Even Season 3 had some emotional moments.
If we have to base Data's lack or possession of emotions on early Season 1 episodes then he definitely had something going on. He made "The Cage(TOS)" Spock seem downright cold and insensitive.![]()
Yes, but in this case I read advanced as evolved, not technologically ahead of us, and they're practically as beyond the Borg in that regard as they are us.
I agree. I always had the feeling the Borg were 'only' a few centuries beyond the UFP, technology wise.
We see species and entities that are probably beyond the Borg but that are still corporeal. The Voth could be an example of that. No need to 'adapt' to photon torpedoes if you can just turn off your opponents' technology like a light switch. V'ger might be another (though that is one that is on the threshold of becoming incorporeal).
And the Borg would already know about the Q. After all, they assimilated Picard and therefore would know everything he did at that point in time. Including the fact that Q brought them to J-25 and back.
Kurtzman & the new generation of Star Trek really need to find ways to avoid having Mid-Space collision with objects.
Given how vast Space is, there is really no excuse for colliding with objects in space.
You have bloody Super Luminal Sensors, use them.
Don't let your StarShip hit another object in space if you don't have to and can avoid it.
If that Asteroid / Debris / Whatever Field is too dense, send in a smaller & manueverable craft to dodge the objects.
Don't risk your parent StarShip if you don't have to.
We teach modern drivers of Automobiles how to best avoid accidents & collisions, the same should be true with StarShip pilots and their Captains.
The amount of unnecessary repairs incurred because you can't bloody avoid hitting an object in the vastness of space.
-_-
I’ve probably mentioned this before, but when we met Spiner in 2016 someone asked him “how do you play a character with no emotions?”
He said “You don’t. You play a character who pretends to have no emotions.”
In any event, I think the main difference was that Data was much more child-like in the beginning. They dropped some of the cutesy stuff as the series progressed.
My interpretation of series-era Data is that he has emotions, but he doesn't have the full range of human emotions and the ones he has are much less intense than what Humans experience, and that their triggers are very different.
Only sometimes.Star Trek treats nebulas like soup, sound travels through space and ships move in a way entirely inconsistent with zero-g. And too many space collisions bother people?
In any event, I think the main difference was that Data was much more child-like in the beginning. They dropped some of the cutesy stuff as the series progressed.
Given that Data's backstory was rather different until quite late in the day, and arguably even into very early filming, that's understandable (the original concept was that he was built by an advanced race of secretive AIs and sent to the Federation to study humanity – basically the same as Isaac in The Orville). I always got the impression, particularly early on, that Data was being played as someone who was much younger than he turned out to be. It's really weird to think that although he's 26 in "Encounter at Farpoint", he's already been in Starfleet for 18 years and is comfortably the Enterprise-D's second most tenured officer after Picard – especially given how undeveloped he is. A lot of TNG makes more sense if we assume that Data is, literally, child-aged instead.
Yeah Data kind of has a "Fresh out of the Box" feel in early TNG and appears to encounter many things for the first time (bickering people in Haven, somebody close to him dying in Skin of Evil, Perfume in Angel One etc.). And really even as TNG went on and thing developed into a different direction, he never quite lost that.
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