Simple, logic.so when you move away from one end of a spectrum you don't get closer to the other?![]()
A move to the middle is not a move to the far side.so when you move away from one end of a spectrum you don't get closer to the other?![]()
in relative terms, you are moving closer to the other side.A move to the middle is not a move to the far side.
Why would more of one thing not mean less of its opposite? It's logical.![]()
so when you move away from one end of a spectrum you don't get closer to the other?![]()
If he wasn’t for him you would not have Star Trek.Gene didn't approve of TWOK either. The days are long past my giving a crap. The more I learn about him the less I care.
If he wasn’t for him you would not have Star Trek.
That does not make him the arbiter of what makes for good Star Trek or for good storytelling. In point of fact, many of the elements that made Star Trek more than just another 1960s sci-fi show were introduced by other people, including Gene L. Coon, D.C. Fontana, and Leonard Nimoy. Auteur theory simply does not apply to TOS.
Yeah, Michael Chabon who's won the Pulizter, the Hugo and the Nebula is talentless and doesn't know how to write. Kristen Beyer who's been writing Trek in prose and on screen for over a decade doesn't know how to write.sure and that’s why tos is far superior to std and stp. They utilized actual science fiction writers and people that knew how to write. They were able to make entertain gone hour stories following Genes rules for the most part. Writers today just dont have that kind if talent. Everyone has to have a moral grey scale. It’s frankly getting tiring and boring,
Bad example. Friday rarely used his gun, and even more rarely missed an opportunity to engage in an infodump monologue.Joe Friday doesn't stop to explain the mechanics of his .38 before he uses it
If you move to the middle, you have moved away from all sides equally.in relative terms, you are moving closer to the other side.
Sci said:That does not make him the arbiter of what makes for good Star Trek or for good storytelling. In point of fact, many of the elements that made Star Trek more than just another 1960s sci-fi show were introduced by other people, including Gene L. Coon, D.C. Fontana, and Leonard Nimoy. Auteur theory simply does not apply to TOS.Pubert said:If he wasn’t for him you would not have Star Trek.
sure and that’s why tos is far superior to std and stp. They utilized actual science fiction writers and people that knew how to write.
They were able to make entertain gone hour stories following Genes rules for the most part. Writers today just dont have that kind if talent. Everyone has to have a moral grey scale. It’s frankly getting tiring and boring,
Writers today just dont have that kind if talent.
sure and that’s why tos is far superior to std and stp. They utilized actual science fiction writers and people that knew how to write. They were able to make entertain gone hour stories following Genes rules for the most part. Writers today just dont have that kind if talent. Everyone has to have a moral grey scale. It’s frankly getting tiring and boring,
And...? That doesn't make him the perfect arbiter of all Star Trek either.If he wasn’t for him you would not have Star Trek.
You would rather have the black and white moralizing rather than acknowledging that life isn't black and white?Everyone has to have a moral grey scale. It’s frankly getting tiring and boring,
Impossible.If you move to the middle, you have moved away from all sides equally.
To say that something is "more dystopian" because it is not perfect is deceptive and inaccurate language. "Dystopia" is not a synonym for "any fictional society where bad things happen." It is not even a synonym for "a setting where terrible things happen" or "a setting where crimes against sentient beings" happen. Dystopia refers specifically to societies primarily characterized by authoritarianism and/or oppression.
[...]
You can reasonably say the Federation is depicted in darker terms than in TNG. That would be a defensible position, particularly with regards to the development of widespread (but not universal!) prejudice against synths. But it's really not reasonable to use the word "dystopian" for a society that, while deeply flawed, is still not fundamentally oppressive.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DystopiaA dystopia (from Ancient Greek δυσ- "bad" and τόπος "place"; alternatively cacotopia or simply anti-utopia) is a community or society that is undesirable or frightening.
That's what we see in most cases: a combination of both.
I agree. That is a big part of my thing with the fashion in PIC-it looks like a more subdued update to the colors of TNG. I would expect that, especially after the whole "Dominion War" kerfuffle that probably severely impacted Federation culture as a whole.I know the topic has shifted from shirts -- where it originally was -- but one thing stood out to me while I was re-watching "Et in Arcadia Ego" and you can blame this thread for my noticing something I wouldn't have noticed before. The shirt Picard's wearing for most of the episode wouldn't have looked out of place on TNG. It's toned down a little, but I chalk that up to the difference between the 2360s and the 2390s.
Back to your regularly scheduled Utopia vs. Dystopia, already in-progress.
Cool. Where's the part in PIC that I should be scared of that reflects the Federation?That's what we see in most cases: a combination of both.
Bad example. Friday rarely used his gun, and even more rarely missed an opportunity to engage in an infodump monologue.
Exhibit A:
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