Both times by the same character, a character who apparently doesn't have solid knowledge of Earth history.The BB is identified as a DY-100 class twice in this episode
Both times by the same character, a character who apparently doesn't have solid knowledge of Earth history.The BB is identified as a DY-100 class twice in this episode
KIRK: But why Nazi Germany? You studied history. You knew what the Nazis were.
GILL: Most efficient state Earth ever knew.
SPOCK: Quite true, Captain. That tiny country, beaten, bankrupt, defeated, rose in a few years to stand only one step away from global domination.
No. Spock was agreeing with Gill's statement, and not a statement by Kirk.Except he agreed with something that Kirk said.
I'm going with 1980's.and DY-100 apparently is from the 1960s or whatever
Spock claims for the numbers of dead in the 1st and 2nd world wars are obsurdly low, and historically wrong. Spock was talking out of his ass.That's not an example of Spock being wrong. That's a changed premise.
Why would that be requirement? Spock was factually incorrect, whether anyone points it out or notDid anyone point out that Spock was wrong when he made that statement?
Okay, so who was right and who was wrong about the death count from the 3rd world war, Spock or Riker? The two were no-where near each other (37 million vs 600 million).Spock's knowledge of Earth's history is fine.
Okay, so who was right and who was wrong about the death count from the 3rd world war, Spock or Riker? The two were no-where near each other (37 million vs 600 million).
They both can't be right.
Except Spock didn't employ the computer when he made his claim that the ship was a DY-100. He and Kirk were both making their identification by memory.it's more than that. Spock has access to the computer library.
Kirk has alway stated that his middle initial was a "T." And when his records were read, they too had the initial as a "T."What's James Kirk's middle initial? It is R or is it T? They can't both be right.
Except Spock didn't employ the computer when he made his claim that the ship was a DY-100. He and Kirk were both making their identification by memory.
Kirk has alway stated that his middle initial was a "T." And when his records were read, they too had the initial as a "T."
So between Mitchell using a "R," and Kirk using a "T," I would say that Kirk is the one who is correct, and Michell is the one who is wrong.
Now that I've answered your question to the best of my ability, please answer mine, Spock or Riker?
I propose that the farther your historic information is from the actual events, the more inaccurate your understanding of history is. So, someone in the 1960's would have better and more accurate information than someone in 2060's and them more than someone in 2160's and so on to the 2260's and then on to the 2360's. Throw in a couple of wars and conquerors rewriting history and its gets even worse. So, Spock's historic information would be generally better than Riker's.Spock or Riker?
Perceptions of historical events, persons, etc. also tend to change over time. For example, the notion of Nazi Germany as a remarkably efficient state was far more widely-accepted in the period during which the episode was produced than it is today.I propose that the farther your historic information is from the actual events, the more inaccurate your understanding of history is. So, someone in the 1960's would have better and more accurate information than someone in 2060's and them more than someone in 2160's and so on to the 2260's and then on to the 2360's. Throw in a couple of wars and conquerors rewriting history and its gets even worse.
An expert can spot the difference between a Block I Apollo and a block II. Spock could probably spot the different radiators on the SM, whereas Kirk would just recognise an Apollo.From episode dialogue:
Kirk's ID of the vessel is approximate -- "similar to"; Spock's is definitive -- "to be exact".
As for the DY-100 being the most advanced of its time, that kind of status is often fleeting. The DY-500, while similar in appearance, most likely represented an improvement of the design in several aspects, and (whether quickly or eventually) superseded the older model in production and use.
The change to the number of dead people is a retcon. These things happen in fiction.
However, it is a little fun to think that Spock, who's usually precisely right about everything, was way off the mark. That, and it's fun to think Spock confused two completely different wars when he said "Your so-called last world war".
Not at all, I am advancing a position through. Simply not agreeing with you isn't arguing.You are just arguing for the sake of arguing
How can you "retcon" a historical fact?The change to the number of dead people is a retcon.
Not even close, I'm saying that Spock's knowledge in the specific area of Earth history is lacking.the OP’s premise is that Spock is constantly wrong about things
Why would they do that?because if it was, other characters would be constantly correcting him
The death counts Spock gave for the first two world wars were wildly off ( 6 million and 11 million). Spock and Riker gave different death figures for the 3rd world War (37 million and 600 million) trust who you will there.
Spock agreed with the statement from John Gill that Nazi Germany was "the most efficient state Earth ever knew," Nazi Germany thankfully was extremely inefficant and badly run.
Spock mis-identified the Eugenics War as Earth's last world war.Being wrong about Earth history certainly is.Why "way to convoluted?" I started this thread to discuss a detail, not a major story element.Spock had moments before been proven wrong on his prior anouncement that the ship they were approaching couldn't possibly be a Earth ship. Why rub it in two mistakes in less than a minute.Apparently not.
Thank you for sharing that. That eminently readable article explains how Nazi Germany appeared efficient, while being anything but when checking its undercarriage.Perceptions of historical events, persons, etc. also tend to change over time. For example, the notion of Nazi Germany as a remarkably efficient state was far more widely-accepted in the period during which the episode was produced than it is today.
See:
https://coffeecuphistory.wordpress.com/2013/05/06/the-myth-of-nazi-efficiency/
Not at all, I any advancing position through. Simply not agreeing with you isn't arguing.
How can you "retcon" a historical fact?
Not even close, I'm saying that Spock's knowledge in the specific area of Earth history is lacking.
Why would they do that?
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