I came across the above and some B5 vs ST chatter in the comments section. TL

Material science and programmable matter have improved, but it doesn't seem much else has considering where we left off after Voyagers return.
Or perhaps we simply cannot appreciate the differences because they are too far ahead of us.
Could a medieval peasant appreciate the differences between, say, 1950's technology and today? Both have advanced display technologies (TV), incredibly fast transportation (cars and jet airplanes), and telecommunication. It's quite possible that the area we would say most progress has been made in -computing technology- would escape his perception altogether since he has no concept of those.
I just assume that the technology is almost unrecognisable but the terminology has stuck. Like a time traveller from the 1970s might be disappointed to hear that we still use phones in 2022, but what a phone is has changed drastically.
Somebody must've left the instructions on how to transfer the Mind's Electrical Patterns from the original body to the new Synthetic host body. But success must've been very low for most people to give up on trying.Didn't Disco give Gray a human synth body a la Picard in season 1 and although they said it's not been very successful in years since PIC, it went from Alton Soong's life's work to something they cooked up in a day.
That actually makes ALOT more logical sense IMO. Tapping into the local friendly Transporter System Network and asking it to transport you to where-ever you want makes WAY more logical sense given how much energy it must take to transport you along with processing the data vs having the Combadge do everything that a traditional Transporter would do.Transporters the size of a commbadge (although retconned in one Disco S4 episode to going through the ship, that definitely wasn't the case in season 3) is a huge deal too.
It's not so much of a cure-all, but a circumstantial repair tool, and it definitely won't grant you eternal life.All that said, Disco barely scratch the surface of what SHOULD be possible, and in fact possible since Kirk's time (transporter as a cure-all and gateway to eternal life, for example)
Every teleport reverts your age to the stored pattern, making you immune to ageing and illness. If you die, a copy is resurrected Thomas Riker/William Boimler style. What would stop you?It's not so much of a cure-all, but a circumstantial repair tool, and it definitely won't grant you eternal life.
I think you're misunderstanding how the Transporter works.Every teleport reverts your age to the stored pattern, making you immune to ageing and illness. If you die, a copy is resurrected Thomas Riker/William Boimler style. What would stop you?
In "The Lorelai Signal".Given that any resurrected copies wouldn't technically be you, but that's irrelevant. It's as close to immortality as can be. And the other examples were proven in "The Lorelai Signal" and "Natural Selection" but never repeated for no good reason whatsoever.
The transporter only restored the body to its previous state for the men affected on the away team and who were "Prematurely Aged" by the affects of the planet and the Theelans.The opto-aud reveals both sexes of the race from which they are descended, and Theela explains that they came to this planet when their homeworld began to die. They built the temple and all surrounding it, but they did not know that surface radiation which the planet emitted drained humanoid energy. The women's bodies developed a glandular secretion that enabled them to survive and to manipulate certain areas of the male's brains to influence their emotional senses, ultimately draining the men. This caused them to weaken and die. To survive the females must revitalize every 27 years. They are eternal prisoners because they neither age nor die, nor can they bear children.
...
Uhura and one of her security officers locate the urn and destroy it with their phasers, on setting one, releasing the water and the trapped crew members. They are quickly returned to the sickbay of the Enterprise. Chapel tries everything she knows in her attempt to reverse the aging process, but she fails. Spock suggests that the transporter is the key to their age restoration, because it holds the molecular pattern of their original bodies when they beamed down. Although feasible, this procedure has never been attempted before. Spock states that the odds are against them, 99.7 to 1. If it fails, their patterns will break up and scatter in space.
Scott, who, despite still having a severe headache he and the other men still all have, is no longer affected by the alien probe. He transports the four aged crewmen to the planet's surface and prepares to transport them back aboard upon reprogramming the transporter. Despite a brief scare, their transport-transformation is successful.
Back in the temple on the planet, Theela destroys the opto-aud, the probe that lured men to their planet, with a phaser, as part of a prearranged agreement. Uhura explains that a crew of women will bring a ship back to transport the alien women to the first suitable planet, where, according to Dr. McCoy, their physiology will return to normal within a few months, ultimately offering them a better future than immortality.
"Data's analysis is conclusive, and unfortunate. As he explains to the astonished Kingsley and Pulaski, the antibody the children's immune system created to counteract the Thelusian flu does more than attack the virus;
it interacts with normal Human DNA to change sequences which affect the aging process. The children are in fact more than carriers; they're the cause. Since DNA is self-replicating, the effects are irreversible,
and as evidenced by how rapidly the crew of the Lantree were wiped out, any infected person is capable of infecting others."
"Data beams back aboard after a farewell to the now-white-haired Pulaski, who looks around a hundred years old by now, like the equally deteriorated Kingsley. Both women seem to have accepted their terrible fate with
more calm by now, but both still look very depressed. However, after Data is screened for organics and beamed aboard, Picard asks him about another idea. Since the genetic changes are the cause, they could take a sample
of her genetic code and have the transporter reverse the transposition. Chief O'Brien says it will work, but it would be risky, since they will lose her pattern if it doesn't work."
"It takes some doing to get a DNA sample; Pulaski's records have not arrived at the Enterprise from Starfleet Command yet. Riker and Data search her quarters and finally find a hair follicle on her hairbrush. Picard calls
Pulaski. The bridge crew and Picard are shocked by the image of severe deterioration, now looking much older than a hundred years."
"The captain explains the possible solution to the terminal doctor. Pulaski, now totally exhausted, out of time and options, is willing to give it a try. Troi is very shaken and sad, seeing and possibly feeling Pulaski's
terror, despair and unbearable suffering. O'Brien warns Picard that the trip is one-way only; if the procedure doesn't work, Pulaski can't be beamed back to Darwin Station. Picard takes the transporter controls and assumes
full responsibility for the attempt so that O'Brien will not be to blame should something go wrong, to O'Brien's gratitude. After a tense several seconds of controlling the transporter during beam-in, the doctor, restored
to her proper age, appears. Picard admits to her had the procedure not worked he would have had to beam her pattern into space. Pulaski doesn't mind, since she assumes the worst whenever she uses it anyway."
That is the way of Trek tech.Given that any resurrected copies wouldn't technically be you, but that's irrelevant. It's as close to immortality as can be. And the other examples were proven in "The Lorelai Signal" and "Natural Selection" but never repeated for no good reason whatsoever.
Given enough time, the Transporter can restore a person back to whom they were assuming:
- You didn't lose any matter or enough matter despite your physical state change due to whatever incident/sickness/condition affected you
- If you lost too much matter (arms gets ripped off and disintegrated), you have nothing to restore with. You still need the raw base biological matter.
Other options exist (Regenerating and growing new Limbs), but that takes time (weeks) and you have to retrain your body to adjust to the new limb and re-train your muscle memory.
ST:TNG - Lonely Among Us:Check out TNG's "Lonely Among Us" and DS9's "Our Man Bashir". In both cases, the matter (body) was lost and was still able to re-materialize with energy and a transporter pattern. Interestingly, DS9's transporters were unable to store the pattern (either due to damage or lack of space) and had to shunt them into the holosuite. E-D's transporters kept Picard's pattern for at least an hour.
And also "Relics" where it looked like Scotty kept refreshing his pattern over several decades to mimic suspended animation.
That situation with Picard was more about fixing Picard and putting him back to his original self.
As for "Relics", Scotty's trick of refreshing his pattern was 50% successful, his fellow crewman died due to mechanical failure on his side of the Transporter and signal degradation.
But that's one heck of a MacGyvering attempt to survive. Something can be learned from all of that. But that's a method of Suspended Animation, not reverting you back to your youthful self.
DS9 was about shunting the physical matter and the data somewhere, it just happened to be in the Holosuite since they were running low on memory on the station and had to commander the Holosuite.
With Picard's case, his body was transitioned to a "Phased Energy State" which is what the Transporter does anyways to beam you over such long distances in a near instantaneous amount of time.The point being is that in two of those cases, Picard had no body and the DS9 crew didn't have bodies either which would indicate that the transporter repair trick isn't dependent on having a physical body to do it with. For Scotty, he effectively was keeping himself youthful (by not aging) by resetting back to his starting transporter pattern.
The Transporter doesn't make new matter, it just takes the existing matter and slightly changes the phase of your atoms into a semi-energy "Phased State" to allow it to be beamed wherever you tell the Transporter to do so.So, if a transporter pattern can be held indefinitely, you could clone yourself a body based on when the pattern was recorded. I do believe the writers however put in some caveats to where you'd still need your surviving neural energy to make your body whole. All IMHO![]()
With Picard's case, his body was transitioned to a "Phased Energy State" which is what the Transporter does anyways to beam you over such long distances in a near instantaneous amount of time.
How else do you think the transporter rips you apart, atom-by-atom, and reassembles you back again?
So the Transporter needed Picards specific Phased Energy, not just any old random one will do.
The Transporter doesn't make new matter, it just takes the existing matter and slightly changes the phase of your atoms into a semi-energy "Phased State" to allow it to be beamed wherever you tell the Transporter to do so.
As for Scotty in the TNG episode "Relics". Scotty Jerry Rigged the Transporter in a strange configuration.
It's only good for pausing your body while time passes, it's not good for going back to a more youthful state, and it's incredibly dangerous to use/implement.
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