Spock must have really listened to his mother, because in "Dagger of the Mind," he packed two incorrect statements into one sentence:
That said, I love Early Installment Weirdness in TOS. It often doesn't fit with the smoother productions that followed, but it takes me back to a time when practically the whole Star Trek universe was unwritten and wide open. It was new. The spots where it was unpolished are charming. That's partly why I enjoy "Mudd's Women", "Charlie X", and "Miri" so much, even though others here often rate them poorly.
SPOCK: We disposed of emotion, Doctor. Where there is no emotion, there is no motive for violence.
That said, I love Early Installment Weirdness in TOS. It often doesn't fit with the smoother productions that followed, but it takes me back to a time when practically the whole Star Trek universe was unwritten and wide open. It was new. The spots where it was unpolished are charming. That's partly why I enjoy "Mudd's Women", "Charlie X", and "Miri" so much, even though others here often rate them poorly.