I guess it's my turn to go again.
masonwheeler wrote:The "refutations" seem to be mostly the same thing, repeated over and over. "Replicators require raw materials, so there's no post-scarcity society thing going on afterall, so you're wrong!"
And extremely valid refutations they are, too. Let's see if you'll actually address them.
masonwheeler wrote:Puh-leeze. If you have a Federation that spans a good portion of the galaxy, with hundreds of inhabited worlds, thousands of uninhabited worlds and heaven only knows how many resource-rich asteroids and nebulae, you can find any pretty much any raw material you're looking for.
With a territory some 8000 LY across, yes, the raw materials they need are probably available. That doesn't make gathering them into a labor-free, energy-free process, though.
masonwheeler wrote:Yes, you'll need mining equipment--which could simply be a specially-calibrated transporter.
Thank you for the mindless speculation. There is no evidence that transporters can be made to work that way; try again.
masonwheeler wrote:Or you could simply scoop up dirt and rocks and have plenty of minerals and organic compounds in raw form.
Scooping up random dirt and rock is good for obtaining common elements that can be used for common items. Getting rare elements for sophisticated electronics is an entirely different prospect.
masonwheeler wrote:And if you really do need mining equipment, have the replicator build it.
Assuming your replicator is capable of producing something that large; we've yet to see a replicator capable of making something as large as a tractor. If you replicate parts, then you need labor for assembly. And, of course, if you don't already have mining equipment, then you may not have the raw materials you need to replicate mining equipment.
masonwheeler wrote:If you need energy, have the replicator build some solar panels or other device capable of producing energy.
Solar power depends on the close proximity of a suitable star. Industrial processes consume huge quantities of energy. Have you even tried to consider how many square meters of solar panel would be needed to power a typical factory?
masonwheeler wrote:With the addition of a few warp-capable freighters (and a few armed escort ships, if necessary,) such a system would become self-sustaining very quickly.
Your warp-capable vessels will require anti-matter fuel in large quantities, and anti-matter is definitely on the "non replicatable" list.
masonwheeler wrote:And bringing up Voyager doesn't refute my point in the least; it underscores it. Voyager was an example of unusual circumstances. The crew of Voyager find themselves cut off from their supply lines. They no longer have the virtually unlimited resources that they're used to. They don't have freighters or worlds and asteroids to mine. They don't have industrial equipment. They're a science vessel. And so what do the crew do? They revert back to capitalism. People trading replicator rations for goods and services was mentioned various times in the first couple seasons. Heck, Tom Paris even ran a lottery with them for a while! If that's not "money," then what is?
Voyager is a perfect example of when your "replicators fix everything" economic system would perform best, if they had anything like the limitless capabilities you like to assign to them. Power shortage?
Voyager would replicate solar panels and to supply the power to make new fuel. Raw material shortage?
Voyager would just beam some over from the nearest planet or asteroid. Equipment shortage?
Voyager would just replicate whatever they needed. That scenario obviously doesn't describe the situation on
Voyager, so
Voyager neatly refutes your "magic replicator economy" argument
because the "replicator economy" breaks down so easily in isolation.
"This is supposed to be a happy occasion... Let's not bicker and argue about who killed who."
-- The King of Swamp Castle, Monty Python and the Holy Grail
"Nothing of consequence happened today. " -- Diary of King George III, July 4, 1776
"This is not bad; this is a conspiracy to remove happiness from existence. It seeks to wrap its hedgehog hand around the still beating heart of the personification of good and squeeze until it is stilled."
-- Chuck Sonnenburg on Voyager's "Elogium"