Logic is a high ideal for Vulcans - but what evidence is there of Vulcan's being anti-individualists? Now were we not just discussing the danger of seeing them as a monoculture? We have Vulcans without logic who were merely stigmatised at the height of Vulcan's period of 22nd century Romulan-backed intolerance - how much more tolerant of dissent then must the Vulcan society be after the recovery of the Kir'Shara? Sybok might have faced censure privately, but he wasn't imprisoned or harmed as far as we know.
While we are on the topic of reductio ad absurdum:
The argument that the "needs of the many" could easily be perverted into a justification for collectivist violence is reminiscent of the extremist argument that a person without religion is "capable of anything". Aside from how a person with religion often seems capable of anything too, it seems to assume that just because a true world doctrine is no longer present, that the godless person is incapable of having any number of other replacement ideals - or that there is no further nuance of any kind to their beliefs. Likewise there is a reductive argument that the Vulcan philosophy has no other components than pure ultilitarianism (not even say, act utilitarianism). Roddenbury, whatever we may think of him, seems to have been fairly literate in philosophy, and probably didn't feel that such obvious nuances needed implicitly explaining, as it was too obvious to anyone who had read liberal thought since Hobbes or secular thought since the 1800s. Now we are generally less familiar with those ideas it would seem, and perhaps Star Trek is the ideal platform for exploring them anew.
While we are on the topic of reductio ad absurdum:
The argument that the "needs of the many" could easily be perverted into a justification for collectivist violence is reminiscent of the extremist argument that a person without religion is "capable of anything". Aside from how a person with religion often seems capable of anything too, it seems to assume that just because a true world doctrine is no longer present, that the godless person is incapable of having any number of other replacement ideals - or that there is no further nuance of any kind to their beliefs. Likewise there is a reductive argument that the Vulcan philosophy has no other components than pure ultilitarianism (not even say, act utilitarianism). Roddenbury, whatever we may think of him, seems to have been fairly literate in philosophy, and probably didn't feel that such obvious nuances needed implicitly explaining, as it was too obvious to anyone who had read liberal thought since Hobbes or secular thought since the 1800s. Now we are generally less familiar with those ideas it would seem, and perhaps Star Trek is the ideal platform for exploring them anew.