Unclear.Again, Vulcan has money in the 24th century,
1. In TOS, before the idea of no money came about....and Spock convincingly posed as a interstellar Vulcan trader in the 23rd century.
All the more reason against.Do Humans in Starfleet not get paid, while their fellow Starfleet officers from other Member worlds receive regular paychecks?
Did that matter? Roddenberry didn't come up with everything. (Love Gene Coon, Michael Piller, others too BTW) And he evolved over time like anyone. Moore & Co. didn't get into specifics (i.e. tech manual) but also weren't proactive for or to explore the cause. Maybe he and they should have tried.One of the reason that it might have been harder to write is that Roddenberry himself was incapable of describing it. Ron Moore said in a interview that the writers approached Roddenberry and asked him about his idea so they could incorporate it into scripts, apparently even Roddenberry didn't know how it was suppose to work.
Unclear.
1. In TOS, before the idea of no money came about.
2. Was it trader or merchant? Either way, neither necessarily use money, and, as mentioned, he could, like Vash, been an expat.
I'd have to watch the episode gain, but he could, like Vash, been an unusual character.In "The Gift" (VOY), it's said that the Vulcan who sold Tuvok his lamp doubled the price when he realized that his customer was a Starfleet officer.
Doesn't negate points. Why wouldn't lots of Vulcans like trading goods? I'd love to travel the worlds of heaven to bring back home all sorts of amazing finds.Fair points, although "Errand of Mercy" did imply that merchant was a very common profession for Vulcans.
I'd have to watch the episode gain, but he could, like Vash, been an unusual character.
Doesn't negate points. Why wouldn't lots of Vulcans like trading goods? I'd love to travel the worlds of heaven to bring back home all sorts of amazing finds.
Mudd's Women and Devil in the Dark are both based on people performing life threatening jobs in pursuit of getting rich. And with no money then Mudd doesn't make sense. For that matter neither does Jones or Okona."Entire episodes"? That sounds like hyperbole, at best. Which ones did you have in mind?
See, I can understand where you can try and smooth out 22nd / 23rd / 29th century to be an agreeable 23rd. Vulcanian can be discarded for the later Vulcan.
But if there is NEVER an instance of TOS saying that there is no money, why would you jump through logical hoops to say that Spock being a Vulcan trader doesn't mean that he's a Vulcan trader?
Mudd's Women and Devil in the Dark are both based on people performing life threatening jobs in pursuit of getting rich. And with no money then Mudd doesn't make sense. For that matter neither does Jones or Okona.
See? That's the hoop. They COULD be. But why would they be?They could be outside United Earth's economy. After all, on TNG/DS9, the human character Vash used her profession to earn money, and, while considered backwards, it wasn't viewed as illegal.
But still inside the Federation's.They could be outside United Earth's economy
As did Kasidy Yates.the human character Vash used her profession to earn money
"Eugenics" just means improving the breed, so it could include genetic engineering.In TOS, Khan was the product of eugenics, not genetic-engineering.
In "Conscience of the King," McCoy makes an offhand remark about the Vulcans being conquered. He doesn't say by whom.But then again, it means something like Vulcan being 'conquered' by humans has to be taken into account as something more than just McCoy being McCoy, and that would just be silly.![]()
In "Conscience of the King," McCoy makes an offhand remark about the Vulcans being conquered. He doesn't say by whom.
In "Conscience of the King," McCoy makes an offhand remark about the Vulcans being conquered. He doesn't say by whom.
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