I think this is a misconception on some peoples part, Spock's shown to make his fair share of mistakes, screw things up, and to harbor false beliefs at times.I think Spock is written to be too powerful. He's like a golden age era Superman in that he can do whatever the plot needs him to do.
Spock (one example) frying the warp drive, instead of letting Scott perform a needed procedure first.
Beverly used the ugly cloth to produce all the ugly civilian clothing seen in TNG.I wish somebody would write a story some day that explains WTF Beverly did with that ugly cloth she bought on Farpoint Station.
I kind of like Picard's more bombastic moments. Picard is usually on the ball, but his brain farts when it comes to people from the past and their cultures shows that Picard can sometimes be a utter and complete fool.Better use of an episode: Picard meets someone from the 20th century and does NOT start lecturing them on
It lowers Picard down to the level of being a real Human being, similar to his initial difficulties with children, befuddlement around Troi's mother, or having Admiral Nechayev treat him like something she needs to scrap off the bottom of her shoe.
Picard in fact isn't a superior evolved being, he just thinks he is.
Of course neither is the belief that there is no God or otherwise supernatural beings or experiences.It may be your belief that there is a god. Keep in mind that your belief is not universally held, either in RL or in Star Trek.
And while admittedly not not universally held, those with a pro/positive position on the matter and those neutral on the subject fair out number those with a anti/negative position. Speaking of present day Humans.
Janeway was open minded enough to venture at one point into Chakotay's spiritual beliefs. While it's unclear if she continued or not, she obviously didn't knee jerk dismiss Chakotay's beliefs out of some personal doctrine.
It does from a certain way of looking at it.But it certainly doesn't make sense that you have a ship with 400 people and the exact same people go on away missions, over and over again
The ship basically has a fairly small core of highly train personnel who undertake the "up front" aspects of the missions (usually represented by the principal actors). These personnel are often higher in rank. If something happens to them, they're replaced (example Yar).
The idea is that your best most talented people aren't "preserved" aboard the ship.
The majority of the people on the ship are there to support and back-up this core group, and those whose primary job is to maintain and operate the ship itself.
Occasionally, a support individual will show promise and be elevated to the core group (example Worf). Also the core group will attach narrow subject specialty personnel when needed (example security).
Consider a police department, there are patrol personnel and people who maintain the vehicles or do administrative. But there are also detectives who are higher trained and experienced, and handle more advanced activities. Detectives are higher in rank.
Perhaps in the utopian future, people on the ship only report for their duty shift when they feel like it, and this is why there are so many people on board. It provides for a better chance that at least some people will show up.It's a post-scarcity future. I'd like to think that we're down from eight-hour shifts to only six hours, but YMMV on whether that's too utopian.
You know, if they want to.
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