Seems obvious to me. If he arrested Soran, the Duras sisters would be at large, their ship loaded to the brim with starkiller weapons.
If, OTOH, Picard defeated Soran while Riker was holding the Duras sisters under the big guns of the Federation Flagship, the universe would be a much safer place.
Really, going back to Amargosa would have been the one thing that would have made no sense whatsoever. For one thing, it wouldn't have allowed Picard to achieve all his immediate goals. For another, it would have caused a bigger time interference than the hop just a few minutes back. And if Picard was willing to go that far back, why would he ever stop there? Why wouldn't he go back to stop the fire that killed his nephew? Why wouldn't he go back to stop the Borg before they turned him into Locutus? Why wouldn't he go back to stop Tasha Yar or Assistant Chief Engineer Singh from getting killed? Why wouldn't he bo back to stop the Holocaust, or the Children's Crusade, or the crucifixion of Christ, or the sack of Troy, or the death of the last mammoth?
For me the highlights of ST:GEN were the well-presented deaths of the hero ship and James T. Kirk, the brilliant acting of Stewart and Spiner, the character development of Data, the well thought out villain Soran, and the well explored theme of aging and loss. The main downers were the contrivances of the hastily rewritten prologue, where the TOS heroes acted out of character, or rather in character for entirely different characters. In the middle fall the competent visuals (including some gorgeous stuff on the E-B and Amargosa), the sometimes superfluous tweakings with sets, props and uniforms, the jarring twice-crashing of the saucer with all the usual Poseidon cliches, and the somewhat ho-hum portrayal of the Nexus from Picard's point of view (Kirk's was a bit more interesting for me).
Timo Saloniemi
If, OTOH, Picard defeated Soran while Riker was holding the Duras sisters under the big guns of the Federation Flagship, the universe would be a much safer place.
Really, going back to Amargosa would have been the one thing that would have made no sense whatsoever. For one thing, it wouldn't have allowed Picard to achieve all his immediate goals. For another, it would have caused a bigger time interference than the hop just a few minutes back. And if Picard was willing to go that far back, why would he ever stop there? Why wouldn't he go back to stop the fire that killed his nephew? Why wouldn't he go back to stop the Borg before they turned him into Locutus? Why wouldn't he go back to stop Tasha Yar or Assistant Chief Engineer Singh from getting killed? Why wouldn't he bo back to stop the Holocaust, or the Children's Crusade, or the crucifixion of Christ, or the sack of Troy, or the death of the last mammoth?
For me the highlights of ST:GEN were the well-presented deaths of the hero ship and James T. Kirk, the brilliant acting of Stewart and Spiner, the character development of Data, the well thought out villain Soran, and the well explored theme of aging and loss. The main downers were the contrivances of the hastily rewritten prologue, where the TOS heroes acted out of character, or rather in character for entirely different characters. In the middle fall the competent visuals (including some gorgeous stuff on the E-B and Amargosa), the sometimes superfluous tweakings with sets, props and uniforms, the jarring twice-crashing of the saucer with all the usual Poseidon cliches, and the somewhat ho-hum portrayal of the Nexus from Picard's point of view (Kirk's was a bit more interesting for me).
Timo Saloniemi