EMH2: The secondary gyrodyne relays in the propulsion field intermatrix have depolarised.
EMH1: In English?
EMH2: I'm just reading what it says here.
EMH1: In English?
EMH2: I'm just reading what it says here.
No, they didn't. It was total B.S. from the get-go.I think what's clever about the pseudo technobabble is how the writers wrote it so we know that it's bullsh*t. They did a good job in distinguishing it from the genuine technobabble.
Today's shows are full of technobabble. House M.D., CSI, NCIS, Stargate, and it NEVER adds ANYTHING to the story, nor does it make any sense. Doctors will recognize House MD's babble makes no sense, forensic doctors will recognize CSI's babble is bullcrap, and physicists will recognize that Trek's and Stargate's babble makes no sense, but the general audience, to which I belong, doesn't care. So I will never understand the fan's gripe against technobabble in Star Trek.
And that's before getting into things that don't exist or do things in Trek radically different than the plain meaning suggests. "Starship Mine's" "baryon sweep," for example--how hard is it to know what the word "baryon" means (a hadron with three bound quarks ordinarily found as those exotic particles, protons and neutrons), and that using it as a high-energy sweep is a ridiculously bad idea?
TNG wasn't really that bad with technobabble, in that tended not to totally solve things with it. Like in "Starship Mine," the baryon sweep is a mcguffin, at least has consistent properties in-episode, and isn't the solution. Is it stupid? Hell yes, but it is just fiction...
The problem is when the technobabble substituted for resolution.![]()
Agreed. And I like Starship Mine, too. I suppose that subconciously, I took the baryon sweep to just be an episode-length version of the cliche'd evil crushing spiked wall trap. It wasn't the baryon sweep that needed to be resolved, it was how Picard would have to outwit the thieves that was crucial to the story. IIRC, Picard even uses his trusty Lecture Skills (tm) to hold off the main villainous until she's vaporized.
One of the clearest examples in my mind about misuse of technobabble is Voyager's "Flashback." Here we have Janeway exploring Tuvok's past with Sulu. If anything, this episode was perfect to explore that dynamic, the history of the Excelsior, and most importantly interesting-but-mysterious Tuvok. But how is it resolved? By the Doctor going into polysyllabic equivalents of using a mental defibrillator. Boo!!
But when it's used as a means for characters to interact, as an excuse for your Harry Kims and Ensign Mayweathers to get a couple lines in the script, or worse -- as conflict resolution, then there's a gigantic problem.
I watched DS9 "Sword of Kahless" today. There's a scene where Dax is using some device to try and shut down a force field, but it's not working, so Worf suggests "try reversing the polarity". Clearly Worf knows nothing about any of this stuff, but he's genre savvy enough to know what works on Star Trek. And lo, it does work!
But when it's used as a means for characters to interact, as an excuse for your Harry Kims and Ensign Mayweathers to get a couple lines in the script, or worse -- as conflict resolution, then there's a gigantic problem.
You mean like House M.D.? They spend half the episode talking technobabble that makes no sense to the casual viewer. Entire dialogue sequences are only about technobabble, just so a few of the characters can interact, otherwise they wouldn't have any lines. And it's a conflict resolution, EVERY TIME.
And there's no difference to me between that medobabble that might be or not grounded in real medical terms, or Trek's babble, that is more grounded in fiction than science. Both makes no sense to the casual viewer.
You mean like House M.D.? They spend half the episode talking technobabble that makes no sense to the casual viewer. Entire dialogue sequences are only about technobabble, just so a few of the characters can interact, otherwise they wouldn't have any lines. And it's a conflict resolution, EVERY TIME.But when it's used as a means for characters to interact, as an excuse for your Harry Kims and Ensign Mayweathers to get a couple lines in the script, or worse -- as conflict resolution, then there's a gigantic problem.
And there's no difference to me between that medobabble that might be or not grounded in real medical terms, or Trek's babble, that is more grounded in fiction than science. Both makes no sense to the casual viewer.
There's a big difference between the technobabble in Trek and the medicalbabble in TV shows like House.
Because the medicalbabble is real and shows like House often have real-world doctors on staff to consult for accuracy. There's a website that "grades" House on its medicine and for the most part House stays "true" even if it fudges things a bit for the sake of TV.
So when House busts into the room and spouts off a bunch of medicalbabble about what they need to do, what needs to happen, or what the solution is that's a pretty big difference than -I'm going to go with Voyager here since they were the worst with technobabble, IMO- Belanna standing up and yaking about made-up technology nonsense in order to save the day.
This is, more or less, why I "liked" the technobabble in TNG because they tried to have it more or less make sense. There were times when they went too far, sure, and it didn't always make sense. But at the end of the day I don't think there's any similarity to medicalbabble saving the day in a show that's all about solving medical cases and made-up technology babble saving the day on a dramatic series.
House busting in to the room to describe some procedure to put the patient of the week through to solve the case is a lot different than Belanna saying they need to reconfigure Seven's nanoprobes to alter the wavelengths of the output on the deflector dish to save the day.
In one case something "real" is being called into play to save the day and it's mostly in-line with real life in another case a writer was either lazy or got himself stuck in the corner and couldn't come up with anything more creative than using made-up technology to save the day.
No, they didn't. It was total B.S. from the get-go.I think what's clever about the pseudo technobabble is how the writers wrote it so we know that it's bullsh*t. They did a good job in distinguishing it from the genuine technobabble.
Technobabble is actually fine as flavour material. It gives the sense these people are extremely competent professionals who know how this stuff works and are trying to come up with an expedient solution using technology and science theory sufficiently more advanced than our own to the point we don't get it, also it just sounds sort of cool and exotic.
Pages and pages of it, not so much. [TECH] should also never solve the story - and Voyager is more guilty than TNG of just using it as a narrative crutch in addition to spewing it all over the place. Not to say it wasn't a problem in TNG also, just not as much.
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