It's definitely one of the stronger Trek pilots, on reflection - it's got a strong narrative spine about it. Shame most of S1 didn't match up really.
The more I watch the show the more I come to appreciate the first and second seasons.
It's definitely one of the stronger Trek pilots, on reflection - it's got a strong narrative spine about it. Shame most of S1 didn't match up really.
http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/Elysian_CouncilWe get our first true Human colony world here, albeit another stranded offshoot. How many species go through things like this? Maybe not to the same extreme - no god-like-powers, etc. - but a situation wherein their early years as a warp power see them launching ill-planned expeditions that sometimes disappear, only for later explorers to rediscover them, finding lost outposts of their people scattered about?
Heh, that's true. The various hero starships are almost always stumbling across farflung remnants of 21st/22nd-century human spaceflight-- even in the Delta Quadrant! Friendship One, the Valiant, the O'Neill habitats, Terra 10, SS Mariposa, the Offenhouse cryonics satellite, and there must be others I'm forgetting about. Where are all the lost Andorian colonies/spaceships?
It's definitely one of the stronger Trek pilots, on reflection - it's got a strong narrative spine about it. Shame most of S1 didn't match up really.
The more I watch the show the more I come to appreciate the first and second seasons.
The fact that the Vulcans of this time don't engage in exploration helps to explain why there are wide unknown regions located right next door. I don't really like the whole "Galactic Barrier can give powers" concept.
. I personally categorize Galactic Barrier-induced psionics differently than natural psionics because the latter is clearly genetic. I don't really like the whole "Galactic Barrier can give powers" concept.
There's an interesting and telling moment when T'Pol references her own people's capacity for telepathic ability "in certain circumstances" and Archer reflects how Humans know not to press them on that point, because Vulcans don't discuss it. This works quite well with the "telepathy is a perversion" subplot that the show will introduce soon.
I personally categorize Galactic Barrier-induced psionics differently than natural psionics because the latter is clearly genetic. I don't really like the whole "Galactic Barrier can give powers" concept.
They're related, though, because the Galactic Barrier enhances the abilities of preexisting espers-- it doesn't make new ones out of whole cloth.
Fair enough.I personally categorize Galactic Barrier-induced psionics differently than natural psionics because the latter is clearly genetic. I don't really like the whole "Galactic Barrier can give powers" concept.
They're related, though, because the Galactic Barrier enhances the abilities of preexisting espers-- it doesn't make new ones out of whole cloth.
Exactly. It doesn't give powers, it just supercharges psionically receptive minds. Albeit only human minds, it seems, since Spock was unaffected.
). Trip and T'Pol's initial reactions also show an awareness of the sort of problems this sort of thing could potentially cause from a diplomatic viewpoint. It's clear in T'Pol's cooler-than-usual manner that she's thinking of the potential consequences in a way the Humans aren't necessarily grasping, which I thought was another good scene that subtly shows us the value of the character and her shtick. Becoming entangled in the laws, customs and honour codes governing familial relationships, mating, reproduction and other intimate matters wouldn't be fun. T'Pol's disapproval - due to her initial suspicion that Trip was making hanky-panky over there - combined with the way that Trip defends himself, makes it clear that this is the sort of thing that can blossom into An Incident. She knows it and, happily, so does he, proving that Trip isn't just T'Pol's counterweight here, he's a thoughtful person in his own right, and takes his responsibilities as a representative of Earth seriously. It's also a nice way to subtly introduce the idea of social and political tensions that might result from interspecies reproduction. Wait until you meet your actual genetic surprise daughter, Trip. You too, T'Pol.
Spying on people is what Vulcans do. The two episodes after this will demonstrate that quite nicely (Pssst, Enterprise, they're following you). Vulcans might not be curious or open to exploration, but there's no way they're letting Humans go whooping off into the galaxy unsupervised, especially if the colonists are going to split entirely from the homeworld and threaten to shoot visitors down. I just find the whole set-up too hard to accept. Which is a shame in some ways, because I see the appeal in the basic rediscover-a-lost-colony idea, and I like the reminder that space is dangerous and that early colonization is rough - traveling all that way only to fall victim to an asteroid strike, yes, that works for me. It's not a terrible episode, but I just don't think the central idea holds together.It's odd that Terra Nova is treated like the nearest habitable world to Earth when Trek has previously mentioned Alpha Centauri as an inhabited system (later episodes of Enterprise will also confirm that Humans have colonies there). Why did nobody head there then? Why go 20 light-years when you could go a quarter the distance?
Why hasn't Earth sent a ship? If Enterprise can get there in a few weeks, surely one of your existing ships could get there in six months or a year or two? If you have cargo ships bothering the Trill and colonies at Vega (and you have both those things, the latter confirmed on screen), then you can get to Terra Nova. Not quickly, but you can get there.
I just find the whole set-up too hard to accept. Which is a shame in some ways, because I see the appeal in the basic rediscover-a-lost-colony idea, and I like the reminder that space is dangerous and that early colonization is rough - traveling all that way only to fall victim to an asteroid strike, yes, that works for me. It's not a terrible episode, but I just don't think the central idea holds together.
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