Turning someone into energy = killing them.

E = mc².Turning someone into energy = killing them.
Yes.Where Trek lore is concerned, the notion that the transporter is 100% and unquestionably fatal... doesn't work. This is because, while Trek doesn't affiliate itself with any traditional religion, it does adhere to the belief that people have souls. They might be called katras, or essences, or whatever. But they seem to be what defines whether a person is alive or deceased. Remember that Spock and Dr. Culber were able to return from the grave because their souls were preserved, Spock's in McCoy's head and Culber's in the mycelium network.
Since a person's katra/essence/soul remains with them in transport, we must assume that they survive the trip.
Where Trek lore is concerned, the notion that the transporter is 100% and unquestionably fatal... doesn't work. This is because, while Trek doesn't affiliate itself with any traditional religion, it does adhere to the belief that people have souls. They might be called katras, or essences, or whatever. But they seem to be what defines whether a person is alive or deceased. Remember that Spock and Dr. Culber were able to return from the grave because their souls were preserved, Spock's in McCoy's head and Culber's in the mycelium network.
Since a person's katra/essence/soul remains with them in transport, we must assume that they survive the trip.
And has been demonstrated repeatedly in Trek to be movable from the body itself. Kirk, and Chakotay are both examples of humans experiencing this, which means it is difficult to dismiss this as alien oddness, like with Spock.My point. "Soul" is the term most traditionally used in the Judeo Christian tradition, which Trek generally keeps at a distance. Not because it doesn't acknowledge the existence of the soul; it actually does. It just calls it something different.
If your emoji is in response to the broken photo link, the photo was the cover of "The Physics of Star Trek" by Lawrence M. Kraus (who talks about this subject extensively in his book).
The theory behind a person's "self" coming out the other end (with his or her body) is that if you "re-esemble" a person on the other end of the transporter with the brain structure in place, and with all of the fluids in your brain in the exact same place, you will come out with the exact same consciousness.Where Trek lore is concerned, the notion that the transporter is 100% and unquestionably fatal... doesn't work. This is because, while Trek doesn't affiliate itself with any traditional religion, it does adhere to the belief that people have souls. They might be called katras, or essences, or whatever. But they seem to be what defines whether a person is alive or deceased. Remember that Spock and Dr. Culber were able to return from the grave because their souls were preserved, Spock's in McCoy's head and Culber's in the mycelium network.
Since a person's katra/essence/soul remains with them in transport, we must assume that they survive the trip.
Sorry. Turning someone into "energy" = killing them.E = mc².
We all already are energy.![]()
"This isn't reality. This is fantasy!" — Nyota Uhura.Sorry.
You got that right! lol"This isn't reality. This is fantasy!" — Nyota Uhura.
Checkmate.![]()
Exactly."This isn't reality. This is fantasy!" — Nyota Uhura.
Checkmate.![]()
No, but I also don't own a Blu-Ray player either. So, I'm probably not the best example.If you were given the opportunity to be trasported somewhere just to try it out, would you do it?
I might say no thank you.
Buses do not physically dismantle you at the beginning of your trip and then put you back together at the end of your trip. That is absolutely a false equivalency.Yeah, continuity of self is overrated. I mean, how could we even tell?
People with ideologial objections to transporting would be found among those who can afford to have ideological objections, just like in everything else; hating and fearing buses today doesn't mean you can stop riding those in the general case. But the limiting issue in Trek might not be the affording - just about everybody probably could abstain, what with every location being a paradise you don't need to leave, either on foot or via transporter. Rather, with so much weird shit being inherent in the Trek way of existence, transporters and their implications simply might fail to arouse antipathy in a large number of people, who have so many better things to do and worry about.
Timo Saloniemi
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