Yes, I am.You are under no obligation to understand people who see the world differently than you do. Though you will have to put up with us irrational people on the internet.![]()
Thank you.
Yes, I am.You are under no obligation to understand people who see the world differently than you do. Though you will have to put up with us irrational people on the internet.![]()
Accepting that humans are sometimes irrational beyond rhyme or reason is the rational choice.
One could argue that Spock's entire TOS movie arc is coming to that realization is true about himself.
I see. So family heirlooms are now characters.There’s nothing irrational about it. If people didn’t have any sentimental attachments to inanimate objects, then no one would prize collecting things, or keep family heirlooms, etc
I see. So family heirlooms are now characters.
If not, then this is confusing two issues. It is not irrational to put emotional attachment to an inanimate object.
Treating it like a character? That's the irrational and confusing part.
So it is to remain unknowable unless you already have it?Entertainment is not the real world. It is really that simple.
So it is to remain unknowable unless you already have it?
How that makes an inanimate object a character.What remains unknowable? Entertainment and the real world are two distinct things. One allows for some folks to root for characters like Gul Dukat or Empress Georgiou, while no one in their right mind would be rooting for Stalin, Hitler or Pol Pot in the real world.
How that makes an inanimate object a character.
I couldn't agree more.Good Lord…pages of this.
This is why bullies took our lunch money.
I don't believe that the Enterprise rises to the level of being an actual character. It's a beloved setting.
I really got the feels when HGTV made the actual Brady house inside the Brady house.
https://www.hgtv.com/shopping/news-and-trends/the-brady-bunch-house-reno-hgtv-magazine-pictures
It's also an excellent practical, more than theoretical case study of matching a set as authentically as feasible inside an exterior.
But the house is not a character.
Character means person in a story. These days, character doesn't just mean played by an actor. Yoda is a character, for certain. C-3PO and R2-D2? I'd have to call it as "yes" to both, because of their dialog (whether in a recognized language or not) and their autonomy. Lassie? Well, yeah, I think so, which reinforces R2-D2's status.
Being integral to the dramatic conflict and having the agency to influence the outcome by their choices seems to be an essential attribute of a character.
Where is the Enterprise's agency? It isn't there. She does not make decisions on her own. She does not even have feelings. So, not a character, but a beloved setting.
Because it is.
Hell, the TOS E even had a voice and probably had more lines during the run of the show than Uhura did.
I see.
Because it thinks, feels, and can respond to my wishes and desires like a regular character?
You know what? Don't answer. It's clear to me the irrational is preferred over the rational in this case.
In my opinion.
Exactly.
Thank you.
I still think of her as a character, she delivered people to the action and her limitations often decided where a story was going. The crew's affection for her pushes her beyond just being a conventional setting.
Obviously, a mileage may vary type of situation.
It is all make believe, so why does it need to be rational?
It would be nice if it was at least acknowledged as irrational.
Also, in a franchise that supposedly espouses rationality and logic and celebrates characters who show these facets (Spock, Data) the full embracing of irrationality and demanding others fall in line strikes me as very strange.
Good Lord…pages of this.
This is why bullies took our lunch money.
I couldn't agree more.
In a sadistic way, now I want to see if this makes it to Page 20.
That they can't explain.You're going to find out humans are chock full of these quirks.
I don't really consider the original Enterprise an inanimate object. It is no different than somebody who treats their pet(s) as human. I know our cats aren't human, yet everyday I talk to them like they are.
They act like people...An animal in a story can be a character because of the way that the narrative is constructed, but animals in real life are not people.
You're on.20 pages? Let's go for broke.
FIFTY!!!!!!!
It's actually quite a bit different. A cat is alive. A ship is not. A ship is inanimate. A cat is not.
Yes, quite!They act like people...![]()
I agree completely, have said so with examples (like, the Brady house), but that's not enough to make them characters.And you can have the same feelings for that ship as you have for the real cat. I mean, you might not cry for the destruction of the ship like you would for the death of that cat, but you can still have an emotional response. And anyone who says they’ve never experienced an emotional response for an inanimate object has obviously never been to an art museum.
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