I never really assumed the "bought a boat" line was necessarily meant to be taken literally.Maybe he bought it with grain.
I never really assumed the "bought a boat" line was necessarily meant to be taken literally.Maybe he bought it with grain.
I just never understood what else could Scotty could be referring to.I never really assumed the "bought a boat" line was necessarily meant to be taken literally.
I figured he was in possession of a boat, but not that he necessarily literally paid money for it.I just never understood what else could Scotty could be referring to.
If someone gives you something, would you ever say you bought it?I figured he was in possession of a boat, but not that he necessarily literally paid money for it.
If someone gives you something, would you ever say you bought it?
If I was being flippant, possibly.If someone gives you something, would you ever say you bought it?
I mean, yeah, that's pretty much exactly what I meant. Sounds pretty utopian to me.TOS Earth and humanity were simply way better than late 20th century Earth. That's about it. Racism had largely been eradicated and people no longer fought wars on Earth or went hungry, but otherwise mankind was still recognizably mankind even in the Federation of the 23rd century.
Yes, as a show TOS wasn't perfect. But compare to a lot of other 50s sci-fi which is exclusively white man.TOS did have utopian themes, but I have to point out - Star Trek wasn't necessarily leagues ahead of other progressive television in terms of representation. I'm sure people could name a lot of other examples, but even within Desilu, there were series like Mission: Impossible where race and sex didn't enormously matter within the IMF (in fact, the IMF appears more progressive than the TOS Federation half the time, since male characters don't randomly stop to talk about how much they hate women, as sometimes happens in post-S1 TOS). They even had a black woman as an agent in a 1966 episode, played by Eartha Kitt.
I think the truth's in the middle; TOS does style itself as a progressive future, but it's not really approaching the creepy "utopian" project of TNG either. It's more like 60s American liberalism projected into a fictional world, same as a lot of other media of the era.
I mean - Kodos' food shortage was due to an unnatural catastrophe destroying the food sources. Something that also easily could have happened on TNG.TOS showed humanity had improved a bit from the 20th century.
But a utopia? Absolutely not.
No crime? Harry Mudd and Tantalus V both say hi.
Post scarcity without hunger? Kodos, killing 4,000 people because of food shortage, says 'what's up'.
Miracle cures? From McCoy ("THE OMEGA GLORY", I believe): "Who knows, it may cure the common cold."
And somewhere else he said human doctors can replace any organ other than the brain.What? Not TOS I remember. McCoy even notes no cure for the common cold. No crime? Why did they have penal colonies? Rehabilitation for criminals of questionable efficacy?
There's not a lot that screams post scarcity to me.
TOS clearly used a currency ("credits"). Of that technically is money or not doesn't really matter. But "not using money" is IMO not a sign for a Utopia - in fact, often the opposite (Borg collective & computer gods say "hi").Hell, the whole idea that there was no money wasn't even introduced until the fourth movie, twenty years after TOS premiered.
You and I define "utopia" way differently.somewhere else he said human doctors can replace any organ other than the brain.
Again - it's not literal paradise - but it's pretty Utopian.
I don't call that utopian and the comparison game is useless. TOS doesn't feel like a utopia to me.I'm taking about a realistically achievable, utopian human society.
Not a magic fairyland where everybody suddenly is perfect.
The first one applies Star Trek, sometimes more, sometimes less, but always more than, say, Star Wars, Battlestar Galactica, Alien, Babylon 5, Firefly and so on.
I mean, feel free NOT to use the commonly agreed definition of words:I don't call that utopian and the comparison game is useless. TOS doesn't feel like a utopia to me.
Mileage will vary.
Near perfect is not TOS to me, especially with the treatment of mental illness and crime.I mean, feel free NOT to use the commonly agreed definition of words:
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Utopia - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
But the standard definition of a Utopia is "highly desirable" to "near perfect" characteristics.
Absolute perfection (for which I would use the word "paradise", not "utopia") is not really achievable.
We're talking about the guy who helped steal the Enterprise, he probably just stole the boat.I figured he was in possession of a boat, but not that he necessarily literally paid money for it.
a realistically achievable, utopian human society
I agree in the optimism. I'm optimistic about the future of humanity as well, no matter the news. We have a great capacity for growth.TOS certainly had a very optimistic view on the future of humanity, no matter how we call that.
No. Not really. Especially not initially (if you’re talking about TOS).
Early TNG is the initially I'm referring to, should have clarified.Perhaps initially in TNG. But it definitely was not his initial vision for Star Trek, as TOS portrayed no such thing. It was somewhere during his touring of the lecture circuit in the 70's when Roddenberry bought into all the "he was a visionary" bullshit.
Exactly. I would say that's one of the distinguishing features of Trek from other popular sci-fi franchises.TOS certainly had a very optimistic view on the future of humanity, no matter how we call that.
Utopia, no. But a heck of a lot better than what we've got now or what we had in the mid-1960s.I don't call that utopian and the comparison game is useless. TOS doesn't feel like a utopia to me.
Mileage will vary.
Not with mental health treatment or crime.Utopia, no. But a heck of a lot better than what we've got now or what we had in the mid-1960s.
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