Also Kavis Alpha 4. Home of the nanite civilization. Never mentioned ever again after TNG. You mean Nobody ever even went to take a look.
That's the one. It was great but shame it was so close to the finale. A follow up would have been great had they had the inclination and time to do so.
If only the soliton wave had been successful. That was a cool idea
I'm usually not one to argue against Data possibly having emotions, but in this case it played like he'd just made a calculated decision to safeguard others from being killed by Fajo, & then later to withhold the whole truth, in order to safeguard himself against another possible trumped up trial about whether he should be considered a legit person capable of making those calls.But doesn't a lie come after some emotion, so he felt the emotion of anger one could argue, couldn't they?
Also Kavis Alpha 4. Home of the nanite civilization. Never mentioned ever again after TNG. You mean Nobody ever even went to take a look.
I wanted to reply here that that was by the Nanites own request, asking them to only return after 300 years because Humans were still too arrogant and primitive, but it turns out those were the Homesoil crystalline lifeforms, not the Nanites.
I always wondered if anyone got put up on violating the prime directive for what happened to those "Ugly Bags of Mostly Water" creatures. The initial issue caused by the terraformers was accidental, but Picard beaming them aboard to be studied is what prompted them to use the ship's lights to rapidly advance. Once they suspected it was a life form, they shouldn't have relocated it.I wanted to reply here that that was by the Nanites' own request, asking them to only return after 300 years because Humans were still too arrogant and primitive, but it turns out those were the Homesoil crystalline lifeforms, not the Nanites.
I'm usually not one to argue against Data possibly having emotions, but in this case it played like he'd just made a calculated decision to safeguard others from being killed by Fajo, & then later to withhold the whole truth, in order to safeguard himself against another possible trumped up trial about whether he should be considered a legit person capable of making those calls.
Now, one could debate the motivation of him being concerned about those things as being of an emotional nature & I might not argue against that. I've always suspected he was somewhat micro-emotive, but I highly rebuke any idea he was acting on emotion when he fired on Fajo. We pretty well saw him working it out in real time.
I always wondered if anyone got put up on violating the prime directive for what happened to those "Ugly Bags of Mostly Water" creatures. The initial issue caused by the terraformers was accidental, but Picard beaming them aboard to be studied is what prompted them to use the ship's lights to rapidly advance. Once they suspected it was a life form, they shouldn't have relocated it.
Right. He has a go at the project leader about the PD, even though they were operating under the understanding that others certified the planet lifeless, which logically made their actions less responsible, even though compounding.It is the first thing Picard suggests after the Enterprise computer speculates it is life - that the project leader might have knowingly defied the Prime Directive. But at this point they haven't really connected the dots yet that this might not only be life, but sapient life.
The Prime Directive seems unclear in those matters anyway. They cannot disturb a microbe on primitive planets for fear they might disturb its future evolution, but apparently there's no problem walking around on any planets with flora but apparently no sapient life (such as e.g. in Shades of Grey) - who's to say they won't evolve sapient life in the distant future?
Moriarty seems aware before Geordi even gives the computer instructions, you see him looking intently at them as they use the arch. Makes me wonder if he was a bit self aware before the computer snafu..
"The Big Goodbye" was produced and aired before the Bynars upgraded the holodeck in "11001001". Moriarty could have been a byproduct of this upgrade, though.
Ah had those mixed up in my head.
Still either way, it's implied by "The Big Goodbye" that the holodeck had received some sort of upgrade given how excited Picard was to go play with it. "I actually saw automobiles!"
It may have been whatever upgrade that was that allowed some of the early weirdness with the holodeck.
The way he pronounces that too always makes me laugh a lot. Ita just such a funny way to pronce a word.
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