One of the more telling moments of TNG was First Contact, in which Picard speaks of the Federation's "evolved sensibility". No-one watching can take him seriously, and that's the point:
I just listened to a clip of it-- he does seem to contradict himself while saying all of this. Yet at the same time, he really does seem to believe it.
It's called "cognitive dissonance."
I think the point is that just because everyone's basic needs are taken care of doesn't mean the citizens all become perfect.
True, Trek has never really explained the behavior part. It always described humans changing for the better by referring to the elimination of poverty.
Maybe that's a basic assumption.
But how do you get from poverty is eliminated to 'we judge no one by outward appearances anymore?'
Well, in part by recognizing that racism is an ideological system created as a means of class warfare. People are not inherently racist; what happened, historically, was that the wealthy white elite recognized that the oppressed lower white tiers of society might make common cause with oppressed blacks, and so sought to instill into those whites feelings of alienation from and superiority to blacks. By elevating those whites slightly above blacks in the class system, and by creating these racial animosities, the white elite could therefore "divide and conquer;" by keeping the oppressed classes hostile to one-another through the ideological system called racism, their domination was secured.
In a classless society, a lot of the driving forces behind racist ideologies collapse. That doesn't mean racism would disappear immediately, but it does mean that the driving mechanisms are gone.
A number of different characters has referred to earth as a paradise, in different contexts.That's a ridiculous leap to make. You're taking a character who is speaking in a very figurative, emotive way in order to construct rhetorical justifications for militarism and authoritarianism
Yes, and they were all speaking metaphorically. People like to call the United States the "land of the free," but that doesn't mean there are no prisoners or no oppressed people.
Consider that earth has weather modification systems, (and other things) it would probably be easy to create lush landscapes-to the point of shaping the environment around them.
I really think that's a stretch. For one thing, you're talking about the sort of interference in the natural ecosystem that would likely result in cataclysmic damage to the environment. There's just no way to control such a complex system without destabilizing the whole thing. The weather modification network is probably there to do things like make sure tornadoes don't form over downtown Chicago, not to literally control the entire natural environment.
Combine it with the little or no crime aspect, no money needed, food is free, everyone is basically happy, no sexism, no racism, no bigotry, there's freedom, virtually no illnesses, and all the technological goodies, that's a good argument that humans at least think they live in Utopia.
I think that 24th Century Humans are very aware that they live in a society that has solved many of the social problems that vexed their ancestors. I think some tend to take that and apply it as a form of blind patriotism -- the "Rah rah rah, we're ever so evolved, my goodness we rock" ethnocentric types. Riker in "The Last Outpost" is a prime example. Others, such as Sisko, take a more skeptical view towards how much more evolved Humanity truly is and how "perfect" Earth actually is. So it seems like there's a lot of argument over how much of a "paradise" Earth is and over how "evolved" Humanity is -- just like today, there's a lot of argument over just whether or not the United States is a truly just and free country.
Frankly, I'd be willing to bet that there's some Federation equivalent to The Nation or Mother Jones, still banging away at their 24th Century keyboards, arguing that the Federation still has major flaws that need to be fixed. As well there should be -- a society that becomes too complacent about whether or not it lives up to its principles is a society that's doomed to start violating them.
Extraordinary? I disagree, if anything the claim of survival subsequent to death is quite common amongst Humans, and is hardly either uncommon or unusual.Making the claim that personal existence lasts beyond one's death is an extraordinary thing to claim ...
You're playing a word game and it's not cute.
Sonak is very clearly and obviously using the word "extraordinary" in the sense of "violating the laws of physics as they are currently understood and lacking in empirical support," not in the sense of "commonly believed by many people."
Belief in an afterlife may well be common, but this does not mean that it is not an extraordinary claim, nor does it mean that it is supported by empirical evidence.
NDE may be able to least strongly suggest there might be something else.
Considering that so-called "near-death experiences" seem to mirror the well-established effects of oxygen deprivation on the brain, and that the supernatural figures identified in them seem to vary according to the culture into which the individual so having the experience was raised, I'm fairly skeptical of this claim.
Hell, the very second episode, "Where No Man Has Gone Before," establishes widespread Human prejudice against telepaths.
I think it was a desire not to end up like the Valiant that was motivating everyone there instead of a prejudice against telepaths
I suppose that's a valid interpretation, but Dehner's dialogue to me seemed to be implying a more generalized fear of and prejudice against telepathic Humans.
You mean like they did in TNG's "Journey's End?"The Feds want to forcefully remove a peaceful colony while allied with a questionable power..
To be fair in "Journey's End' it was a federation colony not a planet populated by non-federation members, and the feds left the colonists alone for the most part when they ultimately decided to stay.
Absolutely! Which goes to my point: The Federation has progressed beyond any modern society. It is free of poverty, of major disease, of hunger, of want, of class, of racism, of sexism, etc. But it's not perfect. What it is, however, is, it's a society that's dedicated to its ideals of liberty and egalitarianism, and when abuses occur, it tends to correct them. Which is far, far more than modern societies can say most of the time.