|
Welcome! The Trek BBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans. Please login to see our full range of forums as well as the ability to send and receive private messages, track your favourite topics and of course join in the discussions. If you are a new visitor, join us for free. If you are an existing member please login below. Note: for members who joined under our old messageboard system, please login with your display name not your login name. |
|
|||||||
| Trek Literature "...Good words. That's where ideas begin." |
| View Poll Results: Grade Lost Souls | |||
| Excellent |
|
126 | 72.41% |
| Above Average |
|
34 | 19.54% |
| Average |
|
11 | 6.32% |
| Below Average |
|
1 | 0.57% |
| Poor |
|
2 | 1.15% |
| Voters: 174. You may not vote on this poll | |||
![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools |
|
|
#601 |
|
Admiral
Location: Arizona, USA
|
Re: Star Trek: Destiny Book 3: Lost Souls - (SPOILERS)
As for the Alpha/Beta quadrants being a worse place now, I have to dissagree again. Ok things might be worse in alot of ways right this moment, but they are already looking better for the Federation in the form of (since I don't know which of you guys have read ASD I'll put this in spoiler code)
__________________
Over the course of many encounters and many years, I have successfully developed a standard operating procedure for dealing with big, nasty monsters. Run away. Me and Monty Python. Harry Dresden - Blood Rites (The Dresden Files #6) |
|
|
|
|
#602 | |||
|
Writer
|
Re: Star Trek: Destiny Book 3: Lost Souls - (SPOILERS)
Besides, who's to say Seven of Nine thinks more clearly about the Borg than Picard does? She was a victim of them for far longer than he was, and she's long since outgrown her Stockholm Syndrome. Individual opinions don't trump documented evidence, because individuals can have any number of reasons for holding biased or distorted opinions.
__________________
Christopher L. Bennett Homepage -- Includes purchasing links for Only Superhuman, on sale now! Updated 12/30/12 with annotations for the novel. Written Worlds -- My blog |
|||
|
|
|
|
|
#603 | |||||
|
Commander
|
Re: Star Trek: Destiny Book 3: Lost Souls - (SPOILERS)
that is beyond our innate ability to solve.The Caeliar intervening and having a greater technical ability than the Fed makes it deus ex machina no more than a motorist lending you jumper cables,though of course the stakes are different.The Federation had no means to ensure it's own survival in any case.
__________________
There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under Heaven:A time to heal, A time to break down, and a time to build up. -Ecclesiastes 3:3 |
|||||
|
|
|
|
|
#604 | ||
|
Fleet Captain
|
Re: Star Trek: Destiny Book 3: Lost Souls - (SPOILERS)
About "Before Dishonor" - in "Mere Mortals" it was established that the only way these standard borg could have the advanced nanite technology is by receiving the necessary information from the offshoot supercube borg. What happened with the superborg from "Before Dishonor" was a freak accident, something ridiculously improbable that won't happen again. |
||
|
|
|
|
#605 | |||
|
Admiral
Location: The Red Flag: May Day 2013
|
Re: Star Trek: Destiny Book 3: Lost Souls - (SPOILERS)
![]()
__________________
This dream must end, this world must know: We all depend on the beast below. |
|||
|
|
|
|
#606 |
|
Ensign
|
Re: Star Trek: Destiny: Lost Souls - Discuss/Grade
Does Dr. Bashir survive, where is he and who is he with by the end of the novel? - Sheri |
|
|
|
|
#607 | ||
|
Writer
|
Re: Star Trek: Destiny Book 3: Lost Souls - (SPOILERS)
And what was the unique, unprecedented circumstance that made the supercube in BD choose to adapt in this way? In the Janeway Queen's own words, it was humiliated by its continued defeat at human hands. Probably a melodramatic way of describing their state of mind, but perhaps a more objective term is desperation. The mindset that drove the main Borg Collective to launch its full-scale assault on the Federation was similar: they'd gone beyond seeing the Federation as an annoyance and had recognized it as a serious threat. If the Federation had been able to use a weapon that neutralized all the Borg drones on over 4000 cubes, then it's not unreasonable to think that the surviving technological sentience of those cubes would experience the same sense of desperation, humiliation, whatever, and would make the same choice. After all, the incentive would be much the same.
__________________
Christopher L. Bennett Homepage -- Includes purchasing links for Only Superhuman, on sale now! Updated 12/30/12 with annotations for the novel. Written Worlds -- My blog |
||
|
|
|
|
|
#608 | |
|
Fleet Captain
|
Re: Star Trek: Destiny Book 3: Lost Souls - (SPOILERS)
You say that, in order for the borg to adapt this grey goo, they need to be desperate, humiliated. This happened many times to the borg before. Species 8472 destroyed far more than 4000 cubes - almost destroyed the entire collective - and the bord didn't create their grey goo, despite their desperation. "Destiny"'s own "children of the storm" destroyed hundreds of thousands of borg cubes - and the borg did't gain the superpowered ability from "before dishonor". And there were undoubtedly many other off-screen instances when the borg lost badly - and they never adapted their grey goo. You may say that another requirement for this adaptation is the death of all drones on a cube and the survival of the cube. Considering the borg's redundant tech and the many conflicts they fought (some of which they lost), it's extremely improbable that such a situation never occured before (in a losing battle). And yet, the borg never developed the unstoppable grey goo. What happened in "before dishonor" was practically impossible, it was a freak accident. It was like Enterprise D gaining sentience out of the blue and creating a space baby - something never before seen, that will never be seen again. Either that, or, in the entire borg history, there was never a situation that fulfilled the simple requirements necessary for the creation of "before dishonor"'s grey goo - which is ridiculously improbable. |
|
|
|
|
|
#609 | ||
|
Admiral
Location: The Red Flag: May Day 2013
|
Re: Star Trek: Destiny Book 3: Lost Souls - (SPOILERS)
Right now, I have the capability to alter my body's metabolism so that I become very, very muscular, if I so choose. Heck, if I chose, I could become a body builder -- physically adapting my body in a way I never have before. Or, alternately, I'm interested in Spanish history and literature. I've never done it before, but, in theory, I could choose to learn Spanish to such proficiency that I could read Cervantes's Don Quixote in the original Spanish. After all, it's just a matter of developing a new mental adaptation (learning Spanish). It's true, I don't have the ability to do enter a body building competition or to read Cervantes now. But it's only a matter of realizing the potential that I have and developing the adaptations needed to accomplish those goals. By your logic, the fact that I have not done so must mean I am physically incapable of it. After all, the Borg have never tried to assimilate by absorbing physical matter before; therefore the Borg must be incapable of it. It's an incredibly irrational syllogism based upon false premises, though. The Borg are by nature a force that adapts all the time. Therefore, they should logically often be developing capabilities they never possessed before. It does not stand to reason therefore that those capabilities were never potential capabilities beforehand -- just that they had not adapted themselves to accomplish those tasks beforehand.
There's no accounting for innovation and creativity. When it happens, it just happens. And canon has implied that the Borg have trouble being creative (Janeway believed that they just don't do it); it's not unreasonable to think that they don't tend to use sentient creativity because its appearance is unreliable, but that they still have moments of innovation or insight ungleaned from other species. And certainly if there's one thing that Destiny should teach us, it's that the Borg cannot be relied upon to follow previous behavior patterns on all situations; they are, like any other sentient intelligence, capable of altering their behavior. In any event: The point is not that the cubes, denuded of their drones, will certainly develop the absorption adaptation. The point is that it is a very real, and very serious risk, and the negative potential consequences would be of such severity that they would outweigh the positive potential consequences.
__________________
This dream must end, this world must know: We all depend on the beast below. |
||
|
|
|
|
#610 | ||||||||||||||||
|
Rear Admiral
Location: The Palace of Pernicious Pleasures
|
Re: Star Trek: Destiny Book 3: Lost Souls - (SPOILERS)
Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
__________________
Obdurants and Amusings - Behind the Shampoo Curtain |
||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
#611 | |
|
Admiral
Location: The Red Flag: May Day 2013
|
Re: Star Trek: Destiny Book 3: Lost Souls - (SPOILERS)
And I say that as an Atheist who's gotten into more than a few arguments with Christians, including family, about the validity of their faith. Whatever I may think of it, though, most of them hold their religion on the basis of a fundamental altruism -- ETA: and a fundamental sense of responsibility (often manifested as guilt and a desire to somehow right the wrongs they have committed) for their actions, end edit -- you aren't accounting for, and many who hold it are motivated by it to try to change the world for the better -- a behavioral paradigm far gone from your claim it promotes passivity. To claim that the story is popular because it promotes, in essence, irresponsibility and passivity is demonstrably false.
__________________
This dream must end, this world must know: We all depend on the beast below. |
|
|
|
|
|
#612 | ||
|
Writer
|
Re: Star Trek: Destiny Book 3: Lost Souls - (SPOILERS)
If there's one thing the books leading up to (and including) Destiny demonstrated, it's that you can't assume you know the Borg's limits. Every time it was believed they were defeated, they came back. Assuming that finding another thing to shoot at them would magically solve the problem forevermore is failing to learn the lesson of the prior sequence of events: that you can't beat the Borg with weapons. No matter what weapon you throw at them, they will always adapt. That's what they do. The only way to achieve a meaningful victory over the Borg was to change the very nature of the Borg. So the thalaron weapon was not a magic bullet. It was just another false hope. Santayana said that the definition of insanity is repeating the same action and expecting different results. By acknowledging the failure of brute force and finding a better option, the heroes of Destiny took the sane course. They rose above repeating the same endless conflict with the Borg and found a whole new paradigm for dealing with them, one that finally resolved the problem once and for all. I don't see how that can be seen as an undesirable outcome.
__________________
Christopher L. Bennett Homepage -- Includes purchasing links for Only Superhuman, on sale now! Updated 12/30/12 with annotations for the novel. Written Worlds -- My blog |
||
|
|
|
|
|
#613 | |
|
Rear Admiral
Location: The Palace of Pernicious Pleasures
|
Re: Star Trek: Destiny Book 3: Lost Souls - (SPOILERS)
(And, er... this is getting somewhat off-topic...) Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
__________________
Obdurants and Amusings - Behind the Shampoo Curtain |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#614 | |
|
Fleet Captain
|
Re: Star Trek: Destiny Book 3: Lost Souls - (SPOILERS)
I never said the thalaron weapon would certainly work against the borg. I said it had a good chance of working - of delaying or stopping the borg. It's possible that the borg assimilated the weapon previously. It's possible that they will adapt in some way - although, between 7 of 9's reccomendation and the many opportunities the borg wasted, the risk of them developing grey goo is minimal. But there is also a very good chance that the weapon will work. What Santayana/Picard/La Forge did was give up without even trying - it's possible the weapon won't work, so we won't use it. A defeatist attitude - one justified by a moral argument with holls so big that the entire borg fleet could fly through. What Santayana/Picard/La Forge did was start praying to some gods for deliverance - because they lacked the will and the creativity to even try to solve the problem themselves. That contradicts star trek's spirit - its fundamental humanism. P.S.
Last edited by ProtoAvatar; July 6 2009 at 10:27 PM. |
|
|
|
|
|
#615 | ||||||||||
|
Admiral
Location: The Red Flag: May Day 2013
|
Re: Star Trek: Destiny Book 3: Lost Souls - (SPOILERS)
And if they get help, then that renders them subservient to the people who help them.
Christopher then went on to point out that even if that particular adaptation is not utilized, the controlling artificial intelligence of the cubes remain, and the cubes remain capable of operating and of exterminating the Federation as they had previously been doing whilst crewed, which I hadn't considered. The thalaron weapon would quite literally be useless -- it wouldn't even delay the extermination of the Federation.
__________________
This dream must end, this world must know: We all depend on the beast below. |
||||||||||
|
|
![]() |
| Bookmarks |
| Tags |
| aventine, borg, destiny, destiny trilogy |
«
Previous Thread
|
Next Thread
»
| Thread Tools | |
|
|
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:57 PM.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.6
Copyright ©2000 - 2013, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
FireFox 2+ or Internet Explorer 7+ highly recommended.
Copyright ©2000 - 2013, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
FireFox 2+ or Internet Explorer 7+ highly recommended.




















