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Abrams vs Fibonacci, or "Why the 09 Enterprise looks 'off' "

I'm sure some people out there like the looks of an AMC Pacer. It doesn't change the fact that it's one of the ugliest cars ever, because the proportions of the thing are so "off", most notably the oversized windows. The JJ Prise is much the same. Some people like it, but they are in the minority, like people who are tone-deaf or color-blind. It's hard to quantify what those proportions are mathematically, but people know it when they see it. Call it golden mean or whatever else. But it's definitely a "thing". A good artist knows how to get it right. Bad ones, and bad managers like JJ who oversee them, don't. And then they double-down on their bad-taste by not changing it when people criticize.
 
I'm studying Pseudoscience at Miskatonic Univerisity on a Venkman Scholarship, so I can say with some authorty that the Fibonacci proportion is a real thing.
 
I'm sure some people out there like the looks of an AMC Pacer. It doesn't change the fact that it's one of the ugliest cars ever, because the proportions of the thing are so "off", most notably the oversized windows. The JJ Prise is much the same. Some people like it, but they are in the minority, like people who are tone-deaf or color-blind. It's hard to quantify what those proportions are mathematically, but people know it when they see it. Call it golden mean or whatever else. But it's definitely a "thing". A good artist knows how to get it right. Bad ones, and bad managers like JJ who oversee them, don't. And then they double-down on their bad-taste by not changing it when people criticize.

Wow. So according to this post and the OP if I like the nuEnterprise I am:

Unable to understand and conform to the golden ratio that determines the aesthetic value of the entire universe

Tone -deaf

Color - blind

Unable to recognize bad artists and bad managers

Have terrible taste

Am part of a minority that is so determined to be right that we will double our bets no matter what the real world tells us.


And here I thought I was A-OK. Thanks folks for correcting my viewpoint. I will now go into therapy.
 
The Fibonacci thing in all of this is really a big Fib.

I love the new Enterprise. She's definitely the hot rod version of the ol' girl.

Folk can apply all the pseudoscience, pseudo-psychology, and pseudo-aesthetic authority, all they want in terms of disliking the new ship.... it doesn't hold weight.

It's called "trying to find justification" to make something seem like authoritative fact. A shorter word might be: "desperation".

It's called "folk trying to make others feel stupid for liking the new movies/new Enterprise by trying to apply something that only would seem to have relevance to their case." Clearly, other folks, more in the know, have debunked such "relevancy".

"This (pseudo-sciency, pseudo-psychological gobbledygook) is the reason why the new Enterprise does not work. Therefore, this makes it fact that the Enterprise is a poorly designed and unappealing ship. You cannot argue with this."

Folk more in the know, and more sure of their facts, have proven otherwise.

Oh, and what one might call "doubling down on their bet by not changing it after criticism", I call "artistic integrity" and "not pandering or caving in."

And then of course there's the misconception of thinking that the folk who did not like the new Enterprise are somehow in the minority....again. That's just like trying to say that the folks who loved the new movies are somehow in the minority. Misconception. Delusion.

Clearly the movies raked in big box office bucks (for a Star Trek movie) due to...oh, I dunno, let's call them "repeat viewings on the big screen".
 
I'm sure some people out there like the looks of an AMC Pacer. It doesn't change the fact that it's one of the ugliest cars ever, because the proportions of the thing are so "off", most notably the oversized windows. The JJ Prise is much the same. Some people like it, but they are in the minority, like people who are tone-deaf or color-blind. It's hard to quantify what those proportions are mathematically, but people know it when they see it. Call it golden mean or whatever else. But it's definitely a "thing". A good artist knows how to get it right. Bad ones, and bad managers like JJ who oversee them, don't. And then they double-down on their bad-taste by not changing it when people criticize.

Between the incorrect use of the word "fact," some very dubious claims not backed up by any evidence, insulting comparisons regarding fans; which you've been warned not to do countless times, the continuation of the golden ratio bunk that's already been disproved in the thread, and entitled claims that the makers of the films should respond to the whims of a subset of fans, this is all around a pretty questionable post. You should revise your posting style in this thread immediately, especially the insulting rhetoric about other fans.
 
Picard: Report, Lieutenant.
Worf: A highly localized distortion in the space time continuum.
Data: Sir, something is emerging.

<NuEnterprise appears out of the rift>

Riker: That looks like the old Enterprise but something's a little off.
Data: Sensors indicate that the ship's Fibonacci sequence is asynchronous with normal matter. It does not conform with the Golden Ratio.
Picard: Just what ratio does it conform to?
Data: 4:3, Captain.
Riker: That explains the black bars on the viewscreen.

:guffaw: :techman: I can so hear the characters saying that. Well done!

Me? I have yet to meet an Enterprise I didn't like. They are a set of beautiful sister ships. They're in the same family, but each has its own unique charms. I wouldn't mind getting my hands on the ample nacelles of any one of them, if you'll pardon the engineering parlance. ;)
 
This thread is based on a lot of nonsense - people "reason" backward from the fact that they don't like the look of the nuEnterprise.

The reason they don't like it is that they're attached to the original.
 
I will say that many of us have seen a poll here recently where, yes, the majority of active posters participating in the poll put the new Enterprise in the lower percentage of favorites.

This was basically a "which is your favorite Enterprise?" poll. I think the top three contenders were the original, the refit, and the E-D. So it would likely follow that even though JJ's Enterprise did not get a majority vote, it does not necessarily mean that it was disliked. It was a question of "favorite", not "liked or disliked". Clearly, on this board, JJ's ship is not the favorite. Doesn't mean it's not well-liked.

This is also not a clear indicator of worldwide favoriting or disposition for or against the new Enterprise. This is a microscopic sampling compared to an official, worldwide poll (if one were ever to be conducted).

Personally, I love the new ship. And I voted for it in the poll.

And, I have a feeling that if another poll were conducted that basically asked: "Do you like the new Enterprise?", it will come across (no matter how well intentioned) as another antagonistic poll meant to stir discord among the participating membership here.

There have been so many polls, often conducted by repeat offenders that have somehow tried to pit the PU versus the JJ Abrams era, whether in part or as a whole. Such polls sparked a little friendly debate that naturally ended up going over into animosity and sniping.... and then, when some of those threads were losing interest, the original poster would put in some insignificant statement to bump the thread to make it seem like it still had relevance.

TL;DR? Bottom line is, this is another thread about "how bullheaded can everyone be?". No one is going to convince me to dislike the Abrams' era Enterprise, no matter how much pseudo-science, pseudo-psychology, or pseudo-aesthetic authority they try to slam into it. And I am not going to convince haters that their dislike of the new ship is somehow unsound and unfounded. (And I would never try such a feat unless they were actively trying to convince me that I was stupid for liking the new ship). It's not a question of whether the ship looks "off". It is a more pointed question of why the ship looks "piss poor" in the eyes of the haters.
 
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*sigh*

"most people" ≠ hardcore fans

The AMC Pacer's aesthetic merits or lack thereof are nearly impossible to view objectively because most people who've seen one have seen hundreds of other car models, the vast majority of which do not conform to its shape and proportions, thus the Pacer is likely "odd" to their eyes.
 
I'm studying Pseudoscience at Miskatonic Univerisity on a Venkman Scholarship, so I can say with some authorty that the Fibonacci proportion is a real thing.

Damn, it was you. And I worked so hard for that scholarship.


I wonder what percentage of casual viewers would know that the ship in the current movies is not the same design as the one from the tv show. Although that may be a bad question to pose amongst readers of Nacelles Monthly.
 
Long term McDonaldologists know that JJ Abrams is secretly an owner of twelve McDonald's franchises in the San Fernando Valley in Southern California. I intend to demonstrate objectively, using established scientific principles, how the nuEnterprise adheres to both the Golden Arches Ratio and the McRibonacci Proportions at several points of measurement in order to be the best subliminal food marketing tool known to man.

Pf52xPP.jpg


Also note the repeated use of the McDonald's trademarked gold and crimson color scheme repeatedly throughout the films:

7smjFoS.jpg


Here, the Enterprise even travels to a planet of Ronald McDonald worshipers in their gold and crimson outfits and white clown makeup:

ync8wPl.jpg


And just when you're being bombarded by all that subminal messaging, they hit you with an overt Filet o' Fish product placement:

KFG1A0k.jpg


It's insidious, but ingenious and effective. And objectively, it's the most perfect product placement/starship ever devised. That's just science.
 
Long term McDonaldologists know that JJ Abrams is secretly an owner of twelve McDonald's franchises in the San Fernando Valley in Southern California. I intend to demonstrate objectively, using established scientific principles, how the nuEnterprise adheres to both the Golden Arches Ratio and the McRibonacci Proportions at several points of measurement in order to be the best subliminal food marketing tool known to man.

Pf52xPP.jpg


Also note the repeated use of the McDonald's trademarked gold and crimson color scheme repeatedly throughout the films:

7smjFoS.jpg


Here, the Enterprise even travels to a planet of Ronald McDonald worshipers in their gold and crimson outfits and white clown makeup:

ync8wPl.jpg


And just when you're being bombarded by all that subminal messaging, they hit you with an overt Filet o' Fish product placement:

KFG1A0k.jpg


It's insidious, but ingenious and effective. And objectively, it's the most perfect product placement/starship ever devised. That's just science.

:guffaw:

Good to have you back, Locutus!
 
Bill, that's simply not true. The "treknological" fandom is one of the oldest known Trek fandoms.
Which doesn't change the fact that "treknologist" is not a real thing, seeing how "treknology" is not a real thing.

I suppose there are people in the world who perceive themselves to be exceptionally knowledgeable in the technical background information of Star Trek, much the same way there are "experts" in the fictional history of comic books. Still, that's not a real discipline with certifications or a relevant knowledge base; it's more of a hobby for people who think they're really really smart.

And those people call themselves "treknologists".
I used to be a Treknologist like you.
Then I took an arrow to the knee.

Fine, so the aesthetic qualities of the ratio were only described later.
Well, they were SUGGESTED later. It's a bit of a stretch to say that they were "described," mainly because 99% of the things in nature that humans find aesthetically pleasing don't actually conform to any recognizable golden ratio.

It's a cute idea, but it's also bullshit.

That doesn't mean that the ratio is not ubiquitous in the natural world
It's not.

and don't think I didn't catch you deleting the link to the scientific paper about it.
You mean the link to the blog post that referenced a scientific paper that doesn't actually mention the golden ratio in any way shape or form? Yes, I deleted that.

Since our intellectual development has taken place in a world full of the ratio, we subconsciously expect to "see" that ratio. It looks "normal" to us.

That's basic psychology.

Actually that's pseudoscience without an ounce of actual evidence behind it. And the really interesting thing is, it's not actually that hard to disprove if you spent any amount of time putting the theory to the test; find yourself a nautilus shell, or two, or ten, and try to draw a golden spiral that confirms to its shape. Or measure the spiral pattern in a pine cone (wet or dry, doesn't matter) or measure the height and width ratio of the face most attractive person you know (I did this for my wife about six years ago as a thought experiment).

Did you actually MEASURE any of the "phi matrix" diagrams on the link you posted? None of them conform to golden rectangles either, nor do their relative proportions conform to anything resembling a phi ratio. Most of them are in the neighborhood of 1.42 or 1.48. The larger rectangle on the bow diagram measures at 1.72.

Again, it's a cute idea. Doesn't change the fact tat it's bullshit. In terms of its application of "beauty" in plastic surgery (which is the gist of the site you linked to) it's little better than phrenology.
 
"Is There In Truth No Beauty?" (Seemed appropriate to bring that up in a Trek thread about Fibonacci.)
 
An article (not the documentary I was talking about above about Phi in relation to Connie's design:

http://www.goldennumber.net/uss-enterprise-golden-ratio-design/
I've seen the hypothesis before about the proportions of the OS Enterprise conforming to the Golden Ratio (one instance here - there have been others just on TrekBBS) though I've never been quite sold on it. I've not seen this particular article, but I think it runs into the same sort of problems presenting a convincing argument.

Something stuck out here:
article said:
Jefferies started with a blank page and a marker, and with a very pragmatic design ethic. He reasoned that “a starship’s engines would be extremely powerful and potentially dangerous, and positioned them far away from the core of the ship, with the added benefit of modular design so that they could be ejected quickly in an emergency.” His design documents revealed that he was also a very exacting designer. He specified the dimensions on his designs to the 1/10000th of an inch. This was clearly beyond any practical level of accuracy in the construction of the small-scale models used on the Star Trek set and indicates that he was working with a mathematical precision based on geometric formulas and relationships.
(emphasis mine)


I suspect the article's author is reading into the designs something which may not, in fact, be there. He's interpreting "dimensions given to five decimal places" as evidence of geometric formulas and an impractical level of precision, when anyone with an engineering background and experience reading and drafting blueprints and engineering drawings will recognize those as decimal representations of common fractions. Look at Shaw's file (PDF doc,) for example, from the last of the links listed at the bottom of the article. That dimension of 5.46875 inches is the same as if it had been written 5-15/32" (five and fifteen thirty-seconds inches); 3.6875 is the same as three and eleven sixteenths; 3.9375 is the same as three and fifteen sixteenths, and so forth.

The article's author clearly hadn't realized this, and leapt ahead without checking to infer an elegance conveyed upon the design by virtue of incorporation of the magic ratio.

article said:
Given the elegance of its design, it’s not too surprising that golden ratio relationships are incorporated into the design of the USS Enterprise, in its overall dimensions and in the details of the small design features, as revealed in the illustrations below.
His diagrams are nicely presented, but it's also quite true that anyone can superimpose lines and Fibonacci spirals onto a drawing long after the fact and claim they mean something. There's nothing I've seen however, that Matt Jefferies incorporated such proportions into his Enterprise design in any way other than intuitively. If you've seen the many other drawings he made of potential Enterprises before arriving at the design seen in the TV series, you know that all kinds of proportions and ratios are evident, not just the Golden Ratio and Fibonacci spiral.

All of that said, I must chuckle at Locutus' McDonaldology and McRibonacci Proportions. Well done, as always! :techman:
 
For what it's worth, in the 1968 book, The Making of Star Trek, on the part about designing the starship for TOS, Jefferies says he and his group came up with over twenty preliminary designs for a starship for Roddenberry to inspect. Turns out Roddenberry didn't like any one of them, but only bits and pieces of some of them (Jefferies said Roddenberry could be difficult to work with). They tried to incorporate what he liked about certain designs into another round of ships to present to him. By the third time around, they had "eight or ten" designs for Roddenberry, including more detailed renderings of a few, including the one that did eventually become the Enterprise.

In other words, to read how Jefferies put in in 1968, the design of the Enterprise was a mish-mash of the better parts of many designs (according to Roddenberry), finally tweaked down to one that Roddenberry would accept. Real scale drawings didn't occur until they had a finalized preliminary design. (And apparently the story that the first working model of what became that final design was accidentally hung up upside down for presentation is true, at least as Jefferies reports it in the book.)
 
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