• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

star trek- immortality?

lostinexistence

Cadet
Newbie
Hi, I'm doing a Senior Independent Project on immortality, and I was advised to check out a certain star trek episode w. Captain Kirk and a girl who comes from a planet where no one dies. My advisor did not have the name of the exact episode, however. I was wondering if someone could point me in the right direction?


(Mod note: The original question has been answered (and really, I should have moved this to TOS when I first read it, but somehow forgot), but Timo's reply brings up the topic of immortality in TNG too.

I think the topic of Immortality in Star Trek is a very good topic for broader discussion, and of course all the Trek series have contributed different perspectives. Let's see if this topic can find fresh expression in Gen Trek Discussion.

- Holdfast)
 
Last edited by a moderator:
See also "Metamorphosis" where Zephram Cochrane laments that immortaltiy consists largely of boredom. And "Requiem for Methusalah" where an immortal man has been trying to create the perfect mate for centuries.

And don't forget Highlander!
 
wow, thank you guys so much!! I have never seen star trek before, so it would have taken me a long time to go through all the episodes in search of the ones I was looking for. :)
 
Of course, a point about Cochrane complaining of boredom: he was marooned on a desert planet with nothing to do but commune with a gasseous cloud-being. I imagine immortality would be far less boring with freedom, your own ship, all of known space to play in, and, ya know, hobbies.
 
Of course, a point about Cochrane complaining of boredom: he was marooned on a desert planet with nothing to do but commune with a gasseous cloud-being. I imagine immortality would be far less boring with freedom, your own ship, all of known space to play in, and, ya know, hobbies.

Or at least it would not have become boring after just a couple of centuries. Personally, I've always thought immortality is overrated.
 
One might argue that the enlightened folks of Star Trek also view immortality with some disdain. For one thing, they don't make full use of those technologies that would grant them this. For another, in the Next Generation first-season episode "The Neutral Zone", they argue that people of their time and age are no longer afraid of death in the same manner that made a bunch of people from the 1990s attempt cryogenic preservation of their dying or dead bodies.

Timo Saloniemi
 
The original question has been answered (and really, I should have moved this to TOS when I first read it, but somehow forgot), but Timo's reply brings up the topic of immortality in TNG too.

I think the topic of Immortality in Star Trek is a very good topic for broader discussion, and of course all the Trek series have contributed different perspectives. Let's see if this topic can find fresh expression in Gen Trek Discussion.
 
One might argue that the enlightened folks of Star Trek also view immortality with some disdain. For one thing, they don't make full use of those technologies that would grant them this. For another, in the Next Generation first-season episode "The Neutral Zone", they argue that people of their time and age are no longer afraid of death in the same manner that made a bunch of people from the 1990s attempt cryogenic preservation of their dying or dead bodies.

Timo Saloniemi

That was one thing that always annoyed me about Trek. They kept running into alien species (Vulcans, Romulans, even Klingons) that were long-lived to the point where they lived for well over a century, or more (mainly to allow actors who played aliens on the original series to come back on TNG and DS9)--yet the humans considered themselves lucky if they made it to their eighties.

Wouldn't you think the human lifespan would naturally be longer, thanks to the mere presence of advanced technology of the 23th and 24th centuries? At least McCoy had the right idea: any day you're not in the ground is a good day.

Sean
 
Wouldn't you think the human lifespan would naturally be longer, thanks to the mere presence of advanced technology of the 23th and 24th centuries? At least McCoy had the right idea: any day you're not in the ground is a good day.

Sean

I certainly would think so. Isn't the projected lifespan of someone born today in the industrialized western world believed to be well past a hundred?

As far as in show examples go, Picard was supposed to be in his sixties at TNG's start, yet Stewart was in his forties, I believe. Picard looked pretty good for his age. We also see that Dr. McCoy lives into his 130s. With their almost magical medical technology, it wouldn't surprise me if humans living in the 24th century were expected to pass 150.

Picard, however, as of twenty five years after "All Good Things..." was succumbing to a neurological disorder which basicly makes him senile. A previous episode (I forget which) has Picard referencing his father's or grandfather's decent into senility. Something similar happened to Sarek after his 200th as we see from his two appearnces in TNG. One wonders if the writers wanted to put a cap on TNG medical technology, or perhaps somone on staff just had a real fear of aging.
 
Of course, a point about Cochrane complaining of boredom: he was marooned on a desert planet with nothing to do but commune with a gasseous cloud-being. I imagine immortality would be far less boring with freedom, your own ship, all of known space to play in, and, ya know, hobbies.

Or at least it would not have become boring after just a couple of centuries. Personally, I've always thought immortality is overrated.

:vulcan:
and? you speak? from personal experience?
 
HTML:
Wouldn't you think the human lifespan would naturally be longer, thanks to the mere presence of advanced technology of the 23th and 24th centuries? At least McCoy had the right idea: any day you're not in the ground is a good day.
No, :vulcan: i wouldn't think that.

Why? Human lifespan is set at about 100 years- 120 max. Their bioclocks
wind down after that as a matter of evolutionary survival. Remember its
the genes that make it, and having 150+ 200 year old infants walking around a tribe with 500 members just isn't in natures design.

The question of life extension is already upon us. The technology we have now if applied to its fullest billion dollar level could keep most people alive
well into the 100s. BUT. Quality of life ? Genetically, the idea is to reproduce and die. Period. And if you assume as most people in our culture do that death is THE END... well, i can see why you'd want to avoid it.
However, Death is a lot more like spiritual puberty- at least if you have the maturity to work the situation to your favor rather than drown in entropy.

Avoiding death to live a feeble life seems a bit silly, given the alternative of
just letting nature take its course and having all the fun in the universe once you are free of a body.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4iwUZOnB9J4

"And if I die today Ill be the happy phantom
And Ill go chasin the nuns out in the yard
And Ill run naked through the streets without my mask on
And I will never need umbrellas in the rain
Ill wake up in strawberry fields everday
And the atrocities of school I can forgive
The happy phantom has no right to bitch

Oo who- the time is getting closer
Oo who- time to be a ghost
Oo who- everyday were getting closer
The sun is getting dim
Will we pay for who we been

So if I die today Ill be the happy phantom
And Ill go wearin my naughties like a jew
Theyll be my ticket to the universal opera
Theres judy garland taking buddha by the hand
And then these seven little men get up to dance
They say confucius does his crossword with a pen
Im still the angle to the girl who hates to sin

Oo whoo- the time is gettin closer
Oo who- the time to be a ghost
Oo who- everyday were getting closer
The sun is getting dim
Will I pay for who I been

Or will I see you dear and wish I could come back
You found a girl that you could truly love again
Will you still call for me when she falls asleep
Or do we soon forget the things we cannot see

Oo who- the time is getting closer
Oo who- the time to be a ghost
Oo who- everyday were getting closer
The sun is getting dim
Will I pay for who I been

And if I die today
And if I die today
And if I die today
Chasin nuns out in the yard"
 
..yet the humans considered themselves lucky if they made it to their eighties.

Did this happen? I thought modern Trek was pretty clever about this: the characters were indicated to be older than the actors (Picard vs. Stewart), they grumbled and complained when their bodies, due to some rare and exotic disease, did not allow for physically active careers at eighty (Mark Jameison, future Picard), and when they spoke about their preferred death, they said "in bed surrounded by loved ones, at 140", in the same way somebody today would use the realistic-optimistic figure 110, or 100, or even 90 (O'Brien).

Given all this, we might well assume that any or all of the graying admirals in TNG and DS9 were in their eighties or nineties rather than their sixties, and that some were significantly past that. And McCoy's hobbled walk at 137 might reflect his strenuous lifestyle and wild youth rather than his physical age.

Timo Saloniemi
 
:vulcan:

yes, which is very realistic all things considered.

Although, in general, trek medical science is obviously way behind everything else. They also seem to have an aversion to robots and bionics, maybe there
was some sort of "i robot" episode that happened in 2006 of the trek universe or some such. ??

I'm sorry, but if you have the technology for FTL, you have the technology
to be immortal should you make (the unfortunate choice in my opinion) the decision to stay alive forever.

A lot like with communicators- we already have cell phones that apparently
out perform those.

Add some transhumanism, maybe some wetware, an nice neural upload-
:borg::borg:
 
Although, in general, trek medical science is obviously way behind everything else.

Hmh? I think we'll get warp drive and time travel and replicators long before we learn how to redo the entire genetic makeup of a person. Trek medicine always seemed the most fantastic (in both senses of impressive and unbelievable) aspect of future technology, with magnificient tools for making sure that the heroes would survive any and all injuries and diseases without leaving any mark to be carried on the next episode.

A lot like with communicators- we already have cell phones that apparently
out perform those.

Again, hmh? The smallest cell phone today able to contact another cell phone in the same city is the size of a large industrial building - that is, when you count in only the absolutely necessary switching stations, powerplants and so forth, and exclude the numerous satellites or the hundreds or millions of tons of cabling that allow for planetwide communications. The device by which Kirk achieves the same fits inside his pocket. Not to mention that Kirk's device allows him to talk to starships across interplanetary distances.

The smallest thing we have today that could be comparable to Kirk's communicator is the classic military field radio, still a backpack-sized gadget at this day and age.

Timo Saloniemi
 
Hmh? I think we'll get warp drive and time travel and replicators long before we learn how to redo the entire genetic makeup of a person. Trek medicine always seemed the most fantastic (in both senses of impressive and unbelievable) aspect of future technology, with magnificient tools for making sure that the heroes would survive any and all injuries and diseases without leaving any mark to be carried on the next episode.

okay. On what problem solving process do you base this?
Me, I like solving high order problems, for instance, real life space ships.
Check out my site. I'm actually just taking a break from there just now because talking to myself mostly is not that stimulating. The complexity of
a problem might most easily be defined as the minimum number of primary axioms required to describe each of the problems paramaters. By such a definition, warp drive is easily several orders of magnitude more problematic than genetic code- to be frank, we are pretty close to being able to do full genetic analysis of people NOW. Theory says its only a matter of time in terms of at most a few decades. Warp on the other hand? Unless there are gravitons or tachyons and unless we figure out not only how to sense them and manipulate them- it might be impossible to EVER create a real warp drive as far as we know.

Heres one of those high order problems most people underestimate. Teach a computer to talk, interpret many voices, and to figure out meanings of new words from context. That seems like a simpler problem than your genetics problem, but it isn't, its actually an order of magnitude or two more complicated. That comes from a study done on the problem of interdisciplinary science. Said study shows that unless a person has expert knowledge they are highly likely to underestimate the complexity of a problem- even if they are experts in something else and even if its a related field.


The smallest thing we have today that could be comparable to Kirk's communicator is the classic military field radio, still a backpack-sized gadget at this day and age.

You could be right, but on the other hand, theres that ship in space doing all of that stuff, (you seem to miss..) and cell phones now can chat via satellite.
 
By such a definition, warp drive is easily several orders of magnitude more problematic than genetic code- to be frank, we are pretty close to being able to do full genetic analysis of people NOW.

Oh, I have no problem with the idea of absolute genetic knowledge, in the 24th century or the 21st. The hop from analysis to those full-replacement therapies of TNG still seems impossible to make. I chose warp drive as the easier feat because it's flat out impossible, too - only, genetic replacement appears doubly flat out impossible in comparison. Not only is it complete nonsense from the point of view of today's science, it couldn't really work even under the rules of Trek itself.

As for the problem-solving estimate discipline, it suffers from unfortunate unreliability when it comes to these feats that require unpredictable breakthroughs or reversions of modern results. Warp drive might be trivially easy once we get through a single theoretical hoop and realize that most of the steps required beyond that have already been taken (see heavier-than-air flight and its propulsion systems), while replication might prove impossible in practice because every step in the way is an overwhelming engineering challenge. It's a big problem with a methodology that purpots to give order-of-magnitude results: misjudge one step and the result is, naturally, off by an order of magnitude...

Or in other words, predicting is difficult, especially when predicting the future. :vulcan:

You could be right, but on the other hand, theres that ship in space doing all of that stuff, (you seem to miss..)

It's not required, though: the ship can depart, and the communicators or badges still continue to talk with each other. We see some of this in VOY, although IIRC not in TNG or TOS where the landing parties seldom are geographically separated when the ship is away.

and cell phones now can chat via satellite.

The ones the size of a milk carton, yes (usually with the help of a backpack-sized battery). The slim pocket models still require a large building or five in order to access the satellites.

We're close, tho. The distance to Kirk phones is trivial when compared with the distance to something theoretically plausible such as replicators, or theoretically implausible such as warp drives, or conceptually absurd such as whole-body genetic transplants.

Timo Saloniemi
 
Avoiding death to live a feeble life seems a bit silly, given the alternative of
just letting nature take its course and having all the fun in the universe once you are free of a body.

That's assuming there's anything following this life, which I don't believe in.

Sean
 
Avoiding death to live a feeble life seems a bit silly, given the alternative of
just letting nature take its course and having all the fun in the universe once you are free of a body.

That's assuming there's anything following this life, which I don't believe in.

Sean

right then. so. the cure for this is acces to waking theta conditions.

I dare you and triple dare you to ask.
:vulcan::vulcan::vulcan::vulcan::vulcan::vulcan::vulcan::vulcan:
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top