I hope so very much that they didn't misrepresent the details of their made-up-as-they-go tech.

This comment gets a 10/10
I hope so very much that they didn't misrepresent the details of their made-up-as-they-go tech.
Eugenics encompassed selective breeding, selective sterilisation, and significant social engineering. Social engineering (as state propaganda) was key to getting societal buy-in of what was little more than scientific-sounding bigotry against "feeblemindedness", "infirmities of body and character", deformities, etc. Race inevitably fell into the "etc" bin. Had modern genetic engineering sciences been available to the American, Japanese, Soviet, and Nazi programmes, I have complete confidence they would have been used enthusiastically.Kirk's exact words in the episode were "a product of controlled genetics," which can easily mean either. Selective breeding or gene manipulation. So it still covers all the bases.
Kirk's exact words in the episode were "a product of controlled genetics," which can easily mean either. Selective breeding or gene manipulation. So it still covers all the bases.
@cooleddie74 is half right about the dialog in "Space Seed."TOS Space Seed says Khan and his ilk were the result of selective breeding, no genetic editing/modification, but later series seem to imply they specifically altered.
I haven't watched it again yet but I thought M'Benga said something about his daughter being in the transporter buffer was the result of an accident (that ends up fortuitous since she is in a kind of stasis as a result). I have trouble understanding him. Not the accent but the timbre of the actor's voice. I'll have to use the good headphones next time.
@cooleddie74 is half right about the dialog in "Space Seed."
Kirk does say [http://www.chakoteya.net/StarTrek/24.htm]:
KHAN: A new life, a chance to build a world. Other things I doubt you would understand.
KIRK: Why? Because I'm not a product of controlled genetics?
But there are also these lines, one by Spock and one by Kirk:
SPOCK: No such vessel listed. Records of that period are fragmentary, however. The mid=1990s was the era of your last so-called World War.
MCCOY: The Eugenics Wars.
SPOCK: Of course. Your attempt to improve the race through selective breeding.
SPOCK: I note he's making considerable use of our technical library.
KIRK: Common courtesy, Mister Spock. He'll spend the rest of his days in our time. It's only decent to help him catch up. Would you estimate him to be a product of selective breeding?
SPOCK: There is that possibility, Captain. His age would be correct. In 1993, a group of these young supermen did seize power simultaneously in over forty nations.
Eugenics was understood in the 1960s and is understood today to mean the discredited practice of selective breeding for the purpose of increasing desirable characteristics. So, yes, clearly the original intent of "Space Seed" was that the supermen had been created by selective breeding, and "controlled genetics" was intended to be understood in the context of selective breeding.
It was TWOK that first explicitly said Khan was a product of "genetic engineering."
The premise that the supermen would have been created using only the principles of eugenics is dated, was dated in the 1980s and merited this retcon.
Might have been my imagination, but the Illyrians took on vaguely humanoid shapes at times.The creatures were the remains of those Illyrians who hadn't "de-engineered" themselves and therefore could adapt to the disease and the storm. The fire effect used to represent them resembled the effect that appeared on Una's skin when her system repelled the disease.
Retconned from what? What did we know about her background prior to this episode?So, Number One is an Illyrian now?
Retcons don't always change existing information, they also add new information.Retconned from what? What did we know about her background prior to this episode?
Agreed completely.Glad the site was useful.
First off - I haven't seen any of these shows, they're not available to me.
What I would like to comment on is that gene editing and genetic manipulation wasn't even a sci-fi thing back in the 60s. The closest was eugenics, the slow and patient selective breeding of lifeforms for specific traits.
So, as far as this Old One is concerned, changing the terminology in the script from a post-war one to a modern one that is completely understandable to the current audience is fine by me.
Then all episodes that expand upon a character's background are retcons. Kirk on Tarsus IV, retcon. Spock has a wife, retcon. McCoy dated Nancy Crater, retcon.Retcons don't always change existing information, they also add new information.
But yeah I don't see this as bad.
The idea that selective breeding would result in superhuman abilities by less than 30 years after the show began was ludicrous. I also note that in that TOS episode the Eugenics War and WW3 were one and the same.An example of a retcon that doesn't completely overturn the entire concept of Khan, just makes his creation and rise more sensible. No dates changed, no outcomes. Just the details of the road map.
No, that's not what a retcon is. The whole idea of a retroactive continuity change is that it changes something previously established. Adding information in a void doesn't count.Retcons don't always change existing information, they also add new information.
At least the Cerritos' lower deckers don't sleep on some piece of machinery. They should stop complaining!Liked seeing the lower-deckers' shared quarters. Not as bad as the hallway on the Cerritos (many decades later!), but is, after all, the "flagship of Starfleet."
Well, that sucks. Why aren't they available?First off - I haven't seen any of these shows, they're not available to me..
Glad the site was useful.
First off - I haven't seen any of these shows, they're not available to me.
What I would like to comment on is that gene editing and genetic manipulation wasn't even a sci-fi thing back in the 60s. The closest was eugenics, the slow and patient selective breeding of lifeforms for specific traits.
So, as far as this Old One is concerned, changing the terminology in the script from a post-war one to a modern one that is completely understandable to the current audience is fine by me.
Define "now". DC Fontana established that Number One was Illyrian in 1989.So, Number One is an Illyrian now?
So, Number One is an Illyrian now? Please, no more retcons!
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