this post was submitted on 05 Jan 2026
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I’ve been thinking about how a lot of science fiction portrays futures that feel far more optimistic than the world we actually seem to be heading toward.

In real life we’re dealing with many simultaneous, compounding crises: AI being deployed in ways that cannibalize society under capitalism, an ever increasing cost of living with fixed wages, declining birth rates (people replacing children with pets/mascots), pollution, mass extinction of biodiversity, climate change, etc. It feels less like “one big problem” and more like death by a thousand cuts.

By contrast, in most SF stories there are usually one or two central issues to grapple with—an evil AI, an empire, climate collapse—but rarely the overwhelming stack of interlocking failures we see in reality. Even dystopias often feel strangely cleaner and more legible than real life.

Is there a known psychological explanation for this? Something like optimism bias, positivity bias, planning fallacy, or cognitive overconfidence, where we systematically underestimate complexity and overestimate humanity’s ability to coordinate and improve? Or is it more about narrative constraints and what the human mind can comfortably model?

Curious if there’s research, theory, or even just good takes on why imagined futures so often look “better” than the present.

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[–] Eternalposer@lemmy.zip 2 points 3 days ago

I was talking about this recently, how there are so few optimistic sci-fi that I think it's speaks poorly to where we're heading. If we can't visualize a better world how are we going to work towards it? Other than Star Trek what scifi has an optimistic view of the future?