Shades of GrayThe Q and the Gray.
Shades of GrayThe Q and the Gray.
that was expressly a copy.One other example of mind transfer is Dr. Juliana Song's consciousness into an android body, in "Inheritance".
Not to mention being the entire plot of Star Trek 3: The Search for Spock.But this is what we understand TODAY with today’s science, in the Star Trek universe you can very clearly transfer your conscience to another body, as seen in several episodes.
I am really disappointed that Adira's symbiont doesn't seem to warrant any discussion at all any longer. They made a big deal about it early on in Season 3, and now she might as well be a normal human aside from hosting Grey's force ghost.
We do know from DS9 that it's possible for hosts to talk with previous hosts as if they were still alive - or even to transfer them temporarily to other people (Curzon spent a lot of time in Odo) so the whole "consciousness transference" thing doesn't bother me. They're just not doing anything interesting with either Grey or Adira as characters any longer, which is the disappointing thing.
But for the ceremony they did in DS9 they explicitly say it is just the transfer of memories that allows the past selves to "inhabit" current people. It's not like a katra transference, the previous host isn't really alive again. Additionally, both Jadzia and Ezri had varying "visions" of Joran, but he wasn't thought to be alive either, it was just mental manifestation by the physical/host body and mind.
I know the Discovery writers, and the characters obviously, are treating this like a done deal and verified reality, but for me due to the lack of sufficient exploration or discussion of the whole "Gray is still here" topic, to me it still feels like this is just Adira's mind envisioning a memory of Gray and how he would act. I wish this storyline felt more real for me.
actually that was probably a copy: Spock made a copy of his mind inside McCoy, then immolated himself to save the ship, until he died there were two copies of spock’s mind alive at the same time.Not to mention being the entire plot of Star Trek 3: The Search for Spock.
I still have no idea how he came back. Speaking of other parts of discovery that don’t make sense...Regardless, in terms of Trek logic, it makes way more sense than how Culber came back. Didn't that have something to do with Stamets' tears?
As I said upthread, it actually doesn't matter if the Grey in Adira's mind is actually the "real Grey" in terms of having continuity of consciousness. He believes he is real, and so does Adira. If they can put him into an android body, than he will be a real person in all ways that matter.
Regardless, in terms of Trek logic, it makes way more sense than how Culber came back. Didn't that have something to do with Stamets' tears?
Yet that would be a distinction without a difference. Assuming it is a copy, it was implanted in Spock's body at the end of the movie, and thus it would be a "copy" of Spock from the end of ST3 forward through Into Darkness. The body might be the original, but the consciousness would be a "copy". Yet no one complains about it being a copy of Spock. I honestly do not understand why it would be different for Picard, other than people just like to dump on things.actually that was probably a copy: Spock made a copy of his mind inside McCoy, then immolated himself to save the ship, until he died there were two copies of spock’s mind alive at the same time.
Just give me android buttocks. I'll do the rest.
Exactly so. The mechanics of which may vary but Trek has always postulated that consciousness transfer is absolutely possible since TOS onward.But this is what we understand TODAY with today’s science, in the Star Trek universe you can very clearly transfer your conscience to another body, as seen in several episodes.
Yeah, I agree that that makes more sense than Culber's resurrection (which still feels to me like a really bad retcon in execution, but not character development or impact). But as for Gray, it does matter if it is just memories transferred or something more. Just programming a synth to think it is alive and giving it memories from some person, doesn't make it that person. (For me, a person is a combination of their memories and their physical brain structures - whether physical or emulated/simulated - which governs their decision making and reactions to stimuli. Without both of those you just have a bunch of records of experiences of that person, not the actual person. Other people, depending on their spirituality, might add an additional requirement of a "soul" or other core energy/element.) And until you have some kind of independent confirmation that Gray as an entity actually exists in some form other than just memories, it doesn't matter if Adira's "vision" of Gray thinks its alive or if Adira thinks that Gray is alive (because those would be the same thing) because that is just Adira's mind's interpretation that Gray would want to be alive.
Now, if DIS says Gray is real and not just memories, then that is fine; it's the clear stated intent of the show. But that doesn't mean it has been justified by what has been shown, it has just been enacted via fiat. Not unlike a lot of other Discovery (and some other Trek) story beats and character decisions/moments.
There will be a statue of your buttocks right next to the one of Miles O'Brien.OK? I'm hoping future students have to memorize the epitaph and write long essays theorizing the meaning.
Eh. Picard established that synths were self-aware people, whether or not they were direct mind transfers (or copies, whatever). It's not like Soji isn't a real person despite all of her memories being false. From a story perspective it doesn't matter what Gray is. We only really knew the "real Gray" in flashback in Forget Me Not.
Last season, seeing holo-Gray on the ship with Su'Kal was supposed to be the confirmation that he is "real." That's good enough. But even if he's just a mental construction, there's real world analogues, like multiple personality disorder, where the individual alters may indeed in a sense be separate conscious individuals inhabiting the same brain.
I see no reason not to think that Gray isn't actually a self-aware individual within Adira's body given what the story has told us - even if he might not be identical to the Gray that passed away. And I see no reason why the process used for Picard couldn't be used on Gray, provided they can figure out where exactly his consciousness is stored in Adira's body (presumably somewhere in the symbiont).
A bit of an aside, but I do feel increasingly that Discovery over-learned the lessons of the bad response to Season 1 and is now way too conflict averse.
I mean, in this episode, Tilly snaps at Adira once, and is given advice to lay off them because they look up to her. Then later in the episode, she tells Culber she needs counseling. It took me time to put two and two together - that the inference is the only possible reason Tilly could be short with Adira is because she's not mentally well.
That's...awful. Conflict is a normal part of human relationships, not a sign of mental illness.
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