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Tran Hung Dao's avatar

I think it would be fun for a science fiction author to challenge you and come up with an optimistic future that DOESN'T contain those points. At first blush it feels doable, at least on some technicalities. And it kinda feels like something Becky Chambers might try to tackle.

Material abundance: An author could extrapolate from current trends of dematerialisation, mixing in things like ideas from Jenny Odell's How to Do Nothing. A lot of our current concepts of material abundance are a reaction to the general lack of stuff in history. Obviously this future scifi society would in some very real sense still have material abundance. But it might not manifest in the usual obvious ways. Maybe everyone lives isolated pastoral homestead existences ... but nanobots make sure the air and water is pristine, diseases quickly eradicated, and any accidents summon help.

Egalitarianism: I think there are many ways we could hack our tribal monkey brains to accept living in a very non-egalitarian society. We mostly want egalitarianism within "our society". And at this exact moment in technical, social, cultural history "our society" has become very broadly defined. I can see someone across the planet, with a different religion and a different skin-tone, livestreaming something and they are, in some sense, part of my society. But what if we are dealing with large space-time delays? Will humans in Alpha Centauri, who recieve their Facebook Livestreams on a 4 year delay, really care if Earthers are richer than them? And then throw in a transhumanist future. In Vernor Vinge's books no one is up in arms that the superintelligences "have more" than humans.

Human agency: I admit this is a tough nut to crack without sliding into dystopia. I have a vague memory of an old Isaac Asimov short story about a future run by supercomputers that gave humans the veneer of agency. So perhaps something where human agency is a welcome, actively-chosen illusion. Kind of like how some people prefer All-inclusive luxury resorts or cruises for their holidays. Or perhaps some sort of philosophical upheaval when humanity abandons its fundamental speciesism when it steps into the bigger community of alien species, experiencing a kind of species-wide existential crisis. Or perhaps all of humanity takes a more meditative turn towards acceptance, instead of striving to change, once we've eliminated vast swathes of human misery. Humanity strives because it has only been around a few thousand years. Will this kind of striving still make sense when our culture is 50,000 years old and we've moved all the big boulders?

Dunno, this one is definitely trickier than the others.

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Jackzilla's avatar

Deep Space Nine is, to me, the most optimistic trek because it takes challenges to the TNG arguments extremely seriously, and challenges the Federation to make its progressive arguments in the face of a crew largely opposed or indifferent, and a scarred captain. People say DS9 is dark but it really believes in the Roddenberry vision, it just spends a lot more time focusing on how hard it might be to get there. In fact, when they go back in time, Bashir is furious that in the 2020s, despite so much technology and abundance, humans just don't care enough to help eachother.

https://youtu.be/ugTTy_u61gM

https://youtu.be/ZOjG8Ditub8

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