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Spock and his constant use of precision

One should realize that there are different kinds of significance, too.

If an instrument gives a single figure, its significance can be questioned in two regards. How many digits are of interest to us? And how many digits are the result of false precision in the readout device versus the true resolution fo the measuring device? If the instrument is well built, then a sixteen-decimal figure can be considered significant to the second-to-last digit in this second sense of significance. It depends on the circumstances whether all the fifteen decimals really have a practical significance, though.

However, that's as regards single standalone measurements. The real significance of significance is when measurements are used in calculations. There's no point in giving the result of X/Y=Z at six significant digits if X and Y were each given at three significant digits only; the seeming accuracy of Z is not "real" there. At very best, one should give Z at three significant digits in such a case.

The significance of this sort of significance of significance in Trek is that Spock usually gives the end results of measurements or calculations, not figures that are intermediate steps in calculations. We could and should have full confidence that he has already taken into account the significance of the numbers in the arithmetic and instrument-accuracy senses, but we can still question whether the digits he gives are significant in the application sense.

Timo Saloniemi
 
He goes (echo) "No! No! No! No! No!" (fade out) and transfers his katra to a dead body?

Timo Saloniemi
 
I would expect Spock to give answers with the level of precision based on his measurements and their uncertainities, or for his theoretical calculations based on some error analysis method
 
Often his superfluous precision seems calculated to evoke a response from Kirk—a form of banter amongst friends.
 
That may be true, but I cannot believe the numbers are not accurate or precision exaggerated just to get a rise out of Kirk.
 
I'm going to quote my short story "Make-Believe," as it addresses the point about Spock and his "precision":
Secretly McCoy thought that in some instances Spock simply created his complicated explanations out of whole cloth in hopes of confusing the issue. There simply was no difference between scientific babble and pseudoscientific nonsense. (Constellations, page 363)
Secretly, I think Bones is right. ;)
 
Sisu said:
But let's face it, no one ever checked him. Or timed him. He could have been talking out of his hat for all we know.
..or at of somewhere a bit lower :devil:

I could just imagine a time period shortly after Kirk took over command where Spock spouted some specific data to Kirk and Kirk was like ...

"C'mon, really??"

At which Spock jumps up, chest thrown forward arms alternating between spread wide and slapping his chest and confronts Kirk with

"WHAT ... WHAT ... you want some of this ...you think I don't know mah shit!!!!!"

At which point Scotty rolls up behind Kirk and says to him in pig latin:

"Cap'n, ix-nay on the question-kay of ock-spay's info-day ... he's ery-vay ensitive-say!!"

And no one ever questioned him again, they simply rolled their eyes :rolleyes: :rolleyes: :rolleyes: and said thank you.

:lol: :lol: :lol:
 
Just found this floating around the net:

"Computer, compute to the last digit the value of pi" -- Spock (Wolf in the Fold)


So maybe he just finds the act of reciting Pi to it's last place a waste of time.
 
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