Photon said:
Barder?
mrs260 said:
I figure it's first come, first serve. If humans work to better themselves and the rest of humanity, who needs money? Joseph cooks for the pleasure and fulfillment of cooking tasty dishes for his customers, just as his customers do their jobs in order to serve their society and fulfill their own potential.
I suspect there's a rough barter system in place for limited items and services--if there's more demand than there is supply, it's up to the supplier to decide how he wants to prioritize his customers. Hence the occasional question and answer among 24th century Trek characters, "How did you get ____?" / "I know the supplier/I traded something/It's a secret."
I know nothing about actual economics, which is probably about what the Trek writers know.Confident that I probably wouldn't screw up any more than they, I once wrote a fairly detailed hypothesis about 24th century Earth economics based on the idea that Earth has overcome the problem of supplying basic needs, and that "demand" is a matter of wants rather than needs. (Nobody will go hungry if Joseph runs out of table space; they just won't get the pleasure of eating his cooking instead of their own or their replicator's.)
With what we know of Joseph, I suspect he gives priority to regulars, and presumably to people who book in advance. Maybe he gives preference also to his food suppliers, if they're also individually run--fishers, farmers.
Exactly.Photon said:
mrs260 said:
I figure it's first come, first serve. If humans work to better themselves and the rest of humanity, who needs money? Joseph cooks for the pleasure and fulfillment of cooking tasty dishes for his customers, just as his customers do their jobs in order to serve their society and fulfill their own potential.
I suspect there's a rough barter system in place for limited items and services--if there's more demand than there is supply, it's up to the supplier to decide how he wants to prioritize his customers. Hence the occasional question and answer among 24th century Trek characters, "How did you get ____?" / "I know the supplier/I traded something/It's a secret."
I know nothing about actual economics, which is probably about what the Trek writers know.Confident that I probably wouldn't screw up any more than they, I once wrote a fairly detailed hypothesis about 24th century Earth economics based on the idea that Earth has overcome the problem of supplying basic needs, and that "demand" is a matter of wants rather than needs. (Nobody will go hungry if Joseph runs out of table space; they just won't get the pleasure of eating his cooking instead of their own or their replicator's.)
With what we know of Joseph, I suspect he gives priority to regulars, and presumably to people who book in advance. Maybe he gives preference also to his food suppliers, if they're also individually run--fishers, farmers.
Appreciate it. Not buying it, but 'preciate it.
Tour of Duty for one. O'Brian can't leave until his time is up, if not he'd be considered AWOL and given a dishonoable discharge. However once he completes his time, he is free to persue any avenue of career choices he wants.Tralis said:
The whole self imporvement thing has a few flaws. Human society has a greater need for some sorts of people than others. Starfleet officers, doctors, researchers, scientists, and engineers all have use that is needed to society. What prevents someone like O'Brien from deciding he can't take fighting in the Dominion War, what he really wants to do is write erotic hololiterature? What prevents the man who is studying medicine in hopes of researching a cure for a horrible disease from dropping out and making ceramics? On a Starship we clearly see a lack of egalitarian resource distribution: The Captain's quarters are far larger than lower ranked officers.
exodus said:
Within the Federation you don't buy anything, people work for appreciation.
If money doesn't exist within Federation worlds, what other way would there be? Picard stated repeatedly how nobody works anymore for material gain.trash80 said:
exodus said:
Within the Federation you don't buy anything, people work for appreciation.
I think that can work for some jobs, especially those with a creative end result but not for others.
mrs260 said:
I figure it's first come, first serve. If humans work to better themselves and the rest of humanity, who needs money? Joseph cooks for the pleasure and fulfillment of cooking tasty dishes for his customers, just as his customers do their jobs in order to serve their society and fulfill their own potential.
I suspect there's a rough barter system in place for limited items and services--if there's more demand than there is supply, it's up to the supplier to decide how he wants to prioritize his customers. Hence the occasional question and answer among 24th century Trek characters, "How did you get ____?" / "I know the supplier/I traded something/It's a secret."
I know nothing about actual economics, which is probably about what the Trek writers know.Confident that I probably wouldn't screw up any more than they, I once wrote a fairly detailed hypothesis about 24th century Earth economics based on the idea that Earth has overcome the problem of supplying basic needs, and that "demand" is a matter of wants rather than needs. (Nobody will go hungry if Joseph runs out of table space; they just won't get the pleasure of eating his cooking instead of their own or their replicator's.)
For the Ferengi and other non-Federation beings and worlds as it's been explained within the shows. For example: DS9 is not a Federation station, so such things as Federation Credit applies in dealing with other alien species that do deal in currency.cwalrus2 said:
When it comes to luxuries like eating at Joseph's, I'm sure there some sort of exchange going on for goods and services provided much like we have now. I think it's been made clear that paper money is obsolete in the Trek uiniverse on Earth, but I think there's still some exchange going on. Why else would there be a need for "Federation Credits."
Trek BBS post of the year so farTralis said:
^
I'd like to point out that making a paradox real turned Janeway into a lizard. Similarly Tuvok has three or four different ages and birthdays. While Voyager is cannon, I have trouble with it being used for evidence for very much.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.