But they never excluded the possibility that there could be.[...]In the absence of any evidence excluding the four-gender paradigm written for the Andorians, and--as Therin of Andor suggests--some evidence allowing for the possibility, what's the harm?
They never excluded the possibility that trek humans are actually shapeshifters whose original form is pink-haired poneys and who are bent on conquering the galaxy through spreading happy thoughts, their endgame being the sudden and senseless extermination of their newly conquered galaxy.
Do you think that's a viable possibility, rfmcdpei? Just because it was never directly spelled out that humans are not pink-haired poneys?
You're a My Little Pony fan? I don't blame you: clean animation and good writing make for an enjoyable show. :-)
I think it may not be the case; or, I think it creates an interesting idea. Is the Andorian four-gender paradigm any worse for being complex and non-canon than, say, the Rihannsu language, or the complexities of Bajoran religion presented in the DS9 relaunch, or the detail given to the Tzenkethi of late?
I actually went to the trouble of posting a quantification of the 'touble' - one extremely biased in your position's favour - 48 children, etc (remember my previous post?).Why, necessarily? It makes things more complicated, but to that degree?
1 - yes, it would work - multicellular organisms are made of cells, similar to bacteria (regarding genetic machinery).Would the defenses of bacteria like Deinococcur radiodurans be scalable up to the level of a complex multicellular organism?
Also: does the success of Deinococcus' approach exclude others?
You may notice how it takes only 2 fungi to reproduce.The multipolar mating systems of Terran fungi are worth noting in this context.
http://blog.mycology.cornell.edu/?p=1060
None of which changes the fact that 4 sexes needed for reproduction are biologically ludicrous, from an evolutionary and survival standpoint.It's also worth noting that Andor: Paradigm acknowledged the relative unlikeliness of the scenario arising in nature, and the near-total lack of other species on the Andorian homeworld making use of the four-gender paradigm and the possibility that the Andorians might not be native to their homeworld. If this isn't the case and the Andorians are in fact immigrants--maybe even an ancient civilization's science project--then questions about the four-gender paradigm's unlikely natural evolution go out the window.
You won't see me arguing that fantasy species from trek are scientifically plausible - as you do argue with the andorians.Andorian sociology and economics would be interesting and complex, but IMHO not more inherently problematic than Vulcan's evolving a high-tech civilization on the surface of a desert planet, or Qo'Nos supporting a high-tech civilization despite exceptionally high levels of civil strife.So, unless andorians are genetically programed to the extent of being meat puppets:
In order to have a stable population with a 4 bond, the 4 individuals would need to have ~48 children (all of whom must live). The problem with this is, you need resources to raise ALL these children - which, evolutionary speaking, condemns these 48 children to starvation more often than not.
As already said: I criticize the overinsistence on a tired theme and - on this thread - playing fast and loose with science while claiming not to do so.But I haven't seen you here criticizing Trek lit for covering Odo and the Q here. What gives?Shapeshifters and energy beings - from a real science perspective, they're jibberish.
4 genders is rather close to the same category.
None of which changes the fact that 4 sexes needed for reproduction are biologically ludicrous, from an evolutionary and survival standpoint.
You 'ancient civilization science project' could be an explanation. But even that doesn't explain how the andorians managed to survive/maintain their numbers.
what's amusing is the insistence of posters in ascribing scientific plausibility to something that has none (which even a cursory inspection reveals) - the 4 genders.
Yogi BerraIt ain't over, 'til it's over.
As already said: I criticize the overinsistence on a tired theme and - on this thread - playing fast and loose with science while claiming not to do so.
As said:
"Likewise, the andorians were clearly intended to have 2 genders in canon...
We saw a courtship between a seemingly male and a seemingly female Andorian, yes. But... we'd also already seen a rather androgynous male (Tholos) who seemingly flirted with both the male and female Enterprise crew ("The Andorian Incident"), and a feisty female who towered over the males (Tarah in "Cease Fire").- a 2 gender relation was even presented in Ent S4."
Which we still don't know. Your interpretation happens to differ to ours. And until Harold Apter & Ronald D Moore, or Fred Dekker, come along to say who's wrong, it will still be open to interpretation.irrelevant regarding the scenarists' intent
Star Trek is a franchise where the overwhelming majority of aliens look like human beings with extra bits added, and where aliens from totally separate biospheres can interbreed and produce viable offspring. Both of those are completely ridiculous from a biological or evolutionary standpoint. So if you can suspend disbelief about those, it should be comparatively easy to suspend disbelief about a species having four sexes.
Star Trek is a franchise where the overwhelming majority of aliens look like human beings with extra bits added, and where aliens from totally separate biospheres can interbreed and produce viable offspring. Both of those are completely ridiculous from a biological or evolutionary standpoint. So if you can suspend disbelief about those, it should be comparatively easy to suspend disbelief about a species having four sexes.
+10
A great point, I was going to bring it up but you said it far better than I could.
The Treklit novels establish, famously, that the Andorians do have considerable problems with sustaining their populations, even that some Andorians saw genetic engineering to produce a two-gender successor species as the only way for anything Andorian to survive.
Think of it this way. I've posted elsewhere that's an established fact that, in the neighbourhood of Sol, all four of the closet yellow dwarf stars, at least four of the five closest orange dwarf stars, and an unknown number of red dwarf stars support at least one class-M world. That the near-totality of stars in the Star Trek universe potentially capable of supporting class-M world do support class-M worlds is hugely in excess of even the most optimistic current surveys of exoplanets suggest. (Andor ultimately in orbit of Procyon, and substantial colonies in the systems of Vega and Altair, suggest life-supporting conditions might exist almost everywhere.)
Is this possible, if very low-probability? Sure. Maybe there's an unusual clustering effect around Sol now; maybe life and biospheres are that easy to spread. I'd reduce the number of class-M planets sharply if I was creating my own setting, but the plethora of class-M environments also work for me. In any case, the Star Trek universe is one where advanced civilizations capable of engineering planetary environments have existed for hundreds of millions of years: maybe the huge number was engineered by successive civilizations. Does it matter?
Now as for proclaiming the Andorians "one note" because of it, I would ask are the Vulcan's one note because of Pon Farr? I certainly don't think so.
As already said: I criticize the overinsistence on a tired theme and - on this thread - playing fast and loose with science while claiming not to do so.
Really? Playing fast and loose with science... by Christopher...?Playing fast and loose with science by Mr. There are less thoroughly researched physics papers than my books Bennet? Um wow. Hey tell me another one while I go and fertilize my roses with that one.
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As said:
"Likewise, the andorians were clearly intended to have 2 genders in canon...
And you know what? I still suspect that Data's unfinished line about Andorian marriage was a deliberate homage to the Leslie Fish Andorian fanfics of the 70s, in which the Andorians had more than two sexes. Her writings (including her filksongs) were known to many of the crew on the various ST series, especially those who were members of "first fandom" and who ended up working at Paramount professionally in the 80s, 90s and 00s.[...]We saw a courtship between a seemingly male and a seemingly female Andorian, yes. [...]But... we'd also already seen a rather androgynous male (Tholos) who seemingly flirted with both the male and female Enterprise crew ("The Andorian Incident"), and a feisty female who towered over the males (Tarah in "Cease Fire").[...]Which we still don't know. Your interpretation happens to differ to ours. And until Harold Apter & Ronald D Moore, or Fred Dekker, come along to say who's wrong, it will still be open to interpretation.
you have to look at very biased
Yes, Tarah was female. I never said she wasn't. Treklit simply proposes that there are two very distinct types of female Andorian. And two types of male Andorian.And of course the feisty female was not intended to be female, etc.
For you, every opinion other than your own is seemingly "weak".... shows the weakness of your argument.
So what do you propose we do about this four-gender situation? Slap Pocket Books with a black ban, demand a complete retraction on every Andorian storyline since the DS9 Relaunch, or just accept and enjoy the fiction?
What should be done about the andorians?
Simply give them plot-lines that don't center around the 4 genders and its complications
Like the existence of Spock, Troi, K'Ehleyr, Alexander, B'Elanna, Naomi...?as long as one is aware of such concepts being scientifically unsupported fantasy and treats them accordingly.
So what do you propose we do about this four-gender situation? Slap Pocket Books with a black ban, demand a complete retraction on every Andorian storyline since the DS9 Relaunch, or just accept and enjoy the fiction?
Hardly.
I made my position clear several times in this thread:
"And what's bad writing is not the andorian species - fantasy species are common throughout star trek. It's rehashing a single motive again and again with it.
In the context of this thread, what's amusing is the insistence of posters in ascribing scientific plausibility to something that has none (which even a cursory inspection reveals) - the 4 genders."
or
"Shapeshifters and energy beings - from a real science perspective, they're jibberish.
4 genders is rather close to the same category.
Which is fine - trek is a largely fantasy setting - as long as one is aware of such concepts being scientifically unsupported fantasy and treats them accordingly.
But when one treats 4 genders as a viable (from a real world perspective) evolutionary development, as happens in this thread -."
What should be done about the andorians?
Simply give them plot-lines that don't center around the 4 genders and its complications - 'blink and you'll miss' background notwithstanding.
Star Trek is a franchise where the overwhelming majority of aliens look like human beings with extra bits added, and where aliens from totally separate biospheres can interbreed and produce viable offspring. Both of those are completely ridiculous from a biological or evolutionary standpoint. So if you can suspend disbelief about those, it should be comparatively easy to suspend disbelief about a species having four sexes.
+10
A great point, I was going to bring it up but you said it far better than I could.
As I Said:
"Shapeshifters and energy beings - from a real science perspective, they're jibberish.
4 genders is rather close to the same category.
Which is fine - trek is a largely fantasy setting - as long as one is aware of such concepts being scientifically unsupported fantasy and treats them accordingly.
But when one treats 4 genders as a viable (from a real world perspective) evolutionary development, as happens in this thread -."
I showed WHY 4 genders are scientifically ludicrous, thereby proving it.
PS - The vulcans are not one-note, as the andorians are, because not all their appearances revolve around pon farr and it effects (not even close), while all andorian story-lines revolve around 4 genders (and complications).
"... who dislike/condescend to 'casual' gamers who don't play the same way they do."
I assume the plural was aimed at both of us.
No, it was aimed squarely at Edit, who seems to object to the idea that anyone else might dare enjoy the 4-sex paradigm for the Andorians.
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