Vulcans have feelings, feelings so intense they've learned to repress them in order to function as a society. As part of that they deny they even have feelings at all. That's quite illogical.
One may argue that in fact, Vulcan's have repressed their feelings beyond what is needed to function as a society, and that that is both illogical and unhealthy (and then point to the intensity of Pon farr or diseases like Bendii Syndrome as a sign of too much repression).
Vulcans are aware that other humanoids have feelings, yet are continuously surprised when those humanoids act on those feelings, and can never account for such feelings (even when they are aware of them) when considering humanoid behavior. This seems highly illogical.
Vulcan's often engage in, or permit, irrational/illogical behavior, or behave based on specious or fallacious logic, even at the highest levels, without question, meaning this is acceptable in their society. Quite illogical.
If Romulans are an offshoot of Vulcans but they didn't embrace logic, why didn't they destroy themselves? In fact, how did pre-Surak Vulcan even achieve interstellar space travel? Could the story of Romulans as Vulcan re be something about Vulcan (the planet) that affected Vulcan (the species) evolution, creating these extreme emotional states?
If indeed the Vulcans are the species from which other Vulcanoid races evolved, and their emotional instability is inherent in that species, shouldn't they all show signs of that?
How did the "proto-Vulcan" Mintakans get there, evade the emotional instability and come to embrace logic?
The logical answer seems to be that Vulcans, Romulans, Mintakans and other Vulcanoid species are descended from another species (and I don't mean Sargon and his species... something in between), that the emotional instability (and perhaps also a tendency for logic) is inherent in that "missing link" species, and that Vulcan (the planet) had the effect of magnifying that trait in those evolved there... also seems like maybe the Romulans didn't come from Vulcan at all.
Or maybe early Vulcans weren't as bad as they say, though they did in the end almost destroy themselves. Then this extreme view of pre-Surak Vulcans would be propaganda by pro-logic-extremists to justify their absolutist views on emotional repression.
One may argue that in fact, Vulcan's have repressed their feelings beyond what is needed to function as a society, and that that is both illogical and unhealthy (and then point to the intensity of Pon farr or diseases like Bendii Syndrome as a sign of too much repression).
Vulcans are aware that other humanoids have feelings, yet are continuously surprised when those humanoids act on those feelings, and can never account for such feelings (even when they are aware of them) when considering humanoid behavior. This seems highly illogical.
Vulcan's often engage in, or permit, irrational/illogical behavior, or behave based on specious or fallacious logic, even at the highest levels, without question, meaning this is acceptable in their society. Quite illogical.
If Romulans are an offshoot of Vulcans but they didn't embrace logic, why didn't they destroy themselves? In fact, how did pre-Surak Vulcan even achieve interstellar space travel? Could the story of Romulans as Vulcan re be something about Vulcan (the planet) that affected Vulcan (the species) evolution, creating these extreme emotional states?
If indeed the Vulcans are the species from which other Vulcanoid races evolved, and their emotional instability is inherent in that species, shouldn't they all show signs of that?
How did the "proto-Vulcan" Mintakans get there, evade the emotional instability and come to embrace logic?
The logical answer seems to be that Vulcans, Romulans, Mintakans and other Vulcanoid species are descended from another species (and I don't mean Sargon and his species... something in between), that the emotional instability (and perhaps also a tendency for logic) is inherent in that "missing link" species, and that Vulcan (the planet) had the effect of magnifying that trait in those evolved there... also seems like maybe the Romulans didn't come from Vulcan at all.
Or maybe early Vulcans weren't as bad as they say, though they did in the end almost destroy themselves. Then this extreme view of pre-Surak Vulcans would be propaganda by pro-logic-extremists to justify their absolutist views on emotional repression.