Janeway and Paris evolving into salamanders (to me) makes more sense than Picard's future humans will change into "more evolved" beings who are superior to all other life and cultures.The evolution thing was just so dumb though.
Janeway and Paris evolving into salamanders (to me) makes more sense than Picard's future humans will change into "more evolved" beings who are superior to all other life and cultures.The evolution thing was just so dumb though.
Janeway and Paris evolving into salamanders (to me) makes more sense than Picard's future humans will change into "more evolved" beings who are superior to all other life and cultures.
Nahhh. Meant Picard's "I better than others" philosophy.You mean the energy beings as being the end point of human evolution?
Who's talking trash about that episode?! Point me at 'em—I'll learn 'em.I love "The Royale."
So they know Warp 10 turns you into a salamander. I don't know why they just didn't go Warp 9.9999999etc? Or have the EMH subject the crew to anti-protons or whatever after they hit Warp 10 and got home.
Or put everyone is stasis, and let the computer fly the ship. And let the EMH contact Starfleet command over subspace radio when they get close enough.
Then evolution would simply stop and not turn backwardsHe turns into a "salmander" because millions of years of evolution happens in the absence of millions of years of environmental stimulus.
Then evolution would simply stop and not turn backwards
Mutations would still occur I think. In the absence of those 'external stimuli' though, why would any particular mutations be favoured? More explicitly, why would Janeway evolve the same way as Paris?
No mutation without external factors like radiation either.
I think it was called First Frontier.Years ago, I read a TOS novel where some of the crew were went back to Earth during the time of dinosaurs. I really enjoyed the book, especially how scientifically accurate the descriptions of the dinosaurs were.
I think it was called First Frontier.
Then evolution would simply stop and not turn backwards
Yes, I liked it very much.Yeah.. that's the one. Did you read it?
Theshold was kind of silly, but I still enjoyed it.
Yes, I liked it very much.
But once an organ has evolved, you can't simply get rid of it. Amphibians only make sense if they had to adapt to a swamp environment, which I guess didn't exist in the shuttle. Also why would these changes begin after their flight, and without any new generation? It just doesn't make much sense in terms of evolution.That's not the way evolution works. The way it works is, "use it or lose it".
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/use-it-or-lose-it/
Conversely it also works like "use it and and it becomes more specialized".
The way I interpret the episode based on what I know, because the shuttle existed everywhere in time, Paris and Janeway rapidly evolved, but in the absence of any environmental stimulus they evolved into simpler life forms. This is still forward movement.
Mole rats began living underground, they didn't stop evolving, the lack of light stimulus has rendered them blind, or nearly blind. They can only detect light or dark now. The point is, if you could accelerate human evolution over the next million years into a day or a week without a million years of stimulus, whatever came out of that would probably be worm like.
That's why I think the episode is so much more... if you dig into it.
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