In retrospect, I think this could be read wrong. No offense or dismissal was intended!
But scifi really works best when the writers don't think through the implications of the wonders the introduce. Larry Niven is insufferable for ostensibly having worked it all out from the get-go, even directly channeling that to his Pak species eventually; finding different interpretations to what he created isn't all that difficult to do, and the writers he allowed into his Known Space sandbox eventually had a ball with that! Trek writers know they aren't Larry Niven (except perhaps when they are): they realize that their successors will chop their work to pieces for the sheer fun of it, and won't try and nail down anything with nails thick enough to unduly damage those chopping blades.
Timo Saloniemi
I have to disagree here.
Scifi might become ridiculous when the writers don't think through the implications of the wonders the introduce. There are dozens of examples when this has happened. Especially in Star trek when the fans just love to dissect every possible error and bring it up in the cold daylight.
The problems with the Voyager writers was that they didn't even seem to care. As for all the craziness they posed on the poor Ocampa which actually made me wonder what they were on when I watched
Elogium, they seem to have no clue in what they were doing.
Like the silly short lifespan, the one-child thing and the whole Elogium process itself. They just seem to think that "Oh, this is new, we have never had that in any Star Trek Series before".
Their whims could easily have ben used to give the Ocampa a lifespan of 500 years or to a species which change skin or body each 25th year to stay alive for hundreds of years. It would also have been like "Oh, this is new, we have never had that in any Star Trek Series before".
And when they realized that their idea didn't work or was highly unrealistic, they just plowed on like a locomotive in a glass shop, just like "Ah never mind, the viewers won't notice". No explanations, not a single attempt to correct the errors in any way.
Which was just what happened with the problems with shuttles and torpedoes. They were happily crashing shuttles and blasting torpedoes like hail without even thinking about the fact that Voyager was supposed to have only two shuttles and a limited supply of torpedoes. "Never mind, the viewers won't notice".
The point is that the viewers
did notice and then is when scifi become ridiculous.
However, there is a positive aspect of it too which is to come up with logical explanations for all the errors and odd things which have occurred in certain episodes, something which has given me great pleasure and a lot of fun for many years.
There's a page on the
Kes Website which is dedicated to this, it's called
Voyager's Mysteries-and how to solve them. There you can find a lot of explanations for many things, like the Ocampa life-span, the never ending supply of torpedoes, what
Threshold really was about, the secret with Owen Paris and who Nicole Janeway really is.
