Greater representation is indeed welcome, but there has been at least some since the early days! Off the top of my head, David Gerrold and Andy Mangels are both openly gay, and I'm sure there are others I don't know of as well.YIt’s like a breath of fresh air to have some LGBTQIA+ representation amongst the Trek novelists.
Excellent! I knew David Gerrold was out, but I didn’t know about Andy Mangels. Wonderful.Greater representation is indeed welcome, but there has been at least some since the early days! Off the top of my head, David Gerrold and Andy Mangels are both openly gay, and I'm sure there are others I don't know of as well.
i might have noted that earlier in the threads, but yes, glad we are finally shedding off the conceit of the false continuity of the so-called "relaunch/litverse" epoch and just reading a story that was competent to its own devices. hurrah to the authorship of finally having a story not beholden to overarc-ing-ness... nice after the cataclysmic events of Coda to just read a standalone novel that did not have universe changing consequences. So a first good outing for Alex White I thought.
I remember this briefly came up in STAR TREK: RESURGENCE and was something that I never thought of before but the previous person is effectively dead the same way that "Tuvix" is. A Trill would have probably argued that both were still alive in their new form but another might say that Jadzia died when she became Jadzia Dax.
I'm not a fan of tendency to claim that Neelix and Tuvok were "dead" when they were combined into Tuvix. I think that's a facile analogy and a refusal to accept the uniqueness of the Tuvix situation, whose whole point is that it cannot be mapped onto any conventional definition of life and death. That ambiguity is the very thing that makes the episode such an intractable dilemma in the first place. A merger is not death, simply transformation. If you make a banana-strawberry smoothie, the banana and the strawberry haven't ceased to exist. They're both still in there. Their individual essences can still be discerned within the whole. The combination would be nothing without the included parts, so it's nonsensical to claim they no longer exist. They're just combined in an irreversible way.
I guess that's why people try to reduce it to death, because it's irreversible. But death is not the only irreversible transformation. A child becoming an adult is irreversible too. The child's mind is transformed by physical and hormonal changes and the accretion of new experiences and life roles, to the extent that the person ceases to be who they were as a child. But the child's identity and memory are still part of the adult. There's no going back, no, but that's not death. It's only death if you can't go forward either.
Joining doesn't kill a host. They retain their individual identity and all of their memories; they just gain a lot of other people's memories and personality traits on top of it. That's why Jadzia Dax was a very different person from Curzon Dax, and why Ezri Dax was very different from either of them. The host's personality is the primary thread, not something that disappears into the collective. That's the whole point of joining -- that each host adds new and different experiences, skills, and perspectives to the symbiote's life experience.
I'd argue that's what makes it an interesting discussion in the first place and the Trill have already forwarded their position unambiguously but that doesn't necessarily mean that there's not room for argument.
The Resurgence reference being to Petty Officer Nili Edsilar, who has the subplot that she joined Starfleet to get away from Trill.
Nili: My sister was the closest person in the world to me. I knew she would be different after joining, but she grew more and more distant, the room we shared growing up was foreign to the both of us. And eventually, she... or whoever she'd become, cut me out entirely. So I left for Starfleet and swore I'd never go back. I couldn't stand the thought of seeing her... someone who looked like my sister.
Now, the game doesn't in any way show her to be right and it's contradicted by a bunch of media that her sister isn't "gone." However, lots of families in RL have relationships changed by profound experiences (converting a religion, marriage, or life and death events). That's far from death but you could easily see something coming off like that to someone who witnesses it from the outside.
To go back to Tuvix, Janeway can also be argued to have had simply a responsibility to her crew that triumphed her responsibility to a new form of life (one that Starfleet ethiciticians would probably debate I'm sure). She chose her particular position on the Trolley Problem in a way that I feel was entirely consistent. FYI - while that is an overused example, I feel like the Kobayashi Maru, the Trolley Problem is misunderstood. It's not about getting the right answer but confronting how the person thinks.
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