#Nope
The moon was directed through wormholes in space through the action s of extremely powerful entities as was explained in the series, not unlike those found in Star Trek and Bablyon 5. The inhabitants of Moonbase Alpha were pretty much restricted to what was projected we'd have available to us 25 years from 1974. I'd put Babylon 5 and Stargate Harder because they actually expended an effort where it came to real-world science over Star Trek for instance.
I was actually trying to make a self-deprecating joke about myself being the nerd who is treating the show like it's real (and your post breaking the illusion), but obviously that failed miserably.Anyway, I haven't replied more to you more thoroughly, because you went down the route of meme posting i.e. 'obsessive nerd', and all the usual stuff, although I know it was likely tongue-in-cheek. I have seen that you are a pretty nice guy watching these forums, so I know it's just an exasperated expression born of your strong opinion, but I'm gonna leave it there, because I don't wanna get into personal stuff.
Correct me if I'm wrong, as it was never a show I followed as much as Trek, but didn't they only enter things like space rifts a couple of times - I think the first episode just had them arrive in another solar system, as if the nuclear explosion propelled them there - then I seem to remember they went through a rift of some kind later in another episode. Anyway, it was a nice bit of fun as a show.
FYI, Jules Verne invented the 'Hard' Science Fiction Genre about 150 years ago, so adhering to scientific principles when writing science fiction is hardly strictly a modern phenomena.
But that really isn't "Star Trek".
I'd put Babylon 5 and Stargate Harder because they actually expended an effort where it came to real-world physics over Star Trek in many instances.
There was actually a Hard Science Fiction series made in the 80s on BBC while Doctor Who was on hiatus and it is available to watch on Youtube currently. It is called Star Cops and is pretty unique because it has pretty much zero non scientific elements in it, and just about every single prognostication it made from 1987 has either come to pass or is looking like it will.
Ummmnnn...You pick minor points yet ignore the fact they are travelling across the galaxy using magic fucking mushrooms hahaha
And neither is arguing about how scientifically accurate SF is supposed to be. Verne famously complained that H.G. Wells played too fast and loose with science, what the anti-gravity and the time machine and invisibility serum and such. But are we really going to argue that H.G. Wells sucked compared to Verne?
Hard SF is just one category of SF, neither better nor worse than any other. No reason DISCO has to be more more hard-sf than TOS or whatever.
Bring on the glowing Greek gods and giant space amoebas.![]()
Yeah, I really enjoyed B5 and SG1 for their detail - it was pretty damn amazing looking back on some of it. I felt this season of Doctor Who that just aired last year was harder than previous ones - I really enjoyed it actually - so I think hardness can even vary between seasons of a show!![]()
You pick minor points yet ignore the fact they are travelling across the galaxy using magic fucking mushrooms hahaha
Or an Iconian gateway, or Borg transwarp hubs, or magical organic beings who can throw starships across galaxies, or a dozen other weird travel methods.As opposed to magic "dilithium" crystals
Star Trek hasn't been rigorously scientific since that time the ship flew to the edge of the galaxy and suddenly people were moving styrofoam cups just by intensely squinting at them.
Evolution is one topic Star Trek has always got hopelessly wrong. Along with the non explanations for all the similar forms across the galaxy, and the scientific travesty that is Genesis, it signs up fully for the idea that evolution is a straight line progression to 'greater' or 'higher' forms including an organic being becoming pure energy. It's cheerfully absurd, but hey, it's fun fantasy storytelling.I mean, TNG - The Chase is one of my favorite episodes and extremely enjoyable, but it's bad genetic and evolutionary science at its worst, while ironically trying to serve as a ficto-science explanation for why all the aliens look like humans in prosthetics and they can all make baybayz together (with a little help).
Well that's less implies the writers where actually taking shrooms when coming up with ideasAs opposed to magic "dilithium" crystals . . .. .![]()
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