I mean, if enough individuals do it...
And when do you that will actually happen? I don't see it happening in another two or three centuries.
I mean, if enough individuals do it...
They will force the others to conform?I mean, if enough individuals do it...
That’s it. That’s all it’s ever really been.
That and we learned to get along with each other.
I agree that it's not "our" future. I've made that point in a whole lot of other threads... but that's really a separate discussion. To the extent that the producers keep trying (for better or worse) to make it look like it's an extrapolation of something at least resembling our present, it's still a commentary on our present-day problems and the prospects for solving them.Star Trek has been a post-holocaust tale since TOS. SNW and PIC are just filling in the details. TOS had already given minor details about Col Greene and the Eugenics Wars. The VERY FIRST episode of TNG deals with the post-war horrors. Star Trek isn't our future. It never could be. The physics are make believe so it doesn't matter what time it can take place in.
And I feel this is what doomed the franchise in my eyes in the first place. I don't think that humanity, in general, is capable of evolving into a hopeful future or more ideal state. Individuals, yes. But not all of humanity. Certainly not in the space of two hundred to four hundred years.
Again, it's not that humanity was perfect in Trek's future. (Notwithstanding GR's attitude during early TNG.) It certainly still had problems to confront. It's just that they were mostly new problems, because we'd managed to put the old ones behind us... at least at the planetary level.Nor do I think it truly represented humanity having transcended the problems and failings that afflict us today. There was still racism, sexism, greed, violence, etc - all well before First Contact. ... TOS was a relatively optimistic view of humanity's future, compared to other sci fi where we tended to ruin Earth, get taken over by aliens, etc, but it was plain we still had a long way to go as a species. TNG was largely an exaggerated version of "Gene's Vision" as it had evolved since TOS
Are you actually watching modern Trek all the way through or just judging it from a distance?Today's Trek (as with so much of life today) carries the message (at least in the subtext) that we're our own worst enemy, and basically doomed.
To be clear: I'm not saying that Trek's depiction of its own era conveys a sense of doom. On the whole, it's still resolutely idealistic and optimistic.Doomed, eh? A starfarring civilization who is willing to learn, grow and be self-reflective? Doomed strikes me as a bit harsh.
Again, I'm not talking about Trek's depictions of its own era. I agree that those are indeed (largely) very hopeful, and serve as symbolic examples. I'm saying that hopeful future seems far more unreachable than it did in Trek's early decades.Are you actually watching modern Trek all the way through or just judging it from a distance?
In PIC season 2,mortal enemies - the Borg and the Federation - are now partners.
In DSC season 4,the Federation is on a massive comeback after a major disaster, spreading hope and help throughout the galaxy.
I'm in full agreement on this. Both the threat, and the moral obligation. It's certainly a message I try to convey to the students I teach. I'm just discouraged by modern Trek's implicit message that shouldering that moral obligation wouldn't (on its own) actually be enough.And that's where I agree with you in your original post, regarding Trek's basic message: "humanity could and would persevere." But even with your tour through history in your last post, we also see that every generation has to take ownership of the principles and values that lead to progress on every level. In our world today, we see democracy being rolled back and suffering setbacks in nations around the world, for example. It's up to every generation to take up the mantle.
With respect, Star Trek repeatedly stated that we went through at least one more World War, as well as whole populations being bombed out of existence. The fact that they are being more explicit in the history, rather than leaving it as vague is only a feature of it lasting for so long. Had it just been TOS we would still have "WW3/Eugenics Wars" and Kirk's speech about being killers. TI'm saying that Trek's depiction of its past ("our" present and future) no longer conveys any sense, not even implicitly, of how we could credibly get from here to there. It explicitly says we can't get there without miracle technologies and friendly aliens. IOW, those of us stuck in the real world without those things are SOL. That's tonally different from earlier eras of Trek, where the implicit message was that we solved our problems on our own and then ventured out into the stars.
And I believe that humanity is fully capable of miracle technologies as evidenced by the last ten years of technological expansion.It explicitly says we can't get from here to there without miracle technologies and friendly aliens.
I don't think Trek should be taken seriously as it has been. One of the biggest aspects of Trek that annoyed me from TNG forward was the evolution just happened. There was no point A to point B descriptor of how we got there. Humanity just evolved. TOS was at least honest in that we survived and chose to make different priorities, i.e. we're not going to kill, we work together despite differences, not homogenizing them in to a collective whole. It wasn't perfect but there was at least some measure of choice.So another way to look at it is, since there were no Eugenics wars in the 90’s, none of the Trek future events should be taken seriously….as for the premise that humanity will somehow attain world peace, you could take it or leave it.
Yeah, I can't argue with that...As it keeps getting added on it's going to be a little less optimistic because the details of World Wars are understandably not optimistic.
There's miraculous and then there's miraculous. Warp drive ain't happening any time in the foreseeable future, not with the existing laws of physics. Nor transporters. Nor replicators. (And the friendly humanoid aliens aren't in evidence, either.)And I believe that humanity is fully capable of miracle technologies as evidenced by the last ten years of technological expansion.
Hear, hear.To me, this seems like a very solid point about First Contact as the hinge of Trek future history-- being so specific on the cause of humanity’s radical progress was more discouraging than intentionally leaving it mysterious.
I can see where you're coming from there. Trek's past is clearly not our future. But Trek's creative PTB keep trying to make them seem at least like kissing cousins... e.g., with Pike's speechAlso agree with @Vger23 –the original premise of TOS was simply that we didn’t destroy ourselves. So another way to look at it is, since there were no Eugenics wars in the 90’s, none of the Trek future events should be taken seriously….as for the premise that humanity will somehow attain world peace, you could take it or leave it.
Ok. Doesn't change my optimism.There's miraculous and then there's miraculous. Warp drive ain't happening any time in the foreseeable future, not with the existing laws of physics. Nor transporters. Nor replicators. (And the friendly humanoid aliens aren't in evidence, either.)
While I agree, Trek has largely not embraced this approach.IMHO Trek would do better at this point, thematically, to lean into the differences than the similarities.
Just wondered if you'd care to expand on that? I didn't think there was even enough safe drinking water for everyone on earth, for starters.In some ways emerging technology does seem to have put us on the cusp of a "post-scarcity" civilization.
Well, it's undeniably a glass-half-full kind of situation.Just wondered if you'd care to expand on that? I didn't think there was even enough safe drinking water for everyone on earth, for starters.
a quick dig for some stats seemed to paint a pretty optimistic picture
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