Yeah, but it is not that you can't get the qualifications earlier, it is just that they're required for being a Commander.Which struck me as kind of silly. Surely LCMRs and LTs have stood watches on the bridge.
Yeah, but it is not that you can't get the qualifications earlier, it is just that they're required for being a Commander.Which struck me as kind of silly. Surely LCMRs and LTs have stood watches on the bridge.
Which is also silly. Commander is just a rank. McCoy was a Commander. Pulaski was a Commander. Neither one was qualified to run the bridge. Commander and command are not synonyms. The writers were idiots.Yeah, but it is not that you can't get the qualifications earlier, it is just that they're required for being a Commander.
Pulaski must have been qualified. I can easily accept that the system was different in McCoy's time. But yeah, it is a bit odd. Then again, you don't really need a commander rank to be a CMO.Which is also silly. Commander is just a rank. McCoy was a Commander. Pulaski was a Commander. Neither one was qualified to run the bridge. Commander and command are not synonyms. The writers were idiots.
Why must she be qualified? Because she held the rank of Commander? Again that's conflating command with Commander. It's probably the same idiot thinking that made Sisko a Commander rather than a Captain.Pulaski must have been qualified. I can easily accept that the system was different in McCoy's time. But yeah, it is a bit odd. Then again, you don't really need a commander rank to be a CMO.
Sure, I am not disagreeing that it is a weird requirement. I merely meant that under the system established in the show, whether you like it or not, Pulaski must have had the command qualifications.Why must she be qualified? Because she held the rank of Commander? Again that's conflating command with Commander. It's probably the same idiot thinking that made Sisko a Commander rather than a Captain.
But if you have the time in service and a large enough department there's no reason to stall out at Lt Commander. Not everyone at the rank of Commander and above needs to run a starship bridge. I don't think real militaries work that way.
Like I said the writers really didn't think it through or do any research. They just wanted to do a story about Troi taking command.Sure, I am not disagreeing that it is a weird requirement. I merely meant that under the system established in the show, whether you like it or not, Pulaski must have had the command qualifications.
That's where things get weird, Thine Own Self was written by Ron Moore, who basically was 90s Trek's military expert.Like I said the writers really didn't think it through or do any research.
Which is also silly. Commander is just a rank. McCoy was a Commander. Pulaski was a Commander. Neither one was qualified to run the bridge. Commander and command are not synonyms. The writers were idiots.
IIRC it was to get a Commanders rank. Though I'd prefer to think of it as just to have command of the bridge as you said.The bridge officer's test isn't required to reach the rank of Commander. It's required for any staff officer who wants to have command of the bridge.
IIRC it was to get a Commanders rank. Though I'd prefer to think of it as just to have command of the bridge as you said.
Why would it only apply to blueshirts? Considering how easy it is to switch departments, it really isn't a feasible assumption. It is probably just that people whose jobs do not revolve around command decisions and do not have aspirations for command are less likely to take the test. And note how similar Troi's test is to Kobyashi Maru, which we see lieutenants Saavik and (in Kelvin) Kirk taking. Neither was a cadet any more, I think they were there for exactly this sort of extra command training.I've been told that ALL officers have to take the test (not just blueshirts) but I find no evidence in the episode to support that. Indeed, the only ones who we know for sure HAVE taken the test are blueshirts - Crusher and Troi. I know this isn't proof for my assumption, but it's not proof against it either.![]()
I'm not gonna rewatch the episode for this, but my recollection is that it was related to the rank, as little sense as it might make. And we don't know that Pulaski didn't have these command qualifications, Bones probably didn't, but that was a century earlier and regulations change.As for taking the test to simply reach CDR rank: I doubt it. McCoy and Pulaski, as far as we know, did not take the test.
and at the endThine Own Self said:CRUSHER: I volunteered tonight. I like to put in a little Bridge time now and then, stay on top of operations, tactical procedures. The truth is, I like it. It's not every doctor who gets to command a starship, even if it is the night shift.
TROI: May I ask you a personal question? Why did you decide to become a Commander? I mean, you didn't need the rank in order to be Chief Medical Officer, so why put yourself through all the extra work?
CRUSHER: Oh, I don't know. I never even thought about my rank for a long time. It seemed pretty trivial compared to being a doctor. But then, about eight years ago, I started to feel like I wanted to stretch myself a little.
TROI: Well, if you'll excuse me, I have the Bridge this watch.
DATA: Counsellor, have you been promoted in my absence?
TROI: That's right. Which means from now on you can call me sir.
DATA: Yes, sir.
At the start
CRUSHER: I volunteered tonight. I like to put in a little Bridge time now and then, stay on top of operations, tactical procedures. The truth is, I like it. It's not every doctor who gets to command a starship, even if it is the night shift.
Does not exactly match the dialogue, but I guess that is an acceptable interpretation and makes more sense. Could you elaborate on what was said about Pulaski's qualifications?A test that allows Troi to be promoted from rank A to rank B is hardly proof that the test is a requirement for rank B. Just as likely, it is a test that provides you with a promotion as a reward/incentive, completely regardless of what your starting rank is.
Similarly, other tests would be available for providing that promotion, again regardless of the starting rank - the same incentive, but a completely different topic. And then other means that do not involve any tests whatsoever, such as accumulating service years or the heroic rescue of a grateful ambassador from wily monstrosnails.
And then there would be tests that do not provide you with brownie points counting towards a promotion, or at least not so many that you would hop from any A to any B with just one test. (And, just possibly, tests you do have to take for earning the specific rank B. But we never hear specifically of these things.) What we hear of in the case of Troi is a test verifying the acquiring of a special competence Troi originally was missing - a competence Commander Pulaski very explicitly states she lacks, with no negative effect to her career and rank progression.
All that aside, the special competence of "standing bridge watches" is a rather menial thing, something ITRW burdened on young officers when their seniors have better things to do (such as sleep or drink or play minigolf). It is described as such in "Thine Own Self" specifically. It's a way for Crusher and now Troi to kill time in a not utterly boring fashion, by their standards of boring (although somebody like Yar or LaForge would probably be bored stiff, and even Harry Kim would eventually start to gripe).
(Pulaski enters Main Bridge)
Picard: "Hello, Doctor. Have you been briefed on what's happened?"
Pulaski: "I heard, but I don't understand it, Captain."
Picard: "I wish I could say I did. Increase magnification by ten. By one hundred."
Pulaski: "Isn't this impossible, sir? I'm not a bridge officer, but... Increase by one thousand, Mr Data. By ten thousand. It does know how to do these things, doesn't it?"
Picard: "Commander Data knows precisely what he is doing."
I imagine a promotion that is given by your commanding officer without you applying, following a heroic act you performed means more to some people than simply taking an aptitude test/training course.
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