Not cool, man. It's just a movie.Are you again assuming the audience of Star Trek movie are more familiar with military history (and submarines, for that matter) than they are with Star Trek?
Are you again beating your spouse?
Not cool, man. It's just a movie.Are you again assuming the audience of Star Trek movie are more familiar with military history (and submarines, for that matter) than they are with Star Trek?
Are you again beating your spouse?
Not cool, man. It's just a movie.Are you again assuming the audience of Star Trek movie are more familiar with military history (and submarines, for that matter) than they are with Star Trek?
Are you again beating your spouse?
It's still not cool. It should go the way of other odious language used for minorities, gays, and women to insult, hector, castigate, and annoy them.
Indeed. Is TNG diminished by scenes in Ten Forward (which is far too big for the Enterprise-D's saucer rim) or every time we see Picard's impossible Ready Room window? Of course not. Did the TNG movies fail when Picard walked into his Ready Room there, which isn't on the exterior model at all?I came to the conclusion that in the new Trek, there is a pathologic "I don't care" way of thinking when it comes to ship/technical details.
Is that supposed to be unique to this version of Trek ?
The second dead-beat argument. Just because they have been inconsistent in the past, it's too much to ask to be consistent in the future?
So you're in fact admitting that Trek has always had a "I don't care" way of thinking when it comes to ship/technical details. So why mention it at all ?
Knock it off, both of you. If you cannot carry on a discussion without resorting to taking debate-school pokes at each other, then the thing for you to do is to voluntarily withdraw from the public conversation and take your personal squabble elsewhere.Are you again assuming the audience of Star Trek movie are more familiar with military history (and submarines, for that matter) than they are with Star Trek?
Are you again beating your spouse?
<snip>
Not cool, man. It's just a movie.Are you again beating your spouse?
It's not a serious question or even an insult. It is, rather, the classic (literally the primary textbook) example of the "fallacy of many questions." By inserting an unwelcome assumption, there is no way you can provide a direct answer to the question. Crazy Eddie asks me if I am again going to do something which I have not agreed that I have done. I cannot answer his question directly without implicating myself in doing something I deny. It's not a fair question. My response highlights NOT my suspicion of spousal abuse (the question is both preposterous and conventional), but rather the form of the question.
I think you doth protest too much (also a conventional expression, but in this case intended literally).
YARN, you're conducting lectures again, something from which you've been specifically directed on more than one occasion to refrain. That will earn you a warning.It's still not cool. It should go the way of other odious language used for minorities, gays, and women to insult, hector, castigate, and annoy them.
Well, I guess we should tell textbook writers to remove this example from all those textbooks.
Also, we should note that the modern phrasing of the example is no longer heterosexist (e.g., not asking about "wives," but spouses) or intrinsically tied gendered violence. It's pretty PC as far as examples of fallacies go.
If we assume the Enterprise has less than 72 tubes, I wonder how many torpedoes can be loaded into each launch tube?
And the big issue would be how fast they reload rather than the number of tubes.If we assume the Enterprise has less than 72 tubes, I wonder how many torpedoes can be loaded into each launch tube?
I suggested a few pages ago that 9 tubes each side, 18 in all, could hold 4 torpedoes each, giving 72.
The screencap posted only a page or two ago which shows Vengeance's scan of the Enterprise shows maybe 18 each side, or 2 torpedoes each.
That doesn't answer the question. You keep making these far-reaching claims about what the audience knows from "cultural memory" or whatever as if to predict how they're most likely to interpret those torpedo tubes. I can't help but wonder if the reason you're getting defensive all of a sudden is because you have no idea what you're talking about.Are you again assuming the audience of Star Trek movie are more familiar with military history (and submarines, for that matter) than they are with Star Trek?
Are you again beating your spouse?
No, because phase cannons are a 22nd century technology, and even those didn't fire solid projectiles.Right, the six-shooter thingees.
Are they loading up the phase-cannons?
Are you going to address the fact that I have just conclusively shown you it is EXTREMELY UNLIKELY the ship actually has 72 torpedoes in the lower weapons bay?If so, then it would seem that in addition to having tubes for 72 torpedoes...
Doubtful. In the case of the smaller launcher, it would make sense if all six of them share a common launch hatch, like the VLS tubes on an Ohio SSGN conversion. The ESSM missiles in the Mk-41 VLS can also be quad packed, four missiles to a tube, which I suspect is what we're seeing in the first film. It's not clear to me if they are a different weapon system customized for short-range engagement (e.g. an additional point defense system) or an adapter that has been fitted to the larger tubes to make the smaller weapons useable.If so, only one torpedo can be aligned with the tube at a time!
Of course he could. We about as much about the Enterprise's design as Khan does. Probably more, actually, since Khan has never actually SEEN the Enterprise' weapons bay and we have.Thus when Khan says "I see all 72 torpedoes are still in their tubes," he cannot be referring to torpedoes being in giant rotating six-gun cylinders
We've already established that Khan was wrong. The question is, HOW wrong was he?Thus the Enterprise must still have 72 torpedo tubes or you must maintain that Khan is wrong.
Well, we saw them being loaded in the first place using this big mechanical cranes, so assuming nothing goes disastrously wrong in the weapons bay, they could probably reload all 18 tubes in thirty to sixty seconds.And the big issue would be how fast they reload rather than the number of tubes.If we assume the Enterprise has less than 72 tubes, I wonder how many torpedoes can be loaded into each launch tube?
I suggested a few pages ago that 9 tubes each side, 18 in all, could hold 4 torpedoes each, giving 72.
The screencap posted only a page or two ago which shows Vengeance's scan of the Enterprise shows maybe 18 each side, or 2 torpedoes each.
If we assume the Enterprise has less than 72 tubes, I wonder how many torpedoes can be loaded into each launch tube?
I suggested a few pages ago that 9 tubes each side, 18 in all, could hold 4 torpedoes each, giving 72.
The screencap posted only a page or two ago which shows Vengeance's scan of the Enterprise shows maybe 18 each side, or 2 torpedoes each.
I think there are more than 18. Owing to the size of the graphic and how close the launchers are to each other, a bunch of them overlap as they blip onto the screen.
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