I have read that one, but it's been a while.I think it's a reference to a fairly important plot point in CLB's novel The Buried Age.
I have read that one, but it's been a while.I think it's a reference to a fairly important plot point in CLB's novel The Buried Age.
I’ve read Buried Age recently and that is indeed a reference to that.Well, I'm about 140 pages into it and Christopher has touched on a matter that has long struck me as the "great improbability" of the Trekverse. Specifically, the existence of so many civilizations that are in rough technological parity. I obviously don't know at this point if he returns to this question, but it was good to see it raised.
I think it's a reference to a fairly important plot point in CLB's novel The Buried Age.
As do the Chapters-Indigo chains in Canada.Waterstones in the UK groups the franchises together, regardless on the author. Makes finding books easier.
I'm enjoying the exploration of Kirk's character based on the earlier conceptions of who he is meant to be, before pop culture impressions skewed the picture. When I watched TOS in production order, I was intrigued by the line in the second Pilot that Kirk was a "stack of books on legs," even though I had seen the episode before a couple times and consider that one of my favorites, I hadn't remember that line before until recently.
Even as TOS went on, Kirk never was the rebel who willfully disregarded the rules everyone thinks of him as these days. While he wouldn't hesitate to disregard a rule if it served a greater good, the "I'm my own man, screw the rules" attitude everyone applies to him now didn't really come into play until the movies.
I think maybe that's harder to understand for people today, walking around with incredibly fast and powerful computer networking and telecommunication devices in their pockets, than it was for people in the '60s who had to find the nearest corner drugstore or phone booth and talk to an operator if they wanted to get in touch with someone, or else send a letter and wait days for a reply (well, unless they sent a telegram instead).
I think a lot of the perceptions of Kirk come from his actions in TSFS for one, and more recently his portrayal in Star Trek (2009).
And I also think people mistaken his 'interpreting' rules and regulations with 'breaking' rules and regulations. They are not the same thing.
And as I've noted before, I can see how a literal-minded admiral or fellow captain might feel Kirk is a bit too freewheeling in his decision making.
Well, no; the whole reason he was portrayed that way in ST '09 was because the myth of Kirk as a womanizing renegade had already been firmly established for a generation or more
And I think that's a circular argument, stacking the deck to reinforce the preconception of Kirk as a loose cannon. I think it's more likely that other captains would be just as willing to interpret the rules flexibly, because that ability to make those judgments rather than just clinging blindly to a rule book is what makes a good captain.
As TOS's writers saw it, they portrayed Kirk as an enforcer of the Prime Directive, stepping in to free societies from others' impositions. The modern perception that he "broke" it or treated it with contempt is egregiously wrong.
Well, he was a womanizer![]()
That's true though. Star Trek (2009) seemed to cement the myth that he was a renegade, when in fact you could argue the changed circumstances of his upbringing resulted in a different background for Kirk.
What I mean is it is equally likely there are some captains/admirals out there who prefer a more literal interpretation of the rules and regulations that don't allow for as wide an interpretation of the regulations. A captain who might believe a reading of the Prime Directive would not allow them to interfere with Landru for instance. Those types might view Kirk as a bit of a maverick. Now I believe those would end up being mediocre captains and admirals as they lack imagination.
That's what made Kirk a legend really. His ability to see the bigger picture. And his gifts of knowing what the right decisions are and what the regulations truly mean. His supporters at Starfleet Command obviously saw that.
Yeah, and I thought the episodes usually provided an explanation for why he was doing what he was doing. I think part of that is it seems by the time of TNG the Prime Directive had been adjusted. It was obviously tightened a bit by that time and I think sometimes people mistakenly apply that retroactively to Kirk's era. Perhaps what Kirk did on those missions would have violated the PD as interpreted in the 24th century, but that's not how it was during his era.
I'm not denying that that's possible. But that's a hypothetical invented to support a position that conflicts with the actual evidence, and actual evidence should always outweigh unsupported speculation.
I've never liked the hero worship of Kirk, this idea that just one guy was intrinsically superior to every other captain. It's too much of an elitist "Chosen One" idea. It's far more logical to think that Starfleet has many captains who have the same ability, that they're the rule rather than the exception.
But TNG tended to take it too far and ended up becoming even more condescending, especially in "Homeward."
About half way through. I wondered if we would see Pike and the Enterprise. Did not expect Spock to be a Lieutenant Commander then.
Well, I guess I was applying some of the terms applied to Kirk's era by later shows a bit, and those characters you could argue were applying their own current views on an earlier era--which is probably understandable. We do that even today, incorrectly applying today's standards to earlier eras. What a 24th century captain might feel is cowboy diplomacy by Kirk was perfectly acceptable in the 23rd century.
I wonder, how did Trekkies view Kirk before TNG came out and before TSFS? I didn't become a fan until 1986 so my views of Kirk may be colored a bit. Was this idea some have of Kirk being a maverick an opinion before the movies? Or did that not start until after TSFS and particularly before TNG came out?
Well, in defense of that hero worship, he is the hero of the show, the main character. He's probably designed to be a bit larger than life as a result.
A shorthand sketch of him might be "A space-age Captain Horatio Hornblower", constantly on trial with himself, a strong, complex personality.
With the Starship out of communication with Earth and Starfleet bases for long periods of time, a Starship captain has unusually broad powers over both the lives and welfare of his crew, as well as over Earth people and activities encountered during these voyages. He also has broad power as an Earth Ambassador to alien societies in his galaxy sector or on new worlds he may discover. Kirk feels these responsibilities strongly and is fully capable of letting the worry and frustration lead him into error.
He is also capable of fatigue and inclined to push himself beyond human limits then condemn himself because he is not superhuman. The crew respects him, some almost to the point of adoration. At the same time, no senior officer aboard is fearful of using his own intelligence in questioning Kirk's orders and can themselves be strongly articulate up to the point where Kirk signifies his decision has been made.
...
He is, in short, a strong man forced by the requirements of his ship and career into the often lonely role of command, even lonelier because Starship command is the most difficult and demanding task of his century.
Plus even among the greats, there still has to be a top dog.
Not really. Roddenberry was consciously trying to get away from the fanciful space operas and Lost in Space-type things and do science fiction that was as grounded and plausible as the best prime-time dramas of the day.
That was lost somewhat as later producers took the show in a less naturalistic direction.
Kirk wasn't meant to be the top dog, he was meant to be the young, upcoming new talent.
But you could argue when he is being looked at by the later 24th century officers they are looking at his entire career. Sure, early in his career he is not yet deserving of that kind of respect, but looking at him historically from becoming captain until the events of TUC he would be looked at as a hero.
About half way through. I wondered if we would see Pike and the Enterprise. Did not expect Spock to be a Lieutenant Commander then.
I think they referred to him as Commander Spock at least once in Discovery, and they do occaisionally refer to Lieutenant Commanders just as Commander. I believe Worf, Dax, and Tuvok were all called Commander even they were actually Lt. Cmdrs.I think he was a Lt. Commander in WNMHGB. The Pike-Enterprise scenes in the novel are about a year or so prior to that so it makes sense. He would become a Commander I believe by the 2nd season so he probably spent a few years as a Lt. Commander (I believe he was a Lieutenant in "The Cage", the decade prior).
My point is that it's ignoring evidence from TOS to assume he would have been the only captain from that period that anyone ever talked about later on as important or heroic.
The tendency of later Trek writers to assume that Kirk is the only 23rd-century figure anyone ever talks about in the 24th is lazy and implausible,
I think they referred to him as Commander Spock at least once in Discovery, and they do occaisionally refer to Lieutenant Commanders just as Commander.
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