borg question

Discussion in 'General Trek Discussion' started by roguephoenix, Sep 27, 2008.

  1. roguephoenix

    roguephoenix Captain Captain

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    yea thinking about the same. that they're subconsciously wanting to keep their biological side even though they are striving for perfection. they're unable to leave all the imperfections behind because subconsciously they can't. however, it doesn't explain why they're not using their tech or their biological potential to their most efficient and most improved. that's what i'm trying to understand. trying to understand their concept.
     
  2. Sector 7

    Sector 7 Vice Admiral Admiral

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    You need to think like a TV exec. They LOOK menacing and scary for a reason... it's good TV. No logic necessary since Hollywood is all about outward appearances. :borg:
     
  3. Jeri

    Jeri Vice Admiral Admiral

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    Keeping their biological side is not subconscious; they plainly do it by design: they approach perfection by assimilating other cultures' creativity. They don't practice creativity themselves per se. Your bottleneck appears to be at the location where you ascribe your own notion of what they should do in place of their stated goals.
     
  4. roguephoenix

    roguephoenix Captain Captain

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    so in essence their view of perfection is flawed. are they aware of that? though they keep their biological bodies, they do nothing to unlock the potential of those bodies even though they have the tech. i'm sure there are plenty of species that they've assimilated with amazing biological abilities. one that comes to mind are vulcans. they could release the potential of their minds, but they don't. they don't really elevate themselves. they're doing more of a diagonal rise rather than a vertical rise they have all the tech they need to accomplish this, but they don't. unlock biological potential and augment it with electronic technology. don't you think that's much better than just taking a regular body and augmenting it? which one would you say is more "efficient" or "perfect"? i doubt you'd pick the latter cause that wouldn't logically make sense. so why are they not doing that? do they not realize that their methods to gaining "perfection" and "efficiency" is very "imperfect" and defies streamline logic? if they don't realize that then they really are not following their directive.

    also, if they assimilate "creativity" from the outside, doesn't that mean they do so in order to utilize it? if not, there's no logical reason to assimilate it.

    i'm saying that their actions don't seem to FULLY correspond with their goals. am i the only one who thinks that? sure they somewhat follow their goals, but not to the best of their abilities, and they are capable of so much more and have the knowledge and tech to elevate themselves beyond what they are now. if they are thinking more machines as we have seen they either should be follwing their directive fully or not. there's no somewhat.

    but i think mr. spook 7 had the best answer where the borg really don't make sense. they're just there to be meneacing even though they're not working as intended because the creators probably don't think that people will think about borg function as much as just go "ooh ahh" when they see them lol.
     
  5. Jeri

    Jeri Vice Admiral Admiral

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    In your opinion. That's what this topic is really all about: you want to run the Borg differently than they do, but it's their choice to make. Timo made the best point: essentially perfection is in the eye of the beholder.
     
  6. roguephoenix

    roguephoenix Captain Captain

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    but we already know their view of perfection. it's not like we don't know what perfection means to them. even if we didn't know, we at least know that they have an analytical approach to perfection. so analytically speaking, their actions do not meet their goals as far as perfection. it's not like we're talking about some abstract view of perfection. they've stated it often enough and we've seen how they function.
     
  7. Timo

    Timo Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Excuse me, but what IYO is their view of perfection?

    All they have stated, AFAIK, is that they wish to add the distinctiveness of pretty much everybody to their Collective, increase the quality of life of the assimilees, and become more powerful in the process themselves. That doesn't much define their views on perfection.

    The Queen likes to be a loose head, and thinks that Omega molecules are pretty cool, but from this it doesn't follow that every Drone should be bodyless or become an Omega molecule ASAP. The Borg seek perfection, that much they say - and they bolt technology to biological bodies, that much we see. So it should follow, straightforwardly enough, that perfection for the Borg is a cybernetically augmented body.

    As for the claim that such a body would need to be a Six Billion Dollar Plus Value Added Tax Man, that's absurd. Six Million Dollar Man didn't fly at hypersonic speeds, so he already fell short of perfection in one field. He didn't look like Johnny Depp, so he fell short in another field, too. He didn't play the dulcimer with any skill, so he was imperfect in yet another field. And he didn't even seek to improve himself in those fields - because they were irrelevant to his idea of bodily perfection, in this case physical prowess important in being an all-around hero and rescue engine.

    The Borg aren't fast runners, but that's irrelevant to physical perfection. They don't have to run, because they are invulnerable. The Borg don't dance like Bruce Lee, but again, that's irrelevant. If Bruce Lee wanted to play rough with them, he'd simply be snapped in half. And neither Carl Lewis nor Bruce Lee would be able to compete with the Borg on real survival skills, such as the hability to hack into starships.

    Timo Saloniemi
     
  8. roguephoenix

    roguephoenix Captain Captain

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    ok, first off, the fact that they view the omega molecule as the epiotomy of perfection is already a big clue of their views. the efficiency, symetry, and power of the molecule. they worship it and try to be like it, like how it works. the only way to achieve that molecule is if all components are at their peak and working in harmony.

    second, the example about the six million dollar man was an analogy. it's when you use something simpler in order to drive a point. i used those easier to grasp examples in order to show comparative difference between what they want and what they are doing. lol what i was trying to illustrate is that the guy was more than he used to be. his body was augmented with tech yet the tech wasn't in the way and it boosted his natural abilities. i wasn't saying that he was already perfect but essentially more than normal humans were.

    third, the borg are not invulnerable lol. if that were true they'd be gods.

    as far as "being fast runners" being irrelevant to physical perfection, that's not entirely true. the reason people are able to run faster than others is because they have a natural gift that gives them the advantage. the fact that they run faster is just a byproduct of the enhanced ability they have. they, of course, will not strive to be fast runners, or whatnot. that's not what boosting the body's potential is all about. ok, to use an analogy again, hopefully you understand, if a bodybuilder wants a more perfect body, he'll not neglect a certain part while boosting others. same goes for the borg. they value symetry so it has to be a unilateral boost not just one part.

    clearly they value their biological components else they would just abandon. however they're not doing anything to unlock the biological potential while they are doing everything they can to unlock cybernetic potential. it's not balanced. there are so many ways to boost the biological components. one example is unlocking the potential of vulcan minds and using that to their advantage. unlocking the potential of the klingon physiology to make them virtually unstoppable.

    using your bruce lee example lol imagine a borg with bruce lee's ability and a regular drone. who do you think would be more successful, if it's even a question? show the queen a borg that's agile, smart, have natural stamina, and certain abilities that you might call "powers" and see if she doesn't pick them over regular drones. that's all i'm saying. they can, and are able to to make a super humanoid borg that would elevate them a step up to perfection and would essentially follow their directive to elevate the quality of life, using the distictiveness to add to their collective, and in the process becoming more powerful and following their essential view of perfection. that would also follow their analytical view of perfection as all components will be working at their peak, with symetry and efficiency.

    sorry, but does anyone see my point? am i alone in this? thinking that the borg are not following their primal drive? they are simply... being mediocre when they are capable of being so much more and have the knowledge and tech to do it? i don't know why but that's how i see them. as a species (not a plot device) they are capable of elevating themselves, which is their primal drive, but for some reason are not. they're like that 40 year old living at home working part time because the parents are rich and he's comfortable there. lol
     
    Last edited: Oct 11, 2008
  9. timmy84

    timmy84 Commodore Commodore

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    The problem is whats being perfected. The Borg drones or the Borg Collective. They are two different things.

    The Collective is seeking perfection, and sends it drones out to pursue those goals.

    Drones are simply parts of the collective. If the collective were destroyed, those parts are no longer Borg, because they never were.

    :borg:
     
  10. Birdshine

    Birdshine Ensign Newbie

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    I think the easy answer is the correct answer - They look that way because its really cool. I dont think the Borg ever would of become so popular if they didn't all look like horrible machinized Frankensteins.
     
  11. MetalPants

    MetalPants Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    One thing I have never understood about the borg is their use of time travel. They don't seem to be constrained by a "temporal prime directive" or whatever it is called. So if I were the borg, ever few decades or so, I'd send a ship back in time to give technology from the future to the past. This would also give decades worth of knowledge and exploration, insight into various battle techniques, and myriad other advantages to the borg of the past to exploit.

    So why don't they use time travel to help themselves?
     
  12. roguephoenix

    roguephoenix Captain Captain

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    perfection of the parts = perfection of the whole. looking at their omega molecule fascination is enough to establish that. molecule does not exist in it's perfect state without it's parts being so as well. so perfecting the drones IS part of perfecting the collective.


    i wonder the same thing. same goes for that transwarp conduit. so much potential to get what they want yet they don't use it fully. they never use anything they have to their full advantage, aka inefficient which means they are going against their directive/goals.