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Spot's fate

Not according to a post earlier in the thread. I tried to quote it but it won't come up in my post. It pops up in the edit window, but then disappears when I post.
 
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This one @JD?

THe only mention of spot in Persistence was when Worf woke up, gave her some food, then Choudhury came in and said Spot was in charge. There was no mention of a spot/data interaction.

"She (spot) was roughly seventeen years old by his estimate, and despite the preventive care she received from the ship’s veterinary medical specialist, she was showing signs of her age. With proper care and nutrition, she might live another decade, but he (worf) sensed in the cat a spirit almost Klingon in its fierce pride; he knew it would offend her dignity to prolong her life after its quality had expired. As he procured her favorite dietary formula from his replicator with the press of a button, he promised himself that he would safeguard her honor as he would that of any true warrior. There will come a good day to die, my friend. But for you, this is not that day."

At this stage Spot had been with worf for 5 years.
 
Some cats live until their late teens/early twenties with a high quality of life, and that's now. I would think by the 24th Century, feline life spans are probably increased just as humans are.
 
Some cats live until their late teens/early twenties with a high quality of life, and that's now. I would think by the 24th Century, feline life spans are probably increased just as humans are.

Not a given, though. It's only some cats. Even if future medicine increased the average, it wouldn't mean every cat lived that long.
 
Spot lived on the Enterprises, D and E, after all. More timely access to better medical care, surrounded by scientists, and owned mostly by Data, an android that can remember anything he reads. If any cat is likely to live very long and prosper, it's Spot.
 
Spot lived on the Enterprises, D and E, after all. More timely access to better medical care, surrounded by scientists, and owned mostly by Data, an android that can remember anything he reads. If any cat is likely to live very long and prosper, it's Spot.

Also subjected to the stress of frequent space battles, the health hazards from weird cosmic phenomena, the occasional mutation into a reptile, etc.

And even cats who get the best medical care aren't guaranteed a long life. It just improves their chances. When I got my cats Tasha and Shadow as kittens, I was confident that, with modern medical care, they'd probably live into their 20s, but they only made it to 17 and 19, respectively. And both had brushes with death when they were only a few years old, thyroid disease for Tasha and a right-of-way disagreement with a moving car in Shadow's case. There are no guarantees.
 
Also subjected to the stress of frequent space battles, the health hazards from weird cosmic phenomena, the occasional mutation into a reptile, etc.

Also true. Still, the Enterprise is one of the cutting edges of science, after all. If Spot had been on a cargo freighter or a passenger liner and met with similar stresses, the chances would be less favorable.

And even cats who get the best medical care aren't guaranteed a long life. When I got my cats Tasha and Shadow as kittens, I was confident that, with modern medical care, they'd probably live into their 20s, but they only made it to 17 and 19, respectively....There are no guarantees.

Nothing is guaranteed, indeed. If they're making it that far in the 20th-21st century on Earth living normal (relatively speaking) cat lives, then Spot? Who knows?
 
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