I can't claim any knowledge of my own, but my search seems to point to it coming from Star Trek Academy: Collision Course by the Reeves-Stevens. I feel bad for posting this somehow.I'm not 100% sure, but I'm pretty sure I wrote that.![]()
I tried to find another version but it's hard to find without knowing how the variant is worded. I don't doubt you have a version though!Interesting! Pretty sure I've done a variant on this, maybe even a couple of time, but I guess I'm not the only one!
I'm not 100% certain, but I'm pretty sure I wrote that bit.
I remember seeing a very similar joke in a more recent novel, might’ve been one of yours, but it was after this had been floating around as a meme for a while. God bless Google Books. This line is actually from “Collision Course,” Shatner (and company)’s last Trek novel from back in 2008.
I seem to recall in TOS The Voyage Home, Spock says he cannot tell a lie. Of course when asked if he likes pizza, he say no a few times and then yes. Or something like that.I'm not 100% sure, but I'm pretty sure I wrote that.
But, yes, Vulcans can absolutely lie . . . if they have a logical reason to do so.
They may find it distasteful, they may have a cultural taboo against doing so, but it's not as though they're incapable of it. And they're not above using that myth to their own advantage at times.
Heck, remember Spock posing as a "trader in kevas and trillium" in "Errand of Mercy"?
- GILLIAN: You guys like Italian?
- SPOCK+KIRK: No. Yes. No. Yes.
- KIRK: Yes, I love Italian and so do you.
- SPOCK: Yes.
I seem to recall in TOS The Voyage Home, Spock says he cannot tell a lie.
This isn't supposed to be a "Gotcha!" or any crap like that. It's just funny.
I always say this is the real reason replying to old threads isn’t allowed on the board. The cognitive dissonance of drafting a reply in your head and then seeing you already wrote it word-for-word five or ten years ago is shattering. I once retired from this board for two or three years because I realized I was having the same debate with the same poster that I’d had six months earlier.
IIEC, there was one time on Voyager when Seven asked Tuvok about Vulcans not telling lies, which he explained as if there's a logical reason for doing so, they can and will.
It's a little known fact that as a boy Spock sold kevas and trillium door to to door to raise money for his Scout Troop.I'm not 100% sure, but I'm pretty sure I wrote that.
But, yes, Vulcans can absolutely lie . . . if they have a logical reason to do so.
They may find it distasteful, they may have a cultural taboo against doing so, but it's not as though they're incapable of it. And they're not above using that myth to their own advantage at times.
Heck, remember Spock posing as a "trader in kevas and trillium" in "Errand of Mercy"?
Do Vulcans ever lie?
The fact that one of his ancestors married a human female may be the LIE that one of his ancestors married a human female.....at least retroactively.
It's early Trek smirky Spock.I don't know why Spock would say it that way. If he's trying to downplay the influence of his human ancestry, any lapses in judgement will be attributed to a more heavily diluted humanity than half his immediate parentage, which would either imply that any humanity in a Vulcan's lineage has a very noticeable influence, however distant, or that Spock perhaps comes from weak stock, Vulcan-wise, to behave so human-like with so little humanity in him.
Better to admit that's he's half and half.
Written by Peter David, I believe.
How easy is it to accept yourself?I don't know why Spock would say it that way. If he's trying to downplay the influence of his human ancestry, any lapses in judgement will be attributed to a more heavily diluted humanity than half his immediate parentage, which would either imply that any humanity in a Vulcan's lineage has a very noticeable influence, however distant, or that Spock perhaps comes from weak stock, Vulcan-wise, to behave so human-like with so little humanity in him.
Better to admit that's he's half and half.
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