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Utopia vs Dystopia discussion
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Lost Horizon .


A practical utopia can be achieved. That is a system that is optimum. It cannot guarantee personal happiness.
I am writing a series with that in mind.

Yes, Lost Horizon. Very interesting approach and factors in the different character's perspectives and asks the reader to weigh it as well.

1. Personal: parents with sick child (as old diseases are cured new ones appear especially given contact with aliens?)
2. Geopolitical: nation-states still exist but in less powerful capacity...

I've not read that; thanks for the recommendation.
Humberto wrote: "A practical utopia can be achieved. That is a system that is optimum. It cannot guarantee personal happiness."
Without personal happiness, what's the point? It would treat people as mere machines (Hellstrom's Hive springs to mind, albeit with a shudder).
I'd be interested in how you could define an 'optimum' system. I work on government social security policy and I know from experience there will always be someone or something ready to throw a spanner in the works of any carefully-crafted system. Real life is fickle like that.

With more powerful computers and with people not concerned about petty issues like $ or power, an AI could administer a society optimally.
The 1st issue in an utopia is not to have material needs. This alone reduces the fight for power.
Right now $ buys and corrupts everybody.
At present, there are more goods and food than $ in the hands of people. If somebody is hungry in America, and in most parts of the world, it is because they don't have $. Not because there is no food. To me that means that we are getting close to an economy of abundance. Under those conditions the economy must adapt and change.
In a SF future of abundance, an utopian system could be optimal. I don't think it could be perfect.

A system which guaranties happiness would be rigid and rule based. That is NOT utopia.



Well, maybe. I should have expanded upon my earlier comment about working in government. I've always found that there will be people ready to complain and blame the administration if things aren't quite right (and you can't please everyone all of the time), even if the fault isn't the government's. Society needs a hate figure, if you like; yet that seems to go against the ideals of a utopia. However, if you try to change people's attitudes against their nature, we're slipping back towards dystopia again.

Of course, when I say that there's nothing in the system really worth complaining about, that really depends on WHO decides what's good and bad and important--leading to a whole other can of worms, which could lead...to dystopia. Urg. It's never going to be true utopia. I just hope, like others have said, that somewhere in the future there's a possibility of improvement.


That's why more and more I'm inclined to conclude humans don't really want utopia because they want "challenges" to "overcome" lest they become bored.
As for the Swiss plan need to check details and think more about it. But initial thought is money might be enough to free some people from "working for living" so they could work on self-improvement like people in Star Trek utopian earth.


Moreover, productivity due to technological advances is higher everyday. Civilization is heading into an economy of abundance. Basic Income is a good way to give money to those who will not have a way to find work.
I am surprised that people who read SF cannot understand that a job is not indispensable. It is a consequence of the Industrial Revolution. Before people worked, mostly in agriculture. Now 3% work on agriculture and many of the jobs that we have are just to allow people to have a salary. They aren't indispensable.
Basic Income doesn't mean that you cannot work. It only means that your basic needs are covered. Whatever extra $ you try to make is up to you. Even with a job.

Have to agree with you. Having a "basic" standard income does not preclude "work". Some of the most innovative periods in history were a result of a populace having enough inherent wealth to educate the populace and to have excess leisure time to think, research, explore, write, invent, create, etc. The Egyptian, Greek, and Roman Empires; the Italian Renaissance; the Spanish and British Age of Exploration; the British Industrial Revolution; the Space Age were all fueled by an excess of wealth in materials and man power. While a few individuals and a small percentage of the population benefitted the most, the excess of wealth also trickled down resulting in the expansion of the ruling and the upper middle class, and creating a populace with enough leisure time to dedicate to or to fund and foster intellectual work beyond just eking out a basic living (i.e. food and shelter) and immediately practical applications.

I'm also surprised SF readers have difficulty imagining life beyond "working for a living" which is just necessary evil at best. Also given our forum how could anyone here not want a utopian version of "time enough at last" to read all the books we want and try to write our own books without being bothered with "working" for a living" and "meeting ends meet"?


Problem is we think with limited early 21st century homosapien minds. Wouldn't be surprised if homosuperior or some other advanced species looks back and thinks how we wasted so much time on such drudgery. Maybe then they'll also read real utopian fiction without conflict and problems.

I vaguely remember...think it's in foundation series...a group of humans who live in a kind of utopian fortress of solitude. Each individual lives comfortably alone with little interaction. They hate sex because they perceive it as a vile and vulgar act.
Speaking of Matrix -- first film refers to early version of Matrix which was perfect world but failed because humans can't live without suffering and struggling. So seek books that have Matrix like utopias which are perfect worlds.
Books mentioned in this topic
Hellstrom's Hive (other topics)Lost Horizon (other topics)
Lost Horizon (other topics)
Lost Horizon (other topics)
American Elsewhere (other topics)
More...
Someone upthread mentioned the problems of variance, J.P. Morgan's utopia being Upton Sinclair's dystopia, for an example. I've always thought that improving the absolute value of the worst-off members of a society was the best possible goal. The top 1% may improve as well (in fact they almost certainly will) but so long as the bottom is rising, there probably won't be any pressure for revolutionary change. In many cases, if both the top and the bottom are falling together for an external reason, there probably won't be such pressure. It's only if the top is rising and the bottom is falling (like 1790's France) that you get really bad stuff likely happening.
People always want to forget spreads and only look at some average or median measure. That's probably why I liked "The Dispossessed", LeGuin showed several facets, good and bad of her societies.
Maybe Bentham should have said "...the least bad for fewest number" as the goal of a just society. It's just not very stirring.