Defunct in making a functional planet which the Klingons didn't want it for anyway.I Doubt they learned anything technical enough to try. It has Ben be defunct,so it is not referenced in the future.
Defunct in making a functional planet which the Klingons didn't want it for anyway.I Doubt they learned anything technical enough to try. It has Ben be defunct,so it is not referenced in the future.
Yes, but their existence was already known as soon as Einstein figured out relativity.
The problem of the mycellium network is basically, that it has needed to have existed since millions of years, so that tardigrades can have evolved the means to travel it. There is NO WAY, in all those millions of years, no tardigrades, spores or anything else ever made it to Earth, or that such subspace-openings wouldn't ever have been noticed. As such, the existence of the mycellium network not only clashes with previous established canon (that would have been fine), but with what WE already know about our universe.
Used by the Preservers? How's that for an Easter Egg?known but not found. and who is to say that the mycellium network, in trek backstory, is not a catalyst for panspermia.
known but not found. and who is to say that the mycellium network, in trek backstory, is not a catalyst for panspermia.
As opposed to time travel? I guess my line of suspension of disbelief is a whole lot different than others.But never previously they built an entire season-spanning arc on a McGuffin that is truly, downright provable rubbish and violating the very reality we live in.
As opposed to time travel? I guess my line of suspension of disbelief is a whole lot different than others.
And the Q? The Organians? The Prophets?Well, we can safely rule that out as provable impossible. Just by looking at the observable universe today.
And the Q? The Organians? The Prophets?
Or, we know what exists in all ten spatial dimensions that have been theorized? I'm no physicists, but I do feel like that Star Trek has dealt in the provabable impossible before without issue.
And the Q? The Organians? The Prophets?
Or, we know what exists in all ten spatial dimensions that have been theorized? I'm no physicists, but I do feel like that Star Trek has dealt in the provabable impossible before without issue.
That's fair point. Lorca and his mapping of the network means we are supposed to believe it has always been there just not mapped yet. I have struggled even wanting to give sense to the mechanics of spore drive. Visually it seems silly, it really does. Having a creature, be it a Tardigrade or a human hooked up and mixed with spores then piloting this technology through pathways that present themselves in the interfaces brain. What a freak show.. A giant mushroom spanning the entire galaxy with sentient beings (tardigrades) traveling it's paths through the galaxy? Well, we can safely rule that out as provable impossible. Just by looking at the observable universe today.
YMMV though. Big time.
No we wouldn't.NOT okay: A galaxy spanning space shroom FTL network with biological organisms travelling on it. That'd be right in front of us. IF such a thing existed, we would know of it by now. Aka - we would see the consequences of it right in front of our eyes.
That's fair point. Lorca and his mapping of the network means we are supposed to believe it has always been there just not mapped yet. I have struggled even wanting to give sense to the mechanics of spore drive. Visually it seems silly, it really does. Having a creature, be it a Tardigrade or a human hooked up and mixed with spores then piloting this technology through pathways that present themselves in the interfaces brain. What a freak show.
No we wouldn't.
How would we know about it? What tool is present in current technology that would make that possible? Why is an FTL lifeform when humanity cannot surmount the lightspeed barrier yet be so detectable?NOT okay: A galaxy spanning space shroom FTL network with biological organisms travelling on it. That'd be right in front of us. IF such a thing existed, we would know of it by now. Aka - we would see the consequences of it right in front of our eyes. Ergo - while all of these are highly implausible in the real world (and none of them really scientific), only the latter is already provable impossible, even in the more lenient fictional universe of Star Trek.
How would we know about it? What tool is present in current technology that would make that possible? Why is an FTL lifeform when humanity cannot surmount the lightspeed barrier yet be so detectable?
Again, this feels like a very strange place to say "suspension of disbelief broken!" when Star Trek has gods, noncoporeal beings, aliens who state that "thought is the basis of reality," time travel, temporal wars, terraforming torpedoes, aliens who talk to whales, cross-species breeding (by accident some times), ion storms and transporter duplicates.
This line makes no sense to me.![]()
This is a fair point.Well, first of all: The suspension of disbelief is quite different from person to person. But I see a lot of people being discontent with the mycellium network, so I believe I'm not alone here.
I don't want to be that guy, but you stated in another post that if Star Trek is supposed to be connected to our real world and that our real world had not observed this network, that current science should be seeing the consequences of it and that we hadn't and , therefore it was ridiculous (oversimplifying). Since it doesn't "fit" in real world science it doesn't fit in universe? Again, I'm missing some place where this the straw that breaks the camel's back.And again: This is not a matter of real science. This is about a fictional universe following it's own rules. If "The Force" from Star Wars, or Orcs and Elves would suddenly appear in Star Trek, it would equally break the suspension of disbelief (I have quite a few problems with Apollo's appereance on TOS), all while they work fabulously in their own universes, and are neither more or less realistic than the other.
Backlash is one thing. The demand that it be explained and made to fit in to continuity is the part that I find truly baffling. As if Star Trek has never done this before.Also: Only because these things have happened before (cough* warp 10-salamanders), doesn't mean it's an excuse now. It was stupid back then, and it faced a whole lot of fan-backlash back then. And was thereafter immediately buried, forgotten and never mentioned again. Star Trek always had it's lower points. But it's not good to use them as a point of reference. And rarely they used one of the truly audaciously stupid concepts as a main arc. The FTL "jumping" would be much more believable IMO if it didn't were linked to some concept someone clearly came up with while being stoned, like a funky intergalactic shroom network with happy tardigrades travelling upon it.
NOT okay: A galaxy spanning space shroom FTL network with biological organisms travelling on it. That'd be right in front of us. IF such a thing existed, we would know of it by now. Aka - we would see the consequences of it right in front of our eyes. Ergo - while all of these are highly implausible in the real world (and none of them really scientific), only the latter is already provable impossible, even in the more lenient fictional universe of Star Trek.
Star Trek has done that for a a while, including in TOS-Wink of an Eye. Phasing cloak in TNG, aliens who exist like you described also appear in VOY too, with "Scientific Method" as well as fluidic space.The way TNG or VOY had often represented subspace realms, it seemed to me that those realms were like entire always right with us, but "out of phase" with our universe or something like that (think "TNG: Schisms"). Fluidic space is a similar idea -- an extra-dimensional realm that coexists with our space, but in a different dimension. In those cases, there is a whole subspace realm or fluidic space realm right in front of us that we cannot readily detect.
The mycelium network is (as has been described on DSC) extra-dimiensional compared to our universe. So, just like subspace of fluidic space, it may coexist with us, but on a different dimensional plane, and thus would not be readily detectable.
Star Trek has done that for a a while, including in TOS-Wink of an Eye. Phasing cloak in TNG, aliens who exist like you described also appear in VOY too, with "Scientific Method" as well as fluidic space.
Really don't find this network that strange at least in Star Trek.
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