Re: Transports in New Trek
The transporter does indeed just convert you to energy, transport you, and then reconstitute you -- the original you, not some sort of duplicate. So there you go.
This is like saying that you could drop someone into a Cuisinart, reduce them to People Puree - and then if you could somehow reassemble the molecules into a copy it would mean that they hadn't been killed.
Doesn't pass the smell test.
Well, I suppose, as
Photoman15 said, since the transporter does disassemble you at the molecular level, you do cease to exist as a human being during transport and thus are technically no longer alive. So yes, in that respect, the transporter has to "kill" you to fulfill its very function, then bring you back to life, in a manner of speaking. That's certainly one way of looking at it. Personally, I don't think it would bother me that much -- if transporters were real, that is.
The analogy you give kind of reminds me of an
X-Files episode in which the people of a small town would use a creature to cure all their illnesses -- but for it to do so, it first had to consume the sick person, take the disease (which would then afflict the creature), and regurgitate the individual, who would then reform, completely healed and seemingly none the worse for wear! Of course, in this story, the explanation was some sort of magic, which the viewer accepts after the usual suspension of disbelief. In the case of most Treknology (especially transporters), I think we have to look at it in a similar way -- like it's almost some sort of magic. Otherwise we'd go nuts thinking about it.
This approach does have its limits, however, i.e. "Realm of Fear". I think it would be best to ignore that one, as it requires you to suspend your disbelief even more than usual. In fact, it basically asks you to ignore the previously established (if admittedly fictional) rules about transporting in the
Trek universe. There's really no way Barclay could be consciously aware of what was going on inside the matter stream, let alone move his body to grab onto the
Yosemite's crew members. It doesn't make a lick of sense, even by
Star Trek's usual pseudo-scientific standards.
Thanks a lot for that one, Mr. Braga.
