I'll be honest, I don't enjoy it as much as other series.
A Warp Drive powered by space fungus? Nah.
It's not Warp Drive. The Discovery is outfitted with a regular warp drive and this spore drive.
I'll be honest, I don't enjoy it as much as other series.
A Warp Drive powered by space fungus? Nah.
Nothing to indicate the seismic social changes that would come with inventing a replicator.
My point is that if we have money in the 23rd century, and no money in the 24th, that's a major societal change - one of the biggest in human history, in fact. Yet it doesn't seem to have changed much at all. Other than tighter uniforms, fewer buttons, and more pompous captains, Starfleet and the Federation doesn't seem to be any different. They can just make earl grey tea out of thin air.
if you had a system to convert energy to matter and an extremely efficient way to genrerate that efficiency, you wouldnt even need a replicator. that's just icing on the post-scarcity cake. If we develop fusion and start tapping the asteroids and jovian moons, for instance, we'd most likely be post-scarcity within a century or less.Would replicator technology really create a post-scarcity situation? How are replicators fueled? The raw matter has to come from somewhere.
Kor
Would replicator technology really create a post-scarcity situation? How are replicators fueled? The raw matter has to come from somewhere.
Kor
Which is how we know replicators do not work that way. If they really could convert "energy to matter" then starships wouldn't need to use antimatter as a fuel, nor would dilithium be neccesary for warp drive, you could literally dump a mass of anything you want into the warp core and convert it into energy. Replicators really just use transporter-like gadgetry to reorganize matter from one form to another, and some energy is always lost in the process, which makes replicators a net LOSS of energy no matter what you use them for.if you had a system to convert energy to matter and an extremely efficient way to genrerate that efficiency, you wouldnt even need a replicator.
There were certainly some basic points Roddenberry made about what he thought Star Trek should be, and it'd be very hard to say many of these are on display in this show.
Of course you're not allowed to say that now, as legions of sneery "move with the times" or "Roddenberry's vision was cash" types will descend on you.
Quite why a successful and popular formula had to be binned, I don't know. But there it is
Interesting post. What precisely are the basic things Roddenberry said Star Trek should always be about, and how specifically do you judge the majority of those to be absent in Star Trek Discovery?
Last time I checked, humanity has learned to survive into the future and explore the galaxy together, despite our differences.
Not sure what other "basic" things Roddenberry felt Star Trek should be about...so I'd like to understands that better.
Oh, just little things, like exploring the issues of our time through allegorical stories set in other societies. Maybe also having a crew who are likeable and get on well with each other? That works a tonic with viewers dont cha know, when they have a collective group they can root for.
While it's a positive for viewers, it is not necessary to comply with "Gene's vision."Oh, just little things, like exploring the issues of our time through allegorical stories set in other societies. Maybe also having a crew who are likeable and get on well with each other? That works a tonic with viewers dont cha know, when they have a collective group they can root for.
Of course you're not allowed to say that now, as legions of sneery "move with the times" or "Roddenberry's vision was cash" types will descend on you.
@XCV330, You must have been. Aside from the Burnham/Tyler dynamic, which understandably will be close, the majority of other interactions have come across as cold, indifferent or outright hostile. No chance of any good natured verbal sparring like Spock and Bones or Odo and Quark either. Oh no, this all FAR too intense and intellectual for that... well, or it likes to think it is.
That works a tonic with viewers dont cha know, when they have a collective group they can root for.
That good-natured racist ripping of Spock every time Bones and Kirk ganged up on him more or less forcing him to respond in kind to defend half his lineage? Doesn't really play well as well now as it used to. It's good in reruns, but its like Yeoman Rand's wig, best kept in a sealed container.
and it took a long time to get Odo and Quark's frenemy dynamic figured out. This show has had 9 episodes, all of them in a war-arc.
Discovery gets held to a double standard by people who set outright not to like it. There is gentle banter, but you have to see it. hell they dedicated 5 minutes to a loving conversation over toothbrushing. There was nothing cold in watching Burnham learn how to react to people in a way she never learned on Shenzou (probably due to being teacher's pet to Georgiou, different thread material). She's cold because she was raised that way, but when she talked to Tyler after his experiences relieving whatever happened to him, that was by no means cold.
If Discovery has to be tight and ship-shape for war scenes, people blast it. When it lets its hair down for a party, the same people blast it. There's no pleasing them, so I hope the showrunners don't bother trying and just continue to make an outstanding series.
If I may interperet, you seem to want some cuddly alternate version of a show that was not designed to be that way in the first place. maybe you might make an edit like this other SMG show:
I wouldn't deny he was a sexist pig. I never said he was a great guy. He was a man though who advanced a few ideas concerning his main creation that all the evidence would seem to show do hold some water.I think Discovery is a dull slog, and still believe "Roddenberry's Vision" was about cash, women and drugs.![]()
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