If someone does not "define a 'lie' as willing, and knowingly telling a falsehood," then that person is wrong.
Agreed here that it was done purely for drama. Cogley probably specifically asked for the "white noise filter" to be constructed!4. The whole rigmarole with filtering out the heartbeats to determine how many people are really on board. I thought the ship's sensors could do this immediately?
However, would you really trust ship's sensors when facing a master criminal whose demonstrated expertise lies in perverting the output of said sensors?
Agreed here that it was done purely for drama. Cogley probably specifically asked for the "white noise filter" to be constructed!4. The whole rigmarole with filtering out the heartbeats to determine how many people are really on board. I thought the ship's sensors could do this immediately?
However, would you really trust ship's sensors when facing a master criminal whose demonstrated expertise lies in perverting the output of said sensors?
That doesn't make any sense at all. You're assuming that this heartbeat detector is independent of the ship's sensors. But Kirk's dialog contradicts this:
KIRK: "Gentlemen, this computer has an auditory sensor. It can, in effect, hear sounds. By installing a booster, we can increase that capability on the order of one to the fourth power. The computer should bring us every sound occurring on the ship."
[...]
KIRK: "Turn it down a little. Gentlemen, that sound is caused by the heartbeats of all the people on board the ship. Doctor McCoy will use this white sound device to mask out each person's heartbeat so that it will be eliminated from the sounds we are hearing."
So, the ship's computer has an auditory sensor that can be filtered down using the hand held white sound device. Also, Mr. Spock uses the computer to cancel out the transporter room crewman's heartbeat. So, they definitely trusted the ship's sensors.
Finney was adept at keeping an eye on things. Certainly he would have seen this mass exodus of people off the ship and knew something was up. But apparently Finney did not anticipate that Cogley would have everyone from the court brought to the Enterprise and that there'd be any checking of active heartbeats on the ship. I think they anticipated this, so there wasn't concern with Finney having messed with the ship's sensors.
Threads about specific episodes often encourage me to rewatch the episode, and that's what I did w/ Court Martial over the weekend. I've seen this episode many, many times over the decades, but I had a new thought during this viewing.
When it first aired in 1967, it must have been very unusual to show a black commanding officer, whom the other officers always address as "Sir" and don't question his orders or authority. Actually, this episode is very diverse, even by ST standards. In addition to Commodore Stone, we have: Uhura with a prominent role in piloting the ship near the end, the unnamed Chinese-American yeoman (with a charming Southern American accent), and Captain Chandra in the jury.
Why are so many of Kirk's graduating classmates on this starbase? Wouldn't they be scattered all over the place? Was there a reunion they didn't invite him to?
...Which reminds me: who is who in the jury?
We have "Space Command representative Lindström" plus "starship captains Krasnovsky and Chandra". OTOH, we have two guys in gold (green) and one in blue. Connecting Chandra with the dark-skinned goldshirt probably won't bring down charges of racism - but what do you think, can we take the blueshirt for the representative and the other goldshirt for Krasnovsky?
It seems to me that all three wear the same dress uniform type, with braid in sleeve/body seams but not along the sleeves and sides; thus, fitting for Captain as seen on Kirk. The blueshirt appears to wear the most impressive medals after Stone, but not by a great margin vs. his two comrades. Kirk beats him by the thickness of the strap on his medal.
Mendez' gesturing when introducing the jury is vague at best...
Timo Saloniemi
Feedback from my wife:
Bones: "All my friends look like doctors. All of his look like you."
Jodi: Hahahahahaha! I love Bones! (His sad face is hysterical.)
Jamie Finney enters Stone's office:
Jodi: Um, ew. She looks like a waitress at Sonic."
"Would it cause a breakdown in discipline of a lowly lieutenant kissed a starship captain…?"
Jodi: "Oh. My. God."
That must be one powerful computer if it can amplify sounds... er, not at all. Given that one to the fourth power is, well, one.KIRK: "Gentlemen, this computer has an auditory sensor. It can, in effect, hear sounds. By installing a booster, we can increase that capability on the order of one to the fourth power. The computer should bring us every sound occurring on the ship."
I always get a little pumped up when the computer reads off Kirk's record. He IS the man. There is no better captain.
I always get a little pumped up when the computer reads off Kirk's record. He IS the man. There is no better captain.
...Until one takes a look at the jury, where everybody wears just about the same number of medals and "ribbon triangles"!
Timo Saloniemi
"...on the order of one to the fourth power." Yeah, that's a bit of a blunder in wording there. I wonder if it was scripted exactly that way, or if Shatner "reworded it" and the director didn't catch it. I'd expect something simpler like "amplification of 100 times actual decibel level".
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