It's not less emotion, it's control over the expression, so it doesn't control you. That's what stuff upper lip means.
For example, courage isn't the absence of fear, it's the control of fear. We don't want our Starfleet heros to be a bunch of cowards just so they can be more emotionally open. I'm sure you can make similar connections with other emotions as well.
This attitude of "control" and "stiff upper lip" is a key reason why we currently have suicide rates at the levels noted in this article https://www.theguardian.com/society/2020/sep/01/male-suicide-rate-england-wales-covid-19
That isn't to accuse you of anything, but to say that they should have perfect temperament at all times is, to me, unhealthy.
I may be wrong, but I'm struggling to think of many, or any, instances in Disco where these expressions of emotion that people hate so much occurred at inappropriate times. I can think of them in people's quarters or when alone somewhere but it isn't as if halfway through that battle with Control everyone sat down and just had a little cry
I don't think repression and equanimity are the same thing. There are people who are happy and have found inner peace who have suffered all sorts of tragedies, and aren't repressed nor doing themselves psychological damage
Previously portrayed characters never lacked emotions; they just appeared to be infinitely better equipped to process and deal with them. It's heartening to think that in 200-300 years we might have reached a level as a society where tragedy needn't floor us so hard.
I take your point about where it happens - but my contention isn't mainly that it makes them unprofessional (though some of their behaviour does call that into question), more that a) it jarringly flies in the face of how we understand humans of the future to operate, based on over a dozen seasons of episodes, b) is overused so often as to desensitise - one or two traumas can be poignant, shocking, evoke empathy, but every episode begins to erode that.But it is unrealistic to expect all characters to have reached a zen like state.
The key for me is the latter half of my post where I point out that it didn't appear that they were suffering emotional trauma on the bridge mid mission but were expressing it when in the quarters or off duty.
I would also contend that 90s Trek avoided dealing with emotions to such an extent that it is not possible to determine whether they were dealt with thoroughly or in a better manner - how can they be assessed if we don't see them portrayed
I guess it's hard when you have to squash your year into 13 episodes and have half the time to squeeze your angst inThe crew of the Discovery never had that chance. So, again, the portrayed emotions are realistic and to @Ianburns252 point the crew is not showing emotions in inappropriate ways. They still do their jobs. We just see the emotional aftermath too.
I guess it's hard when you have to squash your year into 13 episodes and have half the time to squeeze your angst in![]()
I don't know about that. They devoted an entire episodes right after TBOBW to his recuperation, which on TNG is otherwise downright unheard of.
Well the TNG people were suppose to be more evolved than us. Well not so much evolved in the way Tom Paris evolved into a Lizard but they are still us but simply more well adjusted and better at dealing with emotional issues usually.
True, but compare that one episode to the zero episodes the had dealing with him recuperating from essentially living another life and watching his family and world die in The Inner Light, or from being captured and tortured by the Cardassians for what was it, a week or so in Chain of Command. The fact they did that one episode is pretty damn impressive.Devoting one or two episodes to it is still mostly ignoring it. Trauma like that is something that's constantly present in one's life, not something you only deal with once in a while.
By the standards of the time they were doing that. That was why TNG had Troi a counselor on the ship. It's just most of them didn't have the emotional baggage that we modern humans have thus they never had much to talk about in that way. The idea of a counselor is a good idea but especially when you put characters in the sessions that have major issues. Of course used brilliantly on The Sopranos. One of the underated great elements of that show.Devoting one or two episodes to it is still mostly ignoring it. Trauma like that is something that's constantly present in one's life, not something you only deal with once in a while.
If they were more well-adjusted and better at dealing with their emotional issues than we are today, then they would by definition be expressing their emotions more often and more freely than we do today.
It was extremely impressive and things like Family or The Wounded are highlights because it recognizes that trauma. I would hope that such things could be more freely expressed rather than less now.True, but compare that one episode to the zero episodes the had dealing with him recuperating from essentially living another life and watching his family and world die in The Inner Light, or from being captured and tortured by the Cardassians for what was it, a week or so in Chain of Command. The fact they did that one episode is pretty damn impressive.
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