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Spoilers Yeah... I give up - Star Trek has abandoned philosophical naturalism - it's depressing/juvenile

The problem with Discovery is that it's abandoned humanism and exploration of humanist philosophical themes.
There is no politics here, no philosophy, no exploration of social issues, at all. They will throw hamfisted attempts at the wokesphere crowd to virtue signal they care about these ideas (constantly mentioning how the mirror universe are racist xenophobes and equality of the federation is good) but there are absolutely zero exploration of these themes, at all. None. It's exactly what it is, shallow pandering to the Social justice crowd on Twitter. It's a trend that is rife through modern pop culture, from Ghost Busters 2016 to Nu-Star Wars, the tedious pretending to be progressive to get brownie points from the liberal media while not actually being progressive, at all.

There is nothing about Gene Roddenberry in Discovery, there is nothing about Star Trek in Discovery.
We have a Star Trek show, being made in 2018, dealing with a WAR and not once have we dealt with a storyline around, Refugees and tensions that arise from mass movement and cultural clash and how a better society would deal with that (European Refugee Crisis), we have not had a storyline deal with, what happens if a enemy gets a super weapon but you can't do anything because acting puts a ally's civilisation at extreme material risk, is it better to attack or try keep a balance or even start reaching out and trying real diplomacy (North Korea), what happens when you have a section of the population reject humanist values and becomes extremely reactionary and violent. Do they have the right to free speech when in fact, their speech is dangerous and directly harms the safety and lives of the people they spout vile vitriol against? (The Alt-Right and "Political Correctness") How about some way exploring the issues of police brutality and violence against a minority?

These are all themes are real Star Trek show would be exploring (From the humanist socialist view point of Roddenberry and not even a liberal centrist viewpoint), but we're not exploring these themes, because Discovery is not Star Trek, nor do the writers care about Star Trek, nor do the audience they are aiming for cares about Star Trek.
Discovery is after the Game of Thrones and Star Wars crowd, it could not give a crap about Trekkies and it's a business sure. But it annoys me that they pretend to care and get all their little shillbots in the media to pretend the reason people don't like this show is because they're just lame reactionary nerds who hate women and minorities and gays, when Discovery is the least progressive Trek show ever made and people are actually crying for a progressive, contemplative show that deals with social issues.

It's 2018, TV NEEDS Star Trek, but sadly what is called Star Trek on TV right now is not it.

This is the best post in the thread. If this was a show dealing with modern issues and war, it would features the Klingons invading a world, and millions of refugees being forced onto Earth, Andor and Vulcan, and how society reacts to it, their different social mores - the Orville has done more in this area.

The issue, other than it's abandonment of naturalism, is, as you say, it's abandonment of humanism.
 
...The characters are all over the place and this constant need to pull the rug out and tell us that this character was a facade or is another universe version is pathetic.
I must disagree on this point. The most effective way for a writer to pull the rug out from under the reader/viewer is to construct the reveal such that it also pulls the rug out from under the characters. Clues should be seeded judiciously through careful foreshadowing such that the audience looks back at the moment of revelation and only then puts it all together. Discovery's writers can't manage to set things up without placing traffic cones, safety tape, flashing signs, and road flares around any twist. I don't care how artfully the reveal is crafted. If the outcome is already easily guessed, the reveal is empty window dressing.
 
Are you going to start threads about how stupid it was for Spock to stick his soul into McCoy? How about all the space wizards that we've seen over time, starting with the very first two episodes? You can't claim that a bunch of Vulcans banging gongs to cast Revivify is any more naturalistic than communicating with an interdimensional fungus.
 
Spock's Katra, anyone?

Sure, we could invent some technobabble reason that Spock's Katra could possibly be transferred (and held) by McCoy, but when you get right down to it, it is mystical story about Spock's spiritual soul.

And then there is all of the Bajoran religious story lines in DS9. Again, the writers invented the wormhole aliens to explain it, but those stories were very mystical.
 
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Honestly, I've never understood Vulcan mysticism.
 
Star Trek never wholly embraced naturalism though. If anything it embraced the fantastical more than the naturalistic. TOS was meant to be hornblower in space. Yeah it explored some societal themes, but it was also filled with fantastical elements like space monsters, god-like aliens, and shatner's acting.

TNG was the same, yeah it had it's philosophical episodes, but then it also had things like crystalline entities, picard getting turned into a kid, and Crusher having sex with a space ghost that lived in a candle. How many times were problems solved by power being rerouted somewhere or using the deflector dish to emit some made up particles?

Deep Space Nine may have explored religion but at least it was a fairly nuanced in it's examination. You had religious fanatics represented by Kai Winn, the Vorta and the Jem'Hadar, Religious moderates represented by Kira and Non-Believers represented by people like Sisko (in the beginning) Dax, Odo and others. It was topical then and remains topical to this day. Why can science fiction not be used to explore religion?

Do most of the fanbase care about the philosophical, naturalistic aspects though? In my experience, the debates about canon, technobabble and whether the Akira class starship has 5 or 15 torpedo launchers and can carry fighter jets seem to far outweigh the philosophical debates.
 
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It's depressing to watch Star Trek become a mystical soap opera. On the positive side, recent attempts at Star Trek have, as many people have noted, brought the 'colorfulness' back into Trek - more things can happen than in the latter days of Voyager, when the colorfulness had been washed away - but the problem is that every bad juvenile trend in storytelling from the last ten years has been present to some degree too.
But, enough about DS9...*rimshot*

Largely, the DISCO story has come from the fact that these are not optimistic times. Naturalistic philosophy, despite its name, isn't something that is just given-it has to grow from somewhere. We are discovering the manure from which TOS arose.

I would rather have the dynamic story, even with the darker undertones than the episodic format with nice and neat packaging about controversial issues.
 
This is what I don't understand, why people can't see where this has been heading from the start. The show-runners and writers have stated it explicitly many times. This show is showing how they got to a more enlightened, more hopeful society. It goes on a journey of inner as well as outer discovery. They are gonna be tested by difficult crises, where their ideals are put in question. It's going to be a struggle, not something easy. Do they stick by their principles or just go 'to hell with it, the ends justifies the terrible means' like Lorca sai?. Do they grow as a collective, lean on each other and aspire to do better or do they fall into their individual abysses. This is what makes Discovery so damned awesome to me.

A utopic mindset that's not hard-earned is useless to me. It's another imposed ideology on people who've never had to deal with true hardship. As much as I once loved TNG, I find the message to be self-righteous and smug at times. Like an after school special in terms of how certain topics were dealt with, all done by

Discovery's story is obviously not for everyone. That's cool. Just don't pretend it's more of a departure than TMP was from TOS, or TNG from TOS or DS9 from TNG etc. Each series has tried to find its own feet and it's own message. You may not like how much more serialized and nuanced the moral and philosophical dilemmas are, but they're still there. If you don't like this iteration of Trek, that's fine. Just don't try to tell me it's not just as much Trek in its identity as everything that preceded it.
 
The problem with Discovery is that it's abandoned humanism and exploration of humanist philosophical themes.
There is no politics here, no philosophy, no exploration of social issues, at all. They will throw hamfisted attempts at the wokesphere crowd to virtue signal they care about these ideas (constantly mentioning how the mirror universe are racist xenophobes and equality of the federation is good) but there are absolutely zero exploration of these themes, at all. None. It's exactly what it is, shallow pandering to the Social justice crowd on Twitter. It's a trend that is rife through modern pop culture, from Ghost Busters 2016 to Nu-Star Wars, the tedious pretending to be progressive to get brownie points from the liberal media while not actually being progressive, at all.

I agree with this assessment - and I lean toward a Libertarian/Autarchist point of view. The entertainment industry as a whole tends to promote a sort of 'Pop Progressivism' that is very much reflective of whatever happens to be trendy at the moment. It's all about momentary popularity but few if any spend the time to think about the real implications of what they are promoting with any depth.

We have a Star Trek show, being made in 2018, dealing with a WAR and not once have we dealt with a storyline around, Refugees and tensions that arise from mass movement and cultural clash and how a better society would deal with that (European Refugee Crisis), we have not had a storyline deal with, what happens if a enemy gets a super weapon but you can't do anything because acting puts a ally's civilisation at extreme material risk, is it better to attack or try keep a balance or even start reaching out and trying real diplomacy (North Korea), what happens when you have a section of the population reject humanist values and becomes extremely reactionary and violent. Do they have the right to free speech when in fact, their speech is dangerous and directly harms the safety and lives of the people they spout vile vitriol against? (The Alt-Right and "Political Correctness") How about some way exploring the issues of police brutality and violence against a minority?

I wouldn't mind seeing some iteration of Star Trek dealing with these in a thoughtful intelligent way; even more so if the storytellers would dare to take on the view that a typically liberal or progressive approach may not always be the best perspective from which to solve a particular problem. For example how do you deal with the doomsday scenario above if the only way to save the largest number of people is to sacrifice that civilization? What are the limits of 'tolerance' of as a cultural ideal? Is diversity in all it's forms always a strength? When can it be a weakness?

It's 2018, TV NEEDS Star Trek, but sadly what is called Star Trek on TV right now is not it.

Television has changed and so has the world around it since the last incarnation of Star Trek was on the air (not to speak of TOS). One reason for the change may be that we are now constantly bombarded by these sorts of socio-political questions on a daily basis. The original Star Trek (and Twilight Zone etc) dealt with these issues by 'hiding' them in a science fiction context because censorship of the time would not allow them to be dealt with directly or openly. That is no longer the case.
In that sense Star Trek is no longer 'needed' in the same way it may have been in the past. Perhaps this is just the natural evolution of entertainment in general.

A utopic mindset that's not hard-earned is useless to me. It's another imposed ideology on people who've never had to deal with true hardship. As much as I once loved TNG, I find the message to be self-righteous and smug at times. Like an after school special in terms of how certain topics were dealt with, all done by

Well said - I couldn't agree more.
 
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