If Carol's call to Kirk was the only transmission about Genesis, and Khan arrives at Regula to find no Genesis, it's not a stretch for Khan to think that Kirk knows something about its location.
I thought Kirk knew everything since he's an Admiral and issued a lot of orders including Chekov's post on Reliant. Probably Reliant's misson itself.
When he accessed Dr. Marcus' presentation it was for the benefit of Spock ans McCoy. Spock had just asked him: "it would help my analysis if I knew what Genesis is"
As I recall, the phrase was "life from lifelessness." That doesn't mean bringing life to the dead. There wasn't any life there to begin with, so there couldn't be anything dead to bring back to life.In the end, Genesis means nothing to Khan.
… Apart from a way to turn a desolate, lifeless, destroyed world into a Garden of Eden. And maybe, depending on how he's garbled the concept in his head, to bring the dead back to life.
(Of course it's madness to think that Genesis could restore someone dead, but, given the sales pitch of Genesis as a way of bringing life to the dead it wouldn't be a totally mad misunderstanding, just, the sort of thing that makes the scientists roll their eyes and start long paragraphs with, ``no, this is what we mean''.)
Quite so. It appears likely (and dramatically satisfying) that Kirk would not have been able to give Khan what he wanted, even if Kirk caved in to Khan's demands. Kirk's role in all this may have been minor, but in Khan's eyes, it would of course be major: all evil in the universe must stem from Kirk, and lots and lots of seeming evidence is accumulating to support Khan's deranged belief that this is so.
Kirk knows Carol, and knows Carol works on Genesis. He doesn't seem intimate with either the woman or the project, though: he doesn't recognize the grown-up David, and he knows nothing about the Genesis Cave. And it seems neither Carol nor David is much better off there: their ideas of Kirk's role in Starfleet and his relationship to the project are fuzzy as best. Heck, Carol doesn't hail Jim because he would be her immediate superior or contact man or anything - she hails her only Starfleet ex-lover because she needs insider help from or possibly against Starfleet.
As I recall, the phrase was "life from lifelessness." That doesn't mean bringing life to the dead. There wasn't any life there to begin with, so there couldn't be anything dead to bring back to life.In the end, Genesis means nothing to Khan.
… Apart from a way to turn a desolate, lifeless, destroyed world into a Garden of Eden. And maybe, depending on how he's garbled the concept in his head, to bring the dead back to life.
(Of course it's madness to think that Genesis could restore someone dead, but, given the sales pitch of Genesis as a way of bringing life to the dead it wouldn't be a totally mad misunderstanding, just, the sort of thing that makes the scientists roll their eyes and start long paragraphs with, ``no, this is what we mean''.)
At first I was wondering who/what the third was, and then realized I'd forgotten about Esteban and the Grissom (shows how much of an impression he made!).Their negligence set in motion a chain of events leading to Khan's escape, the destruction of three Federation starships, the deaths of three Starfleet captains (though one was restored to life), another in a long list of conflicts with the Klingon Empire, the deaths of several civilian scientists and the internal controversy spurred by the charges against Kirk and his friends for circumventing Federation policy to go to Genesis and retrieve Spock. All told, I think Starfleet Command should have put itself on trial rather than punishing Kirk (and this is coming from someone who believes the entirety of the TOS films is an illustration of Kirk's leadership-by-arrogance approach to starship command).
At first I was wondering who/what the third was, and then realized I'd forgotten about Esteban and the Grissom (shows how much of an impression he made!).
Khan also tortured some of the scientists at the Regula Space Lab. Perhaps Kirk was involved in the project at some point. Perhaps Carol Marcus took it to Kirk first and Kirk then took it to the Federation. The scientist knew this and during their torture the name Kirk came up.
Yes, I know that's what it did. However, that's not what it was originally intended to do.As I recall, the phrase was "life from lifelessness." That doesn't mean bringing life to the dead. There wasn't any life there to begin with, so there couldn't be anything dead to bring back to life.… Apart from a way to turn a desolate, lifeless, destroyed world into a Garden of Eden. And maybe, depending on how he's garbled the concept in his head, to bring the dead back to life.
(Of course it's madness to think that Genesis could restore someone dead, but, given the sales pitch of Genesis as a way of bringing life to the dead it wouldn't be a totally mad misunderstanding, just, the sort of thing that makes the scientists roll their eyes and start long paragraphs with, ``no, this is what we mean''.)
Except it does exacly that.
Although too, without that same negligence (paradoxically), the Earth itself would've been completely destroyed and much of the human race obliterated, since that chain of events basically put Admiral Kirk and his crew in position to rescue the Federation from the Whale Probe when all other Starfleet assets within range had been neutralized.Their negligence set in motion a chain of events leading to Khan's escape, the destruction of three Federation starships, the deaths of three Starfleet captains (though one was restored to life), another in a long list of conflicts with the Klingon Empire, the deaths of several civilian scientists and the internal controversy spurred by the charges against Kirk and his friends for circumventing Federation policy to go to Genesis and retrieve Spock. All told, I think Starfleet Command should have put itself on trial rather than punishing Kirk (and this is coming from someone who believes the entirety of the TOS films is an illustration of Kirk's leadership-by-arrogance approach to starship command).
Although too, without that same negligence (paradoxically), the Earth itself would've been completely destroyed and much of the human race obliterated, since that chain of events basically put Admiral Kirk and his crew in position to rescue the Federation from the Whale Probe when all other Starfleet assets within range had been neutralized.
In 20/20 hindsight, many historians from Capt. Picard's era likely consider the loss of three starships as being an eminently worthwhile tradeoff.
It seemed like he knew of the project by name but may not have had all the details until seeing the video presentation. He was surprised that Carol thought he was trying to take Genesis from her, not that there was such a thing.
It seemed like he knew of the project by name but may not have had all the details until seeing the video presentation. He was surprised that Carol thought he was trying to take Genesis from her, not that there was such a thing.
The old 25th Anniversary game had a fun mission which involved rescuing the starbase where Stage One of Genesis was being developed from a Romulan attack. Carol and her crew's research had accidentally created a viral agent that caused pneumonia-like symptoms in Vulcans and Romulans, and the Romulans mistook this for a Federation bioweapon.
ge the fact that Starfleet botched the entire Genesis affair in every way possible. Three starships seems like a small price to pay decades after the fact only because things didn't turn out much worse.
The old 25th Anniversary game
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