If that were the case, the Talosians couldn't have given him a 'fantasy life' because for all their abilities, they a just Super Telepaths and would require a working brain of the subject (like Pike) to be successful. Commodore Mendez even stated "His Mind is as active as yours or mine; but it's trapped in a useless vegetating body.But Hawking had a fully working brain. Pike could be incapable of producing expressions more complex than "Yeah yeah yeah!" or "Nononono badbadbaaaad!", despite otherwise retaining his faculties.
Indeed, while the audiences in the 1960s might not have been all that well versed in medicobabble, audiences today should be familiar with the sort of aphasia that Pike apparently is suffering from. No matter what the medium, speech, writing, gestures, cybernetic soundbox, he could quite plausibly be incapable of putting together a sentence or otherwise applying language for expression.
I rather think there was nothing left of Pike below his chest, and the "chair" was in fact his body now - not a motion aid, but the forum of all his life processes save thinking and (possibly) vision and hearing.
DSC certainly doesn't shy away from showing prosthetics for the disabled: many sidekick characters wear those due to Burnham's War. What Pike wears could well be state of the art as far as entire replacement bodies go.
Timo Saloniemi
It's just a simple matter of relearning based upon personal experience. Farscape did a similar idea with a clone of John Crichton and the dynamic of him with the crew.Even after all they've been through, I would think the Discovery crew wouldn't be so petty and small-minded as to hold ReguLorca responsible for the actions of his MU counterpart.
If that were the case, the Talosians couldn't have given him a 'fantasy life' because for all their abilities, they a just Super Telepaths and would require a working brain of the subject (like Pike) to be successful. Commodore Mendez even stated "His Mind is as active as yours or mine; but it's trapped in a useless vegetating body.
The story setup also didn't make a lot of sense, as the Federation HAD Universal Translates that were shown (Yes, it was in the next Season TOS - "Metamorphisis"; but Kirk didn't treat it like new cutting edge tech, it was a tool they'd had for a long time previously) - so it's weird that the Federation couldn't tie one into Pike's thoughts so the character could at least communicate <---- But yeah, that would have impacted the 'urgency' of Spock's actions in the episode.
We currently seem to understand that dolphins and whales have some sort of language, one we are currently incapable of understanding. Certain species like Killer Whales have individual languages that are only used in their pod and they are unable to understand other pods. Curiously, dolphins have been known to lower the range of their clicks and whistles to a range humans can hear when around humans. I'd like to think that after the events of Star Trek IV, Starfleet made an effort to make actual first contact with whales and dolphins developing some method of communication.Well at one point, TNG had plans for a Cetacean Interactive Area in the Enterprise-D, so there must be some form of communication with non-human life forms possible by that time.
Somehow, I just can't see the Klingons giving a damn about what their Targs have to say, so my guess would be Yes.The UT ought to be capable of making sense of simple languages if it can translate complex ones. So deep down, the user ought to know what a stupid little earthworm means by its wriggling, or even what the wind is saying.
Which may be the very reason why those things don't get a translation: the world is full of language, and most of it is stupid and dull. The line must be drawn somewhere, and most people have set their cutoff level at, well, people.
People interacting with dolphins for a living may use a different setting, of course. And there may be UT junkies listening to the hidden messages of the forest just for fun. It's a tad odd we never see this - and more than a tad odd that Spock fails to translate Whale when first hearing it in ST4:TVH, even though he seems to feel that there's a message to it, and one that will make a crucial difference to the enigmatic Probe. Is the Klingon UT too primitive and limited to properly translate Earth Humpback?
Timo Saloniemi
He's in charge of Trek. Who's gonna stop him?He won’t be allowed to do that bullshit here.
I imagine Killy wasn’t the nicest person and she just killed her way to the top.
CBSHe's in charge of Trek. Who's gonna stop him?![]()
If they didn't stop The Space Cannibal Hitler Joins Black Ops Show, they aren't gonna stop Kurtzman mimicing Kirk's promotion from a very successful Trek movie he co-wrote.
I don’t see the connectionIf they didn't stop The Space Cannibal Hitler Joins Black Ops Show, they aren't gonna stop Kurtzman mimicing Kirk's promotion from a very successful Trek movie he co-wrote.
Which may be the very reason why those things don't get a translation: the world is full of language, and most of it is stupid and dull. The line must be drawn somewhere, and most people have set their cutoff level at, well, people.
People interacting with dolphins for a living may use a different setting, of course. And there may be UT junkies listening to the hidden messages of the forest just for fun.
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