Ah, but Spock doesn't represent reason.But that alternative view is only presented to show it's faults. Spock was created to do this. His views are not actually non-human or alien but just one aspect of humanity's. Humans are complex. We can be as cold and logical as Vulcans, as violent as Klingons, as paranoid as Romulans, as greedy as Ferengi, as Spiritual as Bajorans and as oppressive as Cardassians. It's our battles between those urges that Star Trek tries to illustrate.It is hardly surprising that human authors would write stories that draw those kind of conclusions or have those attitudes to Spocks character. The fantastic thing for me was that at least Spock represented the alternative view.
And what I'm saying is that we need Spock to continue to advocate the reasonable conponent of human nature. I certainly don't believe Spock was created to show how faulty reason is.It may not always be the way to go but I don't want Kirk trying to convince Spock to be logical!
I won't argue that that interpretation improves those episodes, in those aspects. It had certainly never occurred to me.
However, it did occur to me that someone must have thought that Spock was too stiff, and loosened him up for the sake of the audience (as opposed to the sake of the character) in The Cloud Minders.
Although the RL reason may be simply not having his character traits figured out yet (Spock was basically human with pointed ears in "The Cage", then had Number One's personality grafted on in "Where No Man..." when that character was dropped), flashbacks in "The Minagerie" show Spock smiling at pretty space flowers. They could have edited that and other emotional bits out if they wanted. Spock's ultracool personality was well-established by then in the series proper, but they intentionally kept those glimpses of emotion in to show how he'd changed and matured in the past 13 years.
Many novels set during the pre-TOS era, like D.C Fontana's Vulcan's Glory feature a more vulnerable young Spock, whose emotions are closer to the surface.
Plus, being stuck on a starship with emotional humans for a five-year mission is bound to rub off a bit, or at least encourage you to explore your human side more than you would among Vulcans.
Ah, but Spock doesn't represent reason.
Maybe somebody just wanted to take advantage of the fact that, unexpectedly, Spock had become a sex symbol!
They should have just made a new TV series about Voyeger
Shatner will always be Kirk, Chris Pine is not.
I didn't hear you screaming when five actors played Spock in ST III?![]()
But logic is not always "reasonable" or even right. Spock represents the facts. The cold hard facts. McCoy compassion, empathy and heart. Kirk is the one needs to find the reasonable compromise between the two extremes.Ah, but Spock doesn't represent reason.
Only because "Reasonble" didn't sound as cool as "Logical".![]()
But logic is not always "reasonable" or even right. Spock represents the facts. The cold hard facts. McCoy compassion, empathy and heart. Kirk is the one needs to find the reasonable compromise between the two extremes.Ah, but Spock doesn't represent reason.
Only because "Reasonble" didn't sound as cool as "Logical".![]()
OK, now compare & contrast Spock's reaction to the death of his mother and destruction of Vulcan with his reaction to the "death" of Intrepid and her Vulcan crew in "The Immunity Syndrome".But logic is not always "reasonable" or even right. Spock represents the facts. The cold hard facts. McCoy compassion, empathy and heart. Kirk is the one needs to find the reasonable compromise between the two extremes.Only because "Reasonble" didn't sound as cool as "Logical".![]()
Well I accept that using the word "reasonable" wasn't quite right because "reasonable" goes beyond reason!I should have simply disagreed with your view that Spock doesn't represent reason. After all logic isn't about facts, it's a form of reasoning. So already we know he is more that just a font of data.
Moreover it does Spock a huge injustice to imply he is only about "cold hard facts". We also saw in "Journey to Babel" that he is an individual of honour and principle when he refused to give blood to his own father despite his mother's urgings, because he was in command of the Enterprise. You may view that as cold, but it's not without reason.
I agree though, that he represent reasoning (as opposed to reasonableness) taken close to an extreme at times. Where upon McCoy supplies the balance you indicate. But Spock isn't always wrong or even in need of compromise etc, as we saw in WNMHGB.
Why is it OK to water down the reasoning of a character in such a way that it at least intermittently fails at the worst possible times, but its fine to leave McCoy as is? If Spock becomes another Kirk, it’s two against one!
My main complaint is that the one character who was tasked with defending reason and reasoning (if not being "reasonable") is being encouraged "by all and sundry" (OK, at least two) to give it up completely, and just do what feels right, when it counts. Bad enough if he just cracks, without others egging him on. As I've said, this will be one of the interesting parts of the next movie for me: which Spock will he be?
Isn't that often what Spock winds up doing in many episodes centered around him? "The Galileo Seven" comes to mind.
OK, now compare & contrast Spock's reaction to the death of his mother and destruction of Vulcan with his reaction to the "death" of Intrepid and her Vulcan crew in "The Immunity Syndrome".
Sometimes you have to remember its just a TV show and the writers are just creating drama. Spock is the way he is because he's written to provide a certain POV or to create the aforementioned drama. Which is better than when he's just Commander Exposition.Isn't that often what Spock winds up doing in many episodes centered around him? "The Galileo Seven" comes to mind.
If Spock were really that poor at commanding others how did he get to be a first officer let alone the best in the fleet? "The Galileo Seven" comes across as a cheap shot on the part of the writer(s) to me. A reasoning being would be able to take into account the fact that others see things differently. This should be no surprise to Spock.
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