Speaker to Animals wrote:GrumpyCatFace wrote:Triggered.
Ok, fuckstain. Does science fiction relate only to near-future, grimy war-torn dystopic fiction?
How many social issues were tackled by Star Wars/BSG compared to Star Trek? They did some (admittedly shallow) philosophical issues on almost every episode. Abrams came along, dumbed it down to drooling fuckwit boom screen time, and you call it the pinnacle of the series?
Why not just admit that you're simply incapable of grasping what Star Trek is about in the first place? It was never about the damn ship, transporter beams, or any of that. It was about people, man... People. You could have set it on a 15th century sailing ship, visiting various island tribes and had the same show (damn, that's a good idea
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No, genius. Science fiction relates to science. Science being the operative word modifying the word fiction. The work must at least attempt some fidelity to plausible science. This is why hard science fiction is science fiction that is extremely technical, whereas soft science fiction makes some leeway (usually by not explaining how something like an FTL drive works). Most works fall somewhere in between.
Star Trek is a fantasy. It has ZERO fidelity to any plausible science. When the spaceship is trapped in warp, Geordi saves the day by inventing some flux bubble tachyon pulse emitter that sends a pulse out to penetrate the warp bubble and cause the warp matrix to collapse, thereby sending the ship back into normal space-time. That's not science. They just made up shit to solve a problem -- i.e. magic -- which is fantasy.
They could replace their futuristic jargon with Dungeons and Dragons spells and it would be the same fucking story -- A FANTASY.
Future science is magic. Also, remember that the show was pretty damned accurate to science, as understood in the 70s.
It also predicted WAY THE FUCK more actual, current technology than any other show - flip phones, internet, tablets, tasers, and more. That makes it the most accurate sci-fi ever produced.
Also, the warp bubble idea still has legs, among theoretical physicists. Ion drive? Habbening. Transporters? Hello, quantum entanglement.
Please open your mouth again, on this topic. I so enjoy kicking those teeth in.