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Is there a need for a Helm Department?

If you really think about it, is there a good in-universe reason for the Enterprise-D to have over 1,000 crewmembers? I'm sure there a lot of jobs that humans do the computer could be doing instead.

The out-of-universe reason is nobody wants to see a future in which humans are obsolete.
 
^Yes, but most of them seem to have jobs too, from what we've seen. I mean, aside from the children. What exactly would a stay-at-home spouse do in the 24th century? Putting plates back in the replicator only eats up so many minutes.
 
More people equals more plot possibilities. Also, its more interesting for the Captain to interact with people than a computer.
 
I'd think most of the civies on Enterprise were scientists of various sorts. Keiko sure fits that role. You'd also have your odd historian, linguist, and the like. They are supposed to be the tip of Starfleet's exploration arm, after all.
 
Starfleet seems to have something against AI, and robots in particular. They don't even seem to have them to do routine maintenance, like clean the waste processors. I wonder if the Telarites had some sort of robot apocalypse in their history or something :D


What we saw in the ENT episode dead stop with the repair station is more likely how repairs will really be conducted and at high speed with those robotic worker arms and stuff.
 
Starfleet seems to have something against AI, and robots in particular. They don't even seem to have them to do routine maintenance, like clean the waste processors. I wonder if the Telarites had some sort of robot apocalypse in their history or something :D


What we saw in the ENT episode dead stop with the repair station is more likely how repairs will really be conducted and at high speed with those robotic worker arms and stuff.

But that was an alien station, wasn't it? What Starfleet facilities we have seen seem to use manned worker bees and the like.

But still, that's not day-to-day stuff. It would make more sense to have a bunch of advanced Roombas doing the cleaning, rather than some non-coms/Bajorans.
 
I'd think most of the civies on Enterprise were scientists of various sorts. Keiko sure fits that role. You'd also have your odd historian, linguist, and the like. They are supposed to be the tip of Starfleet's exploration arm, after all.
I tend to think a Galaxy-class starship is as much a mobile starbase as it is a deep-space exploration vessel. In that capacity, it carries out the additional roles of a Federation embassy and township, IMO.
 
^Yes, but most of them seem to have jobs too, from what we've seen. I mean, aside from the children. What exactly would a stay-at-home spouse do in the 24th century? Putting plates back in the replicator only eats up so many minutes.

Schools, Arboretum, Lounges, and places like that would probably make use of civilians ( or is it the other way around...?...). A ship like a Galaxy Class is much like a little town. And people want to be active in its commune. Some might not like working in a Cafe, but they might be in a book club...
 
I was watching TNG the other day for the first time in years and I had to ask myself if there is any need to helm or navigation. Surely the captain/first officer could just tell the computer where they want to go and when they want to arrive by, and the ship can steer itself.

Captain: "Computer, Set course two-one-three Mark seven."

Computer: ""Unable to comply, the automatic pilot system is offline."

Automation is all very well and good, but like any system it can fail. Today a plane could take off, fly to it's destination and land all by itself." But would you fly on it without a pilot?

As for having a dedicated department, sure everyone might receive basic training in piloting a starship, but their is a difference between basic and advanced training.
 
Captain: "Computer, Set course two-one-three Mark seven."

Computer: ""Unable to comply, the automatic pilot system is offline."

Automation is all very well and good, but like any system it can fail. Today a plane could take off, fly to it's destination and land all by itself." But would you fly on it without a pilot?

As for having a dedicated department, sure everyone might receive basic training in piloting a starship, but their is a difference between basic and advanced training.

I hear what you're saying, but for me it was a case of not having really watched TNG for years, and getting a sense in the intervening years that tech has moved on here IRL and so feeling the ship should be able to fly itself. I still think it could. As for wanting to get onto a plane that could fly itself? No way! :lol:
 
Yes but tech had moved on, in TOS you needed a Navigator and Helmsman, by the time of TNG you where just down to the CONN officer, a combination of both positions.

And the ship can pilot itself, in TNG's "Remember Me" we see Beverly ordering the computer to lay in a course.
 
Captain: "Computer, Set course two-one-three Mark seven."

Computer: ""Unable to comply, the automatic pilot system is offline."

Automation is all very well and good, but like any system it can fail. Today a plane could take off, fly to it's destination and land all by itself." But would you fly on it without a pilot?

As for having a dedicated department, sure everyone might receive basic training in piloting a starship, but their is a difference between basic and advanced training.

I hear what you're saying, but for me it was a case of not having really watched TNG for years, and getting a sense in the intervening years that tech has moved on here IRL and so feeling the ship should be able to fly itself. I still think it could. As for wanting to get onto a plane that could fly itself? No way! :lol:


I don't think this is so much about the a ship being engineered to fly on itself, but the question wether humankind wants to step away from using technology and instead getting fed by it.
 
Most of us here can drive.

But how many of us can drive a car with such precision that they would be qualified to be race car driver quality, stunt driver quality, or even defensive driving level quality.

Just because everybody can drive, doesn't mean you can handle a vehicle or vessel to it's maximum potential.

There are lots of layers to driving, most people only know the surface layers of it.

The same can be applied to the helmsman.

A dedicated helmsman should be able to fly the shuttle or starship in ways that no average pilot could do.
 
Yes but tech had moved on, in TOS you needed a Navigator and Helmsman, by the time of TNG you where just down to the CONN officer, a combination of both positions.

And the ship can pilot itself, in TNG's "Remember Me" we see Beverly ordering the computer to lay in a course.
Even as far back as TOS, it's been demonstrated that a starship can fly itself once a course has been set ("The Menagerie" comes to mind right now). The same kind of automation is likely true for the majority of the ship's systems, but it's still good to have a dedicated specialist to monitor & maintain those systems and intervene in the event of a malfunction or in a sudden situation change.
 
In the end, wasn't it the point of the TNG episode Booby Trap? The computer is no surrogate for creativity asf ?
 
^Yes, but most of them seem to have jobs too, from what we've seen. I mean, aside from the children. What exactly would a stay-at-home spouse do in the 24th century? Putting plates back in the replicator only eats up so many minutes.
Would there be a role for the traditional "housewife" in the 24th century? Probably not. Heck, our technology TODAY has rendered the need for that, from a practical house maintenance standpoint, largely non-existent.

OTOH, I would imagine there would still be plenty of people who choose to be stay-at-home parents because there is a lot more to raising children than just being the housekeeper. And in the 24th century, people apparently don't have to worry about their material needs, so there would be more opportunity for someone who wanted to stay home with their children to do so, as opposed to today when you hear so many people say things like "I'd love to stay home with my children, but we need the two incomes to survive."
 
Similarly, I've always wondered if they ever need a transporter operator and a transport room as well. I mean, if Worf or someone on the bridge can beam directly from planet surface to sick bay, why bother with the actual room and extra personnel?
 
Because a computer even one as advanced as the ones in Star Trek can only do what it's programming tells it to do.
 
Similarly, I've always wondered if they ever need a transporter operator and a transport room as well. I mean, if Worf or someone on the bridge can beam directly from planet surface to sick bay, why bother with the actual room and extra personnel?

Perhaps it's about the risk being taken. It might not be as risky using a room where you can access the devices to counter problems.
 
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