Bats aren't bugs.Whales aren't fish.
Bats aren't bugs.Whales aren't fish.
Don’t try to frighten us with your pescatarian ways. Your sad devotion to Cartesian dualism hasn’t allowed you special comprehension of fish cognizance or given you and understanding of their mind’s umwelt.I am aware of the lateral line. Furthermore, it is apparent that you do not understand the difference between a metaphor and reality.
And no, the lateral line doesn't count.
A fish may know how many enemies are around, but the lateral line isn't the fish's brain.
By the way...fish don't speak English. Maybe Klingonaase. I don't know I haven't interviewed a fish recently. Something about them not speaking English...
I understood that reference.Bats aren't bugs.
I understood that one too.Don’t try to frighten us with your pescatarian ways. Your sad devotion to Cartesian dualism hasn’t allowed you special comprehension of fish cognizance or given you and understanding of their mind’s umwelt.

So say we all.I understood that one too.
Sure, that is what the Big Whale lobby wants you to believe....Whales aren't fish.
Pigs is pigs.Bats aren't bugs.
I second this take. Few of the Vulcans seen in the era were very warm or friendly towards humans. I think Spock does the Lion's share of lifting for perception of Vulcans.My take: there are more haughty, racist Vulcans in the TOS and TNG eras than we probably think.
It is a fallacy that being half-human makes Spock's emotions stronger. Vulcan emotions are intrinsically far more intense than human, which is why they need such strict emotional control to begin with. It's more likely that Spock and other Vulcans just find it a convenient fiction to blame his difficulties with emotional control on his "human half" -- which is a ridiculous formulation, really, because what is the "chocolate half" of a glass of chocolate milk, or the "oxygen half" of carbon monoxide? It's not two halves, it's an integrated whole.
Could be a little of both. A real person would find it very difficult to repress themselves in a Vulcan-ish way, certainly not to the point where they could claim they don't even feel emotions. The people who do claim to thinking from a place of perfect rationality without being emotion are often deluding themselves about what counts as an emotional response, claiming their own biases and reactive impulses are mathematical reason and dismissing others' differing thoughts as emotionalism that they can ignore.Yes, I know, over the years and also in other shows and movies we've learned that Vulcans have intense emotions (I don't think this was introduced until Sarek in TNG, was it?) and that because of Surak (The Savage Curtain) and Kohlinar (TMP) that they have "abandoned" emotion. It's philosophical not biological.
If being half human doesn't make Spock any different emotionally then what is the point of Spock?
Even in Star Trek IV Amanda says that "You're half human. The computer knows that." If Vulcans are as emotional as humans, what does that even mean?
Even if we go back to Star Trek: The Motion Picture, what is Spock's struggle? Why is he having this connection with Vejur but Sonak or the Vulcan elders do not?
"I sense the consciousness calling to you from space. ...Your human blood is touched by it, Spock."
His WHAT now? Why does this matter?
The end of TMP is Spock's emotional epiphany. His discovery of joy and friendship for Kirk. Shouldn't we want this for other Vulcans then?
Yes, I know, over the years and also in other shows and movies we've learned that Vulcans have intense emotions (I don't think this was introduced until Sarek in TNG, was it?) and that because of Surak (The Savage Curtain) and Kohlinar (TMP) that they have "abandoned" emotion. It's philosophical not biological.
And yes, that makes sense just as it makes sense that Romulans and Vulcans can't be that physiologically different after such an insignificantly short separation. Star Trek famously does not always make sense if you give it that much thought.
But if all this is true then Vulcans merely have other physical differences but not emotional ones. So Vulcans are just racist bastards.
It was never implied that Spock was physically weaker than his Vulcan contemporaries, was it? Or that he mind melded any worse for being part human?
(Even Deanna Troi was shown to have compromised telepathic abilities because of her human heritage.)
Deep Space Nine's Solok isn't much better:
SISKO: We can upgrade your inertial dampers by the end of the day, but to begin to overhaul your warp core would take at least a week.
SOLOK: That is most inefficient.
SISKO: War's an inefficient business.
SOLOK: A somewhat unprofessional attitude. However, I have come to expect a lack of professionalism and efficiency on starbases run by human officers.
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