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Why was Pike's wheelchair in "The Menagerie" so Poor ?

Unless I'm remembering wrong, the episode states his brain is fully functional
No, it doesn't. The brain is not mentioned at all. McCoy instead says that Pike's mind is still active.

In all likelihood, Pike's brain is just as shot to hell as the rest of his body. The mind could still well be intact - that's the difference between 1960s thinking and 2010s (or even 1980s) thinking. The inability to use language would not be the sign of a damaged mind, any more than stammering is. It's just one more way to be "invalid" in this world, ranking right next to being deaf, blind or crippled. Cripples are not madmen or retards by modern thinking, even though they very much were by older thinking. People who can't use language today (and there are plenty of real-world examples of advanced aphasia on otherwise normal and smart people) are not madmen or retards, either. They simply suffer from a very specific problem in their body, one that physically prevents them from processing language.

Back in the real world, it would have been nice also if the chair prop had had some kind of light around the base, to at least suggest that some sort of exotic anti-grav was levitating the chair a few inches off the floor, but oh well, that's what imagination is for.
I'm sort of delighted that levitation in TOS wasn't indicated by corny light shows. Why should antigravity manifest as blue glow, like it apparently does for the TNG era hoverchairs and hoverbeds? Those handheld antigravs of TOS never glowed in any color, and IIRC didn't even emit a silly hum.

Timo Saloniemi


OK, you're just playing word games here. Mind/brain dualism is not supported by modern neuroscience. Brain=mind, mind= brain. Having a line like "his mind is fully functional" is meant to imply that he's in control of his faculties. If you want to propose that his brain had somehow lost the capacity to think in terms of coherent language, then have fun, but it's not in the episode.

BRAIN, BRAIN! What is BRAIN! :p
 
Captain Pike doesn't have the clout of other wheelchair bound heroes. Perry Mason alias Robert Ironside was at the top of the wheelchair clout list, and behind him Professor X. Pike is no Kirk.

Pike's chair can READ BRAINWAVES and yet all it can do is beep yes or no? It can't even generate a computer voice?
It used to but those around him found it incredibly annoying (Gilbert Gottfried) so they unplugged that portion of his wheelchair computer, not to mention his off-key singing.

Beep-beep? Did they give his computer-chair the language tape for the Roadrunner.
 
Spock already knew what Pike knew; he was simply trying to gain time, in order to get Pike to Talos IV-- and Pike didn't want to go, because this carried the death-penalty; he didn't want Spock to die for his sake.

Spock was just so loyal to Pike, that he wanted to get Pike to Talos so that he could live out the rest of his life with at least the illusion of happiness-- even at the risk of his own death.

So Pike was saying "no" over and over, with regard to Spock's taking him to Talos, since Spock could have turned back at any time and escaped the death-penalty. Even though Pike wanted to go to Talos more than anything, he was saying "No, Spock, don't die for my sake."

Really, the crippled Pike and chair was the set up for perhaps the best ending ever... Pike lives in the "mental" world free of his health problems and able to participate in normal activities. As someone who has had close relatives confined to a chair... what a joyous, optimistic, ending to offer those who have no better alternative.

And this is exactly what Spock was trying to achieve for Pike, his captain-- and why he willing to forfeit his own life to achieve it. This definitely shows Spock's depth of character... as well as the depth of the original series itself, and the bond among the crew, the like of which was never seen in the later Treks. We do see some glimpses, such as on DS9 where O'Brien and Bashir risk their lives to save Odo, but that seems about the extent of it.
 
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Mind/brain dualism is not supported by modern neuroscience. Brain=mind, mind= brain.

But that's just it - brain=mind is the sort of mystique that is no longer supported by science. It's not my argument that hinges on mind/brain dualism, but yours...

Science today, and in the 23rd century, would treat the brain as the complex system it is, realizing that there are physical locations, processes and apparata in there that are directly responsible for certain aspects of the thing we lazily used to call "the mind". The direct consequence of that is the treating of "mind" as a complex collection of processes and features, not a single entity that magically resides in the brain (or, as was thought a bit earlier, in the liver). And any modern practitioner of the medical arts would acknowledge that an active mind becomes no less active if it loses one of those very tangible, physically locatable sub-processes such as the ability to use language, or understand emotions, or recognize faces.

McCoy is only being modest in saying that the brain remains a final unconquered frontier. The conquest is certainly underway already, in our time and thus arguably in McCoy's as well. And a person who loses the ability to use language is not considered "mindless", any more than a person who stammers or suffers from partial paralysis is.

Timo Saloniemi
 
My thought has always been that, that device was so far advanced of what we have today, that without it -- or with the modern 23rd century equivilant of Hawking's chair -- Pike would have been dead.

IE, his body was so ravaged, his nerves, muscles, organs, that the device was not just a chair but full life support and the only thing keeping him from being in a bed in an iron lung scenario. IE, it was a mobile iron lung -- times 100.
 
I agree that he probably no longer even existed from chest down.

I guess standard TOS-era surgery could have repaired his face to a more aesthetic form with ease. But if all the nerves and muscles beneath that face were inoperational, what would be the point? Giving him a doll's face would be about as degrading as replacing his "yes" beep with a voice-synthesized "Yo, becha, all for it, definitelamente - I fully agree, sir!"...

Timo Saloniemi
 
Mind/brain dualism is not supported by modern neuroscience. Brain=mind, mind= brain.
But that's just it - brain=mind is the sort of mystique that is no longer supported by science. It's not my argument that hinges on mind/brain dualism, but yours...

Science today, and in the 23rd century, would treat the brain as the complex system it is, realizing that there are physical locations, processes and apparata in there that are directly responsible for certain aspects of the thing we lazily used to call "the mind". The direct consequence of that is the treating of "mind" as a complex collection of processes and features, not a single entity that magically resides in the brain (or, as was thought a bit earlier, in the liver). And any modern practitioner of the medical arts would acknowledge that an active mind becomes no less active if it loses one of those very tangible, physically locatable sub-processes such as the ability to use language, or understand emotions, or recognize faces.

McCoy is only being modest in saying that the brain remains a final unconquered frontier. The conquest is certainly underway already, in our time and thus arguably in McCoy's as well. And a person who loses the ability to use language is not considered "mindless", any more than a person who stammers or suffers from partial paralysis is.

Timo Saloniemi

but where are you getting that he can't process language from? Just from the crappy wheelchair he got stuck with?

Because he can understand Spock and the others just fine, AND his future on Talos IV would seem to suggest that he's fine with language.
 
How could he understand external speech, and not be able to think in a language? A mind meld goes beyond speech and should easily be able to relay what Pike is thinking.
 
Read upthread. We don't know that Spock didn't mindmeld with Pike offscreen, but in the end it was unnecessary. He knew what Pike had to say about going back to Talos IV: No.

If he HAD mindmelded, Pike was likely to have brain-thought at him, "What part of 'no' do you not understand?"
 
How could he understand external speech, and not be able to think in a language?

This type of brain damage also exists in the real world, as far as external observers can tell. (For example http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transcortical_motor_aphasia .) Apparently, different elements in the brain participate in understanding things, including communication, and in converting those into language-type expression, such as speech or writing or sign language.

A mind meld goes beyond speech and should easily be able to relay what Pike is thinking.

...But he might be thinking only "yes", "no" and "I need a hug", and while the meld might allow him to express that third desire in addition to the two the computer can decipher, neither of these would be able to understand that thinking "no" is Pike's only way of expressing things like "I really feel you should consider confiding in your captain, Spock; he's a man of good character, and might think of a way to do this without damaging your career". Being locked in one's body is bad enough - but it's apparently also possible to be locked in one's mind.

Timo Saloniemi
 
My thought has always been that, that device was so far advanced of what we have today, that without it -- or with the modern 23rd century equivalent of Hawking's chair -- Pike would have been dead.

IE, his body was so ravaged, his nerves, muscles, organs, that the device was not just a chair but full life support and the only thing keeping him from being in a bed in an iron lung scenario.
Mendez did mention that Pike was kept alive by a battery-driven heart. Batteries wear out. Let’s hope there’s a drugstore that sells batteries on Talos IV!

I agree that he probably no longer even existed from chest down.
If that was the case, why was his wheelchair built in the rough shape of a seated human figure? Why not just attach his head and upper torso to a gurney?

(I know . . . because (A) that effect would have been difficult to pull off convincingly, and (B) it would have creeped out viewers too much. Either that or it would have made them laugh.)
 
Read upthread. We don't know that Spock didn't mindmeld with Pike offscreen, but in the end it was unnecessary. He knew what Pike had to say about going back to Talos IV: No.

If he HAD mindmelded, Pike was likely to have brain-thought at him, "What part of 'no' do you not understand?"

Besides, mind-melds were deeply personal experiences as depicted in TOS. It seems to me that Spock and Pike had a much more formal relationship than Spock later developed with Kirk. I can see why it might have been "off the table."
 
mind-melds were deeply personal experiences as depicted in TOS. It seems to me that Spock and Pike had a much more formal relationship than Spock later developed with Kirk. I can see why it might have been "off the table."

But one of the first mind melds we ever saw was between Spock and Dr. Van Gelder, who as far as we know had never even met before.

BTW, what were the other four lights on Pike's chair -- fog lamps and turn indicators?

Lens flares.


So he can give you the lens flare glare of death.

That makes this device the...

Lens flare glare ware chair. :techman:
 
I love how the only door handle we see in all of TOS is the one to Pike's room on the starbase. So cruel.

A friend pointed that out to me a few years ago. It cracks me up whenever I rewatch the episode today.

I also love how Captain Kirk says "Captain Pike is a complete invalid" right within earshot of Captain Pike. :guffaw:
 
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