It’s an interesting story, but not for the way it addresses utopia—it doesn’t (at least for me) give a feeling for why people might like living there. Instead, it’s presented as scary authoritarianism.
What I like about it is the way it undercuts “ignore all barriers” romanticism.
It might relate to a notion I’ve been playing with—that one of the reasons people like systems with a lot of punishment is that they’re afraid that effective methods of getting people to do what you want are too controlling. They want to leave room for rebellion.
I’ve read it now.
It’s an interesting story, but not for the way it addresses utopia—it doesn’t (at least for me) give a feeling for why people might like living there. Instead, it’s presented as scary authoritarianism.
What I like about it is the way it undercuts “ignore all barriers” romanticism.
It might relate to a notion I’ve been playing with—that one of the reasons people like systems with a lot of punishment is that they’re afraid that effective methods of getting people to do what you want are too controlling. They want to leave room for rebellion.