In Enterprise, sure. But by Spock's era, it was commonplace and in wide usage. No indication I'm aware of that there was anything unusual about his abilities.
Yes, that's what I was getting at. The concept of melding being a rare ability only came from ENT, but then the sweeping Vulcan societal changes resulting from Kir'Shara would make the Vulcans more in line with fandom's perceptions of them, including mind-melding as a commonplace ability.In Enterprise, sure. But by Spock's era, it was commonplace and in wide usage. No indication I'm aware of that there was anything unusual about his abilities.
Not only extremely rare, but BANNED in Enterprise. The few people able to do them had to hide their ability, because it disgusted 'conservative' Vulcans. It was because of the actions of Archer and others on that show that more tolerance was shown, and I guess eventually not only tolerance, but it became an accepted practice (by Spock's time). (ENT: "Stigma")Are they? I don't remember that.
Intensely private, and not to be discussed with anyone, but I don't remember hearing that the ability itself is rare.
Not only extremely rare, but BANNED in Enterprise. The few people able to do them had to hide their ability, because it disgusted 'conservative' Vulcans. It was because of the actions of Archer and others on that show that more tolerance was shown, and I guess eventually not only tolerance, but it became an accepted practice (by Spock's time). (ENT: "Stigma")
The way I 'fix' this in my own head is that they all had the potential, but very few could do it without training ("natural talent"), and those were the ones that were shunned. Once such things became accepted, those with 'the gift' were able to train others not born with it.
^ Vulcans get to live for 150- 200 years, sometimes even beyond 200. TOS is situated about 115 years after ENT. Which would mean that by TOS, there still would be enough Vulcans alive that also were alive during the ENT era. I wonder whether that means that there still would be those that retained the attitudes they picked up in their youth (much like in our society, some people will stick to the attitudes and preconceptions of the era they grew up in- and others will go along with the flow of the times), and still have trouble with things such as mind melds or those capable of performing them.
I think the concept writers were ambitious, but when the nuts & bolts writing began, the idea of a fully telepathic character, there 24/7, they got scared & backed off, because in truth, that is some difficult shit to write for & have it be good, least of all on an episodic series, encountering strange beings etc.. with the bare minimum of ongoing development
In defence of Mojochi's point, there are manifest difficulties with writing telepathy well in a five act screenplay structure. X-Men comics get by with their telepaths because in the first place Professor X and Jean Grey are too polite to use their telepathy on their friends (allowing for betrayal stories) and in the second place they have a bucket full of 'telepathy won't work here' plot devices (Juggernaut's helmet, for instance) to get them out of jail free. Claremont repeatedly turns off Charles' mental powers for long stretches if it helps with his plotting. Roddenberry's desire for hermetically sealed episodes runs directly contrary to this kind of approach.So difficult that there's only hundreds of X-Men and Legion of Superheroes comics featuring one or more telepaths. I don't accept the "telepathy is hard" excuse. It could have been done.
In defence of Mojochi's point, there are manifest difficulties with writing telepathy well in a five act screenplay structure. X-Men comics get by with their telepaths because in the first place Professor X and Jean Grey are too polite to use their telepathy on their friends (allowing for betrayal stories) and in the second place they have a bucket full of 'telepathy won't work here' plot devices (Juggernaut's helmet, for instance) to get them out of jail free. Claremont repeatedly turns off Charles' mental powers for long stretches if it helps with his plotting. Roddenberry's desire for hermetically sealed episodes runs directly contrary to this kind of approach.
Honestly, that 1980s TV screenplay format is so much more demanding than the format that Claremont developed for X-Men - both in terms of the need to tie everything up at the end (Claremont does precisely the opposite - he leaves the stories open, so he can hang more off them later), and in terms of having to build to suspense at the end of each act. I really would not want to have a full telepath in the core cast of a TV show in that format if I was on the writing team, and I say this having read the entire original Claremont run of X-Men with great delight.
So I agree with you that it could have been done, but I agree with Mojochi that it would have been difficult to do well.
The full telepath just knows too much... they're an enemy of suspense at the best of times, and on the broadcast production timeline, where every script has to be completed under the ticking clock and your full telepath is a potential plot hole over and over again...? Sheesh. Definitely not to be taken on lightly at the very least.
But of course, the core issue with Troi isn't so much that she wasn't a full telepath but that they struggled with the power they decided to give her. While the official name for her ability was "empathy", her power during the first season is "point out that the people behaving shiftily are hiding something". I like to think of this Level 1 Troi power as "Stating the Obvious". She manages to use this power well - it's just not a very interesting power!![]()
^Exactly. It was at least enough of a potentially never ending toe stub to scare them off it. It's also the fact that they made her a bridge fixture, on a show that's main concept is encountering the unknown. Talk about a would be wet blanket for every potential plot
Of course telepathy is possible to write well. It's just not very user friendly for that show, & no one probably gave it much thought until they were neck deep in it, & fumbling for ways to rein it back. TNG was a very hodgepodge deal in it's formation, where they were just throwing all kinds of things at the wall to see what would stick
Another problem, as well as the points you mentioned, would also be that this somewhat treads on Spock's turf, & we all know how abhorrent TNG found doing anything that could look like TOS. Spock's telepathy was almost verbatim what you describe.In my opinion they should made her and other Betazoids full telepaths, but also the type of telepath who has to spend a lot of effort to "probe" somebody else's mind, like having to sit them down and engage in a battle of wills to enter their mind and get the information they want.
I do feel they got there with Troi in the later seasons. But they had to get past using her to either state the obvious or to fall into a near-coma because of psychic overload first.Build her character in other ways too.
This'll be post-Jim Lee Psylocke you're talking about. Psylocke with a perm was even more terribly polite... even to the point of being fairly useless. But honestly, my recollection of late Claremont Psylocke was that her only speaking line was "my psychic knife... the focussed totality of my psychic powers".(And while Prof X and Jean might be polite about their telepathy most of the time...Psylocke definitely wasn't. Go ahead, be unhappy with having your mind probed, Psylocke don't care.)
In other words, what you wanted was a Vulcan.In my opinion they should made her and other Betazoids full telepaths, but also the type of telepath who has to spend a lot of effort to "probe" somebody else's mind, like having to sit them down and engage in a battle of wills to enter their mind and get the information they want.
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