I think I remember someone in Star Trek: The Magazine suggesting that Data had more than one cat and he named them both Spot due to lack of imagination.
"Spot" is to Data as "Snowball" is to the Simpsons...
I think I remember someone in Star Trek: The Magazine suggesting that Data had more than one cat and he named them both Spot due to lack of imagination.
IIRC, there was a story in the TNG Sky's the Limit anthology that explained Spot's gender. Basically, Data didn't know how to determine gender of cats, asked Geordi, who just presumed Spot was male and said so. It wasn't until Worf had to look after Spot in Phantasms. Worf did know how to determine a cat's gender and realized Spot was actually female.Is there an official stance on Spot's gender when you're writing them in the books? I think they were male in most of their appearances, but I can't remember if their gender was referred to in any of their appearances after Genesis which I believe is where the switch occured.
IIRC, there was a story in the TNG Sky's the Limit anthology that explained Spot's gender. Basically, Data didn't know how to determine gender of cats, asked Geordi, who just presumed Spot was male and said so. It wasn't until Worf had to look after Spot in Phantasms. Worf did know how to determine a cat's gender and realized Spot was actually female.
Besides, any responsible pet owner would get regular veterinary care for their pet, so if Data had never gotten Spot examined by a professional, that would be sheer negligence.
Does the Enterprise-D have a veterinarian? Or an animal biologist who moonlights? Or would the regular sickbay staff, who already have to be competent in health care for multiple species, handle Spot's care?
A xeno-veterinarian?According to Kathleen Sky, the TOS-era Enterprise had a ship's vet, who figures prominently in Death's Angel.
Pretty much.A xeno-veterinarian?![]()
Pretty much.
One of the reasons why I consider Death's Angel to be a "guilty pleasure" is the level of silliness from the shipload of ambassadors from "barnyard" sentient species, and the other reason is that the book is arguably a "double-Mary-Sue," with strong Mary-Sue elements in both the vet, Dr. Ruth Rigel, and the Special Security Division (think "kinder, gentler, Section 31") agent, Elizabeth Schaeffer.
Does the Enterprise-D have a veterinarian?
...and Dracula, and a living pyramid...Pretty much.
One of the reasons why I consider Death's Angel to be a "guilty pleasure" is the level of silliness from the shipload of ambassadors from "barnyard" sentient species
I read that back in December and I have no memory of that.IIRC, there was a story in the TNG Sky's the Limit anthology that explained Spot's gender. Basically, Data didn't know how to determine gender of cats, asked Geordi, who just presumed Spot was male and said so. It wasn't until Worf had to look after Spot in Phantasms. Worf did know how to determine a cat's gender and realized Spot was actually female.
I'm not trying to sound racist or anything here, but with so many different types of life forms out there, I'm curious how exactly they were determine whether a species would be treated by a doctor or a vet. What exactly would be the cut off point where a species goes from being treated by a vet to a doctor, and if an species is originally on one side of the cut off, but then it's determined to belong on the other, would they switch? What about Matt and Kimolu on the Cerritos, would they be taken care of by T'Ana or a vet?They've got a thousand people aboard and a fair number of civilians with pets. Surely they'd make sure to have someone qualified in veterinary medicine. The original intent in TNG was that this was less a military vessel than a university village in space with a military presence aboard to protect all the scientists and their families. Quality of life on the long tour of duty was a priority, which is why they have holodecks and a bar and concerts and a theater troupe and all that. And pets are an important part of quality of life. It surely wouldn't be neglected.
I'm not trying to sound racist or anything here, but with so many different types of life forms out there, I'm curious how exactly they were determine whether a species would be treated by a doctor or a vet. What exactly would be the cut off point where a species goes from being treated by a vet to a doctor, and if an species is originally on one side of the cut off, but then it's determined to belong on the other, would they switch? What about Matt and Kimolu on the Cerritos, would they be taken care of by T'Ana or a vet?
Although I guess by the time we get to the TNG we've been dealing enough different kinds of aliens that they probably have much clearer criteria for sapience than we do today.
Yeah, that makes sense.
And trust me when I say that you really start to accept the sentience of animals when your dog purposely tricks you into giving up your spot on the couch, and then when you get pissed just smiles at you and wags your tail. I don't care what anyone else thinks, the little brat knew exactly what she was doing and planned it out perfectly.
I had a polydactyl, and she worked her extra front claws like thumbs. I would find her in the lower kitchen cabinets because she could grip the handle and pull it open, and then it would slam shut behind her.Cats are notoriously good at figuring out how to open doors.
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