The Q-Ball was able to catch the E-D's stardrive section without any apparent difficulty, so if Picard's assumptions concerning the alien's psychology turned out to be incorrect the inhabitants of the presumably slower saucer would have made for a tasty main course after the battle section's entrée.
Exactly. So if Picard guessed right, the situation would be improved, and if Picard guessed wrong (but in the specific manner where Q
doesn't stop to torment his captives despite loathing them for having become captives), things would take the same course they would have taken if Picard had tried armed resistance. No point, then, in trying to fire at the Q-ball, which didn't look as if it would respond to such conventional attentions anyway.
Firing as an empty gesture of defiance would establish Picard as a brainless brute similar to Kirk (who, after finding out that the Galactic Barrier killed starships, ordered his own ship right in), and we'd get Andromeda, only with a bit more Hercules there. A despicable character by 1980s sensibilities, and unsurprisingly so. In contrast, a rare demonstration of intelligence was the sort of a surprise that helps nascent TV series gain a reputation. (And there's no such thing as a
bad reputation in the business anyway.)
I naturally dispute your assertion that there was any meaningful symmetry in their respective actions. After all, nobody on the E-D's battle bridge plied JLP with martinis while trying desperately to convince him that waving a holographic white flag was The Right Thing To Do.
Umm, Boyce wasn't concerned much with the ship's mission or Pike's related decisions - he was just boozing with his skipper for unrelated, personal reasons and decisions. As far as the actual plot-driving events went, Pike's and Picard's unconsulted, surprise displays of calm rationality in face of developments that unnerved the rest of the crew were quite comparable.
I would hardly call offering yourself - and your underlings - up for brain surgery to privacy-obsessed aliens a "rational" act.
Apparently, no harm was done, though. Why would Picard need to feel irrational apprehension at brain surgery, when he's a civilized man well versed in modern medicine, and has found agreement when consulting his resident medical specialists and master tacticians?
And why should our hero take the isolationist Paxans as a menace to the entire universe? With such a mindset, Picard should always have been following a first contact procedure wherein the target planet is first melted all the way down to the mantle, a friendly hail is then sent, and if there is a response, the planet is vaporized all the way down to the core.
Timo Saloniemi