If so, one would assume him to move to the test where he is "vulnerable" and Kirk has "the upper hand" much sooner.
Instead, a lion's share of his test involves finding out what Kirk will do when threatened, cornered and deprived of options.
Things only start to move forward when Kirk demonstrates cleverness and the ability to fight his way out of the stalemate,
suggesting Balok was ultimately far more interested in Kirk's range of malevolent than benevolent capabilities.
The relevant reasons only come to play after Kirk has proven his worth. So this tells us nothing about what Balok would have done, had Kirk failed to defeat him in the battle of wits.
Or, rather, I posit that this is at least as valid an assumption as thinking that desperately firing phasers would have sealed Kirk's fate.
Or that breaking down in tears would.
It was a test, after all - and in tests, there are infinitely many ways to fail, but typically just a few ways to succeed, and sometimes none.
And was waiting for Kirk to do something about it. We have no reason to think he would have been satisfied with "nothing" as Kirk's response;
had this been the case, he wouldn't have needed ten minutes of "nothing", he could have written down the results much earlier and given Kirk a passing mark.
One that tests intruders and expects them to measure up.
That is all we know about him. The idea that he would have posed no threat to Kirk is your unwarranted speculation;
at most, it fits the facts equally well with the idea that Balok was the desperate last defender of a realm, willing to go to extremes to do his work.
From which it then followed that Balok gave them the passing mark. Which is hardly unexpected, considering Balok himself is a master of deception, and no doubt considers deceit a virtue.
Well, it appears that he does destroy them. Else where are they? Why has nobody heard of the First Federation yet, and lived to tell the tale to the far-ranging explorers of mankind?
Sure, Balok is a liar.
But for some reason, you seem to accept at face value that he is as lonely as he claims.
Kirk passing the test, surviving, and making friends with him is a rare achievement, then.
The alternative to that being that Balok is telling even more complicated lies than either of us thinks, especially after dropping his disguise...
You seem to have a pretty weird idea of the concept of "test". What you describe is not testing, as it supposedly has no failing grade.
What you postulate is a meaningless prank.
Which is a valid idea for the behavior of a by his own account bored superior alien species, of course - but in a strange bout of blindness, you seem to be thinking that the prank is my take and the test yours. It's the other way around.
On the other hand, the "test" was still pretty dangerous.
It was pretty well inferred that the Enterprise came close to blowing up during the tug of war with Balok's pilot ship (Spock: 'She'll blow soon!') so it isn't hard to see how a miscalculation by Balok (what if it had taken an extra minute for Enterprise to break free?) could've turned the Enterprise into a brightly burning star.
Wonder what would've happened if at the end, Kirk had brought the Enterprise over to transporter range....and then opened up without warning with photon torpedos?
Chances are Baloks ship would've been blown away as superior or not, its systems were shut down.
I thought the test wasn't how the Enterprise crew would face death, but how they would react to having Balok helpless and at their mercy after he had repeatedly threatened and terrorized them.
If you go by the novel by Diane Carey "Battlestations" then Baloks ship the Fesarius was not really the monstrously powerful supership that he implied to the Enterprise crew. It was just a giant ship built to tow asteroids for processing and actually had no weapons aside from the ability to selectively shut down the Enterprise systems.
If that was true, the Balok was the one who truly ran a collosal bluff on Kirk and not the other way around.
Some credence in my opinion to this idea is given in the episode where Balok refers to the Fesarius as "this entire complex" which makes me think the Fesarius was actually just some huge space going automated factory.
This would explain why despite the First Federation being on friendly terms with the Federation that apparently none of their technical innovations made it into StarFleet ships.
Why should it be anything else? The purpose of the argument, after all, is to expose the fundamental hollowness of what you try to say (even if you drown it in verbosity) - there's no point in going beyond that. If it's inconvenient for you, all the better.You deploy an all too convenient sort of skepticism.
In this particular test, you fail.
Timo Saloniemi
Why should it be anything else?You deploy an all too convenient sort of skepticism.
The purpose of the argument, after all,
is to expose the fundamental hollowness of what you try to say (even if you drown it in verbosity)
- there's no point in going beyond that. If it's inconvenient for you, all the better.
Despite the "arguments" you present, it appears that you simply decide that a short person who smiles a lot must be a joke rather than a threat.
Hence, a complex series of tests must have a fundamentally humorous and harmless intent.
And "proving" that is a fish-in-a-barrel exercise, because the complexity of the test allows for an infinite number of interpretations - none of which can be claimed to be based on "the text" (least of all when deriving from the word of the episode's explicit trickster).
We saw a test. The test pitted two players with armageddon-level weaponry against each other in artificially created animosity.
The "intent of the test" aspect thus is completely unrelated to the issue of whether Kirk saved 430 bacons from rather hot fire
those lives were at mortal risk all the time, in a situation that had a greater number of negative than positive possible outcomes. Either side blinking at the wrong moment could have meant mass murder, even if neither side "intended" or desired it.
The test would indeed be practical for screening out aggressive intruders, but it also seems to involve a major element of screening out those who have no guts. The border buoy allows the timid to turn back, but does not offer much opposition to those who persist with intruding; apparently, then, you can still get a passing grade if you destroy the buoy, and indeed ultimate friendship with Balok's people requires you to destroy that buoy!
If Balok's only purpose was to swat those who try to intrude, he'd not waste time with tests. If his only purpose was to seek out friendly folks, he would skip the part where the buoy attacks the intruder. The combination of test situations seems optimized for giving resourceful people like Kirk the passing grade. Of course, there may be other ways to pass the test, too, but the ways to fail are obvious, too: fail to respond to the buoy's aggression, fail to wriggle out of the grip of the Fesarius, fail to show mercy to the tugboat, and you have failed Balok. And it's the last failure that would clearly call for the most aggressive penalty, because at that point Balok has maneuvered himself into a corner. But since the penalty for failing with even the very first step, the buoy, is death from radiation, Balok's test is cast in an especially sinister light.
I wouldn't be worried about the episode being pointless - many a nonsensical plot still carries artistic or symbolic merit. But Balok's test itself becomes pointless if we ignore the penalty angle, and in that sense all the provocative talk about Kirk not doing anything much is simply incorrect.
Timo Saloniemi
Or, the destruction of the buoy is the trigger to get Balok's attention. If the buoy gets the ships to turn back, then there's no reason to get out of bed. So, once destroyed, Balok goes out there and see's who is coming up the driveway. I didn't imply that Balok's only mission was to swat intruders. It was to investigate and see who is a threat and who comes in peace.
So, no, it wasn't the corbomite bluff that did anything (although it may have given Balok pause and an excuse to stall and test further), it was the fact that, after they broke away, Kirk turned around and went to meet Balok even after all they'd been through. Not to destroy him, but to create a relationship.
Since Balok's test was pretty much the episode, I would hope it retains a point.
^ "Of course... the old Corbomite in the hull trick....
.... and I fell for it!" (with apologies to Maxwell Smart)
^ "Of course... the old Corbomite in the hull trick....
.... and I fell for it!" (with apologies to Maxwell Smart)
Well then again, if the Corbomite in the hull trick was pulled by Kirk several times, and then other starship captains started using it as well (once Kirk bragged about it naturally) such things can start to have a life of their own. That is, adversaries start to believe there really is such a thing as Corbomite because "the humans keep using it and why would they use something completely imaginary".
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