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USS Enterprise (eventually) on Discovery?

Well, not with the surface detail the original model had it wouldn't. But DS9 and ENT proved you can reuse it on modern television if you upgrade the texturing and coloring. It's not the design, it's the limitations of the original 1960s shooting model and how detailed it was for the demands of a television series made fifty years ago.

nah it's the design
 
From a design standpoint, there's nothing about the original Enterprise that makes it sublimely perfect or innately deserving of adoration. We cannot possibly be good judges of the design because we live in a cultural millieu shaped by it. Of course we think it looks good; fifty years of history have drawn on it.

The golden ratio argument falls apart remarkably fast as soon as we observe how many of the alignments between the ship and the ratio are off by a little or a lot. (Also, the golden ratio is, at best, questionable as a test for good design). If we want, we can find all kinds of things awkward about the Enterprise. Personally, I find it far more interesting when we start thinking of the ship as a design with successes and flaws, rather than venerating it.
 
I don't think any of us ever said there aren't imperfections in the design of the TOS Enterprise. The pilot versions alone contain several odd inconsistencies that draw attention to the design and how certain components of the ship are supposed to work or why they even look that way, but we and I specifically have said there's nothing bad or disqualifying about it.

As is, it would work in 2018, just with aesthetic upgrades to the surface detailing and texturing of the ship. Anything else is up for debate, but the ship still looks fantastic today and not much of her was drastically altered to create the DSC version.
 
What ENT did to the Defiant only with more Aztecing and visible hull paneling. Let the engine nacelles glow blue because that look just works in any time period. And those changes would work. The same shape can be retained.
 
Yes, those are discernible surface changes and alterations. There's nothing inherently "wrong" about the shape or design. If we're going to be serious and not simply tongue-in-cheek about embracing a more eclectic variety of starship designs in Trek then the 2250s can be the home for both the classic TOS look (with aesthetic upgrades for a modern HD image) and the DSC look. One doesn't cancel out the other and both can coexist.
 
From a design standpoint, there's nothing about the original Enterprise that makes it sublimely perfect or innately deserving of adoration. We cannot possibly be good judges of the design because we live in a cultural millieu shaped by it. Of course we think it looks good; fifty years of history have drawn on it.

The golden ratio argument falls apart remarkably fast as soon as we observe how many of the alignments between the ship and the ratio are off by a little or a lot. (Also, the golden ratio is, at best, questionable as a test for good design). If we want, we can find all kinds of things awkward about the Enterprise. Personally, I find it far more interesting when we start thinking of the ship as a design with successes and flaws, rather than venerating it.

This is a lot of "yeah, but" excuse-making for STD's insipid design.
 
Yes, those are discernible surface changes and alterations. There's nothing inherently "wrong" about the shape or design. If we're going to be serious and not simply tongue-in-cheek about embracing a more eclectic variety of starship designs in Trek then the 2250s can be the home for both the classic TOS look (with aesthetic upgrades for a modern HD image) and the DSC look. One doesn't cancel out the other and both can coexist.
I need this on a T-Shirt.
 
(Also, the golden ratio is, at best, questionable as a test for good design).

Thank you.

There's nothing inherently "wrong" about the shape or design.

No, but there's something dated about it. There's no contradiction in saying that AND that we love the design.

This is a lot of "yeah, but" excuse-making for STD's insipid design.

Yeah because I guess you don't think it's possible for someone to genuinely like it.
 
Well, not with the surface detail the original model had it wouldn't. But DS9 and ENT proved you can reuse it on modern television if you upgrade the texturing and coloring.
Which is basically what they did in Discovery along with a few modest structural changes, the most obvious being the nacelle pylons. In this case, it's pretty clear that the re-design of the Enterprise is meant to bring the TOS version slightly closer to the TMP version, which means there's probably an aztec pattern on the hull and a more metallic color scheme if we saw it in more normal light conditions.

Really, compared to the Kelvin Enterprise or even the TMP refit, it's not THAT radical of a redesign.

It's not the design, it's the limitations of the original 1960s shooting model and how detailed it was for the demands of a television series made fifty years ago.
I submit that the effort of redetailing the original TOS model to something fit for modern television would wind up changing enough of the surface detailing that the Trek purists would be furious either way, and that there is literally nothing they could do short of faithfully recreate the original model -- even with the entire port side inexplicably lacking windows or surface details -- that wouldn't draw a backlash.
 
Yeah because I guess you don't think it's possible for someone to genuinely like it.
Well, isn't that true for all of Discovery? There are just "fan boys" who have to "justify" why they like it by putting the rest of Star Trek down. Obviously... /s
I submit that the effort of redetailing the original TOS model to something fit for modern television would wind up changing enough of the surface detailing that the Trek purists would be furious either way, and that there is literally nothing they could do short of faithfully recreate the original model -- even with the entire port side inexplicably lacking windows or surface details -- that wouldn't draw a backlash.
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