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marlboro
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ok
It's possible that Phlox thought just that.
It could have been a personal position on his part, or it could have been the general philosophy of majority of Phlox's species and how they interpret the theory of evolution.
In a way, this is something I'd like to see more of in (future) Star Trek, people in Starfleet who don't think alike and have different, even profoundly different, philosophies, politics, and views of the universeArcher was clearly the lowest on that particular totem pole, he had the least training going in.
But it wasn't just the doc, Archer eventually agrees with him.
I think it is more likely that the writer had no idea what the theory of evolution actually says. There have been a lot of "evolution only works in one direction" science fiction stories over the years.
In this episode Phlox basically says 1) evolution stops and 2) organisms have a preordained destiny. These weren't presented as Denobulan beliefs, but as basic scientific facts. It's like saying "E=MC2 is the formula for Crystal Pepsi ergo seamonkeys will be the dominant species on Mars some day."
If you are going to have a character make a moral decision based on science, you have to get the science right. This was just bad writing all the way around.
I don't really understand why you seem to enjoy playing down other Captains. Or yes, it makes sense in some way when I see the flak Janeway has to take by some unfriendly posters.
"Sisko only made captain in the finale of the 3rd season, I believe, and yes, he commanded a space station. Primarily. Besides having a religious icon status to an entire planet. That station grew out to be the most important space station in the entire alpha quadrant, but still. In later seasons he commanded the Defiant as well, a dedicated battleship, something Voyager never was. Then, he received a promotion again, to direct executive officer of Admiral Ross and in that capacity, commanded the fleet of 600+ ships at the battle of Favor the Bold, and was in command of entire fleets more often after that, too. He was absolutely instrumental in saving the familiar Alpha Quadrant powers. Finally, he received a 'promotion' to at least the status of demi-god as pupil of the prophets. Kinda hard to top that, especially when compared to a dinky promotion to what? rear admiral? Those paper pushers?"
^Do I really mean this? No. Of course not. It's a selective presentation of what we see in DS9, the goal being to make Sisko seem 'top dog', and pushing others down. I could do the same for Kirk, Picard, or Janeway, but honestly, I don't see the goal it would serve.
P.S. I'm leaving on holiday later today to a region without too much internet coverage so it may be a while before I'm able to respond.
I know, I mean if we start fleshing out secondary characters stupidly they will become main characters. These criticisms are becoming childish.You understand they can't flesh out every redshirt don't you? The episodes run for 47 minutes(on average) and that they have a limit to seasons ya know.
Carey was used as a visual cue to the audience that this was "early Voyager" in the episodes Fury and Relativity.
While we're criticizing Voyager for "nameless redshirts", let's not leave DS9 out, which rarely ever gave an identity to it's redshirts. Worse than Voyager, they very very rarely even had speaking roles. There were always all those nameless bajoran militia and SF crewmen walking around, handing off padds, looking glum. I'm having a really hard time remembering episodes that have them roles.
The ones that come to mind are The Ship, Empok Nor(a Bryan Fuller episode), and Field of Fire. Remember Muniz? That guy could give Bashir a run for his money in the bromance department...but oh, he died. Or how about Lt. Ilario? he died immediately, all because Miles and Julian wouldnt let him play on the holodeck with him. Empok Nor? Yep, they died. I don't even remember their names.
Enterprise handled red shirts much better, but even then, their are limitations.
EDIT: I noted Fuller because he only wrote a few episodes.
I've wondered why they stopped showing Ensign Wildman but kept showing Naomi. Seemed like an odd decision to keep showing the child but never the mother. On the other hand, Neelix becomes her (sorta) surrogate father and 7 becomes her friend so maybe they wanted to focus on those dynamics instead.Not even Lt. Carey made it home, and was killed of because...reasons. Also weird that he only showed up in the past scenes in "Relativity." It's like he died but no one showed him dying. Ensign Wildman just stopped showing up on screen as well, so a lot of the secondary characters were literally one shots. It's just baffling to me that you can't have even some consistency with recurring secondaries.
152 crew members, according to the episode "The 37s." Someone did a breakdown of all the deaths, and calculated they lost 22 crewmembers, which is a 15% loss.It had around 140 total post Caretaker and I don't think Voyager suffered that many casualties in proportion to its total crew complement.
152 crew members, according to the episode "The 37s." Someone did a breakdown of all the deaths, and calculated they lost 22 crewmembers, which is a 15% loss.
And, I'm not asking for every one to be fleshed out, but it would be nice to have some characterization. The setting is unique so why not take advantage of it and tell unique stories?
152 crew members, according to the episode "The 37s." Someone did a breakdown of all the deaths, and calculated they lost 22 crewmembers, which is a 15% loss.
And, I'm not asking for every one to be fleshed out, but it would be nice to have some characterization. The setting is unique so why not take advantage of it and tell unique stories?
They had several episodes like this. Good Shepherd is entirely about some random people, one of whom you see again later. There are also several other people who get some fair screen time for extras, Tabor and Chell for example.I always had the impression the crew count was down to 60 or something.
Considering they spent so much money on make up and such, true, why not do an episode featuring the back ground crew members--have them speak and talk like normal people--to make them seem more real?
Not just Naomi Wildman or the Borg children (which in a way did not count IMO).
Like I said, I knew there were over 50 crew members at least but it always seemed like there were barely 20 people on that ship.
That Voyager is stranded and you have the opportunity to highlight other crew members who might usually just be relegated to one shot episodes, or we wouldn't expect to see again because of transfers. No, they don't have to be as in depth as the mains, but why not explore them a little bit. As @Sophie74656 pointed out, "Good Shepherd" is a great example of this, with a character who, quite honestly, was very unique for the Star Trek world, being someone who enlisted just fulfill some education requirements only to be stranded in a roll he didn't want. I mean, here is an individual who is resentful of having to be in Starfleet in the first place, and now is stuck? I daresay that's almost drama.I don't understand your last comment. What exactly are you trying to say?
Whilst they can't flesh out every "redshirt", VOY unlike TOS/TNG/DSN didn't have access to replacement crew. So surely that would make it easier to flesh out several secondary characters on the crew and yes they did some of that with the likes of Seksa and Icheb, and to a lesser extent with the likes of Carey and the Wildeman's.
Lets examine DSN's secondary characters
Nog
Rom
Leeta
Garak
Dukat
Damar
Eddington
Brunt
Weyoun
Winn
Zek
I could go on, and before anyone plays the stationary setting card and some of them were villians. I'm merely using that as an example that if the DSN writers could develop secondary characters without hindering the primaries too much then VOY could as the one thing that really didn't change on VOY was the crew they had.
Constraints make good art.DS9 had access to the entire Trekverse and had their Galactic War storyline, that gave them more storytelling possibilities to give other characters more to do than Voyager who could NOT flesh out their surroundings and do a War storyline that took over the entire show.
People who critique don't realize how utterly constrained Voyager was compared to the other Trek shows.
The fact that the show is subjected to such hyper-criticism doesn't help.
So, the rest should be faceless nobodies?Personally I'm glad they didn't focus more on other crew members. I would rather see screen time used for main characters that i care about
Constraints make good art.
I'm not asking for every episode to be focused on secondary characters, but even M*A*S*H managed to flesh out some of their secondary and tertiary characters over their run. It really doesn't have to take up as much time as is being imagined.
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