Yes.
No.
The post-capitalism notion was a script detail which accomplished the following:
- it enabled the televiewer to imagine both a somewhat more utopian world beyond our own monetized experience of the $wage $slave. Why do that? To suggest the episode characters acted as a matter of conviction, principle, rather than servitude, financial obligation.
- That enabled audience members to not be distracted about why the actors costumes didn't have a wallet pocket, etc.
The advent of the automobile, the horseless carriage was protested in part because it would end employment of the buggy-whip manufacturers. They were substantially correct.
What will happen when A.I. / automation / intelligent dexterous robots displace human laborers? Unemployment will exceed 50%? Then $what ?!
I'm a fan of the History Channel series Alone. By watching it I realized what accounts for our prosperity is division of labor, vastly more efficient than each individual attending to their own needs directly, growing their own food, building their own car, etc.
Subsequently I realized division of labor is not practical without $money.
Some may perceive money to be an annoyance, one more thing to have to fuss about. I believe it is an indispensable component of modern society, the linchpin of division of labor.
Even if madness ensues, and citizens receive a survivable stipend from fully automated industry, not clear to me how that could be, without money.
I suspect, when we're rid of money, we're also rid of human society.
It was only half a century ago. How could you forget ?! Something else on your mind?
note:
MeTV [memorable entertainment TV] broadcasts these old TV series. Nostalgia fans may wish to set the DVR ... . Next up?
Star Trek
A Private Little War
Season 2; Episode 19 (1968)
William Shatner (Capt. James T. Kirk), Leonard Nimoy (Mr. Spock), DeForest Kelley (Dr. Leonard McCoy) / Director: Marc Daniels
A power struggle between the Federation and the Klingon Empire ensnares a primitive society Kirk once visited.
I think they were shooting for a pretty abstract human society in Star Trek.
Since they had anti-matter reactions, they were claiming free energy, and with replicators, that energy then could make whatever you wanted.
But I think that was only the Federation, since the Ferengi were not free of money.

