LOST, according to a website called Newsarama, ranked the 5th best Sci-Fi TV show in history. It ranked behind Dr. Who, Star Trek, Battlestar Gallactica, and Twilight Zone/Outer Limits.
Complain all you want about the finale, we're here to tell you
something: not all questions ever need to be answered and no one owes
you anything.
Part of the majesty of Lost was that it did dare to raise questions
and challenge assumptions in an age where TV is seemingly ruled by a
vast armada of reality TV.
Lost was unreality TV, charging headlong into time travel,
alternate realities, smoke monsters and more with abandon. Not every
viewer may have been totally satisfied, but one can hardly dispute the
totality of vision and the flair with which the creators, cast, and crew
pulled it off. Plus, polar bears.
This short ranking justification calls out fans who did not like the conclusion of the series. The argument that the greatest of LOST was that it was anti-reality TV.
But the argument loses most value when one looks at the shows ranked higher in its own list. Dr. Who has a set of core principles including explanation of time travel and parallel universes which now has been kept in tact for 50 years. Star Trek had an intense amount of rules explaining its core scientific-fiction principles such was what was warp drive, the transporter, the holodeck, etc. Even Data's brain was explained by the extrapolation of supercomputing technologies. Battlestar also had its own universe principles on how things operated, who were the good guys, who were the bad guys. And the Twilight Zone boiled down the bizarre into understandable and believable short stories. All of these programs gave the viewers answers and explanations to the issue presented in each episode.
“
Knowledge comes by taking things apart: analysis. But wisdom comes by putting things together.
”
—
John A. Morrison
This quote is what the LOST blogs, commentators and fans embraced between episodes. TPTB made comments that they were aware of the fan analysis and theories. The expectations were that TPTB would address most of the most basic questions. Without knowledge, there is no wisdom.