Why? They're not gods and the Federation knows that. Hell, the Federation knows that its officers essentially had to talk them into stopping the Borg the same way they would talk any other reluctant political actor into something. They know they're not gods, they're just people with powerful technology that the Federation does not yet possess.Until now, the federation viewed the superbeings it encountered as aliens - it didn't feel insignificant by comparison; from now on, the federation may well view them as gods - to be worshipped or feared.
The federation believed they're just aliens, not gods, until now - as every interaction with such superbeings proved. Until now, the federation never tasted the taste of true insignificance
Yes it has. It was rendered utterly helpless and insignificant by the Organians well over a hundred years earlier, and that didn't completely change their culture.
Now, the federation KNOWS the distance between itself and these supercivilizations
It's always known the distance between itself and those supercivilizations. So what? You keep calm and carry on. You rebuild; you grieve your dead, and you thank your new allies.
(63 BILLION DEAD can do that) - no more optimistically deluding itself that there's some equality to be had between itself and anything out there
The Federation never had any delusion of equality of power between itself and those supercivilizations. Once again, you're taking modern American arrogance about its own power and applying it to the Federation, and that just doesn't hold water. The Federation has had its ass kicked before, and has had its lack of equal power with so-called "supercivilizations" spelled out before. Hell, the Federation had to beg the Prophets to help during the Dominion War.
Guess what? The Federation still only views the inequality as a physical state, not a mental or emotional or intrinsic state.
PS - federation officers talked the Caeliar into NOTHING. Hernandez (now a Caeliar, a half-divine being) informed them about their role in creating the borg;
And the Federation is obviously going to view Hernandez as being one of their own. Hell, they even had her wearing Federation Starfleet uniforms. They'd just look at her as a Federate whose biology has been altered with alien technology.
the Caeliar then decided to benevolently save humanity - but they decided this on their terms, according to their morals and values, with no interference from 'mere mortals'.
No, actually, they did it on Hernandez's terms, according to her morals and values, following her plan. And Hernandez's values are Federation values.
Again, the only way your view of the Federation works is if the Federation was so immature as to not understand before the Invasion that it was not the most powerful entity in the galaxy, that there were limits to its power, that there were some crises that if they were to happen would be impossible to defend against. The only way your argument works is if the Federation's understanding of its standing in the galaxy is akin to the United States's understanding of its standing in the world: The most powerful political actor against which no one else can or ever could stand. The only way your argument works is if the Federation was as deluded before the Borg Invasion as the United States has been for the last several decades.
The Federation was not deluded. They almost lost the Dominion War. They've almost been defeated by the Borg before. They've been saved by supercivilizations before. They've been manipulated by supercivilizations before, and they've manipulated supercivilizations back in return. The Federation is not cowed, and is not deluded, and understands that differences in physical power do not translate into natural hierarchies.
I mean, hell, the Federation resisted the Beings' attempt to get the Federation to genuflect just a few years beforehand, and they were at least as powerful as the Caeliar. Why would the Federation bow to the Caeliar but not the Beings (who actually DID want to be worshipped)?
Edited to add:
PS2Sci said:The "never give up" spirit was not extinguished at all, and Federation forces kept fighting right up to the bitter end.
Picard didn't lost the spirit to 'never give up'?
Picard is one guy, not the UFP incarnate.
Those starfleet forces that were only trying to commit seppuku, not even trying to come up with something creative, only trading shots, waiting to be snuffed off by the borg didn't loose the spirit?
No, they were trying to buy as many extra seconds as possible for more civilians to evacuate. They realized they had no tools with which to defeat the Borg, and no time to generate new tools -- so they used the tools they had to buy as much time as possible for more people to evacuate. That's called heroism, not losing your will to fight.
The whole thalaron weapon fiasco was a symptom of this passive, defeatist mindset - what's the point of using it? it won't work anyway.
No, the thalaron weapon mindset was a symptom of the Federation not wanting to do something it views as horribly immoral. Now, you and I may think it's silly for that weapon to be taboo, but the fact remains that they were unwilling to violate their own moral code in the name of survival. That's not having your spirit broken, that's holding on to your values.
PS3 - I'm not american, Sci - as I've told you before.
I don't remember having discussed that with you before, but fair enough and I apologize for the assumption. But you're still taking a very American attitude towards power -- one that I suppose is shared, to a lesser extent, by the other major industrialized countries -- and applying it to the Federation. But the Federation is not and has never been as deluded, or as arrogant, as modern America and modern first-world countries are.