I'm afraid I don't recall, it was about 20 years ago since I first saw it.
In honesty, I don't think the concept holds up to close scrutiny, but that's never bothered me. It's still my favourite ever episode, and I don't have a problem suspending belief. Indeed, I'm looking forward to seeing it in HD eventually.![]()
Did anyone else figure out how the Tamarians communicated before Picard did? Just curious.
I'm afraid I don't recall, it was about 20 years ago since I first saw it.
In honesty, I don't think the concept holds up to close scrutiny, but that's never bothered me. It's still my favourite ever episode, and I don't have a problem suspending belief. Indeed, I'm looking forward to seeing it in HD eventually.![]()
yeah, one of those cases where the clever premise takes precedence over realism. I question how a language like that would evolve and how well it would work for a technologically advanced civilization.
Tamarian is an example of a noncompositional language, in that the meanings of expressions are not contained within the constituent parts of those expressions. Many phrases in human languages are noncompositional, such as idioms (“He hit the roof”) and allusions (“He’s quite the Romeo”). Many Chinese four-character idioms are more-or-less obscure references to ancient history and literature (“Break the woks, sink the boats”), requiring familiarity with the cultural context to understand.
The written language is used to communicate more technical information of sorts that the spoken language is ill-suited for. There is real precedent, such as the use of musical or mathematical notation to convey things that don’t have words for them per se. Also, given the Tamarians’ reliance on physical as well as conceptual symbols (the decorations pinned to their uniforms and used in their rituals), it makes sense that they would be innately predisposed to incorporate written symbols into their overall “performance” of communication.
You know, it's been so long that I don't actually remember.
Or, as I prefer to say, "Reagan, at the end".![]()
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My main beef with the "speaking in metaphor" thing is that this simply doesn't work for technology. The time it would take to develop anything using only metaphoric references would be astoundingly long, and probably too problematic for anything complex as a warp drive.
I'm afraid I don't recall, it was about 20 years ago since I first saw it.
In honesty, I don't think the concept holds up to close scrutiny, but that's never bothered me. It's still my favourite ever episode, and I don't have a problem suspending belief. Indeed, I'm looking forward to seeing it in HD eventually.![]()
yeah, one of those cases where the clever premise takes precedence over realism. I question how a language like that would evolve and how well it would work for a technologically advanced civilization.
That complaint has always struck me as missing the forest for the tree.
The story is about humans encountering an alien species whose form of communication is so foreign to the way humans think that interspecies communication is almost impossible.
It's unrealistic to expect any humans, let alone TNG's staff writers, to come up with such a system. The metaphor-based communication works well enough for the purposes of the episode. To complain of the unrealisticness of this human-conceived depiction of something humans couldn't conceive, is to say the story isn't worth telling in the first place.
In honesty, I don't think the concept holds up to close scrutiny, but that's never bothered me. It's still my favourite ever episode, and I don't have a problem suspending belief.
Or, as I prefer to say, "Reagan, at the end".![]()
![]()
If this was asked before I apologize. Did anyone else figure out how the Tamarians communicated before Picard did? Just curious. To be this was one of the "purest" Trek episodes ever.
Actually Data & Troi figured out the metaphor angle right around the same time Picard did, by analyzing the communications with the Tamarians. My guess is that by using Data's processing & cross referencing abilities, they could have come up with a working usage of their language, in short order, enough to understand some of the more important points the Tamarians were making, i.e. Jalad... Darmok... Tanagra etc...
After all, wasn't it Data that translated Riva's sign language from nothing, in rather short order? That would seem to be far more difficult
Or, as I prefer to say, "Reagan, at the end".![]()
![]()
Or, as I prefer to say, "Reagan, at the end".![]()
![]()
I guess my complete lack of understanding the above phrase proves the point how important cultural background is in understanding Tamarian language (and other, based of metaphors, languages)![]()
Data learned Riva's sign language so quickly because it was already in the ship's computer banks. He just had to teach himself a language that was already known and understood. That's very different from having to decipher a new language from scratch.
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