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#106 |
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Fleet Captain
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Re: So why doesn't Spock save Vulcan?
2. We have seen, as I have noted, that even though Spock has NOT cheated to save various colonies and alien worlds, he has been MORE than willing to cheat time to save Earth. Since Vulcan (and his mother) are at least as salient/proximate to Spock as Earth. And since Spock has been willing to correct incursions/alterations to timelines in the past, he should have more than enough justification and motivation to save Vulcan. |
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#107 | |
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Vice Admiral
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Re: So why doesn't Spock save Vulcan?
2) That's not Spock Prime's mother. His mother and father lived and died in another timeline.
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Boobies are evil!!! |
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#108 |
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Commodore
Location: Pennsylvania, USA
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Re: So why doesn't Spock save Vulcan?
For example, Casino Royale (2006) was certainly more realistic in tone than, say, A View to Kill, but it was still far from being a realistic representation of the actual world. Casino Royale was 'realistic' only within the framework of the James Bond world.
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...With shoes that cut, and eyes that burn like cigarettes With fingernails that shine like justice and a voice that is dark like tinted glass... |
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#109 |
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Fleet Captain
Location: Omaha, NE
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Re: So why doesn't Spock save Vulcan?
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#110 | |
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Fleet Captain
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Re: So why doesn't Spock save Vulcan?
If you're going to boldly go in a new direction, then just boldly go, and leave old Trek behind without a passing of the torch narrative. And yet Old Spock still reported that he was emotionally compromised. And this means he still had motivation as well as justification. |
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#111 |
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Vice Admiral
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Re: So why doesn't Spock save Vulcan?
2) Spock Prime was showing Kirk the avenue to take in order to gain command of the Enterprise. Yes, he was upset as well. But the whole point was to get Kirk into the captains chair.
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Boobies are evil!!! |
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#112 | |||
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Fleet Captain
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Re: So why doesn't Spock save Vulcan?
Can't we ask these questions and still enjoy our stories? Why do we have to chose between asking narrative questions and enjoyment?
I am sure that these people want to exploit the Trek franchise to milk it for every dime. I do not blame them for wanting to make money, but I do not - for that reason - feel any duty to praise their choices.
I don't own a factory. Do I need to own one to be able to note a defect in a product? I can't produce cars in my garage. Should I not, for that reason, criticize a Ford for having defective brakes. The list of informal fallacies in this thread is staggering. |
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#113 |
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Vice Admiral
Location: La Belle Province or The Green Mountain State (depends on the day of the week)
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Re: So why doesn't Spock save Vulcan?
Feel free to point out whatever flaws you perceive. Feel free to offer up explanations for the flaws. Feel free to offer alternative suggestions to the flaws. Feel free to be exasperated that others don't have the same views as you. DO NOT feel free to presume you are somehow superior to those who disagree with you (a strong undercurrent of many of your posts--as is usually the case when pomposity rears its head). Besides, it not as if everyone disagrees with everything you've said. It's that many of us simply don't care enough to get in a tizzy over whatever flaws you've identified that we might also have seen. Critics and professors can of course continue of analyze and critique things to their hearts' content (as can you). But most of those I've known (in each category) also know well enough to categorize various forms of art and entertainment and apply standards accordingly. Star Trek simply isn't that high up the scale. |
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#114 | ||
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Definitely Herbert. Maybe.
Location: Terra Inlandia
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Re: So why doesn't Spock save Vulcan?
Slingshotting is not an available option. Period. The (then-current) model upon which the idea was based is effectively obsolete, and has been replaced (for purposes of this incarnation of Trek, at the very least) with a different model - one which does not allow closed-loop time travel. In practical terms, that mode of time travel never existed. To insist that it still does exist is to wilfully ignore The Way Things Are Now (according to the guys who are telling the stories). If you're interested in participating in discussion, then you're welcome to do so. However, the recurrent cataloguing of fallacies in which you've been engaging has the effect, more and more, of making it look as if this really is the "gotcha" topic you've insisted it is not. If the responses you're getting don't fit the answers you had already written on your checklist, it does not automatically render them invalid or fallacious; it only means that it would probably have been more realistic for you to be expecting those other answers and not now be trying to force them to fit into your predetermined "right answer" checklist boxes.
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I have long felt that any reviewer who expresses rage and loathing for a novel or a play or a poem is preposterous. He or she is like a person who has put on full armor and attacked a hot fudge sundae or a banana split. — Kurt Vonnegut |
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#115 |
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Admiral
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Re: So why doesn't Spock save Vulcan?
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Thiptho lapth! Ian (Entire post is personal opinion) The Andor Files @ http://andorfiles.blogspot.com/ |
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#116 | ||||||
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Fleet Captain
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Re: So why doesn't Spock save Vulcan?
OK.
It is just a movie. It is certainly no worse a flaw (if that is what it is) than many Trek tale has exhibited. The makers were trying to appease the old while creating the new, a difficult challenge.
Someone should have told them that they only get to criticize high art. The standard I am applying is coherence, which is about as minimal as standards get. I think the healthiest thing to do would be to shrug, even admit that it is an open question, rather than respond as if the very question were a sign of an infection which needed to be purged. |
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#117 |
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Commodore
Location: Pennsylvania, USA
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Re: So why doesn't Spock save Vulcan?
Star Trek fans have a long history of shaping "Star Trek logical reality" based on what is presented on the screen -- and what is presented often required some creative shaping to fit what we thought we previously knew about Star Trek (and what was previously presented). Back on Saturday afternoons in the 1970s watching Star Trek reruns, my friends and I would sit around making up explanations for what we saw on TV that day, trying to make it fit into the "greater Star Trek Universe" that existed in our minds -- and quite a bit of rationalizing needed to be done to make it fit. I'd say the same thing happened with trying to fit TNG into the TOS universe. It seems we are abandoning that long-standing tradition with this thread.
__________________
...With shoes that cut, and eyes that burn like cigarettes With fingernails that shine like justice and a voice that is dark like tinted glass... |
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#118 | |||||
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Fleet Captain
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Re: So why doesn't Spock save Vulcan?
Worship as we may at the altar of authorial intention, authors must still be held to account for what they accomplish, not just what they intended to accomplish. Indeed, we are nearing the old Intentional Fallacy (Wimsatt and Beardsley) if we presume that the author is the God with regard to the meaning and value of a work. Again, I have already detailed how both universes are intermingled and how we cannot suppose tout court that slingshotting is not an option. All the evidence present to us in the text indicates that it is. Star Trek is not reality, it is fantasy. There is no "physics of red matter," there is no actual "warp mechanics" which underwrites the function of the engines of starships. If Star Trek shows us in a film that there is red matter which magically creates black holes from nail polish, then in that universe, this is the case. If Star Trek shows us Spock slingshotting around the sun to go back in the same timeline, then this is simply the case. In short, what fiction posits has greater standing, in term of internal consistency, than what the real-world allows. Our test in this case is coherence. If you want to get all real-world on Star Trek, then the whole universe falls apart. We cannot preferentially defend Star Trek as being real world in some aspects, but then arbitrarily beg off that standard when Trek is not real world. Real world physics has nothing to do with it.
The City on the Edge of Forever never existed, Assignment: Earth never existed, The Naked Time never existed, Tomorrow is Yesterday never existed, All our Yesterdays never existed, and Star Trek IV never existed. And it isn't just this. What else never existed? Let's see... Star Trek: First Contact We'll Always Have Paris Time Squared Yesterday's Enterprise Captain's Holiday A Matter of Time Cause and Effect Time's Arrow Time's Arrow, Part II Tapestry Timescape Firstborn All Good Things... Past Tense, Part I Past Tense, Part II Visionary The Visitor Little Green Men Accession Trials and Tribble-ations Children of Time Wrongs Darker Than Death or Night Time's Orphan Parallax Time and Again Eye of the Needle Death Wish Future's End Future's End, Part II Before and After Timeless Relativity Fury Shattered Endgame Cold Front Shockwave Shockwave, Part II Future Tense Carpenter Street Azati Prime E² Zero Hour Storm Front Storm Front, Part II Indeed, it appears that the Prime Universe never existed! And I thought I was assured that it was still "there" and still "real." Now I find that Old Spock's history and Prime Trek history does not exist anymore. Perhaps it wasn't Old Spock who came through that black hole after all? It is rather, Old Spock lite, with only those historical details that uncomplicate the reality of nu-Trek. So much for the soft-reboot, this is more like getting the boot.
It's not playing "Gotcha" when Sarah Palin cannot answer obvious straightforward questions about national policy. Likewise, it's not playing gotcha, when the opposition hastily reaches for bad reasons in response to questions.
It's not that I object to an Ad Hominem because I'd rather hear agreement, but because an Ad Hominem is so often a weak argument. |
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#119 |
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Vice Admiral
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Re: So why doesn't Spock save Vulcan?
If he goes back pre-Narada, he changes the course of the universe for billions of beings. He eliminates twenty-five years of existence. If he goes back to just before the destruction of Vulcan, Jim Kirk never makes it to the captains chair.
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Boobies are evil!!! |
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#120 | ||
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Vice Admiral
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Re: So why doesn't Spock save Vulcan?
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lol
l /\ |
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