Terra Prime. Forever.I prefer the TL/DR material to the alternative and don't worry, that's not even TL/DR. Lovely!![]()
Terra Prime. Forever.I prefer the TL/DR material to the alternative and don't worry, that's not even TL/DR. Lovely!![]()
Do we ever see what Vulcan culture was like before Surak came, and created the logic-based philosophy that Vulcan had long been identified with?
"Logic, my dear Zoe, merely enables one to be wrong with authority."Logic can justify anything if you start from a faulty premise.
That’s the trick.
I think also, something Michael Chabon (I think) said that made sense, the key aspect of Romulan life is secrecy. They only really trust family and then not very much. Everything beyond that is a series of very shaky trust relationships. Vulcans might be the only other "Species" in the galaxy they could trust enough to be in union with.Perhaps its fair to say then that the Romulans were pressured to leave Vulcan in the first place. On one hand, they face religious persecution for being unwilling to conform to Surak’s teachings, and in the other, they are homeless in an ideological sense. That there were Romulans pushing for reunification with Vulcan as early as 2154 mean either a) attempting to co-opt Vulcan, b) they though that Vulcan was ideologically aligned with Romulus, or c) were simply trying to reunite with what they were familiar with in the face of various hostile species, and what ever horrifying life was present on Vulcan was preferable to whatever Romulans had encountered.
Not really. Aside from the Time of Awakening being their WWIII and that Vulcans were once like humans prior to it, we know nothing about the era.
Logic can justify anything if you start from a faulty premise.
That’s the trick.
In the era of The Original Series, there is a nobility to the Vulcans, with the culture seeming to be one of disciplined stoic intellectuals, and they help express Gene Roddenberry’s ideas about a Utopian future where humanity is at the center of an accepting society based around scientific knowledge and cultural diversity. However, newer iterations of Trek tend to take a much dimmer view of Vulcans. They’re usually portrayed as arrogant elitists who cloak their bigotry of anything different in a belief of the superiority of their ideology.
Some fans might chalk up this shift in characterization as a failure to truly “get” Star Trek by the people in charge of continuing its legacy.
But another way of looking at this is that if someone accepts the characterization as it has been presented over the past five decades, Vulcan society is actually horrifying.
The Vulcans are a culture where from birth to death the entire planet is indoctrinated to suppress their emotions, passions, and desires in adherence to an ideology, and anyone who doesn’t is made to be an outcast. It’s a fictional culture that seems all too relevant to present day churches in its conformity, since it’s rooted around fundamentalism toward an idea, to the exclusion of an individual’s feelings, as an article of faith in how to live.
In its own way, the Vulcans can basically serve as a Star Trek-ian allegory for religious conversion therapy where people are encouraged through various means to "pray-the-gay/logic-the-feels away" (even beyond the more explicit one from The Next Generation). The Vulcans are a people where at least some members carry around a lifetime of regrets about their inability to say “I love you” to the ones they down deep feel it toward.
Sarek: (His thoughts flowing through Captian Picard) Pe- Perrin ... Amanda ... I wanted to give you so much more. I wanted to show you such ... t-t-tenderness. But that is not our way ... Spock ... Amanda ... Did you know? Can you know ... how much I love you? I do … (shouting and sobbing) LOVE YOU!
And even Spock himself is prepared to let his father die just to adhere to some Vulcan idea of logic and duty. TOS Vulcans aren't even remotely utopian or clean.
"You can use logic to justify almost anything. That's it's power, and it's flaw. From now on, bring your logic to me." [Kathryn Janeway]
The Vulcans were NOT all that noble on TOS. The very first full Vulcan we ever met, T'Pring, plotted to get Kirk or Spock killed to escape an arranged marriage. Sarek, in "Journey to Babel," cut off his son for 18 years because Spock chose the "wrong" career path AND concealed a serious heart condition from his wife, while even Spock conceded that his father was capable of committing cold-blooded murder if he had a "logical" reason to do so. And both "Journey to Babel" and TAS's "Yesteryear" established that little Spock was teased and bullied by the other Vulcan children.
The idea that Vulcans were always portrayed in a positive light until ENTERPRISE is mistaken.
Clearly. Although I'd have had Gary whacked, too.![]()
Vulcans have IDIC Medal, yet there society doesn't seem to tolerate half breeds like Spock
The Vulcan Hello to Klingons is: blast them on first sight!And let's not forget that in DSC Sarek was perfectly willing to allow the Federation to commit planetary genocide by setting off a bomb inside the Klingon Homeworld, so where were his vaunted Vulcan ideals then?
We see three kids teasing Spock about that (Yesteryear), plus the head of the science institute in ST09. So it's like four people. Not exactly an epidemic...
"Logic, my dear Zoe, merely enables one to be wrong with authority."
--The Second Doctor, "Tomb of the Cybermen"
^Here's the most relevant point IMHO. This is a fantasy race with a bestowed property of inherently wildly dangerous emotions, who given the choice of self destruction & a singular other way, chose to surviveAlso, real psychology shows us that suppressing your emotions is both impossible and incredibly harmful to one's mental health and the mental health of one's loved ones. We can perhaps hypothesize that as aliens, this is untrue for Vulcans, but if there were a society in real life that tried to function on the basis of Vulcan beliefs, that entire society would be fundamentally abusive.
And T'Pau, who questions Spock's reaction to the Ponn Far. Plus, it's interesting that this is the head of the Vulcan Science Institute who states that Spock has a "disadvantage" and not one member of that council corrects him. It might not be an epidemic, but certainly present with multiple leaders in Vulcan society. Not exactly a ringing endorsement.We see three kids teasing Spock about that (Yesteryear), plus the head of the science institute in ST09. So it's like four people. Not exactly an epidemic...
Also, I actually thought ENTERPRISE's portrayal of Vulcans was pretty good.
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