I guess that's where I differ. How far in to the weeds is this mold? To my mind, keeping them separate but drawing from a similar cloth is sufficient enough without calling one "Star Trek" anymore than I would Stargate "Star Trek" or Star Trek" "Forbidden Planet."
But, I guess that's arguing technicalities. I guess I don't see the value to it, but I'm sure others do.
Me and my stupid brain would love some concreteness to this concept. I'll admit to being thick and sometimes I don't care for Star Trek as a worldview. It feels very strange.Star Trek as worldview” is basically “that nebulous sensibility that the The Best of Trek books used to embody”.
That’s entirely fair — it is nebulous (cf. all the neverending arguments about “Gene’s Vision”, etc). I guess basically the sense you sometimes used to get in older Trek fandom (and in some ways, even in the franchise itself through the present) that Star Trek was more a philosophy than a story. Which could absolutely get wildly overblown and lead some people to treat it more like a religion than a story. Sometimes it could be a perfectly admirable ideal view of what humanity ought to be like; and sometimes it could be complete bullshit, and the sort of thing that led later-career Roddenberry to be treated (or see himself) like an actual visionary philosopher, at least in his public persona.Me and my stupid brain would love some concreteness to this concept. I'll admit to being thick and sometimes I don't care for Star Trek as a worldview. It feels very strange.
I find it needs a balance between these two things. If we say it's all one or all the other then you ignore facets that are between those two.And of course: at the end of the day, you’re absolutely right — the Trek franchise is a commercial project, full stop. But that other thing was, and sometimes still is, a thing in the air, too.)
I entirely agree.I find it needs a balance between these two things. If we say it's all one or all the other then you ignore facets that are between those two.
And for some reason both are like the stuff found on the Guardian of Forever planet.Ancient Roman architecture is a lot like Ancient Greek architecture.

Some something Preservers.And for some reason both are like the stuff found on the Guardian of Forever planet.![]()
It's become sort slang for anyone who seems to be a asshole and likely bigoted. Became that ever since Godwin's Law ended.Nazi is slang? I dunno. Maybe?
Not sure if this is controversial, but...
I think of all the lead captains in STAR TREK, Carol Freeman is the most improved.
new controversial opinion… Picard WAS guilty of having very dirty thoughts about Lawaxana Troi. It wasnt just her way of flirting.
Not sure if this is controversial, but...
I think of all the lead captains in STAR TREK, Carol Freeman is the most improved. When LOWER DECKS first started, I thought she was second tier and a bit of a joke. (Which, admittedly, was probably the point, as the California class ships tend to be more the grunts of the fleet, for lack of a better term.) But as the series went on, she showed herself to be more and more capable and actually a pretty good leader. I really liked her.
She definitely showed she earned her rank as the show progressed, and I'm sad we don't get to see more adventures with her, particularly with her posting in the finale. (For now, anyway. Of all the current era shows, LOWER DECKS had the best case and potential to be the one to be on for more than 5 seasons... maybe even hit 100 episodes. I would love to see that return in some form, even if it's only an animated movie. A man can hope, right?)
Sure. Everybody has an id on the inside.new controversial opinion… Picard WAS guilty of having very dirty thoughts about Lawaxana Troi. It wasnt just her way of flirting.
Sure. Everybody has an id on the inside.
Picard definitely does.What most people won't admit is how much of their id is influenced by the lizard part of our brains. Humans are ashamed of their inner animal inside them and we like to think of ourselves as more evolved than we really are.
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