Is the Star Trek Future Possible?

April 13th, 2009

For a change, I’m not talking about science here.   I think some of the Star Trek technology will be realized in the future, and some is pure fantasy.   Still, I give them credit for trying on that front.   I just wish they’d avoid the time travel…but I have already digressed.

The issue I want to write about briefly is the aspect of the show, at least from The Next Generation onward, that suggests that we can learn to live in peace, all races, all types of people, in harmony.

Adrien Veidt from Watchmen, “the smartest man in the world,” whichever weird world that is, would say that we could but only if given an external enemy.   Unfortunately, I think there is some truth to that, but fortunately I think it’s also not the complete truth.

First, some background from a study I thought was highly illuminating (and for which I’d love to rediscover the link, but not today apparently).   People stereotype.   It’s useful to do so, as stereotypes have some basis in reality and knowing something about somebody you’ve just met has advantages.   It’s not foolproof by any means, but evolution works based on probability, not perfection.   Anyway, the study indicated that people notice three things when they see someone (in this case in photos): gender, age, and race.   It’s easy to understand that age and gender will be useful to recognize in evaluating a person’s relationship, or potential relationship, to one’s self.

The race thing is something of a red herring, as it turns out.   The study continued and had a phase where the people in photos had a clear affiliation of some sort, as in wearing clothing associated with a sports team.   Then the third thing people noticed changed from race to that association.

What people are actually looking for is markers identifying someone as “on my team” or “the other team.”   In other words, tribe.   Race, historically, has been a quick way of identifying someone as different.   If you don’t have race, you look for other clues, which may be obvious like fan clothing, or subtle like facial features, grooming, other clothing choices, etc.   We really want to sort out people as fast as possible, to pigeon-hole them, and while I applaud people who think they don’t do that, or try not to do that out of respect for individuals or some sense of fairness, I am not sure I’d believe them.   It’s hardwired.   We make these snap, instinctual judgements.

As someone who has travelled a lot outside the United States, and who has plenty of foreign friends from all sorts of places and of all sorts of races, it is still ridiculously easy to make friends with almost any random American you find abroad.   Ex-pats have their own hangouts in cities everywhere and even though they may have turned their backs on Nationalism in a way that few do, there’s still a strong urge to recognize the tribal tie.

So, in a way, all we have to do is get people to think of fellow humans, all fellow humans, as being on the same team.   The same tribe.

That’s hard.

Threatening aliens that want to kill humans would certainly do it.   I hope we don’t have that in our near-future, but it is the case in the Star Trek universe.   What it would seem that happened in the series was to go from Kirk’s era where humans banded together against a large and dangerous universe, with different races all serving together on the Enterprise, to the Next Generation, where the team expanded to the Federation in an even more obvious manner and new alien races were viewed not necessarily as threats, but as potential Federation members.

I don’t mean any of this to say that humans aren’t capable today or in the future of being monsters.   Slavery, murder, rape, even genocide, are things that happen today.   They used to happen more regularly and were more acceptable in the past, so I think we’ve made progress.   People can be conditioned to accept almost any reality, no matter how horrible, but the flip side is that we can also be conditioned to expect the best from ourselves and each other.   The fraction of people in the United States, if not the world, who find various forms of hate and discrimination continues to drop.   Not as fast or as steadily as most would like, but it is a different culture than past decades and the good guys are winning.

The biggest problem I see to this in the end is not racism.   Racism ceases to be that third thing as soon as you don’t recognize it as what defines someone’s tribe.   Melting pot countries like the United States, Brazil, and many European countries have a step up on this, although still have a lot of problems with it (and I’ll come back to one big problem with the US in a second).   Places like China lag behind given the past history of isolationism combined with steady control of information.

I was talking to my Chinese buddy here yesterday, and he told me about growing up in the Cultural Revolution.   The government told them that China was the best country in the world, that it was the best place with the best system and the best of everything.   These were lies by any objective measure, but people believed it because they didn’t have any place else for comparison.

This, unfortunately, is the case too often in the United States, too.   Most Americans don’t know much about other countries.   Most Americans do feel like the United States is the best place in the world.   Now, I think the United States does top the list of a lot of categories and is a good place in many ways, but they have more freedom in the Netherlands when it comes to sex and drugs, and many countries on the average have better, cheaper, and healthier food and slimmer, healthier people.   I’m not a big soccer fan, but the best soccer is not in the United States, and that is a measure important to much of the world.

So I think nationalism and religion are the huge remaining problems for the Star Trek future.   On the Enterprise, Chekov, Uhuru, Kirk, Scotty, Sulu, etc., were humans and Starfleet first.   Even Spock was half-human, but fully Starfleet.   You don’t tend to see racism as an issue on sports teams today.   What you get at the highest level are things like the Olympics and wars, struggles between nations.

Religion was, for the most part, simply eliminated from Star Trek.   Religion tends to be quite divisive.   Religion, more so than race, is how people from other countries still do group themselves and self-identify.   I am concerned that even if we found an external enemy, among the stars or our own creation (Terminator, Battlestar Galactica), we’d still have this sort of religious strife.

I’ve rambled enough.   Humans I think are in principle capable of achieving the vision of Star Trek, but our culture must develop in ways to make it standard and children have to be raised with this expectation.   Nationalism and religion are inherently enemies of this, as intrinsically powerful and divisive forces.   I think they should be kept as far away from the children as possible, but that seems like a pipe dream, as people want to indoctrinate their own kids into their own tribes, and these are the two strongest today.

So I guess until we’re attacked by bug-eyed monsters trying to convert us to their religion, we’re doomed to fall short of Gene Roddenberry’s vision.   If only the smartest man in the world would do something…

Share/Bookmark

You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.