stars.
Imagine trying to communicate with people on such a ship, where time is running at a different rate!
In other news: Impulse engines are the sublight drive of everyone. Why?
It's always annoyed me that no one's ever come across an alien spiecies that doesn't use warp drive (or a derivative like transwarp or slipstream). No other FTL ideas seem to come up, and we never find a ship at high relativistic sublight speeds on an epic quest between stars.
Imagine trying to communicate with people on such a ship, where time is running at a different rate!
Don't get me wrong: I know relativity and all that are ignored in TV/film Trek for reasons of simplicity, but novels can get away with going a little deeper.
In other news: Impulse engines are the sublight drive of everyone. Why?
As for "Impulse" engines, what about the gravity-based propulsion in Larry Niven's books? You can't tell me that Trek tweak gravity fields to their whim.
Except, as we know in "The nth Degree," warp drive is neither the only way nor the best way, as I talked about here, in this very thread, no less:That's like complaining that every culture in historical fiction uses sails for their ships. Maybe all FTL is warp or warp-like because that's the only way to do it, or the best way.It's always annoyed me that no one's ever come across an alien spiecies that doesn't use warp drive (or a derivative like transwarp or slipstream). No other FTL ideas seem to come up...
Do pay attention, 007.Barclay turned the Enterprise's warp drive into an Asimovian point-to-point hyperspace jump
6) Putting all that together, and indeed using the Caeliar and Christopher's large-scale archaeological descriptions from The Buried Age as well, you can posit that the next steps along the scientific development that most cultures follow are more towards transhumanism and energy-being kinds of things, but that humans philosophically have no desire to go down that path. And, as a result, no one else nearby is either.
It's always annoyed me that no one's ever come across an alien spiecies that doesn't use warp drive (or a derivative like transwarp or slipstream). No other FTL ideas seem to come up...
That's like complaining that every culture in historical fiction uses sails for their ships. Maybe all FTL is warp or warp-like because that's the only way to do it, or the best way.
Then again, "transwarp" means "beyond warp," so it doesn't necessarily refer to a derivative of warp drive. For that matter, quantum slipstream doesn't strike me as a warp derivative. I'd say it's a pretty dissimilar propulsion method, as evidenced by the fact that the slipstream is generated from the deflector dish or equivalent emitter rather than the warp engines.
But anyway, looking at it from a storytelling perspective, it doesn't matter what label you stick on a propulsion method, since they're all just means of getting the characters from place to place. VGR gave us all sorts of gibberish drives like quantum slipstream and coaxial warp and so on, but they were all just plot devices and were never actually explored in any meaningful way. So varying the types of FTL used doesn't really count as a broader approach to SF. Exploring the social or economic or other consequences of FTL could be, though. For instance, if "Force of Nature" and the idea of an environmental cost to warp travel had been developed further.
and we never find a ship at high relativistic sublight speeds on an epic quest between stars.
Imagine trying to communicate with people on such a ship, where time is running at a different rate!
See the Bantam Trek novel The Galactic Whirlpool by David Gerrold.
In other news: Impulse engines are the sublight drive of everyone. Why?
See above re: sails. "Impulse drive" just means a drive that works by impulse, i.e. an impelling force. It's really just a fancy way of saying "rocket" or "thruster." It's a generic label for any reaction-based drive.
War has been a great innovator in human history. Maybe because we haven't seen a lot of wars in Star Trek, we haven't seen much of the technological innovation that war can bring.Technological evolution generally occurs when something upsets the status quo and there becomes a need to reach another status quo, such as the development of the atomic bomb or the space race. Both of which are now readily available to those with the money and the need.
Has that new status quo been reached? The political entities have had their lives almost snuffed out and will undoubtedly enter a new technological arms race to build bigger and better weapons so that doesn't happen again.
^ The point still holds, though. Perhaps that's the only logical way that's energy efficient to move large, heavy objects in space, and races have developed wildly different mechanisms to do so, but all of them still rely on local bending of spacetime so all of them are called "impulse".
It doesn't have to be the name of a specific technology, just a type of thrust. There are a lot of different kinds of rocket engines.
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