So just to nail you down on this so we can put it to bed, you do accept that old age is not a disease as you previously stated?you're not even responding to stuff I'm writing anymore in any way that I can tell, so I don't see the point in continuing.
I agree with Hartzilla that this thread should go back to an overall discussion of the quality of the film itself.
So just to nail you down on this so we can put it to bed, you do accept that old age is not a disease as you previously stated?you're not even responding to stuff I'm writing anymore in any way that I can tell, so I don't see the point in continuing.
I agree with Hartzilla that this thread should go back to an overall discussion of the quality of the film itself.
Again: relocating people and destroying and entire planet just to live a bit longer? When all you have to do is to set up your own colony on that planet?
Are 150+ years really not enough? Why the greed for life?
Yes, in that fictional scenario, it's my serious question. Getting old and dying is pretty natural. If people will never grow old, you will see that they will stop getting children. You will see that progress stops. You will see that people will start to delay everything because they have so much time. It's not a world I'd want to live in.
(remember, the entire Federation CAN'T relocate to the Briar Patch planet, but the medical resources CAN be brought to the entire Federation, so the issue of "setting up a colony vs relocation" is an irrelevant one.)
Yes, in that fictional scenario, it's my serious question. Getting old and dying is pretty natural. If people will never grow old, you will see that they will stop getting children. You will see that progress stops. You will see that people will start to delay everything because they have so much time. It's not a world I'd want to live in.
well dealing with the aspects of this fictional scenario, it's unclear how much of a longer lifespan these magic particles would bring. I doubt that a few extra centuries would lead to the collapse you foresee.
The Vulcans and other species have longer lifespans than Humans and it hasn't lead to stagnation.
Maybe it would lead to some negative results, but I'd rather folks have the choice between suicide or boredom than not to have that choice.
Yes, in that fictional scenario, it's my serious question. Getting old and dying is pretty natural. If people will never grow old, you will see that they will stop getting children. You will see that progress stops. You will see that people will start to delay everything because they have so much time. It's not a world I'd want to live in.
well dealing with the aspects of this fictional scenario, it's unclear how much of a longer lifespan these magic particles would bring. I doubt that a few extra centuries would lead to the collapse you foresee.
The Vulcans and other species have longer lifespans than Humans and it hasn't lead to stagnation.
Maybe it would lead to some negative results, but I'd rather folks have the choice between suicide or boredom than not to have that choice.
Well... how many aspects of human life do you want to control? Eternal life to give humans a choice between suicide and boredom? Seriously?
And who decides who gets to live longer? Is it a question of price? Abilities? Social status?
Someone has to decide, because it doesn't seem they have an endless amount of particles. They run the process once, then the rings and the planet are destroyed. Whatever they collect there wouldn't last forever.
what are you talking about? I'm not trying to "control" any aspects. Benefitting from the particles would be voluntary.
And why are you inserting things in the argument that aren't in the movie? It seems like the process they're considering would benefit the entire Federation, not only certain groups.
Further, even if it WAS a limited amount, is that a reason to deny it to all of the potential citizens who could get it?
Is that how you approach new food sources or cures for things?
"well, we can't guarantee we could bring this vaccine to every single person in the country, so we'll just forgot about the vaccine, because otherwise they'd have to..... MAKE DECISIONS! HORRORS!"
what are you talking about? I'm not trying to "control" any aspects. Benefitting from the particles would be voluntary.
And why are you inserting things in the argument that aren't in the movie? It seems like the process they're considering would benefit the entire Federation, not only certain groups.
Further, even if it WAS a limited amount, is that a reason to deny it to all of the potential citizens who could get it?
Is that how you approach new food sources or cures for things?
"well, we can't guarantee we could bring this vaccine to every single person in the country, so we'll just forgot about the vaccine, because otherwise they'd have to..... MAKE DECISIONS! HORRORS!"
Oh yes, these decisions are horrors. Who would you give it to?
You say benefitting would be voluntary. But what does one have to do to get these particles? Do you sell it? If you do, how much do you want them to pay for eternal life? Do you make a lottery? Will you exclude people? Murderers? Thieves? Lawyers? Will Klingons get it, or only Federation citizens? Will you give the supply to Starfleet first and only what's left to civilians? All that stuff. Something as big as eternal life particles isn't easy.
You can bet all your vital organs that the cure against Aids or cancer won't be affordable for you and me.
Getting old and dying is pretty natural.
It would depend on the half-life of the particlesSomeone has to decide, because it doesn't seem they have an endless amount of particles. They run the process once, then the rings and the planet are destroyed. Whatever they collect there wouldn't last forever.
The Baku were separated from the particles by thousands of miles. While seriously diseased patents might require close exposure, for the general public, containers of particles located in satellites above population centers would also benefit the many billions of the Federation.But what does one have to do to get these particles?
You might not want to make that bet. The current cost of the cures for many of the diseases that were cured in the twentieth century are in the thirty to one hundred dollar range.You can bet all your vital organs that the cure against Aids or cancer won't be affordable for you and me.
Believe that if it’s what makes the story work for you, but do you really think it’s the intent of the film? What does the film imply happens after the end credits roll:As for Picard opposing Dougherty, again I think it's simply a matter of opposing the deception and violation of Starfleet's better modus operandi.
I changed my mind. I don’t hate the movie anymore. It’s brilliant. It’s a brilliant social experiment demonstrating how easily common sense moral judgment can be upended with cheap tricks like the B&P separation of roles, irrelevant ad hominem, and aesthetics.
I changed my mind. I don’t hate the movie anymore. It’s brilliant. It’s a brilliant social experiment demonstrating how easily common sense moral judgment can be upended with cheap tricks like the B&P separation of roles, irrelevant ad hominem, and aesthetics.
That was very harshly put, and if it came across as impugning the moral character of anyone in this thread, I apologize. It’s not so much a moral failing as a case study in how effective emotional manipulation can influence one’s perception of facts.
I am reminded of a “Terrorist Dry Run” article that made the rounds shortly after 9/11. The author wrote about a plane flight she took and the behavior of three Muslim passengers who she suspected were performing a dry run for a future terrorist attack. It was a brilliant work of emotionally manipulative writing by someone who may not have thought she was being manipulative.
I created a redacted version of the article: I removed all the paranoid speculation and all the visceral descriptions of the terror the writer and her husband felt, and I left in all the facts she reported about what she witnessed. What remained was a description of remarkably unremarkable behavior, nothing particularly mysterious or sinister.
When the article made the rounds on the message boards, most readers said the author’s speculation was plausible, that it may indeed have been a terrorist dry run, and in any case it demonstrated serious holes in security. When pressed to defend those positions, they invariably ended up remembering events and behaviors that were not actually reported in the article.
I was amazed. People believed the author’s conclusions because of the emotional effectiveness of the writing. When the mind becomes emotionally committed to a conclusion that isn’t supported by the available facts, it can make assumptions to support the conclusion, be blind to having done so, and then remember the assumptions as given facts rather than the mind’s own creations.
I think something similar happens with Insurrection. The film hits all the right emotional notes to make Picard come across as the good guy. The fact that we’re STNG fans and he’s Jean-Luc Picard provides a big head start, but there’s more to it than that. However, the story it tells doesn’t support the morality of his position (except under extreme Tea Party values that few of us share). Thus when the mind is emotionally committed to the perception of Picard as hero and challenged to defend it, the result is assumptions, interpretations, and fanwanks that are inconsistent with what the film is clearly saying, and obliviousness to the nature of these rationalizations.
It’s not something craven or stupid. It’s just how the human mind works.
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