There is no logic behind the Vulcans personal bias against humans. If they hate them so much and think themselves superior, they should not have a treaty or alliance with them now should they? Plus they can be seen as hypocrites in their behavior.
There is no logic behind the Vulcans personal bias against humans. If they hate them so much and think themselves superior, they should not have a treaty or alliance with them now should they?
There is no logic behind the Vulcans personal bias against humans. If they hate them so much and think themselves superior, they should not have a treaty or alliance with them now should they?
There is just as little logic in assuming that a few prejudiced assholes somehow represent the entirety of the Vulcan people and their government.![]()
You are conflating "species" and "kind". Vulcans have been at peace with their own kind -- that is, those who follow Surak -- for two thousand years. The total species, which includes the Romulans, have not. Further, Romulans may well have experienced speciation from Vulcans as a result to prolonged exposure to radiation during their flight from Vulcan and as a result of deliberate genetic modifications that either group conducted subsequent to Romulan exile.The average Vulcan is stronger than the average human, smarter, has greater endurance, greater self-discipline, and will live about three times longer. They are reliably telepathic and have been at peace with their own kind for two thousand years.
False. ENT established quite clearly that Vulcan spent 1800 years rebuilding from a devastating nuclear war that threw them back to a pre-industrial level, and had only within the last few centuries become a major space power. This strongly implies that during much of that time, Vulcan was not unified and/or not at peace with their own kind.
Further, Romulans and Vulcans are the same species. (They have to be -- 2,000 years isn't enough time for speciation t occur.) Yet Vulcans and Romulans fought a century-long war at one point according to Q in "Death Wish," and Vulcans and Romulans have fought numerous times as part of Federation-Romulan conflicts.
Only if you have an arbitrary definition of "superior" that's rigged to favor populations with one trait rather than another. One could just as easily argue that Vulcans are "inferior" because their culture is built on emotional repression -- "This species can't even survive if it acts out its true nature, but must instead essentially traumatize all its members from childhood into a form of emotionless autism." Certainly one might argue that Vulcan lacks the kinds of cultural and political freedom one might expect from a civilized world, given their strong desire for conformity and tendency to exile those who don't subscribe to the ruling religion-philosophy of emotional suppression. But that would be just as biased an argument as the idea that they're "superior."Thinking they are superior to humans isn't prejudice, it is a simple acknowledgement of empirical fact.
Vulcans are not superior -- they are different. Different, and equal.
There is no logic behind the Vulcans personal bias against humans. If they hate them so much and think themselves superior, they should not have a treaty or alliance with them now should they?
There is just as little logic in assuming that a few prejudiced assholes somehow represent the entirety of the Vulcan people and their government.![]()
But the only "good" ones we see have been "corrupted" by contact with human beings. The rest are generally portrayed as assholes.
Actually, one of the most interesting things about ST09 is that nuSarek is much less of an asshole than Sarek Prime was. Where Mark Lenard's Sarek was a prideful man disappointed in Spock's humanity who constantly held grudges against his son, Ben Cross portrayed Sarek as a restrained yet affectionate father who understood his son much better than Lenard's. When talking to Little Spock after the school fight, for instance, he didn't offer condemnation -- he reminded Spock of his commitment to the Vulcan way and of the importance of control, but he clearly wasn't angry. And at no point did he show disapproval of Spock in the 2258 scenes -- indeed, he even encourages Spock in his emotional side. NuSarek is a much better father than Sarek Prime was, and he seems to have much less of a chip on his shoulder about Humans.Twice in STXI alone even if you don't include nuSpock.
Because they're not, in general, isolationists.Good point about Vulcans joining the Federation. Why would isolationists do that?
True. Prejudice and bigotry can take many forms, not just flat-out hatred.However thinking themselves superior doesn't necessarily mean hating us. Its just the concept of being prejudiced or biased tends to imply that. But they may not be either.
The average Vulcan is stronger than the average human, smarter, has greater endurance, greater self-discipline, and will live about three times longer. They are reliably telepathic and have been at peace with their own kind for two thousand years.
False. ENT established quite clearly that Vulcan spent 1800 years rebuilding from a devastating nuclear war that threw them back to a pre-industrial level, and had only within the last few centuries become a major space power. This strongly implies that during much of that time, Vulcan was not unified and/or not at peace with their own kind.
Further, Romulans and Vulcans are the same species. (They have to be -- 2,000 years isn't enough time for speciation t occur.) Yet Vulcans and Romulans fought a century-long war at one point according to Q in "Death Wish," and Vulcans and Romulans have fought numerous times as part of Federation-Romulan conflicts.
You are conflating "species" and "kind".
Even excluding the Romulans, this has never been established. We do not know when the Vulcans finally unified under one world government and achieved lasting peace amongst themselves. What we know is that there was a devastating nuclear war on Vulcan circa 300 C.E., and that Vulcan spent more than a millennium and a half recovering from that war -- a feat Humans achieve in roughly a century, which, Soval noted in ENT: "The Forge," unnerved the leaders of the Vulcan High Command in 2154. Indeed, the very fact that it took Vulcan almost twenty times as long to recover from their nuclear holocaust as it did Earth strongly implies that they were not at peace amongst themselves for much of that time.Vulcans have been at peace with their own kind -- that is, those who follow Surak -- for two thousand years.
Being "stronger" is not the same as being "better." Having more physical endurance is also not the same thing as being "better." Those are traits that may give survival advantages in some environments, and may be useless in other environments.Only if you have an arbitrary definition of "superior" that's rigged to favor populations with one trait rather than another. One could just as easily argue that Vulcans are "inferior" because their culture is built on emotional repression -- "This species can't even survive if it acts out its true nature, but must instead essentially traumatize all its members from childhood into a form of emotionless autism." Certainly one might argue that Vulcan lacks the kinds of cultural and political freedom one might expect from a civilized world, given their strong desire for conformity and tendency to exile those who don't subscribe to the ruling religion-philosophy of emotional suppression. But that would be just as biased an argument as the idea that they're "superior."Thinking they are superior to humans isn't prejudice, it is a simple acknowledgement of empirical fact.
Vulcans are not superior -- they are different. Different, and equal.
The assessment was hardly rigged to favor a single trait. I listed several obvious and significant ways in which Vulcans are clearly superior to humans.
But the only "good" ones we see have been "corrupted" by contact with human beings. The rest are generally portrayed as assholes.
Not really. Tuvok was a good guy; Taurik was fine, and so was Vaurik. (The one time he was an asshole was when he was suffering from Pon farr and not in his right state of mind.) Solok might have been an asshole, but his crew seemed to have no problem with socializing with non-Vulcans in a friendly (for Vulcans) manner. The Vulcans of the ENT era had a lot of anti-Human prejudices, but the Humans of that era had a lot of anti-Vulcan prejudices, too -- and once both sides started learning to appreciate one-another instead of resenting one-another, they generally got along well.
T'Pol, Soval, and T'Pau are just a few of the Vulcan characters who learned to appreciate [be corrupted by] Humans.
Actually, one of the most interesting things about ST09 is that nuSarek is much less of an asshole than Sarek Prime was.Twice in STXI alone even if you don't include nuSpock.
True. Prejudice and bigotry can take many forms, not just flat-out hatred.
Because they're not, in general, isolationists.![]()
Because prejudices are based upon the false notion that all members of a population are uniform, and upon the false notion that the traits ascribed to one population or anther are superior or inferior.
Why would "pre-industrial" equate "not at peace"? Makes no obvious sense, but I guess you have a theory on this.ENT established quite clearly that Vulcan spent 1800 years rebuilding from a devastating nuclear war that threw them back to a pre-industrial level, and had only within the last few centuries become a major space power. This strongly implies that during much of that time, Vulcan was not unified and/or not at peace with their own kind.
, it doesn't really explain anything. Why would speed of recovery correlate positively with unity? Surely internal competition would be an equally plausible factor in speedy recovery, and its lack a hindrance.the very fact that it took Vulcan almost twenty times as long to recover from their nuclear holocaust as it did Earth strongly implies that they were not at peace amongst themselves for much of that time.
All definitions are arbitrary. You take what works. And in this case, defining Vulcan traits as superior certainly works, for Vulcans.Only if you have an arbitrary definition of "superior" that's rigged to favor populations with one trait rather than another.
There is no equality other than that given to you. No two things in this universe are alike (save perhaps for leptons), and equality thus is arrived at through a system of compensations and handicaps.Different, and equal.
Now that's just subjective ranting. You have no actual proof that the Vulcans wouldn't be fair and reasonable and still finding humans lacking. You just wish it weren't so, and therefore decide your worldview must be true. Talk about bigoted...It's a subjective evaluation made, frankly, with the intent of justifying pre-existing anti-Human emotions. This is about justifying a bigoted power structure, not about a fair or reasonable evaluation of an individual. Because, if it were, the leader of the Science Academy would have to concede that Vulcans and Humans are equal.
One thing that baffled me about this movie is how the Vulcans where so racist to NuSpock and his human mother. I though Vulcans where supposed to be the intelligent ones, the race known for making perfect decision and being reasonable yet Spock was emotionally and physical abused because of his human heritage. How illogical is that?
Sarek did not even help matters either when he indirectly told Spock that he was not a product of love. Telling that to an already emotional unstable child is just not a logical decision.
Solok might have been an asshole, but his crew seemed to have no problem with socializing with non-Vulcans in a friendly (for Vulcans) manner.
That doesn't mean every Vulcan on the crew had a problem with humans. It's not like Starfleet officers gets to choose where to be assigned, so you can't make assumptions about the attitudes of the crew-members we never saw onscreen.Apparently they did have a problem with *serving* alongside humans, as - AFAIK - the T'Kumbra had an all-Vulcan crew.
That doesn't mean every Vulcan on the crew had a problem with humans. It's not like Starfleet officers gets to choose where to be assigned, so you can't make assumptions about the attitudes of the crew-members we never saw onscreen.Apparently they did have a problem with *serving* alongside humans, as - AFAIK - the T'Kumbra had an all-Vulcan crew.
That doesn't mean every Vulcan on the crew had a problem with humans. It's not like Starfleet officers gets to choose where to be assigned ... .Apparently they did have a problem with *serving* alongside humans, as - AFAIK - the T'Kumbra had an all-Vulcan crew.
Q.- Is it Logical for Vulcans to be prejudice[d]?
A.- "It is not logical , but it is often true." -Spock
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