I still don't see a justification for extrapolating current technology trends, trends only covering a few decades, out to 300 years hence.
Would a person living toward the tail end of the transition from the Bronze Age to the Iron Age (when iron weapons were strengthened with newer forging techniques), be out of line for supposing that, whatever the future held, it would NOT be one of armies fighting wars with bronze swords?
How do you justify your assumption that technological trends can be linearly extrapolated out that far?
This is a nuclear move Pavonis.
A large part of the Treknology game is based on extrapolation. The game is to look at Trek, compare it to what we know (including technological and historical trends) about the world, and use that as a way to govern inferences about the goodness of fit between fictional Trek and our as-of-yet-unrealized-future.
If you want to seriously maintain this claim, then you are basically arguing that the subforum is unjustified. In a sense, of course, any super-serious discussion of fictional technology threatens ridiculousness if not insanity, but we should note that what I am doing is not unique. If you seriously stand by your objection, then you should either be making it in all the Trek subforum threads... ...or perhaps you shouldn't be in this subforum at all (as it has an unjustified purpose).
Let's take this seriously. Let's say that no one in 2012 can reasonably extrapolate to claims about future technologies. We might hit peak oil, after all, and find ourselves on horseback again. Or we might have a nuclear war and push technology back to the stone age. Or we might create sentient pen caps in the next three years. I mean, who knows for sure,
right? If so, we really can't say anything about Treknology. As you said, there could always be an odd reason as to why a seemingly out of place technology would find its place on a Starship. Those doors, for all we know, could be made of hardened sugar.
So, why doesn't Bones recommend lasik surgery instead of Retinax V? Under the reality criterion (if we allow for extrapolation), it seems highly unlikely that Kirk would be limited to glasses.
Why wouldn't Bones recommend something more convenient that glasses? If, however, the future is sacrosanct and unknowable, all we can do is shrug and suppose there must have been some good reason -- the game is over and we are reduced to being passive observers.
Then again, we aren't talking about an actual world. If Star Trek really were our future, then we might justifiably get in a huff about all this. But Trek is a fiction which is itself a mere extrapolation. Trek assumed, for example, that computers would get smaller and more powerful and that personal communication devices would be wireless and have long range. How could the writers know that? Weren't they as unjustified as the rest of us?
If we keep things in perspective, then we realize that we aren't reading sacred scripture. Star Trek is not a religious prophesy which we are testing. It is not a revelation of the future which was made in the past. Rather the Treknology game is one of comparing one guess about the future against our own best guess about the future. Since we are in the future (relative to the writers), we have a leg up. We are better positioned to make judgments. Additionally, there are more fans the writers. And we have more time to think things through. The writer is not an engineer, and has to produce scripts in a tight window. Fans, on the other hand, come from all walks of life and have more time to consider the accuracy of guesses.
It's OK to use the reality criterion in a lot of sci fi discussions. I am all for it. Does the film
Sunshine make sense? It's lauded as being very realistic in many ways, but we could reasonably criticize it via extrapolation. You, however, would obliterate this criterion, bringing all of our discussions to a standstill.
But haven't I been arguing against the reality criterion?
My argument is that you reach a point where the fiction lies so far in our past that it is no longer profitable to play the game this way. No one would suppose, for example, that being fired out of a large canon would be a good way for humans to travel to the moon (we've learned about the G-forces necessary to accelerate from a canon fast enough to break Earth's gravity). One of us could go on and on about
implied inertial dampeners in "A Trip to the Moon," but this would be wild speculation that goes beyond the text, beyond what was intended by the author, and beyond what would have been understood by the audience. It would be an ad hoc justificatory anachronism. At a certain point, someone needs to tap us on the shoulder and tell us to let go.
But you would say no before the game could even get started. I would keep the game going.
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EDIT: A Note About the Coming Singularity for All You Biomeat Puppets
Your objection was to linear extrapolation. The curve of modern technology, however, is often curve-linear (e.g., Moore's Law). If Ray Kurzweil is correct, then you are more right than you know about our inability to extrapolate future technologies! Star Trek is in many respects a linear extrapolation to future technologies. Since no one can say what exactly is on the other side of the singularity, we can have no reasonable discussion about Treknology.
In actuality, the singularity hypothesis is not that stark. It proposes a fusion of man and machine and the arrival of machine consciousness, so it does make
some positive claims.
Either way of reading the singularity (either as a true unknown, or as a mostly unknown that follow human-machine fusion and machine life), however, basically makes Star Trek steampunk(ish).
Whatever the future is, it ain't likely to be analogue gauges and portable memory cards the size of a ham sandwich.
What I am saying is, if you want to make the nuclear move, I can adapt to it. I might (then again I might not) have to give up my particular critique, say that analogue gauges have no place on a starship, but consider the outcome! We would not be able to say anything reasonable about the future Trek might inhabit or reflect. ----Game Over---- I, however, could still argue for an alternative criterion that has no pretensions to knowing the actual future.
I would, in effect, be the only game in town.