Was anything Q ever created an "illusion"? I always thought he was actually creating things and changing reality.
I doubt very much that his Robin Hood scenario was real.
Was anything Q ever created an "illusion"? I always thought he was actually creating things and changing reality.
Wasn't the idea behind the character that he actually was omnipotent and all powerful, rather than being another Trelane or Ardra who were just faking things?
FWIW Voyages of Imaginations sets chapter 3 of the "Encounter at Farpoint" novelization in 2079, so at least according to their timeline Q actually brought them back in time.Still, even in the beginning, it was established that Q wasn't just creating illusions. In "Farpoint," Troi told Picard that the "Post-Atomic Horror" courtroom environment was somehow real, not an illusion -- although it occurs to me that it could just be that it was an illusion convincing enough to fool Betazoid senses.
Yeah, I guess that one might be a bit harder to accept as reality.
Wasn't the idea behind the character that he actually was omnipotent and all powerful, rather than being another Trelane or Ardra who were just faking things?
Remember what Quinn said in "Death Wish" - everyone thinks the Q are omnipotent, but they aren't. And since Quinn *was* a Q, he would know.
Part of that is to do with omnipotence only working if only one being is. If you have two, a can always undo what b has done, and the continuum executes judgements against its own including making them mortal, meaning that they are omnipotent...until they run into another omnipotent being. Granted, that stretches the definition of the the word, but it just about hangs.
Makes me wish someone had asked Q "How do you have superiors if you're omnipotent? What, are they MORE omnipotent?"
Although, knowing Q, the answer would probably have been 'yes.'
Zeus was superior to Hermes. Odin was superior to Loki. Just because gods are all-powerful, that doesn't mean they don't have hierarchies.
To be fair, that's not really a good analogy since the Greek and Norse gods weren't all-powerful. The contemporary Greeks and Norse would have even admitted as such.
I doubt the Q are either. Any powerful being seems all-powerful to those with less power. But every entity is subject to some limits. Sure, Q says he's omnipotent, but he's very, very full of himself. He's also claimed to be God. I don't think his statements about himself can be taken literally.
I doubt the Q are either. Any powerful being seems all-powerful to those with less power. But every entity is subject to some limits. Sure, Q says he's omnipotent, but he's very, very full of himself. He's also claimed to be God. I don't think his statements about himself can be taken literally.
Was anything Q ever created an "illusion"? I always thought he was actually creating things and changing reality.
No, you're assuming that some things were fictional illusions. You're not concluding anything, because that's just conjecture; there's nothing in the episode that establishes it firmly as either real or fictional; since these are all fictional events created by a group of writers for the sake of entertainment, there is no hidden truth that could potentially be uncovered down the line (barring a later episode or movie specifically saying for some reason), and so every interpretation that's consistent with what we see is equally valid, it's just a question of selecting which interpretation you want to personally have.
Your statement is "if some things were illusory then all of it could be illusory". That statement is true. However, there is still no proof that some things were illusory, because the episode never actually stated whether it was an illusion or an alternate timeline. That is what you are assuming to be true.
Maybe I'm a little slow, but does it matter whether what Q showed Picard was a potential future timeline or an elaborately-constructed illusion? There's no practical way for our heroes to settle the matter one way or another.
Picard reacts as if the events are real, and if Q was going to include the twist of Picard being stricken with an illness, why go to the trouble of inventing one rather than simply giving him one that would already be known to exist?
Though, come to that, why does it matter whether Irumodic Syndrome is a real (for Our Heroes) disease or one that Q invented which everyone in the events Picard experienced accepted as real?
To me, this seems like a possible case of us spending far more time on a matter of minutiae than it merits.
...not that that's ever stopped us before... 
Not all of them. There's always been two Qs, the jovial trickster and the deadly serious. John de Lancie did a great job of switching between the two sides, often in the same scene. His mannerisms and and composure switches in an instant. Contrast his performance during his claim to be God with his lecture in Q Who about how space is not for the timid. Whether or not his statements are to be taken literally depends on context.He's also claimed to be God. I don't think his statements about himself can be taken literally.
I don't think Q has ever actually been shown sending anyone back and forth through the timeline.
Someone already cited "Death Wish," where he brought a man from Woodstock forward to Voyager to testify. In that same episode, Quinn took Voyager back in time to the Big Bang in hopes of eluding the Continuum's pursuit.
I, as a rule, avoid Voyager. Still, I'm not sure "bring forward" means the same thing to Q as it does to us. Conjuring an identical person would be effectively the same thing. From our perspective its a meaningless distinction.
Still, it's not something Q does himself very often. Quinn, being a different Q, may have his own preferences.
Riker was also brought forwards.
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