The letters after starship registry destroyed any creativity in the naming of starships.
This regular, recurring "oops, I just found out I had a kid years after the fact" trope shouldn't happen in the future. Not with simply, convenient, reliable, and universally available birth control.
The novelization of TMP also refers to advanced neural invasion technology having been a thing in Earth's pre-warp past. The book references "The Mind Control Revolts of 2048."
Oh please.This regular, recurring "oops, I just found out I had a kid years after the fact" trope shouldn't happen in the future. Not with simply, convenient, reliable, and universally available birth control.
Because it would be easier. Look how far birth control has come in under 100 years, since Margaret Sanger championed the concept. In another 250 or 300, I would think that birth control would be nearly automatic. Ergo, you don't have kids until and unless you want them.People are not responsible now. Why should that change in the future?
It's easier now and people are still irresponsible.Because it would be easier. Look how far birth control has come in under 100 years, since Margaret Sanger championed the concept. In another 250 or 300, I would think that birth control would be nearly automatic. Ergo, you don't have kids until and unless you want them.
I’m ok with it for TOS, it was a common sci-fi trope and was still taken somewhat seriously as possible at the time. However, by the time of TNG they should have known better.My controversial opinion which I may have stated before - I think ESP, Telepathy and whatever mental biological muckery should have no place in any scifi, from 1930, 1960, or even now.
It's Ok when it has a limited range, longer in the case of powerful beings (like those star jellies). But Troi can sense humanoid feelings thousands of miles away. That seems like a bit much.
Troi read an entire planet in "Code of Honor."And still pretty ridiculous. I like the idea of mind melding, where touch is required, or Troi's ability to read people in the same room with her. But it should be limited.
In a universe where Starfleet Admirals and even Captains go insane or become evil or take part in criminal conspiracies or all three I can easily buy somebody not remembering to use birth control while in uniform.
My controversial opinion which I may have stated before - I think ESP, Telepathy and whatever mental biological muckery should have no place in any scifi, from 1930, 1960, or even now.
Since none of us knows what the universe truly offers, I'm okay with writers exploring/using telepathy in a sci-fi setting. Science fiction should be a boxless genre where anything goes. It is our imaginations run wild.
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