As Roddenberry said, "No one would care."
Seriously, I can't believe that they haven't found a cure for hair loss yet.
Send people in a shuttle through some unknown energy field, & try to beam them out before their ship gets destroyed by it? HTF do you fine tune that chaos? I'd rather take my chances with the Jameson treatment. His at least seemingly went wrong because he took too many doses.The de-aging procedure seems simple enough, just reproduce the incident in Rascals, with a little adjustment it should get you to 18 if you don't like being a teen again, personally, I wouldn't mind it.
Given that Bev was able to reverse it, it's a fair bet that they can reproduce the incident without having to go through the initial situation.Send people in a shuttle through some unknown energy field, & try to beam them out before their ship gets destroyed by it? HTF do you fine tune that chaos? I'd rather take my chances with the Jameson treatment. His at least seemingly went wrong because he took too many doses.
Given the number of opportunities for immortality, effective indestructibility, and perfect appearance that the Federation tech base undoubtedly provides, the prevailing culture must be that people in the 24th are Ok with things like aging, death, and baldness.
I think that it's because our storytelling culture is so opposed to the concept, because our overall culture has its roots in the Christian faith. Why live forever in this world and miss out on living forever in a much better place? It's like eating nothing but breadsticks and missing out on the banquet. Even though many aspects of our culture have drifted away from religion (to some extent), most of our stories still observe this unwritten rule.
If you ever saw the movie "Tuck Everlasting", you know the choice that the protagonist faced: live the repressed and miserable existence of a girl in the Victorian age, and die... or live a fun and idyllic and immortal existence with the Tuck family. Even with all this counterbalance, she [spoiler alert, but not really] still chooses mortality. And why? Because of some silly monologue about rocks and rivers.
....but I see something pathetic in the desperate struggle to stay alive at any cost.
You're leaving out the part where being immortal created problems for the family and they had to run and hide and the son told Rory Gilmore to become immortal and sit on her ass and wait for him for god knows how long. It's not like she refused a perfect immortal life.If you ever saw the movie "Tuck Everlasting", you know the choice that the protagonist faced: live the repressed and miserable existence of a girl in the Victorian age, and die... or live a fun and idyllic and immortal existence with the Tuck family. Even with all this counterbalance, she [spoiler alert, but not really] still chooses mortality. And why? Because of some silly monologue about rocks and rivers.
Is it not? The fact that we're going to die influences how we live. If you didn't have to worry about getting old and/or sick you would do many things differently and if even injuries wouldn't kill you'd be much more reckless. Society as a whole would probably be much different, adolescence would last much longer, I doubt the age of majority would be 18, in an immortal society anyone younger than 50 could be considered a child for example. Relationships would also move much slower, I could easily see people dating for a decade or two before things get serious because it's not like there's a biological clock ticking that makes us want to start a family in the relatively short window of opportunity.It's our mortality that defines us...
Does the religion you've chosen to follow espouse a "life after death" scenario? If so, how is that different to someone who might want to exist longer?On the other hand, maybe it's because I'm mildly Religious, but I see something pathetic in the desperate struggle to stay alive at any cost.
Does the religion you've chosen to follow espouse a "life after death" scenario? If so, how is that different to someone who might want to exist longer?
[/END]Because in 1987 a lot of Americans did not know what Earl Grey was, and the show was produced for an American audience. American shows that were sold into overseas ancillary markets in those days rarely took such nuance into account.
Seriously, I can't believe that they haven't found a cure for hair loss yet.
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