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Mike Smith's avatar

I'm a big science fiction fan and love the idea of utopias. But it's hard to make compelling stories for people living in paradise. There has to be some gradient of feeling or need. I think that's why most of the stories in Star Trek or the Culture take place outside or on the fringes of those societies, or involve existential threats to them. And a lot of compelling sci-fi takes place in the ruins of those type of civilizations. Or it turns out to be a false utopia like in Logan's Run.

It's also worth noting that a true post-scarcity society seems unlikely. What seems to happen historically is people's needs and desires recalibrate, and the scarcity happens at a new level than before. A hunter-gatherer from 10,000 BCE would see our world as a post-scarcity society, at least at first, until their desires caught up.

Cool post!

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Benjamin Trull's avatar

If you can stomach the weird 50s Freudian elements, Forbidden Planet is an interesting example of a utopian sci-fi story that most definitely lacks the starry-eyed idealism of TNG. “Monsters from the id”!

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