YARN
Fleet Captain
But you are the only one who seems to think there is a problem. Everyone else is perfectly happy talking about Star Trek as we always have done, but you have created a problem (which is a minor issue) and then offered... I don't know what.
Well, there are PROBLEMS (You have advanced brain cancer) and there are problems (Hmmm, analogue gauges on a 22nd century space ship?).
Others have agreed with me that Trek is dated technologically. As time goes, by it will only become more dated. Judge 19th century science fiction by the Reality Criterion and prepare to put Verne and Wells in the dustbin. One person in this forum has even contended that 2001 is now hopelessly out of date.
I am simply suggesting a different way to play the game here. I am not trying to eliminate anything, but am attempting to start a discussion about how else we might proceed. I don't need to establish that there is any horribly pressing problem to be solved, only that it may be advantageous (comparatively) in some circumstances to play the game a different way.
The whole conceit is that we use creativity and conjecture to try and fit Star Trek into our reality.
Must it be "The whole conceit"? Is there no other way to play the game?
Reality Criterion = fitting Trek into our reality. An explanation succeeds if it can be fitted to the world as we know it today.
Here are two different criteria we might use:
Local Science Criterion: An explanation succeeds if it fits the picture of science which predominated at the time of the creation of the artwork.
Local Pop-Cultural Criterion: An explanation succeeds if it fits with the pop-cultural understanding of science which predominated at the time of the creation of the artwork.
In terms of interpretation, the local science criterion is more accurate than the reality criterion -- there is no way that writers in the 1960s would have been thinking of Tachyons or Dark Matter, so it does not make sense to assume that we should read such science (and attendant technologies) into the text.
In terms of evaluation, my criteria are more forgiving. That is, we don't wind up judging TOS or TNG negatively for failing to have anticipated science/technology X.
I really don't understand what a successful outcome would be for you.
A successful result for me is simply to discuss an idea.
What is a successful result for you when you post a thread?