I'm saying a categorical rejection of such things implies certain epistemological convictions I find lacking.
Amazon does have it streaming, for free if you have Prime or for $12.99 for the whole season if you're not a Prime member.I admit I liked the idea of Charlie and 01 Boxer switching places. Although the rest of it seemed kind of confusing.
Still, I'll be content if they can give us 1) a home video release in region 1, plus THE SOUNDTRACK ALBUM.
This is way off topic now...
It's interesting, though.
^Mental illness is not a thing of the past in the Federation, there were two TOS episodes on it.
Is there legal chaos in the USA where one state has the death penalty and another states does not? Is there legal chaos in the EU where one nation has an age of sexual consent as 16 (UK) and another nation has it at 12 (Spain)?
And the EU is a wanna be 'United States' over here!
If Kirk had been killed on Vulcan, how would his family find out about it, would McCoy tell, would T'Pring tell? I doubt it. The whole incident would be covered up by Starfleet
no matter how much Spock wanted to be arrested, he was not in this right mind.
As for galactic migration, I agree with you there. I am sure there are even minor, migration restrictions on Earth between nation states, Australia would insist on it! lol
If Spock had killed Kirk in the duel, I'm not sure what Kirk's relatives would be able to do to Spock. Kirk willingly engaged in it, after all.
If anything, the pressure would be on the Vulcans, who didn't TELL Kirk it was a fight to the death until he'd already agreed (and thus too late to back out).
Speaking of which, though: Given that it's legal for Vulcans to engage in death duels (even with non-Vulcans) as a matter of ritual, why did Picard take Worf to task for killing Duras? That was a death duel that took place on Klingon territory, according to Klingon law, and involved only Klingons.
And another thing: What about Gowron? Does Worf deserve a reprimand for killing Gowron as well? And that happened on DS9 - Federation territory - not a Klingon ship. Worf, a Starfleet officer, challenges Gowron for the chancellorship. And Sisko doesn't reprimand Worf for doing it. So it would seem that Sisko knows more about Klingon customs than Picard, eh?
Well, Sisko does tear into Worf for his role in Kurn's attempted suicide attempt.
It seems clear that there's an awful lot of background information about the Federation's legal system and how Federation membership works that we simply do not know, and which could shed some light on many of the issues we're touching on if we did know it.
How canyon be sure there aren't grays? Or fairies or angels or demons? How do you know your confidence regarding matter being the only thing in the universe isn't misplaced?
How are fairies, angels and demons "grays"? It's not like they are somewhere between science and believe...
All sorts of legal chaos can entail if your fundamental rights vary from one subpolity to another within a democratic union.
Well, that's the question, isn't it? If consensual homicide is not a universal right within the Federation -- albeit one that would almost certainly need to be regulated within strict conditions to ensure that it is genuinely consensual -- then that opens up all sorts of legal quandaries. I can see a scenario where the United Earth Ministry of Justice puts out an arrest warrant for Spock and the United Earth Attorney-General or United Earth Prime Minister put pressure on the Confederacy of Vulcan to extradite Spock to United Earth to stand trial for murder. And then maybe the Vulcan government refuses to extradite, and other Federation Member States start falling into two camps -- maybe the Tellarites are outraged and so the United Planets of Tellar announce that if Spock sets foot on Tellar, he'll be extradited to United Earth immediately, but the Andorian Empire (remembering their own right to Ushaan) announces that Spock is welcome on Andor and will be protected from anyone seeking to remove him to Earth (all the while the Alpha Centauri Concordium is just like, "Guys, could we just not fight about this?"). And so then you've got the Federation government in a bind, and maybe the Federation Department of Justice is suddenly forced to decide whether or not they will enforce a United Earth arrest warrant on Vulcan soil.
Your example, though, comes from a point in time when that particular right (marriage to a partner of the same sex) was still in the process of being established.
When I was growing up, my parents knew an unmarried couple who were first cousins. At that time in California, first cousins were not allowed to marry (not sure if that's still the case).
IIRC, they could have chosen to move to one of several other states where such marriages were legal, live there long enough to establish residency, get married and move back to California, and California would recognize their marriage, but they chose not to do this. Some things may have changed, but I think the basic principle is still that all marriages are legal from one state to the next.
But, the fact that first cousin marriage is legal in some states but not others, but those states where it is illegal may recognize it when it is performed in another state for residents of that state, does to me suggest a possibility: Maybe some Federation Member States ban consensual homicide unless it is being undertaken in accordance with the legal guidelines of a fellow Federation Member States whose homeworld at least one of the parties is descended from. So maybe, for instance, an Ushaan is legal on United Earth if at least one of the parties is a biological Andorian and the relevant laws of the Andorian Empire are being followed. That might be a way to reconcile differing laws about consensual homicide rituals -- and it would also open the door to explaining why Picard and Sisko both chewed Worf out for his consensual homicide rituals (since the Klingon Empire is not a Federation Member State with a consensual homicide ritual that is legally protected under Federation law).
Dualism is an explicit reality in the Star Trek universe. Story after story has turned upon the "fact" that human beings and other sentients have essential natures including their thought processes, memories, emotions etc. that can be not just copied but actually transferred from one vessel to another such that the essence - Hell, call it a 'soul' - no longer occupies the original body.
Yep, it's superstition - and it's Star Trek.
All you're really saying is that if we could measure and study the soul and prove it exists then it would be a scientific fact and not a superstition. That's kind of a self-evident "Duh!"
What you're doing, on behalf of Trek, is hand-waving - "since in Star Trek they act like Dualism is science, Star Trek is being scientific rather than superstitious in employing Dualism as a plot device."
Ain't so.
Anyone who believes Picard was correct in reprimanding Worf, must also logically believe Spock deserved the same reprimand for fighting in the kunat kalifee. If Spock gets a free pass, so must Worf.
SPOCK: Doctor, I shall be resigning my commission immediately, of course.
MCCOY: Spock, I
SPOCK: So I would appreciate your making the final arrangements.
MCCOY: Spock, I
SPOCK: Doctor, please, let me finish. There can be no excuse for the crime of which I'm guilty. I intend to offer no defence. Furthermore, I shall order Mister Scott to take immediate command of this vessel.
It seems obvious that Duras was the collaborator, given that we later actually see his sisters doing that very thing. If Lursa and B'Etor were in league with the Romulans, Duras surely was as well.
Have you guys read the Blueprint for Season Two? It sounds like it would have been crazy. I found that shortly after it ended and I always try and share whenever I come across other CJ fans.
Still, I'll be content if they can give us 1) a home video release in region 1
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