I really like
Data's Day
Frame of Mind
A Matter of Time
Galaxy's Child
The Nth Degree
Data's Day
Frame of Mind
A Matter of Time
Galaxy's Child
The Nth Degree
I know issues that people have with this episode: that it's a bit preachy and the Ferengi were not a successful "villain", but I liked the careful first contact of the first 20 minutes, and of course the thought of a long lost Portal of the T'Kon Empire being around.
Such a great episode and such a controversial and brave take - yet it didn't seem to cause a fuss at all. Star Trek at its most scientific and rational - something that in my humble opinion was lost.Who Watches the Watchers.
As an atheist child and teenager growing up surrounded by christianity and going to catholic school, TNG (and, to a lesser extent, the episodes of TOS I had seen) was a breath of fresh air to me, and this episode had a crucial role.
When all adults in your life contradict your (un)beliefs, fiction can help tell you you're not insane and that not believing in deities isn't just a "phase" you're going through.
"Horrifying… Dr. Barron, your report describes how rational these people are. Millennia ago, they abandoned their belief in the supernatural. Now you are asking me to sabotage that achievement, to send them back into the dark ages of superstition and ignorance and fear? No!"
Still one of my favourite Picard quote, alongside the Drumhead one. And Troi gets a great line as well:
"Are you sure this is what he wants? That's the problem with believing in a supreme being: trying to determine what he wants."
Mine would be Where No One has Gone Before, The Battle and then maybe Datalore - cheesy as it is.Three good episodes of S1? I have 3 that I think stand out: Home Soil, Where no One has Gone Before and... Justice.
Justice gets unfairly maligned: there is quite a bit of pathos (all of Beverly's scenes), with an interesting ethical quandary at the core, and I think this "There can be no justice so long as laws are absolute. Even life itself is an exercise in exceptions." is a good takeaway.
Visually, questionable choices were made, and some of the guest actors are not very good. But the script isn't bad.
Who Watches the Watchers.
A great episode, yes. Though it feels like one that wouldn't have been made quite the same way only a few years later. In DS9 or VOY, or possibly even in late TNG itself (see the religious struggles of Worf), they probably would have slipped in some line of one of the ent-D characters how scientific progress doesn't necessarily preclude a belief in some religion .. (I don't mean to say that it would have been the right thing to do, just that the 'fashion' changed to become more 'inclusive' of such viewpoints).
I never saw "Who Watches the Watchers" as particularly exclusive of native religions or even personal religions.
I never saw "Who Watches the Watchers" as particularly exclusive of native religions or even personal religions. The Federation is secular but with a freedom of religion policy so that Picard did not want himself and his crew and ship to BECOME a religion did not mean that the same Picard in this episode would not be also welcoming and tolerant of the religious beliefs of Worf, Ensign Ro, the Klingons, the Bajorans, the Vulcans ... we see him do so later with no feeling of inconsistency (unless it's just me?).
I often wonder why people see this episode as some kind of anti-religious stand that I am not sure was ever even originally intended by the writers and producers.
Talking about overlooked episodes, Red Letter Media have just released a video where they're trying to find gems in Season 1.
Oh, I don't think it is exclusive of those feelings either. It's just that I have the feeling that a few years down the road, the writers would have felt more compelled to also include a few of those lines, a kind of 'inclusive correctness', so to speak.
FWIW, I'm not sure that I can agree with Roddenberry on this subject. And I'm still not sure about how I feel about spirituality vs religious belief. Ultimately, Star Trek would present a far more nuanced view of religion after Roddenberry died.
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