• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

"Logic extremists"

Although it does not break setting, it didn't sit well with me, for some reason.

I think the reason it didn't sit well with me might be that we seem to see more of Vulcan xenophobia these days than their vaunted ideals of peace. They were originally intended as an inspirational alien society, one that had renounced violence, and embraced logic as a means of overcoming a dark age. Something we humans can take solace in; that no matter how barbarous the times, we can transcend it through reason and cooperation.

Except for their murder-sex rituals.
 
Indeed. Some Vulcans will be xenophobic, just as some humans will be (*cough* Captain Archer *cough*). Adherence to logic as a philosophy actually allows one to justify all sorts of horrible things. "The needs of the many..." stuff from TWOK can be applied very tyrannically indeed.

STVI showed a Vulcan who used her understanding of logic to justify murder and political interference to prevent peace.

I agree. Valeris in ST:VI did just as you said.
 
In fact, in trying to mentally separate the fan held myth of the Vulcans from their actual on screen portrayal, the conclusion that leaps out is that canonical full Vulcans are generally arrogant, dismissive and condescending, with a tendency to place their own 'logical' analysis above any other concerns such as compassion or tact. Even those characters who mellowed in the audience's view - such as Tuvok - still display many of those traits. Lethe portrays the interesting idea that Starfleet is considered a lesser pursuit for Vulcans, and perhaps helps to explain why Starfleet Vulcans (and half Vulcans) who actually integrate into multi species crews tend to be less intense in this respect than others.

Edit: it also occurs that this is another STVI-as-touchstone moment, in a sense.
 
In fact, in trying to mentally separate the fan held myth of the Vulcans from their actual on screen portrayal, the conclusion that leaps out is that canonical full Vulcans are generally arrogant, dismissive and condescending, with a tendency to place their own 'logical' analysis above any other concerns such as compassion or tact. Even those characters who mellowed in the audience's view - such as Tuvok - still display many of those traits. Lethe portrays the interesting idea that Starfleet is considered a lesser pursuit for Vulcans, and perhaps helps to explain why Starfleet Vulcans (and half Vulcans) who actually integrate into multi species crews tend to be less intense in this respect than others.

Yeah, but don't ya find this a bit disappointing?

I mean I would have thought some of the Federation's strongest advocates would be Vulcans of the Surak-inspired kind, but we never see it. By all accounts his ideals were all about cooperation, acceptance of all life as equal, and building peace. So a union that basically seeks to end war and improve everyone's life through technology seems the most Vulcan thing ever.
 
Vulcans are a very nice people overall but they're a flawed race the same way Roddenberry humanity is (despite his claims),

Yeah, but what I mean is, politically, shouldn't Vulcans be some of the Federation's strongest supporters; an organisation of free association, that acts as a collective body for scientific research, sharing of ideas, cooperation against natural disaster, respect for the rights of all life, etc?

We instead see tons of ambivalence toward the organisation they helped found, which follows Surak's ideals, which researches the cosmos, which protects one and all.
 
Yeah, but what I mean is, politically, shouldn't Vulcans be some of the Federation's strongest supporters; an organisation of free association, that acts as a collective body for scientific research, sharing of ideas, cooperation against natural disaster, respect for the rights of all life, etc?

We instead see tons of ambivalence toward the organisation they helped found, which follows Surak's ideals, which researches the cosmos, which protects one and all.

I'd argue that actually makes a lot more sense as the groups which are the most pro-group, often have people who are anti as a counterpoint.

Basically, Britain for the EU and America for the U.N.

I think ENT far overdid "bad" Vulcans and Archer came off as an ungrateful racist but I don't mind the idea there's bad Vulcans (see Valeris) just like there are bad Starfleet officers. In this case, Sarek is a target for the extremists.
 
Spock's remarks about humans. T'Pau's questioning of Spock's choice of Kirk and McCoy as "groomsmen". Sarek's attitude towards the Tellerites. As for TAS:

Well, considering McCoy regularly called him a "damn green-blooded Vulcan" in his face, there is absolute no reason Spock's dismissive remarks towards human were any other thing than friendly counter-banter. Despite their verbal sparring, they have shown to come along quite well with the other one.

As for his constant remarks about the "superiourity" - well, he was right. He was only ever talking about very specific characteristics, not racial ideology. Vulcans ARE stronger than humans, and have telepathic abilities. And, at least as far as I remember, he never stated anything above these simple facts.

In "Journey To Babel" (TOS)...

AMANDA: When you were five years old and came home stiff-lipped, anguished, because the other boys tormented you, saying that you weren't really Vulcan, I watched you, knowing that inside that the human part of you was crying, and I cried, too.

So, Vulcan children who not have fully been logically formed and obviously act out of emotions say things that they shouldn't have said? How racist of them. What a society. Don't they know kids have act perfectly?

How convenient that you left out DS9 and ENT, there...

If you had actually read what I wrote, and not just tried to be reactionary at all cost, you would have noticed that I was complaining about how this trend started with DS9 and ENT. It's a specific complaint of mine, that they made a species, that beforehand was just "different" than us, but not better or worse, specifically a through-and-through racist society.

And that they clearly weren't before, in TOS/TNG or VOY, and that even ENT took a step back, when it showed the racist high command was specifically undermined by Romulans. But then ST09 and DIS just treated as a regular things for Vulcans to be racist, even though they really weren't before. Individuals? Sure. But not a s a society.
 
Last edited:
Sarek was no pacifist. As far back as "Journey to Babel," Spock stated that his father was perfectly capable of killing in cold blood if he had a logical reason to do so.

As for how the Vulcan's insular ways and open disdain for more emotional races meshes with IDIC . . . well, they're hardly the only culture that has some built-in contradictions. Indeed, one can argue that it makes the Vulcans more believable if they have conflicting values and priorities--and don't always live up to their ideals. ("Ideals" are goals to aspire to, not something everybody lives by all the time.)

Killing somebody in self-defense (or even only in percieved self defense), and still being a pacifist, aren't mutually excluse. Sarek was a strong pacifist, who always advocated for a diplomatic solution, way above his simple commitment to his job.

And, as I've harped on before, the Vulcans have NEVER been presented as role models. Hell, the first full Vulcan we ever met, T'Pring, plotted to get Kirk or Spock killed just to get out of an arranged marriage. And Sarek was first introduced to us as a murder suspect! TOS portrayed them as a shifty bunch from Day One . .. :)

Considering Spock(!) was a role model, and for a long time the only Vulcan we know, yes, we can say Vulcans were somewhat role-models. Spock was never portrayed as "out-of-the-ordinary", or "the-only-not-racist-Vulcan".In fact, he represented a lot of "Vulcan ideas" to the viewers, like IDIC, and showed the general benefits (and sometimes flaws) of a purely logical apporach to behaviour.

T'Pring plotted her way out of an arranged marriage. Hardly something "truly despicable racist". And in case you didn't notice: Part of the Sarek-as-murder-suspect mystery was why he would do something like that, which really isn't in his nature.

You're REALLY fucking overstepping your boundaries of "they're all a shifty bunch" here. If you'd talk that way about any other speices that is not fictional, it would be hella' racist comment. As it was, Vulcans were just portrayed as "different", following logic instead of emotions. But with still being individuals with different personal conflicts or interests. Hardly something to chastizie them for.

IMO having flawed individuals is way more realistic than a "perfect logical society", which would be the other extreme compared to your "a bunch of racist assholes". Generalizising entire species is something that really shoudln't be done, and that Star Trek even tought us not to do in the past.
 
Last edited:
Thanks for the reminder, which goes back to @Rahul 's non-point about "they never acted like this in TNG" and to @T'Zombie /Bonz' general conundrum...

TALLERA: Very well. To answer your question, for several years, there has been a small, but growing movement of extreme isolationists on Vulcan... a group that believes contact with alien races has "polluted" our culture... and is destroying Vulcan purity. This group advocates the total isolation of Vulcan from the rest of the galaxy and the eradication of all alien influences from our planet.
PICARD: It sounds like a very... illogical philosophy.
TALLERA: Agreed. But extremists often have a logic all their own.

As I said: The pure existence of Vulcan extremists is nothing new or should shock anybody. That is in their nature as living, flawed beings to have radical viewpoints as well.

What IS a problem, is that Vulcans have recently been portrayed as a racist Apartheid-regime, in which non-Vulcans get institutionalized dis-advantages. That is both problematic, and a very recent addition to the franchise. And one that clashes with the central Vulcan theme of "IDIC". And one, I'm honestly really not fond of.
 
As I said: The pure existence of Vulcan extremists is nothing new or should shock anybody. That is in their nature as living, flawed beings to have radical viewpoints as well.

What IS a problem, is that Vulcans have recently been portrayed as a racist Apartheid-regime, in which non-Vulcans get institutionalized dis-advantages. That is both problematic, and a very recent addition to the franchise. And one that clashes with the central Vulcan theme of "IDIC". And one, I'm honestly really not fond of.

Allow me to enter this debate if you don't mind.

I think it's notable that when Spock was actually developed as a character, a lot of focus was made on the fact he's the most Vulcan who ever lived and may actually be that way in part because Spock overcompensated. As we saw in the one canonical TAS (which was always canonical), Spock was tormented for his half-human blood and suffered because of it. "Amock Time" actually said that Spock's efforts were successful and the biggest complaint his fiance had wasn't that Spock was half-human or other innate qualities but that he was TOO FAMOUS and TOO BELOVED to be a husband she could stand.

But yes, much of Spock's fandom was because he was an outsider and many people have commented his story line was due to the challenges of being mixed race in the Sixties until the Presemt Day.

I don't think the Vulcans are being portrayed as apartheid. I think they're prejudiced and there's a difference. As I said up there, "Vulcans are snooty and condescending. Romulans are genocidal murderers."

There's a bit of a spectrum here.
 
I think it's notable that when Spock was actually developed as a character, a lot of focus was made on the fact he's the most Vulcan who ever lived and may actually be that way in part because Spock overcompensated. As we saw in the one canonical TAS (which was always canonical), Spock was tormented for his half-human blood and suffered because of it. "Amock Time" actually said that Spock's efforts were successful and the biggest complaint his fiance had wasn't that Spock was half-human or other innate qualities but that he was TOO FAMOUS and TOO BELOVED to be a husband she could stand.

I agree a lot here - Spock certainly was not only a hero to us, the viewers, but also in-universe. How much he really overcompensated being Vulcan, and how much of it was being REALLY fucking professional and good at everything is to be debated.

IMO the "outsider who represents the ideals his people should follow" is something that applies much more to Worf than to Spock. The Vulcans were always portrayed as somewhat secluded. But it was never made clear how much of that was self-inflicted, and how much just a result of strangers not necessary wanting to live in the equivalent of a monk monastry where sex is only every 7 years.

But yes, much of Spock's fandom was because he was an outsider and many people have commented his story line was due to the challenges of being mixed race in the Sixties until the Presemt Day.

Indeed. And that became also reflected in the writing. As in, people were a bit more lewd in their comments as they would be today (norms of society - and what is frowned upon to say and what not - change over time). So there's plenty of remarks about him being Vulcan (or us being humans) made that wouldn't be made today. But overall, there was no inherint racist element in the portrayal of Spock, or the Vulcans as a whole. Quite on the contrary actually. IDIC was not just a Vulcan motto, but also something of a commentary by the creators.
 
I don't think the Vulcans are being portrayed as apartheid. I think they're prejudiced and there's a difference. As I said up there, "Vulcans are snooty and condescending. Romulans are genocidal murderers."

There's a bit of a spectrum here.

THIS is IMO the whole point of this debate. Because I am ABSOLUTELY your opinion here.

But I think both Star Trek 09 ("Your human mother") and DIS ("only ONE non-Vulcan allowed") introduce an element of racism inherint to the system, perpetuated by authoritve figures, that is completely new to the Vulcans, and IMO really shouldn't be there. Because it leaves the realms of "snooty and condescending" (which is a TOTALLY fair characterisation), and enters into the realms of "institutionalised discrimination based on race" (which is NOT).
 
What IS a problem, is that Vulcans have recently been portrayed as a racist Apartheid-regime, in which non-Vulcans get institutionalized dis-advantages. That is both problematic, and a very recent addition to the franchise. And one that clashes with the central Vulcan theme of "IDIC". And one, I'm honestly really not fond of.

Agreed. There's an ugliness to this series' take on the Vulcans that I'm not enjoying.
 
One issue I've always had with how Vulcans are depicted is they are supposed to have naturally stronger emotions than humans, but suppress them through training and discipline. Presuming that neural structure is roughly analogous between humans and Vulcans (which it should be in the Trekverse, because of interbreeding) one would expect that humans, with comparably weaker emotional extremes, would be more able to condition themselves to suppress all emotion. They should be "better Vulcans than Vulcans"
 
Every live Vulcan we met in TOS other than Spock was a major dick.
Isn't that just one Vulcan? Sarek was classy, urbane, and walked with authority. He was the man!

One issue I've always had with how Vulcans are depicted is they are supposed to have naturally stronger emotions than humans, but suppress them through training and discipline. Presuming that neural structure is roughly analogous between humans and Vulcans (which it should be in the Trekverse, because of interbreeding) one would expect that humans, with comparably weaker emotional extremes, would be more able to condition themselves to suppress all emotion. They should be "better Vulcans than Vulcans"
Humans are better. And they probably could. Vulcans are just a lot smarter, stronger, and live longer, well, except for the class of '49.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top