I'm watching Enterprise for the first time really. Well, I saw it off and on when it was on the air, but I wasn't impressed, though now I'm trying to watch it all through and give it an honest chance. So far I'm enjoying it more than I thought I would.
Except for the science.
Now I know that it's just a TV show, and that Trek, especially after the early 90's, wasn't overly conscerned with getting it right. But....
I'm a dental technician by day, I make crowns, bridges, and implants all day every day. Dental terminology is part of my every day vocabulary so while watching "Dear Doctor" I chuckled at how Phlox got the names of T'Pol's teeth hilariously wrong.
He claims she has a cavity on her Anterior Tricuspid. In human dental anatomy, the term "tricuspid" is sometimes used to refer to the lower second bicuspid, which does happen to have three cusps, but it's not an anterior tooth. Everything behind the canine teeth are "posterior."
The graphic on the screen on the wall showing her "x-ray" clearly shows the cavity (circled on the graphic) on the distal-gingival area of the first molar, undeniably in the posterior region. When Phlox takes his dental instruments to her mouth, he seems to be working on the site shown on the screen.
Now, I get that Vulcans are not Humans and may well have different teeth, but the terminology used is very specific and meaningful. And easily discovered with a simple glance through a dictionary or encyclopedia (which I'll bet they did anyway to look up the terms they did use.) This means that (by my supposition) the writers looked up the correct dental terminology and then deliberately used it incorrectly.
This strikes me as silly and...well...not really lazy, I guess, but... I dunno. It makes me a little crazy.
That said, the actual plot of the story was interesting about the two races, one of which was dying and the other was about to evolve past them.... up until Archer got a little too prescient about the Prime Directive...
Oh well, I'm still enjoying it more than I thought I would.
--Alex
Except for the science.
Now I know that it's just a TV show, and that Trek, especially after the early 90's, wasn't overly conscerned with getting it right. But....
I'm a dental technician by day, I make crowns, bridges, and implants all day every day. Dental terminology is part of my every day vocabulary so while watching "Dear Doctor" I chuckled at how Phlox got the names of T'Pol's teeth hilariously wrong.
He claims she has a cavity on her Anterior Tricuspid. In human dental anatomy, the term "tricuspid" is sometimes used to refer to the lower second bicuspid, which does happen to have three cusps, but it's not an anterior tooth. Everything behind the canine teeth are "posterior."
The graphic on the screen on the wall showing her "x-ray" clearly shows the cavity (circled on the graphic) on the distal-gingival area of the first molar, undeniably in the posterior region. When Phlox takes his dental instruments to her mouth, he seems to be working on the site shown on the screen.
Now, I get that Vulcans are not Humans and may well have different teeth, but the terminology used is very specific and meaningful. And easily discovered with a simple glance through a dictionary or encyclopedia (which I'll bet they did anyway to look up the terms they did use.) This means that (by my supposition) the writers looked up the correct dental terminology and then deliberately used it incorrectly.
This strikes me as silly and...well...not really lazy, I guess, but... I dunno. It makes me a little crazy.
That said, the actual plot of the story was interesting about the two races, one of which was dying and the other was about to evolve past them.... up until Archer got a little too prescient about the Prime Directive...
Oh well, I'm still enjoying it more than I thought I would.
--Alex