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What if we lived in a Utopian society?
*mipadi*
post Sep 12 2005, 04:10 PM
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QUOTE(Miss Criss @ Sep 12 2005, 5:08 PM)
But Mipadi, what is perfect? Nearly everything at first glance can seem perfect but once you look deeper, it never is.
*

Well, that's precisely one of the points of The Giver.
 
*tweeak*
post Sep 12 2005, 04:11 PM
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Right, that is the point, so you can't really expect Utopia not to become Dystopia
 
xmkaex
post Sep 12 2005, 04:13 PM
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no need to be perfect...
 
Miss Criss
post Sep 12 2005, 04:13 PM
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I'm just saying, how can there be a real utopian society if nothing is ever perfect?
 
*mipadi*
post Sep 12 2005, 04:16 PM
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QUOTE(Miss Criss @ Sep 12 2005, 5:13 PM)
I'm just saying, how can there be a real utopian society if nothing is ever perfect?
*

Utopia is a purely theoretical construct; it's not expected that such a society will ever come about.
 
Miss Criss
post Sep 12 2005, 04:19 PM
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But you're saying that if I call it an utopian society is wrong, because, technically, it isn't. So, does that mean any society ever called utopian is incorrect?
Hmm.

This is fun. =]
 
*tweeak*
post Sep 12 2005, 04:21 PM
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But this entire subject of utopia is theoretical, so it's only theoretically impossible as well
 
*mipadi*
post Sep 12 2005, 04:22 PM
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QUOTE(Miss Criss @ Sep 12 2005, 5:19 PM)
But you're saying that if I call it an utopian society is wrong, because, technically, it isn't. So, does that mean any society ever called utopian is incorrect?
Hmm.

This is fun. =]
*

No, utopia is a literary construct used to describe a theoretically perfect society. It's theoretical, but most people could at least agree on the basics of such a society (absence of war, poverty, violence, hate, etc.).
 
Miss Criss
post Sep 12 2005, 04:29 PM
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But people have tried creating utopian societies in the past and have even labeled it as Utopian. Take Amos Bronson Alcott, for example. He and Charles Lane (and some others, I believe) created a Utopian society. It certainly didn't last very long, but it is still called a Utopian society, whether it truly was or wasn't.
 
xmkaex
post Sep 12 2005, 04:30 PM
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this reminds me of this movie i had watch...where something happens to this perfect place and things started to change...im unsure of the movie title tho.
 
*mipadi*
post Sep 12 2005, 04:34 PM
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Well, when we discuss "real-world utopias" we're starting to move out of the realm of the literary construct, such as the one used in The Giver. There have been communities set up in the attempt to create a "perfect" society that have been referred to (incorrectly) as utopias, but the idea of actually creating a community is a slightly different discussion than utopias used in the literary sense.
 
*tweeak*
post Sep 12 2005, 04:35 PM
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But if it was able to fall apart that quickly, was it truly utopian? If that's the case, couldn't another society be perfect, if only for a moment? And if that's the case, could it count? Does perfection matter if it doesn't last long enough to really take effect?
 
*mipadi*
post Sep 12 2005, 04:37 PM
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Are we discussing "real-word utopias" or literary utopias? As for literary utopias, I think they are generally used as long-lasting societies, not ones that exist for a moment in time and then collapse.

One could also argue that something that can't last isn't truly perfect.
 
Miss Criss
post Sep 12 2005, 04:47 PM
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I understand your point, Mipadi. However, the point of this topic really isn't about the book itself. It's about whether the world would be better as a "real-world" utopia. Although the society in The Giver proved that utopias are far from perfect, it'd still be a lot closer to perfection than our world currently is.
What do you say?
 
BOOGERSHAHA
post Sep 12 2005, 04:50 PM
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I'd rather live in the world of The Giver, under one condition: I would have no memory of living in this world thus far. If I would suddenly be able to go into that society, I'm sure I wouldn't be able to stand it.

However, if I had no recollection of the real world, I'd be blissfully ignorant and content.
 
Miss Criss
post Sep 12 2005, 04:52 PM
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*claps hands together*
By God, you got the point of this topic!
 
lilliannnn
post Sep 12 2005, 05:07 PM
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No, it would be terrible. Obviously, you've read The Giver. I didn't really like that book but I'm interested in reading more about uptopias/distopias.
 
BOOGERSHAHA
post Sep 12 2005, 05:11 PM
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QUOTE(Miss Criss @ Sep 12 2005, 5:52 PM)
*claps hands together*
By God, you got the point of this topic!
*


woot!
but no seriously..who wouldn't want to be blissfully ignorant and happy than live in this world as it is now with murder, disease, and disaster? "oh but we can't have sex, we can't love blah blah" but it wouldn't be a loss because you wouldn't know how it felt in the first place!
 
Miss Criss
post Sep 12 2005, 05:13 PM
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Je like french, I declare you my new best friend.

Lilliannn, [go here].
 
Levy2k6
post Sep 12 2005, 05:17 PM
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i've never read the Giver and i wouldnt like a utopia.. I rather live in japan.. closest to perfect there is.. lol.
 
*xcaitlinx*
post Sep 12 2005, 05:18 PM
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i LOVED the giver! i read it back in 7th grade. I thought it was very interesting even though I'd never want to live in a world like that.
 
*tweeak*
post Sep 12 2005, 05:24 PM
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QUOTE(je like french @ Sep 12 2005, 5:11 PM)
woot!
but no seriously..who wouldn't want to be blissfully ignorant and happy than live in this world as it is now with murder, disease, and disaster? "oh but we can't have sex, we can't love blah blah" but it wouldn't be a loss because you wouldn't know how it felt in the first place!
*

right! It's a bit like smoking- it's perfectly easy to live without it if you don't try them to begin with. My curiosity is perfectly sated, because I know it's better to stay ignorant to it.

Mmmmm. Yes. I think I've lost track of my point again.
 
mai_z
post Sep 12 2005, 05:33 PM
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The world would be great as a utopia, if it actually ran as a utopia, and you could get it to be like that in the first place. To convert the world into a utopia would take some serious brainwashing or a lot of violence, and then everyone would have to have their memories wiped, because it's human nature to want choices, but if you don't know the choices exist, you'd be perfectly happy.

Ignorance is bliss.
 
*mipadi*
post Sep 12 2005, 06:15 PM
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QUOTE(Miss Criss @ Sep 12 2005, 5:52 PM)
*claps hands together*
By God, you got the point of this topic!
*

So, is the point of this thread to discuss whether we'd want to live in the "utopia" of The Giver, or an actual utopia? Because, again, the utopia of The Giver is not a utopia at all, which is the basis of the book. So do you mean that utopia, or a real utopia? Because, clearly, by definition, there'd be nothing bad about living in a real utopia--it would, by definition, be perfect.
 
Miss Criss
post Sep 12 2005, 06:21 PM
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You got me there, Mipadi.

I suppose I meant a society nearly identical to the one created in the book.
 

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