First season Spock often mentioned how he was incapable of emotions.
I suppose you could retcon this as Spock's attempt to control himself using psychology: Vulcan mind over matter.
First season Spock often mentioned how he was incapable of emotions.
Well, in The Cage Spock was literally not written that way. GR didn't come up with the idea beyond the pointed ears until Where No Man Has Gone Before. Nimoy wasn't going to be the co-star at that point.Cage Spock found singing plants humorous and shouted at inappropriate moments. I agree that they probably didn't have anything comprehensive worked out, at first. I'm no TOS expert though.
There is the acceptance of Spock as an unreliable narrator.I suppose you could retcon this as Spock's attempt to control himself using psychology: Vulcan mind over matter.
That he never felt like he belonged. On the Enterprise he kind of did, but was always an outsider. On Vulcan he was teased and called names. He felt he had to be the best at what he did, and control the raging inferno within by pushing it down. More British style stoicism than classic stoicism.But that still leads us to: Vulcans have emotions. Humans have emotions. Spock has emotions. What the hell was Spock's problem? And why did it take Vejur to solve it?
Spock was outright bullied during his childhood (as we saw in the TAS episode "Yesteryear"). Of course he never felt he truly belonged, as the Vulcans looked down on him for his human side and his Starfleet colleagues had no idea how to perceive or "read" Vulcan body language and cues to understand the nuances of what he was and was not communicating, as he didn't show emotions as humans would.That he never felt like he belonged. On the Enterprise he kind of did, but was always an outsider. On Vulcan he was teased and called names. He felt he had to be the best at what he did, and control the raging inferno within by pushing it down. More British style stoicism than classic stoicism.
While that certainly makes sense it's not what we were ever presented with. When he has his epiphany in sick bay he says that Vejur can't FEEL. He went for Kolinar because it was about emotions. In TOS it's always about Vulcans don't feel and maybe he might.That he never felt like he belonged. On the Enterprise he kind of did, but was always an outsider. On Vulcan he was teased and called names. He felt he had to be the best at what he did, and control the raging inferno within by pushing it down. More British style stoicism than classic stoicism.
Except with the examples shown that Vulcans do have emotions, and they are a part of their history, so at least part of it is that Vulcans can feel but choose not to, by whatever mechanism they ascribed too.While that certainly makes sense it's not what we were ever presented with.
Yeah, that line definitely comes across way more poorly now."You don't understand the Vulcan way, Captain. It's logical. It's a better way than ours." Boy was she guzzling the Kool-Aid.
Or Vulcans are just across the board jerks. All of them. Teachers, students, mail carriers, the whole rotten lot.
"You don't understand the Vulcan way, Captain. It's logical. It's a better way than ours." Boy was she guzzling the Kool-Aid.
Of course it does make the Vulcans the worst racists in Star Trek. Do they have a "one drop rule"?
The Vulcans as a culture said:IDIC as I say, not as I do.
Taking larger Trek lore into account, it seems like there would be something of a cargo-cult mentality about Vulcans, to at least some of Earth. They stepped in, if not at Earth's darkest hour, certainly before the break of dawn and provided a lot of help. It's easy to imagine people trying earnestly to convert to a Vulcan lifestyle, but almost certainly never being able to achieve their goal. The Vulcans believe their own propoganda when it comes to their way of life, and there would be advantages to trying to sell a species like the humans on it, when they have so many common features and similar histories.Except with the examples shown that Vulcans do have emotions, and they are a part of their history, so at least part of it is that Vulcans can feel but choose not to, by whatever mechanism they ascribed too.
Yeah, that line definitely comes across way more poorly now.
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