Arlo said:
^ Please. It's a plot contrivance of the most fanboyish kind.
Flake said:
Didn't Kirk get a 'commendation for original thinking' ? Did they nearly expell him first? Did one of the instructors stick up for him? Did the head of SF Academy stick up for him? Or did Orci & Kurtzman not do their homework.
Personally I don't mind if they forgot the exchange between Kirk & Spock outside the simulator and what Kirk said on Regula 1, but it would be nice if they stuck to it.
So, he goes from nearly being expelled to receiving a commendation for original thinking? Like to see how that worked out.
It also paints Kirk as a mere cheater rather than someone whose character can't accept certain defeat. That's two different things. Remember, Kirk rigged the simulation to give him only a CHANCE to win, however small that may have been. The test is unfair in his eyes. That has to be his defense.
Being able to take the test three times was proably a luxury. Maybe it was his superiors trying to drill into an overconfident Kirk that sometimes you can't win. Either way, "cheating" on the third attempt most probably only take once hardly seems like grounds for expulsion. The "test" was the first time he took it. Why would the other two count the same? And, why get worked up to the point of expelling him over what he did on his THIRD attempt?
I think the whole idea of the Kobayashi Maru test is ridiculous anyway. The military doesn't want to teach its officers how to fail, it wants to teach them how to succeed.Franklincense said:
If this story is true, it seems a rather shallow intepretation of the whole thing. It paints the K-M as no more than a calculus test. I thought it was supposed to be more than that.
is it NECESSARY to the story?
6th day of XMe$$ said:
Such is the State of "Fan"dom.
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