I do have a million dollars of compost in my back 40.
Do you know what to do with 1,500 tons of semi-wet dung?
Don't make say it.

I do have a million dollars of compost in my back 40.
Do you know what to do with 1,500 tons of semi-wet dung?
And then there was Worf and his broken back. Which would be better? Weeks/months being expose to some of the particles, or highly experimental surgury that nearly killed him? It isn't that the Federation already has medicine (they do) it's a matter of the particles being better than what they already have.Fine. They don't have a significant medical problem then
And if one of the Baku stopped eating, they're immortal, would they die? Or are the crops we see being grown just for the children?Any Immortality creates a problem with resources if the elderly stop dying, and keep eating
Humanity was the same the day before Cochrane's flight as we were the day after.I find the whole notion of pre-warp and warp societies to be condescending and presumptuous.
....
If you would insist on a benchmark, wouldn't some kind of sociological development standard make more sense? A philosophic achievement, verses a propulsion mechanism.
Yes, a warp drive might push the issue, they can now come to you. But it should not be the prime predetermining criteria.
The particles get turned off Worf goes back to square one. These particles aren't going anywhere anyway. The Feds have all the time in the galaxy to understand what-the-hell-is-going-on with the particles and devise a way of harnessing them properly without a given person being tethered to them.And then there was Worf and his broken back. Which would be better? Weeks/months being expose to some of the particles, or highly experimental surgury that nearly killed him? It isn't that the Federation already has medicine (they do) it's a matter of the particles being better than what they already have
Any Immortality creates a problem with resources if the elderly stop dying, and keep eating when there's young that were expecting to be earmarked for that cornstarch.
Yes, that is the horror story of Miri.
The Nazi's winning the second world war could have achieved all of those items. I would think a one world government (in of itself) won't be all that important. The species obtaining social and cultural unity would be better, a cultural achievement.One worldwide government, eliminating the possibility of war. No nations, no nationalities, no boundaries. That would be a good criterion. Sounds like we're still a couple of centuries away from that though.
How would that work? Let's say Worf's spine and nerves are complete repaired - then the particles are "turned off" - what then is going to unrepair his spine? What force, what mechinism would come into play to redamage all the good work done by the particle treatment?The particles get turned off Worf goes back to square one
What about Geordi's eyes? He could see on the planet, and is back to implants in Nemesis isn't he?
It's more it wouldn't work on Worf's disfigurement in the first place.How would that work? Let's say Worf's spine and nerves are complete repaired - then the particles are "turned off" - what then is going to unrepair his spine? What force, what mechinism would come into play to redamage all the good work done by the particle treatment?
Worf's treatment would be over with, he walks away.
Perhaps Geordi missed having the additional abilities the artificial eyes gave him, so he made a pair of cybernetic "contact lens" to go over his own perfectly good eyes.What about Geordi's eyes? He could see on the planet, and is back to implants in Nemesis isn't he?
Disfigurement?t's more it wouldn't work on Worf's disfigurement in the first place.
That part never made sense to me either. Unless they meant you had to stay there permanently to keep the cure.Yes, that the part that doesn't make any sense. If Geordi's eyes are back, they are back. What would be the cause of their destruction? I think this is where "the writers are totally full of shit" shows it's ugly head. These idiots have absolutely no idea what they are talking about.
That part never made sense to me either. Unless they meant you had to stay there permanently to keep the cure.
...then the galaxy would suddenly become composed of races of immortals and you can't write that stuff in.
Maybe. But curing death, I'm not sure is a road you should go down in dramatic terms.Well, you can. But they would be taking a chance on making the universe interesting.
It made sense in-universe. You move away from the rays, it loses its effect. If it was a genuine fountain of youth, then the galaxy would suddenly become composed of races of immortals and you can't write that stuff in.
Maybe. But curing death, I'm not sure is a road you should go down in dramatic terms.
Maybe. But curing death, I'm not sure is a road you should go down in dramatic terms.
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