A vision from a glowing ring could have as much validity as today's youtube videos. Maybe it was just a ConclavesEdge ragefake to discredit synths.
Are you suggesting that the Zhat Vash are foolish to think this is anything other than an elaborate prank or hoax by highly advanced aliens? Even so, that wouldn't help us understand their behavior given that they obviously don't think that.
One would almost think they were part of a society that was formed because its people didn't want to embrace logic...
No. Romulan society was formed because its people didn't want to suppress their emotions.
It's amazing how much people are tying themselves into knots to explain this plot point. The big elephant in the room is, that however sure everyone is that they understand it and that it makes perfect sense, people aren't giving the same explanations. Some people have tried to give reasons that the Zhat Vash's behavior is actually rational, others have admitted that it isn't, but say we should expect them to be irrational. The fact that people aren't all zeroing in on the same conclusion suggests that it wasn't really established in the show and the writers probably hadn't even thought about it at the time.
I think the real culprit here is the JJ Abrams Mystery Box writing style this show embraces. Some people are more tolerant of that sort of thing than others and it's fine if you like that sort of thing, but can we at least admit that's what's going on?
This discussion sort of reminds me of some discussions about
Westworld (the series) back when the IMDb boards were still there. It was a regular feature of the writing to have the characters do things that made no sense and contradicted other things they did or to arbitrarily withold mundane information from the audience to reveal it as a "plot twist" later on. A lot of people, even people who really liked
Westworld (like me), noticed these problems and called the show out on it. There were, of course, people who insisted everything made perfect sense even though they didn't necessarily give the same reason or were pretty vague about it. Of course the real reason was that the writers wanted to give the audience mysteries to speculate on, "epic reveals," and "plot twists" and didn't care if they had to cheat to get there and weren't overly concerned that the story made much sense.
Can we at least agree on
something that was a little contrived in the show? I think I've only seen two other people besides myself point out what a huge coincidence it is that Rios' backstory is directly tied to the synths. Can most people acknoledge that that's true?