The only point I was trying to make earlier was that it's probably not something Captain Awesome can remove by cutting him open.The way our brains work have a physical component, even if you're talking only about electrical impulses jumping synapses. So Chuck's solution has got to be physical. What else could it be, hand-waving or magic?
Chuck's brain could be reprogrammed not to trigger memories when given certain input, but that would require new information being downloaded into his brain. At some level, something physical is happening - his synapses are being told to fire when certain information comes its way. They need to be told not to do that - by something akin to a computer program, which will physically interact with the structures in his brain. Can't work any other way.
I'm unsure why he only flashes once when he encounters new stimulus.
Have you seen Chuck when he attempts to lie?What's to stop Chuck from just pretending the intersect data has been deleted from his brain? Does the NSA have a way to verify that it is still in there?
All they'd have to do is wave a national secret before his face and see if he gets woozy and cross-eyed.Have you seen Chuck when he attempts to lie?What's to stop Chuck from just pretending the intersect data has been deleted from his brain? Does the NSA have a way to verify that it is still in there?![]()
Not important. Go with the premise or don't. Debating character arcs and storylines is fine, but dissecting a comedy's premise is like dissecting a fish. By the time you get to what makes it work, you've killed it.
Just enjoy the fish.
--Ted
Has someone been watching Farscape lately?Since Chuck isn't going to bother explaining how or why the Intersect works, the only think stopping Awesome from conducting brain surgery is whether it would be funny. Seems like an obvious slam-dunk to me, especially if Chuck is awake (which happens in real life brain surgery) reading the schematics and telling Awesome which synapses to poke. OW!
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.