How does answering this add to either Kirk and Spock's story, and how important is it for us to actually know?
Criticism seems highly relative, whereas actual disputes on what is portrayed strike me as a sort of secondary issue on which it seems there is only minor disagreement.
Especially where I criticize plot inconsistency and reliance on miracles, opponents most commonly claim that the defect is unimportant. While I usually agree that the majority of flaws I cite were not worth taking me "out" of the film, things I consider "big" did happen enough of the time to make me suspicious. For example, I exclaimed "What?!?" aloud when Spock ordered Kirk "Off this ship!" ...a massive overreaction which seemed stupid and dangerous that I would question if I were there since I would never (so I thought) do something like that. "Why is he doing it?" I wondered. The film gave no answer, then what seemed like seconds later, Kirk stumbles into Spock's cave. "How in the hell did he find ANY shelter in a blizzard, running blindly from a predator?" The film gave no answer... (repeat through the rest of film)
To me, suspending disbelief became a chore after a few times and I felt like I and the rest of the millions of audience members were being cheated and abused. I thought carefully about the film for some time after this let-down from my expectations, and after careful, rational consideration over the following days, I got seriously pissed off.
Yet, if the internal contradictions, bad science, military propaganda, use of miracles to advance the story, and nonsensical dialog don't activate any neurons which cause you to notice a "rule violation", criticism from those for whom this response was triggered seems like nit-picking, bias, or is otherwise invalid in a way that ends up being judged "not important", as you claim here.
To me, this seems like making the "argument from ignorance fallacy" that claims "because we don't know whether this criticism is justified, it is not." I'd like to test my perception by inviting enthusiastic fans to falsify my claim by showing that the standards I apply, which tell me the writing is horrible, should not be used by a competent reviewer.
That is why I asked for your rules of evaluation.