Here it is for anyone who wants to see it:
Thanks. So it looks like the quote I wanted was “can a single act redeem a lifetime?”
Here it is for anyone who wants to see it:
Someone needs to give Q "Man's Search for Meaning" by Viktor Frankl.Here it is for anyone who wants to see it:
Interesting. I always see this point but haven't quite grasped it fully. I prefer serialized stories, done well or not. Episodic, like Q states, is boring after a while. Interesting.But ST isn't doing them well and I'd rather get less serialization and (hopefully) better stories.
It does raise interesting questions!If the season comes down to “cause WWIII to save the future,” and they can’t properly wrestle with the implications of that because they’re too busy cramming the answers to all their riddles into the last episode… I’m gonna be annoyed.
As it should. Consistent with past Trek.In the end, they'll probably just conclude that the Federation is the timeline that occurred "naturally" and that it should be restored for that reason.
How long does the Confederation last? Does it lead to something better? We just don't know. Normally, you'd rationally be saying that we need to avoid WW3 at all costs! But because we see what happens later, we might think otherwise.You are kidding right? In the confederation timeline, the entire Earth becomes a totalitarian militaristic regime which wages wars of genocide against countless species across the galaxy, not to mention extermination of aliens and probably other "undesirables" on Earth.
And that's the real thing. Paramount needs it to be consistent with the Prime timeline. But that's not a good story reason!As it should. Consistent with past Trek.
Good enough for what's been done in the past. Picard saw a brief snippet, deemed it morally unacceptable, and resolved to change it.And that's the real thing. Paramount needs it to be consistent with the Prime timeline. But that's not a good story reason!
My thinking is Q is trying to redeem himself if there is a greater existence beyond what he's known for billions of years. Hedging his bets as it were.Ok this may have already been discussed but seeing as it’s a long thread I’ll just ask.
Q’s conversation with Guinean. I’ve seen people talk about how it shows Q making these changes to somehow stop his death but my read on it was more him starting to worry what was happening when he realised he wasn’t going to move onto something else after death and almost trying to do one good thing before he goes, with that good thing being a ridiculously convoluted way to get Picard to face his demons. I need to rewatch and find the quote that made me think that but what was everyone else’s read on that scene and Q’s reasoning for all of this?
I think it's safe to say that this is almost a guarantee.Who knows though? Maybe we're thinking more about this than the writers.
Not sure what point you're getting at. But I have no doubt that the Prime timeline will be restored, more or less. There are some really interesting questions involved though when you really think about it. A really intelligent series might even want to explore them.Good enough for what's been done in the past. Picard saw a brief snippet, deemed it morally unacceptable, and resolved to change it.
That's pretty much how Star Trek rolls. Anything else is novel territory.
My thinking is Q is trying to redeem himself if there is a greater existence beyond what he's known for billions of years. Hedging his bets as it were.
But I also believe he genuinely has affection for Picard and Data (he tells Soong he's a fan of his work), so he's helping them deal with issues that are trapping them. Also he's tangentially helping the others, too.
-If Rios decides to stay in 2024, he'll no longer be alone.
-Seven is no longer Borg.
-Raffi will learn to deal with her interpersonal issues.
-Even Jurati will leave her loneliness behind.
-And if we're guessing right, the Borg will end up becoming a force for good.
Sure, sacrifices must be made (Elnor, etc.). But Q's "bloody nose" comment in TNG's 'Q Who' comes to mind.
Basically, I think, in his own uncomfortable way, Q is trying to help Picard and his current pals. And the entire galaxy. And himself/the Continuum.
Who knows though? Maybe we're thinking more about this than the writers.
Maybe some day it will. Again, not trying to be flip but I don't treat Star Trek as a "really intelligent series." It can have smart episodes but it was never the smartest kid in the room, as it where, at least not to me.A really intelligent series might even want to explore them.
And that's the power of story. We take in meaning whether to the story means it or not. I prefer that over trusting the writers of something that they themselves may not see in terms of poignancy.'s basically impossible for a franchise series to do that though because maintaining the franchise that is crucial! I'm not dogging Picard for avoiding that. But the underlying questions are interesting. Basically they're going to cause WW3 to prevent our species from taking over the galaxy. That's poignant whether or not they address it.
Isn't the only real canonical information that the war began in 2026 a single screen briefly seen in "A Mirror Darkly?"
This isn’t a lesson. It’s penance.Q dying and trying to teach Jean-Luc one last lesson is by far the most interesting idea in the show and should be getting a lot more screentime.
When was the transporter developed? Why wouldn't the Vulcans have it?How do the Vulcans that landed in 20 centuary earth suddenly have acces to transporter technology? Ist that technology supposed to emerge much later? Or are they time travelers as well?
Vulcans had teleporters long before humans did.How do the Vulcans that landed in 20 centuary earth suddenly have acces to transporter technology? Ist that technology supposed to emerge much later? Or are they time travelers as well?
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