Have they announced how many episodes there are on this season?
They have not.
Have they announced how many episodes there are on this season?
Yes but a weapon can be aimed at targets. This anomaly could trundle along for years before it hits something again.The Xindi superweapon threatened only individual planets but was considered so dangerous an entire season of television episodes was dedicated to finding and stopping it.
Now all we need is for Grudge to morph into a human form and talk.Stanmets’ hologram needed an H on his forehead. To make it clearer he was a hologram
That's why I think they made it too big. It doesn't do damage to a star system, it eliminates it entirely, swallows it whole, and possibly any other star systems within a 5 ly area. Like in the image I posted, TON 618 is 2,606 AU. Our solar system is 80 AU, and the anomaly is 125 times the size (let alone the mass) of TON 618. That means the anomaly is 325,750 AU across.I think the Spatial Anomaly pops back into whatever realm it came from, and is able to move at FTL speeds relative to our realm and then pop back out whenever it wants to do it's thing.
Which causes massive damage to a Star System.
But until you can figure out what direction it's generally going or how to track it, it becomes a major issue since it seems to be a unknown spatial phenomena as of this moment.
This. I've already lost interest in the 5 ly wide black hole. To me it's just one more massive external threat that has to be, and will be, solved.And therein lies a problem with not just DSC but other series and films: compelling threats that can keep your attention for the entire duration.
This. I've already lost interest in the 5 ly wide black hole. To me it's just one more massive external threat that has to be, and will be, solved.
Exactly. One man in an apartment complex with a gun can be a hundred times more frightening than some superweapon being aimed at an entire planet. It's all about framing, and narrative. DSC seems to take the easier method, which is to create a doomsday scenario every season.On a more terrestrial note, think of the threats in horror films. Michael Myers at most will kill just a handful of people in a film but the more limited scope and personalization of the story make the threat of one psychotic murderer seem almost cosmic in proportion. Everything depends on stopping Michael and he eventually is stopped.
At least until the next story.![]()
The only part I can see is that if you stay where you are, and it shows up, you're dead. Which, of course, is also an issue because they made it so damn big that people are actually describing it as something that can be avoided.I mean, if they want to make it a COVID analogy, they have to spend a lot more time looking at the ramifications of the anomaly than the anomaly itself.
IMHO though, it's a bad idea when it comes to timing, because the biggest effect would probably be less interstellar travel (because if you're moving around it would be more likely to "get you"). Only people have had over a century to get used to limited interstellar travel following The Burn, so I don't see why it would be a big deal.
Which is stupid since they have had ways to almost insta cure most mental health issues since TOS.
Burnham wanted Detmer to pilot.
He's overly-emotional and not thinking straight, but he probably also doesn't care because he doesn't think Detmer knows the ship like he does and he's being possessive. I wouldn't take what he said literally, since he was so distressed. It probably just came right out of his mouth when he was trying to convince Burnham why he should be the one to pilot.I just got to the part where Book said he doesn't want Detmer to pilot his ship because he says she doesn't know the first thing about it. But hasn't Detmer already piloted Book's ship? I seem to remember a previous ep where she did.
By definition, a mental health issue cannot, and will never be, instantly cured.
And medication alone is not as efficacious as talk therapy combined with medication, at least according to current research. It's why I find cures in narrative unbelievable.Hell, regular treatments for mental health today - like medication - don't work well within the confines of a traditional narrative.
And medication alone is not as efficacious as talk therapy combined with medication, at least according to current research. It's why I find cures in narrative unbelievable.
Kind of like Whom Gods Destroy?I mean, if you hold to strict materialism - that the mind is completely a reflection of the physical structure and energy states of the brain - than it stands to reason with enough knowledge of how the brain works and the right tools a doctor should be able to "fix" essentially anything within the brain.
Though if the change was drastic enough I suppose it would become an open question whether the patient remained the same person.
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