But yeah, other than that stuff... Viva Italia!![]()
Yeah! Sumerians invented civilization ... and Italians perfected it!![]()
And the Irish saved it!

And I said "Sumerian codgers," not "Sumer." Nice try, though.![]()
Yeah well...
Aaron McGuire
But yeah, other than that stuff... Viva Italia!![]()
Yeah! Sumerians invented civilization ... and Italians perfected it!![]()
And I said "Sumerian codgers," not "Sumer." Nice try, though.![]()
Indeed you did! You saved what the Greco-Romans gave you.
I win.![]()
Transporters are right up there with warp 10 newts in my book.
The contention that one could somehow survive being broken down into one's constituent molecules and beamed across vast distances only to be reconstructed on the other end with no additional technology required at the reception point seems a bit ridiculous.
On the other hand, it's a great storytelling device.
In TOS there was one story about the Preservers who were aliens that took humans from Earth and transplanted them across the Galaxy. The fanon theory is that they also terraformed other worlds to be like Earth and they were responsible for the parallel worlds seen in TOS (Miri, The Roman planet, Omega Glory).
In TNG we found out the Preservers were also the first humanoids who evolved in the galaxy and they found they were alone, so to make sure they left a legacy they seeded their DNA all over the galaxy so new life would rise in forms derivative of their own. Ron Moore said that the aliens in "The Chase" were the Preservers.
ey can do the same thing in Doctor Who I don't see why it can't work in Trek.
Transporters are right up there with warp 10 newts in my book.
The contention that one could somehow survive being broken down into one's constituent molecules and beamed across vast distances only to be reconstructed on the other end with no additional technology required at the reception point seems a bit ridiculous.
On the other hand, it's a great storytelling device.
I think the concept is founded on quantum physics (at least the re-imagined bit -- I know it was basically a way to save money on the production budget) which a lot of people have difficulty getting to grips with. I would certainly be reluctant to get into one of those things unless I was facing certain death if I didn't!
In TOS there was one story about the Preservers who were aliens that took humans from Earth and transplanted them across the Galaxy. The fanon theory is that they also terraformed other worlds to be like Earth and they were responsible for the parallel worlds seen in TOS (Miri, The Roman planet, Omega Glory).
In TNG we found out the Preservers were also the first humanoids who evolved in the galaxy and they found they were alone, so to make sure they left a legacy they seeded their DNA all over the galaxy so new life would rise in forms derivative of their own. Ron Moore said that the aliens in "The Chase" were the Preservers.
ey can do the same thing in Doctor Who I don't see why it can't work in Trek.
The preservers must be very dumb and stupid.
They should have spent ALL THAT EFFORT on preserving themselves and expanding and populating the galaxies.
They must be incredibly stupid MF'S ....must be a bunch of DF'S.
Preservers.
They can't even preserve themselves.
Preservers a dumb idea.
I like preserved jam.
But yeah, other than that stuff... Viva Italia!![]()
Yeah! Sumerians invented civilization ... and Italians perfected it!![]()
And the Irish saved it!
Yeah well...And I said "Sumerian codgers," not "Sumer." Nice try, though.![]()
Aaron McGuire
The entire point of the transporter was a fast way to get the crew on & off the planet... a plot device. However, like so much of TOS' ideas, it made people think "what if you really could make that happen?". As for not wanting to get into one... is your first name Leonard?Transporters are right up there with warp 10 newts in my book.
The contention that one could somehow survive being broken down into one's constituent molecules and beamed across vast distances only to be reconstructed on the other end with no additional technology required at the reception point seems a bit ridiculous.
On the other hand, it's a great storytelling device.
I think the concept is founded on quantum physics (at least the re-imagined bit -- I know it was basically a way to save money on the production budget) which a lot of people have difficulty getting to grips with. I would certainly be reluctant to get into one of those things unless I was facing certain death if I didn't!
As for not wanting to get into one... is your first name Leonard?![]()
1. Native Americans are actually part space alien (Voyager)
OK with no. 4. Also explains some of the lack fossil evidence of dinosaurs and fits with their rapid disappearance.2. Dinosaurs evolved into humanoids and moved to the delta quandrant forming a reclusive monarchy (Voyager)
No particular problems, though time travel in itself is a messy paradox.3. The Temporal Cold War... (Enterprise)
The holoprogram is a bit of a tough nut. I can't remember how many sequences they came up with and how many bits of code created the map, but the information seemed a bit meager to create a holoprogram. Maybe it was enough to tell a written narrative.4. Ancient humanoids injected primordial material onto several alpha quadrant planets, and inserted a holoprogram into their DNA (The Next Generation)
Probably not by itself only, but there could have been other factors at play. I'll have to rewatch it.5. Flinging yourself around the sun takes you back in time (The Voyage Home)
No problem there. This fits with the many worlds theory below.6. Time, space, and thought, are essentially the same thing (The Next Generation)
Maybe derivation of the many worlds theory, or just exposing some of the mechanics.7. Traveling to the outer edges of the universe will land you in some kind of Platonic thoughtscape (The Next Generation).
Many worlds theory.8. There is a "mirror universe", where somehow everything is exactly the same-- though reversed on a moral/ethical level. Though events are completely different, people somehow managed to procreate the same way over time, largely creating the same parallel offspring throughout (DS9, ENT, TOS).
Wait, what!9. Traveling faster than warp 10 enables you to "occupy all space at once", turning you eventually into a hyper-evolved salamander (Voyager).
Transporters are right up there with warp 10 newts in my book.
The contention that one could somehow survive being broken down into one's constituent molecules and beamed across vast distances only to be reconstructed on the other end with no additional technology required at the reception point seems a bit ridiculous.
On the other hand, it's a great storytelling device.
I think the concept is founded on quantum physics (at least the re-imagined bit -- I know it was basically a way to save money on the production budget) which a lot of people have difficulty getting to grips with. I would certainly be reluctant to get into one of those things unless I was facing certain death if I didn't!
Actually the concept is based on classical physics, which wouldn't inherently disallow transporters. quantum physics on the other hand puts the uncertainty principle into play, which undermines the core requirement of a transporter device - to know the structure and position of every particle in an object precisely.
In a society without scarcity of resources I would expect that people could have a house without having to pay for it.
As long as everyone "did their share" why shouldn't they have the basic needs met?
Honestly I see the lack of money as no issue at all. I don't get why some people are mortally offended by the concept that you shouldn't have to have money to get food, clothing and a roof over your head...capitalism isn't the only viable economic model in the universe; it's just what we've settled on at the moment and frankly I think it leaves a lot to be desired.
1. Native Americans are actually part space alien (Voyager)
OK with no. 4. Figure that some interbreeding could have occurred, giving Native Americans a more complex lineage than the other Terrans.
OK with no. 4. Also explains some of the lack fossil evidence of dinosaurs and fits with their rapid disappearance.2. Dinosaurs evolved into humanoids and moved to the delta quandrant forming a reclusive monarchy (Voyager)
No particular problems, though time travel in itself is a messy paradox.
The holoprogram is a bit of a tough nut. I can't remember how many sequences they came up with and how many bits of code created the map, but the information seemed a bit meager to create a holoprogram. Maybe it was enough to tell a written narrative.
Probably not by itself only, but there could have been other factors at play. I'll have to rewatch it.
No problem there. This fits with the many worlds theory below.
Maybe derivation of the many worlds theory, or just exposing some of the mechanics.
Many worlds theory.8. There is a "mirror universe", where somehow everything is exactly the same-- though reversed on a moral/ethical level. Though events are completely different, people somehow managed to procreate the same way over time, largely creating the same parallel offspring throughout (DS9, ENT, TOS).
Wait, what!9. Traveling faster than warp 10 enables you to "occupy all space at once", turning you eventually into a hyper-evolved salamander (Voyager).
OK. maybe there is some relativistic velocity which breaks a space barrier allowing occupation of all space at once (actually I think that is the speed of light, but in Trek we have exceeded it). If you reach that plane, you can simply step off and be anywhere (to be only in one place - where you choose) but what does that have to do with a Salamander again?
If you reach that plane, you can simply step off and be anywhere (to be only in one place - where you choose) but what does that have to do with a Salamander again?
Dissolving into everything causes accelerated evolution. Apparently, we're evolving into giant salamanders.If you reach that plane, you can simply step off and be anywhere (to be only in one place - where you choose) but what does that have to do with a Salamander again?
A couple things -
Even more crazy - could the Preservers be 24th Century changelings? Maybe they evolved in to goo and once they learned to link secluded themselves on a single planet. If they had explored the entire universe and found nobody else around, they wouldn't have much else to do. Then over the centuries the knowledge of their past eroded and they had no recollection of their past. If nothing else, it would explain why the hologram in The Chase looked so much like the female changeling on DS9.![]()
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