The Prime Directive exists to create false drama.
This must be true. I think they would interact with anyone with FTL capability as opposed to just warp drive.I think the officers we see are simply using 'pre-warp' short-hand for 'pre capacity for interstellar travel'.
It's not FTL that's the sticking point, it's knowledge of extraterrestrial life. The Edo had no FTL capacity from what we saw, but because they knew about aliens and were okay with that the crew could go down to the planet.
Same in TOS, as long as the non-FTL aliens already knew about alien life there was no contamination problems from contact because their culture was already open to the idea of aliens.
For that to work, you either have to make said law impossibly simplistic, or make it so complex that you account for every possible variable, in every possible situation.Why write it down in letters if ya don't want it followed to the letter?
This is one way to make the prime directive work, you place people with (presumable) good judgement in position to decide the legitimacy of their own actions. And then you examine their decisions after they make them. If they get it wrong, you pull them from positions of authority and penalize them. If they get it right, there's a slap on the back and you tell them to keep it up.Spirit of a law is open to anyone's interpretation,
One, your post was immediately above mine, so there was no need to quote it in it's entirety. Two, I was agreeing with you.In the part of my quote that you omitted, I said exactly that
This is one way to make the prime directive work, you place people with (presumable) good judgement in position to decide the legitimacy of their own actions. And then you examine their decisions after they make them. If they get it wrong, you pull them from positions of authority and penalize them. If they get it right, there's a slap on the back and you tell them to keep it up.
There won't alway be a single "correct action," and in some cases damage (if any) would not be apparent for years.
The Directive stated that members of Starfleet are not to interfere in the internal affairs of another species, especially the natural development of pre-warp civilizations, either by direct intervention, or technological revelation. When studying a planet's civilization, particularly during a planetary survey, the Prime Directive makes it clear that there was to be "No identification of self or mission. No interference with the social development of said planet. No references to space, other worlds, or advanced civilizations." (TOS: "Bread and Circuses") Starfleet personnel are required to understand that allowing cultures to develop on their own is an important right and therefore must make any sacrifice to protect cultures from contamination, even at the cost of their own lives.
is there any actual canon source for what the Prime Directive actually says or how it's worded?
I always thought that one was a bit sticky, because it was the first mention of the Prime Directive in TNG, and they were on a planet that clearly had no FTL capability. It was never made clear who or what the "Gods" were, but the Ent-D didn't know about the aliens in orbit until they had already beamed down to the surface.It's not FTL that's the sticking point, it's knowledge of extraterrestrial life. The Edo had no FTL capacity from what we saw, but because they knew about aliens and were okay with that the crew could go down to the planet.
One, your post was immediately above mine, so there was no need to quote it in it's entirety.In the part of my quote that you omitted, I said exactly that
I couldn't tell since you omitted the part you agreed with.Two, I was agreeing with you.
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Space is big, and complex. There's probably no end to moral, political and philosophical wrangling that must take place. The Prime Directive is probably a stone tablet in the lobby of Starfleet headquarters with a picture of the British flag with the caption: "Don't fuck up other planets the way these guys fucked up other countries."
Space is big, and complex. There's probably no end to moral, political and philosophical wrangling that must take place. The Prime Directive is probably a stone tablet in the lobby of Starfleet headquarters with a picture of the British flag with the caption: "Don't fuck up other planets the way these guys fucked up other countries."
I'm sure citizens of Canada, Australia, New Zealand and, quite possibly, several others, deeply appreciate your in-depth analysis of their condition.
Space is big, and complex. There's probably no end to moral, political and philosophical wrangling that must take place. The Prime Directive is probably a stone tablet in the lobby of Starfleet headquarters with a picture of the British flag with the caption: "Don't fuck up other planets the way these guys fucked up other countries."
I'm sure citizens of Canada, Australia, New Zealand and, quite possibly, several others, deeply appreciate your in-depth analysis of their condition.
Really, you don't think the Canadian First Nations, Australian Aborigines, and Māori would agree that the British fucked things up for them?
ETA:
Whatever you may think of the European communities Britain transplanted into the lands it stole from their native inhabitants, let's get one thing straight:
The Federation, unlike the British Empire, is not in the business of conquering foreign lands, or importing its people into lands it has taken from their native inhabitants. The Federation, unlike Britain, is not an empire. That is the virtue of the Prime Directive.
I'm sure citizens of Canada, Australia, New Zealand and, quite possibly, several others, deeply appreciate your in-depth analysis of their condition.
Really, you don't think the Canadian First Nations, Australian Aborigines, and Māori would agree that the British fucked things up for them?
ETA:
Whatever you may think of the European communities Britain transplanted into the lands it stole from their native inhabitants, let's get one thing straight:
The Federation, unlike the British Empire, is not in the business of conquering foreign lands, or importing its people into lands it has taken from their native inhabitants. The Federation, unlike Britain, is not an empire. That is the virtue of the Prime Directive.
I don't think that has much to do with the PD. The PD seems to be about sharing technology, interfering with some sort of mythical "natural cultural development," etc.
I don't think they would need a PD just to say "let's not conquer other peoples."
The Federation, unlike the British Empire, is not in the business of conquering foreign lands, or importing its people into lands it has taken from their native inhabitants. The Federation, unlike Britain, is not an empire. That is the virtue of the Prime Directive.
Really, you don't think the Canadian First Nations, Australian Aborigines, and Māori would agree that the British fucked things up for them?
ETA:
Whatever you may think of the European communities Britain transplanted into the lands it stole from their native inhabitants, let's get one thing straight:
The Federation, unlike the British Empire, is not in the business of conquering foreign lands, or importing its people into lands it has taken from their native inhabitants. The Federation, unlike Britain, is not an empire. That is the virtue of the Prime Directive.
I don't think that has much to do with the PD. The PD seems to be about sharing technology, interfering with some sort of mythical "natural cultural development," etc.
I don't think they would need a PD just to say "let's not conquer other peoples."
I'm not sure what to call imperialism (be it overt, through military conquest [a la the British Empire in India], or subtle, through control of puppet governments [a la the United States in Latin America]) if not a form of interference.
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