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| The Next Generation All Good Things come to an end...but not here. |
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#16 |
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Lieutenant Junior Grade
Location: Great Scott
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Re: Is the Data character more human than he's given credit for?
I watched Phantasms last night, and it appears often that Data is worried, pre-occupied, distracted, and during the scene after he has the dream where he cuts off Troi's shoulder-cake and Geordi asks him what his dream was about, he appeared almost scared that Geordi might judge him, or come to the wrong conclusion about what he dreamt. I personally thought he does feel emotions regardless of whether they are on the level of humans or not, but he rationalises these feelings in a way for them to make sense to him. I also read an interesting article the other day where it hypothesises that the internet will grow so large, that it will start resembling the synapses of the human brain, that regardless of what it is made of as long as the complexity is there it could become self-aware and develop emotions. I'd like to think that's what happened, or was happening in a way, to Data. |
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#17 |
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Captain
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Re: Is the Data character more human than he's given credit for?
__________________
"Thank you.. for the drinks." |
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#18 | |
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Rear Admiral
Location: in a figment of a mediocre mind's imagination
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Re: Is the Data character more human than he's given credit for?
You are misinformed as to what Antisocial Personality Disorder is. |
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#19 | ||
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Captain
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Re: Is the Data character more human than he's given credit for?
I still think one can hypothetically lack emotion and still be self aware and sentient. I'd bet there has been at least one case in human history. I think if the right parts of the brain were screwed up it could happen.
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"Thank you.. for the drinks." |
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#20 | ||
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Rear Admiral
Location: in a figment of a mediocre mind's imagination
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Re: Is the Data character more human than he's given credit for?
I agree one could certainly be self-aware and sentient while lacking in SOME emotions(empathy, to use your example) but I don't see how one could lack ALL emotions and still function. Again, things like your basic desires and preferences in things like "what do I feel like eating for breakfast today?" would be gone. How does Data decide what to do in his off-time for example? Wasn't it David Hume who said that the intellect is servant to the passions? I agree with David.
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#21 |
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Lieutenant Commander
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Re: Is the Data character more human than he's given credit for?
Lal: Then why do you still try to emulate humans? What purpose does it serve except to remind you that you are incomplete? Data: I have asked myself that many times as I have struggled to be more human, Lal. Until I finally realized that it is the struggle itself that is most important. We must strive to be better than we are. It does not matter that we will never reahc our ultimate goal. The effort yeilds its own rewards. I always found it kinda ironic that in trying to explain to Lal why he struggles to be more human Data ends up describing what it is to be human, at leats imho. This entire episode makes it very difficult to believe in Data as an emotionless being. Even Dr Crusher within the episode states that she finds it hard to believe that Data is incapable of providing Lal with love.
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A hoarde of flying fizzy bees are coming to eat your dreams... |
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#22 |
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Captain
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Re: Is the Data character more human than he's given credit for?
He seems to be limited to some kind of desire/ambition, though. are those really emotions though? He just wants to get from point A to point B. It's a goal to him. It can be thought of as quite mathematical. There's not much *feeling* involved necessarily
__________________
"Thank you.. for the drinks." |
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#23 | |
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Lieutenant Junior Grade
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Re: Is the Data character more human than he's given credit for?
Except he has a self-preservation instinct that makes him try to avoid unnecessary danger and damage, which is all fear really is. Except he can feel loss, the lack of someone he cared for (Tasha Yar, Lal). That's why he had to download Lal's memories at the end of Offspring, and why he kept the picture of Tasha (which he had no other reason for keeping; it's not like Data is capable of ever forgetting what someone looks like). Isn't missing someone's company, or the way they enriched your life, one of the greatest forms of sadness? Surprise definitely isn't a base emotion, but Data shows that pretty much every time something bizarre happens. Now, I fully believe Data *believes* he doesn't feel emotions, and that he feels them differently, in a much more muted and less all-consuming manner than most humans. It's like the difference between a placid lake and a raging river. Just because you can't hear the lake roaring like the river, just because it's still and won't bash you against rocks if you jump in, those things don't make it stop being water. In the end, though, it seems like the writers of the show wanted to leave it intentionally open to interpretation. So annoying, lol. |
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#24 |
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Commander
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Re: Is the Data character more human than he's given credit for?
__________________
Who said sexy had to be human? |
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#25 | ||||
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Captain
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Re: Is the Data character more human than he's given credit for?
I'm not even sure if he does have much of a self preservation instinct, he often seems puts himself in harms way quite a few times to help others or accomplish the mission at hand. This could be said for many starfleet officers, of course. But data certainly never shows any hint of fear throughout the television series. (except maybe when lore was screwing with him)
As for Lal, I just think it was a logical thing for him to do. He had the capability to download her memories, and he did so, because why not? It might even help him understand emotion more since he could have her memories.
I would argue that data does not show "surprise", but rather that he emulates a human response of surprise/fascination at times. I think a lot of his "emotional responses" are often just him emulating humans in order to 1.) make them feel more comfortable around him as part of his programming and 2.) try to understand these emotions more, like the old saying "fake it till you make it" I most certainly agree with that as well. Dramatically, it worked well for Lore, but it was a horrible idea to make it work with Data and killed a lot of what made his character interesting.
__________________
"Thank you.. for the drinks." |
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#26 |
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Admiral
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Re: Is the Data character more human than he's given credit for?
Hated the emotion chip and how it was used in GEN for mostly cheap laughs. The writers even ignored it completey and went back to no emotion chip Data in the last two movies! |
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#27 |
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Commander
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Re: Is the Data character more human than he's given credit for?
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#28 |
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Fleet Captain
Location: California
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Re: Is the Data character more human than he's given credit for?
Dr Soon had already created an android with emotion, but Lore ended up being psychotic, so Data was created-without an emotion chip. Data seems to go through all the motions of feeling, but cannot classify it. Like a gap is missing. However, I like classical view on Data; He doesn't have emotions, he just has a set of desires and goals, and even those are programs. Yet he stills tries to be 'human' but is always an sentient computer looking from the outside. He comes off more interesting that way. It's true, after the movies gave him his emotion chip, Data became too gimmicky. They went right back to giving him the ability to flip off the chip, even though it was claimed in the first movie, the effects was not reversible. |
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#29 |
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Commodore
Location: Terra 3
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Re: Is the Data character more human than he's given credit for?
At the core Data is an android programed to emulate humans, or at least the best examples thereof. It's what he is and it's his primary function. Data's character evolution would argue towards the later definition, that striving to be more and better than he currently is, is what defines his humanity. Then again by that definition it really is fundamentally racist. By it's very name it implies that only humans are capable of being more than they are. Somewhat surprising that the only time the Federation gets called on this is during STVI.
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"I was never a Star Trek fan." J.J. Abrams |
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#30 |
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Ensign
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Re: Is the Data character more human than he's given credit for?
As for what the writers intended, that's a different matter. We were constantly told Data lacks emotion or humanity, but he frequently adopts human mannerisms. Think about it: if you met Data would you consider him inhuman, or just a little rigid? I think they were ambiguous on this. But by Redemption II they must've been trying to suggest that he apes human emotions when called upon to do so. |
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