The one where Troi is a four breasted hermaphrodite.
Yes, I read about that. That was disgusting, and I am glad that Gene didn't put that in.
Which version of Gene's Vision are we talking about?
His vision of the future where everyone was a much better person and society and culture was constantly getting better.
And Gene's "vision" was a load of hooey, anyway. It was some self-important philosophy he came up with years after the fact of the original Star Trek, and started promoting on the convention circuit, even though it had nothing to do with Trek in the first place.
Kor
That might be true, but I'd have to research it more. He did say that in the 24th century, there would be no greed and every child would be able to read. This is very much in line with his Progressive Atheist agenda, if you don't mind me talking religion's impact on politics and philosophy. It would have been great to fantasize and hope about, but ultimately, Deep Space Nine is more inline with reality than The Next Generation.
Really, in what way?
I could be wrong about this, but didn't Gene say that he didn't really want character conflict to last beyond an episode and there was no war? It is true that Kirk, Spock and Bones did banter a lot, in a small way. You cut off the portion where I said that it is more around the TNG themes.
Actually DS9 was extremely in character with TOS. There was no real paradise in Kirk's era. Yes they were explorers. But they were also tasked in service to military security and realpolitik. It was a positive vision of the future. But not an ungrounded one.
The more pacifist happy hippy commie utopia Star Trek didn't put in an appearance until TNG. Which yes much of DS9 was a direct critical answer to. Largely by pointing out that you can't escape economics with fairy dust. Some way in some form the bill comes due.
I underlined and bolded the key part of your post that I thought was important.
I view DS9 as a critical essay on Gene's utopia.
Yes, you said it first, but not in this post.
DS9 showed that Trek could be more than just the optimistic bright colours and sterilsed utopia. It could expand into other, dirtier directions. Frankly, that was necessary and doing it on a faraway space station meant you could maintain the bright, sterilsed utopia back on Earth just as Sisko described it. No contradiction there.
The only real contradiction was the economy stuff and all those human beings slogging their guts out in jobs or on planets that previous Trek said they didn't have to do. But it was a small price to pay to push the franchise in a new and interesting direction. You can't stand still with this stuff. Something the new show will hopefully embrace.
That is true and the human characters of Deep Space Nine ran into problems with having no money.
Actually DS9 was extremely in character with TOS. There was no real paradise in Kirk's era. Yes they were explorers. But they were also tasked in service to military security and realpolitik. It was a positive vision of the future. But not an ungrounded one.
The more pacifist happy hippy commie utopia Star Trek didn't put in an appearance until TNG. Which yes much of DS9 was a direct critical answer to. Largely by pointing out that you can't escape economics with fairy dust. Some way in some form the bill comes due.
Okay, cool.