Oh dear I am so deeply sorry I just don't understand what you'd like me to do?Errr, please continue with your example... it's for a, uhmm, friend....![]()
Oh dear I am so deeply sorry I just don't understand what you'd like me to do?Errr, please continue with your example... it's for a, uhmm, friend....![]()
I was just jokingOh dear I am so deeply sorry I just don't understand what you'd like me to do?
What if your toaster said "Please, I don't like it when you do that to me"?
If my toaster says that to me,What if your toaster said "Please, I don't like it when you do that to me"?
What if your toaster said "Please, I don't like it when you do that to me"?
Interestingly, the writer of the episode, Melinda Snodgrass, was a practicing lawyer for three years before deciding to pursue writing instead (Source).It was a good episode but I agree with what Skipper said earlier. All the legal issues would have been sorted out long ago, before Data could hold a commission in Starfleet if not much earlier.
As far as Riker acting as legal counsel, that might go back to old models of courts-martial, where the law was straightforward enough that it could basically be read out of a manual by anyone. Prosecutors and defense counsel (called "prisoner's friend" or "friend of the accused" in the British services) were just regular officers, and a neutral judge advocate with legal training would be assigned to the court to advise on procedure and legal technicalities. Of course since WW2 things have become much more complex and lawyers handle it. And in TOS that was how it was done, too. But perhaps some writer on this episode had been reading about courts-martial from the old days.
If we would not recognize a creature as sentient that had the exact same brain as Data but looked like a box on wheels, that's a critique of our capacity for empathy, not an argument not to extend it to Data.
This is one case where I didn't feel Picard's speech was that convincing
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