That's at the heart of why I feel Sci-Fi needs to leave it's old tradition of distilling present times and presenting them in a light to us behind and focus more on being speculative, namely, trying to create and flesh out worlds that are as different from ours as possible, or take from history and not just rehash things.Queen Michael said:That's a fair point, and I would have written about it myself in the post you quoted if I hadn't been so lazy. (Thanks for doing it for me.) But my problem is that it never feels like that. It always feels like the writer just didn't anticipate that things would change.
One of the other bad, worn out aspects is the whole organics vs synthetics deal, at least as it's presented, which is either murderous machines out to kill all meatbags, bigoted luddites who refuse to accept the nice, peaceful robots, or some endless, unresolvable conflict where organics and synthetics are doomed to never ending war.
Of them I find the latter the most worn out as it's just another variation of the "aliens are just human minorities with funny ridges on their grow" and the lesson in the end is that we should all just get along.
Second to that taking human fears of AI to ludicrous extremes and the most over done over all.
The least, but most offensive is not treating human fear of technology with respect and actually looking at it through a reasonable lens, that being either our refusal to make ourselves obsolete and remain just the way we are to the eternal frustration of Transhumanists to actually considering if an AI can ever be completely human like and the possibility of it being similar enough to be disturbing and revolting, never being human enough to be accepted, because at the heart of it, AI are the mos alien thing humans can imagine.
Any "alien" alien has to ultimately emerge as life naturally, even if it's nothing like us as in, not carbon based or using anything like, that or if it's engineered, it at least functions on a baseline no different than ours. In short, they suffer from the same environmental pressures we do and somehow adapted to them. They may not view the world like us or think logically or have their own twisted reasoning that seems completely insane to us, but they somehow emerged from the same process that created us and thus there's at least some commonality.