What do you mean? That it shouldn't be anchored, that it should be replaced - with a pedestal, a stage, a bubble in the ceiling, what?
Especially a Klingon one.A tea party on a spaceship bridge would make more sense.
I mean, what other options do we want? A longue for everyone?The TOS and SNW chair is the most throne-like of them all but even they don't feel "wrong" in any way.
If you mean a hint that Spock was telepathically influenced by other Vulcans from the era, yeah, that's one way of handwaving the episode's nonsensical approach to time travel. But aside from my problems with that idea, even if it were true, I have a hard time believing that Vulcans could be unaware of it to the extent of convincing themselves that most of them weren't telepathic. It would've been much harder for the Vulcans of the High Command era to dismiss telepathy as a minority practice if it were a constant part of every Vulcan's everyday existence, as opposed to a more occasional thing.
Sometimes I dislike the captain's chair being part of the bridge. There's something throne-like about it that feels wrong.
Just a reminder that Romulan Ale is illegal.Just saw 'Greyhound'. Star Trek is junk!
Star Trek the Next Generation is more so.
Why?
Because the actors involved, and those that directed them, for the most part didn't have a clue.
Okay, so you have this ship "out there "... what is it doing? Obeying a set of orders. Many, many orders.
It is not tea time. This what makes Star Trek junk. Helmsman? A set of orders regarding the helm position. Navigator? A set of orders regarding navigational requirements. Officer of the deck? A set of orders for that function, and a set of orders for each manned station.
Why?
So each knows exactly what to do. What each is going to be doing during normal watches. And abnormal watches.
Drill, drill, drill!
By the way, the best Destroyer Captains stayed on or near the bridge.
The bridge is not a tea party.
It is a place of work.
Why? Because the ship's survival depends upon this.
There is possible precedent with that.How so? I'm curious now that you said that.
BTW Vulcans as an added thought, what if they are telepathic all the time but have learnt through their teachings how to suppress the unwanted reading of thoughts of those around them?
There is possible precedent with that.
Miranda Jones in "IS THERE IN TRUTH NO BEAUTY?" said she went to Vulcan to learn how not to read minds.
BTW Vulcans as an added thought, what if they are telepathic all the time but have learnt through their teachings how to suppress the unwanted reading of thoughts of those around them?
Hold on a second...
Vulcans at the time were linked with Spock, telepathy is a two way street.
WHAT IF Spock was the seed that started the whole thing? Logic was unknown then so such a disciplined mind was bound to be noticeable. Did someone pick up the idea?
Again, that doesn't work given what Enterprise established about 22nd-century Vulcans believing that only a minority of the population was capable of telepathy. There's no way they could possibly have held that belief if it were active by default and they had to learn to turn it off.
So, Enterprise is the lone outlier and, therefore, the one we can ignore.
Thats how that works, right?
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