The use of the TOS movie era jumpsuits to tell apart non-officers is probably fallacy - TOS set the precedent of officers like Kyle or Uhura also wearing jumpsuits on occassion, and TNG/DS9/VOY followed suite. And then we have ST:NEM where a Cadet wears the jumpsuit complete with the black collar.
Rather, we might prefer to believe in a Starfleet where equality is being furthered by giving everybody the same uniform. One just gets to wear officer indicators with it if one flaunts the special training associated with the rank - otherwise one is Crew or NCO, and the latter only warrants extra attention in very, very special cases in the 24th century and perhaps in the 23rd as well.
Now, such a system definitely is futuristic. Not for the equality angle, but for the implication that officers are the ones to have special training worth advertising. Today, it's the common folks who have narrow specialities that make a difference. Today, Picard would wish to know whether Crewman Tarses knows his astrobiology or impulse engines, before Picard starts to care about whether Tarses outranks his colleague Featherses or vice versa. Tomorrow, Picard apparently doesn't care - but he doesn't care about the outranking issue, either, as there is no hierarchical status indicator on the crew, either.
The lack of the latter suggests to me that the presence of the latter on officers isn't for sheer idle hierarchy (after all, regardless of their collar pips, our hero officers are buddies, not superiors and inferiors) but for the clearance to command because one knows better. Which is weird, because we don't truly get the impression the latter would be true, either.
Timo Saloniemi
Rather, we might prefer to believe in a Starfleet where equality is being furthered by giving everybody the same uniform. One just gets to wear officer indicators with it if one flaunts the special training associated with the rank - otherwise one is Crew or NCO, and the latter only warrants extra attention in very, very special cases in the 24th century and perhaps in the 23rd as well.
Now, such a system definitely is futuristic. Not for the equality angle, but for the implication that officers are the ones to have special training worth advertising. Today, it's the common folks who have narrow specialities that make a difference. Today, Picard would wish to know whether Crewman Tarses knows his astrobiology or impulse engines, before Picard starts to care about whether Tarses outranks his colleague Featherses or vice versa. Tomorrow, Picard apparently doesn't care - but he doesn't care about the outranking issue, either, as there is no hierarchical status indicator on the crew, either.
The lack of the latter suggests to me that the presence of the latter on officers isn't for sheer idle hierarchy (after all, regardless of their collar pips, our hero officers are buddies, not superiors and inferiors) but for the clearance to command because one knows better. Which is weird, because we don't truly get the impression the latter would be true, either.
Timo Saloniemi