ENT had a western episode with horses, but my traumatic amnesia won't let me remember the details.
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You're right! North Star!! And there were tons of horses and it was a western town! How could I have forgotten this.
ENT had a western episode with horses, but my traumatic amnesia won't let me remember the details.
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Are horses sci-fi stuff or science-fantasy stuff?
By the way, TOS was clearly a medical drama, since there was a doctor in almost all episodes and he's oftenly doing doctor thing. He also does doctor things in TOS movies.
...no, it's a candy mint!...
...no, it's a breath mint!...
...no, it's a candy mint!...
...no, it's a breath mint!...
And a dessert topping and floor wax . . . .
...no, it's a candy mint!...
...no, it's a breath mint!...
And a dessert topping and floor wax . . . .
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I would say all versions of Trek are pretty hard science fiction--straight out of EE Doc Smith and Robert Heinlein. Space opera. Anytime the story centers around quasi-military space adventurers on an FTL ship roaming the galaxy that's pretty much classic hard s.f.
I'm not sure how it could get much harder actually.
ETA: Just take a look at "Forbidden Planet." If that's hard s.f.--which it must be--then so is Star Trek--since just about everything in Star Trek is more or less foreshadowed in Forbidden Planet.
Honestly, the most improbable thing in TOS is Mr. Spock. A human-alien hybrid one can almost accept, but when the alien parent has a completely different, copper-based blood chemistry . . . how is cross-breeding even possible? Vulcans and humans aren't even compatible on the most basic level . . .
You're missing the point. Greg's talking about an explanation that would have been explicitly explained by the writers and the deal is bigger than simply Sarek's sperm and Amanda's egg.Honestly, the most improbable thing in TOS is Mr. Spock. A human-alien hybrid one can almost accept, but when the alien parent has a completely different, copper-based blood chemistry . . . how is cross-breeding even possible? Vulcans and humans aren't even compatible on the most basic level . . .
How do we know there is not something in that Vulcan blood beyond the extent of human science and knowledge that allows Vulcans to breed with alien species? Perhaps the pon farr causes Vulcan blood to match or blend with the blood type of a chosen mate, and it was discovered this chemical change works with certain alien species as well, including humans. This would explain the sensation of their blood burning during pon farr.![]()
They freely ignored the research firm when it suited them. So their devotion to science wasn't that hard fast.Except in TOS at least, they tried to get the science right as best they knew, right? Employing a research firm, etc. Clearly "inertial dampers" (never mentioned but necessary at least when not using warp drive) and deck-by-deck gravity stretch credulity, but many stories considered sci-fi from that era had an element or two that weren't probable.
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