Why would simply having a replicator mean that what comes out of it is at no cost? This is a assumption on your part, not backed up by canon.
This is true. What's canon is that there is no money in the future and that they have 'ended poverty'. I am trying to explain why this would be so.
I have a water faucet in my home, but I pay for the water.
But you
wouldn't if you had a replicator.
The majority of people in America have cars, that doesn't mean that transportation comes at no cost. At minimum, there would be initial purchase price and operating costs of your replicator.
If replicators can make replicators (which they can), then how long do you think it would take for everyone to have a replicator? I'd make `em for my neighbours, for free. You are applying capitalist theory to a system that is explicitly stated as not capitalist.
The chilled air that comes out of my air conditioner cost me money, the food that come out of your replicator costs you money.
That is an assumption on your part, an assumption rooted in your inability to imagine a world without money. Since it's canonically established that there is no money, you need to let that assumption go.
False, value is often base upon a measure of the item's intrinsic value, what it took to place it in your hands.
This is simply not so, and anyone with even a basic grasp of economic theory knows this. There is no such thing as 'intrinsic value'. Money is a shared illusion, an agreement we have come to for our own benefit. It has no value. If I have a bag of flour and you are gluten intolerant, that bag of flour
has no value to you, and I can't sell it to you.
Value is also based upon what you're willing to pay for a item, whether it's scarce or not. We have an abundance of food in America, it still costs money, The lack of scarcity hasn't made it free.
But it has reduced the value, yes? You'd agree that the greater the difference of surplus over demand, the cheaper the price, yes? That is a basic tenement of economic theory. Now make the surplus equal 'infinity'. If the surplus is infinity, the value is
zero.
No, Star Trek has never shown power being derived from a replicator.
No, but we do see the replicator consuming items and then producing items, and Picard does state that in his century matter and energy are interchangeable. When a replicator eats up your dirty dishes, where does the energy go? It can't be destroyed (energy cannot be destroyed- it can only change forms), so the only other explanation is that it is stored somewhere for later use.
If this were so, there would be no need for antimatter to be carried aboard the Enterprise, nor for the Enterprise to have a reactor/warpcore. DS9 also wouldn't require all those fusion reactors.
The antimatter reactor is necessary for the immense power required to travel at warp speed.
Always? No, and this is the big problem with your entire theory. You will never get everyone to agree to anything, no matter how important. But let assume that at one point in time you have a planetary culture that will whole-heartedly agree to engage in community volunteerism.
Sure. Not hard to imagine, since we have already convinced a large portion of the planet to move from monarchy to democracy. Voyager even gives an approximate date for this transformation:
"When the New World Economy took shape in the late 22nd century and money went the way of the dinosaur, Fort Knox was turned into a museum." - Tom Paris
Again, canon reference- money does not exist in the 23rd century.
In order for your fantasy future society to work over an extended period of time, the culture you've described can never change. Ever. Not even over the course of centuries. Talk to anyone over the age of seventy or eighty and ask them if the culture they live in has change since they were children.
I disagree. I think culture would have more freedom to change if removed from the shackles of money.
The advantage of a market based-monetary economic system is that it been shown over the course of multiple centuries to work. Depressions, wars, plagues, even when capitalism partial collapses, it actual doesn't.
Yeah, I know! I've said repeatedly I think capitalism is grand, and I don't think it's going anywhere, because I don't think replicators will ever be invented because they break several laws of physics, just as transporters and warp drive and holodecks do, and I don't think they will ever be invented, either. But I can't escape the conclusion that if they were invented, money would become valueless. Money already
is valueless, but it's value in our society is weighed against the value of physical things, like gold. When you take away that value, money goes out the window.
I mean Christ, if the transporter was invented you'd basically have the perfect murder weapon, and if holodecks were invented no-one would ever come out of them, but you don't go on and on about how unrealistic those precepts are. The disappearance of money after the creation of the replicator actually
is a realistic consequence, and you can't accept it.
People need a motivation to consistently work, income is one motivation, if you can't live without income, it's a powerful motivation.
Agreed, but we are talking about a world where there is no m money, and you are saying that without it no-one would do anything! I reject that completely. How do you think mankind reached a state where money was even possible?
However if you work only when you choose to, then you will have the option to choose not to. Freewill. In a society without a financial system, no impetus can be offered. Societal pressure doesn't works if the pressure is ignored.
Again, I didn't say work would go unrewarded. Just that money would not be the reward. It's be a pointless reward, since anything I could 'buy' I could just go and get from my replicator.
There is one reference in a TNG movie by Picard, and one reference in a DS9 episode by Jake, and that's it. And in one of those examples, In The Cards, Nog said that Humans had abandoned a currency-based economy.
Gillian Taylor: "Don't tell me they don't use money in the 23rd century,"
Kirk: "Well, we don't."
One of my favorite examples of money in the 24th century is Commander Riker's frequent poker games. As most of you know, you can't play poker without money on the table, you can't play with just colored chips. It doesn't work. All the chips on Riker's table had value, the players made wagers based upon their hands. The one occasion that Picard joined them, one of the players had to stake Picard some money (chips) just so he could play.
As someone who has:
A. Played poker for chips not money and
B. Seen that scene about a billion times
I am going to call you for being totally wrong about this. It would be completely in-character for Riker & friends to play Poker just for chips, just as I play Scrabble 'for the points' (while I agree that Poker is a terrible, useless game if you don't play for money- but you don't actually have to play for money). When Picard comes to join their game no-one mentions money, a stake, having to owe him, anything- they just give him the chips without comment. This actually implies there is no money being exchanged and that anyone who shows up just gets an allotted amount of chips. Which makes sense, since it's repeatedly stated that there is no money in the 24th century!