The point is that robotics existed before Star Wars films. While a new generation might have seen the films and then desired to enter robotics, they didn't create robotics themselves but entered a field that was established.
And small communicators existed before Star Trek (the wristwatch radio from Dick Tracy, for instance), yet that doesn't stop people from claiming that Star Trek's communicators influenced the cell phone, nor should it, because it did. Just because something existed in basic form earlier doesn't mean a later work can't offer inspiration as well. Your problem is that you whittle everything down to an all or nothing approach.
It's both, and so is Star Trek, albeit leaning more toward the science fiction end of things than Star Wars does.Star Wars is harmless fun about dualism. It's not science fiction but fantasy.
And Star Trek is "Wagon Train to the Stars" (according to Roddenberry himself) with a healthy dose of Forbidden Planet thrown in. Are you going to dismiss it completely now too, or realize that everything nowadays is derivative of some earlier work(s) and that there's nothing wrong with that?It's not original material, but using Japanese cinema and 30-40's serial films. There's nothing wrong with making money, but it's not artistic at all.
I completely disagree that Star Wars is not artistic, but that's entirely subjective. Although I'm sure you've somehow managed to convince yourself it's fact.
No way. Ya think? Maybe that absurdity is why no one else took it particularly seriously except you?More to the point of the topic, there isn't any evidence to suggest a superiority of Star Wars military to defeat Star Trek species. The original post is rather absurd, and akin to my Battlestar Galactica guys could beat your Firefly (fill-in-the-blank) guys any day of the week.
Oh, you did think you were spouting facts not opinions. I was right after all.The reality is it was a form of entertainment strictly driven to be visually stimulating and mindless fare.
Why would I have to expound upon anything? I provided actual evidence of people across multiple technical fields, including robotics, who were inspired by Star Wars, and you basically said, "nuh uh, I knew some guys..." Surely a debate pro like yourself must know that anecdotes mean next to nothing, and that appeals to authority aren't far behind.By the way, feel free to expound upon your extensive knowledge on robotics or electronics to support your theory. Meanwhile I will use whatever experiences I actually have had to support my position in debate as well as evidence.
This never should have even been a debate. It was a silly, lighthearted topic which you came in and turned ultra-serious and hostile, as you've done across the board in your brief time here.