I'd always thought that Hengist was descended from Earth even if he wasn't born there himself!
JB
JB
I'll admit the tatooing or facial painting in the 24th century shows with the Trill etc was much better than say those doe in the aliens in "The Apple". Still its pretty obvious they are just like humans, especially in those shows where they act exactly like humans. And that's probably not a bad thing. They are supposed to be allegory stories and we are supposed to see ourselves and our motivations in these aliens IMO. If we really saw them as alien species with fins or three arms or something then we possibly wouldn't relate to them.That guy who kidnapped Data I thought looked pretty human to me. With a similar amount of facial tattoos as Chakotay.
I'd assumed Fajo's markings were some kind of alien pigmentation like Trill spots, but looking at screencaps, they're too angular for that and do appear to be some kind of alien writing. Fajo's assistants also look pretty human.
The race who kill off people when they are 60 also looked like humans with tattoos.
Now, the Kaelon's facial markings did look like natural pigmentation. There's also a very subtle bumpiness to the skin under/around the splotches.
In most human languages, the word for our planet is the same as the word for the soil under our feet. It's a logical assumption that an alien race would use their equivalent of the word "earth" to refer to their native planet as well as the ground they walk on.And Lazarus claims that the barren planet beneath the ship is "his Earth". Wouldn't it be proper to assume that Lazarus indeed is an Earthman and thus a human, even if his Earth is a geriatric husk of a planet while Miri's world is a few centuries younger than Kirk's Earth?
That was part of what I was driving at, Human as a species may be from any planet, but Earthicans or Terrans or Earthlings are only from "Earth"
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Or then there's Humanoid, which is like a human but not.
^Yes, granted, but again, there are examples in early science fiction of writers using "human" interchangeably with "humanoid alien." Not to mention that we're talking about one of the worst, most nonsensical episodes in the series, an episode that defines dilithium and antimatter in ways that contradict every other episode in the franchise. Nothing about its terminology usage should be trusted or taken as authoritative.
^Yes, granted, but again, there are examples in early science fiction of writers using "human" interchangeably with "humanoid alien." Not to mention that we're talking about one of the worst, most nonsensical episodes in the series, an episode that defines dilithium and antimatter in ways that contradict every other episode in the franchise. Nothing about its terminology usage should be trusted or taken as authoritative.
All too true. But the sensor readings, in conjunction with Lazarus' claim about "his Earth" being below them, it's easy to see how one could confuse the meaning.
All too true. But the sensor readings, in conjunction with Lazarus' claim about "his Earth" being below them, it's easy to see how one could confuse the meaning.
Except wouldn't someone have mentioned if Lazarus' planet had the necessary uncanny resemblance to a dead planet Earth, or wondering how the hell it got all the way out to where the Enterprise was if it was supposed to be Earth?
Except wouldn't someone have mentioned if Lazarus' planet had the necessary uncanny resemblance to a dead planet Earth, or wondering how the hell it got all the way out to where the Enterprise was if it was supposed to be Earth?
At this point of the five-year mission, who would still care? It's not as if even "Miri" resulted in any in-depth analysis of how such things could be.
Timo Saloniemi
The "noting" consists of the following exchange:But it was important enought to note the first time.
The episode provides no insight into how the impossible could be possible. Our heroes leave it at that. What would go differently the next time around? Well, they shouldn't be surprised...Rand: "Earth!"
Kirk: "Not the Earth, another Earth. Another Earth...? ...Captain's Log, stardate 2713.5. In the distant reaches of our galaxy, we have made an astonishing discovery. Earth type radio signals coming from a planet which apparently is an exact duplicate of the Earth. It seems impossible, but there it is."
Give it a few million years. Lazarus was supposed to come from an advanced future where hopping between universes is possible, and he's somehow different, too (recuperates like a dinosaur, whatever this means).Besides I don't think the plant Lazarus is from even looks like Earth.
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