Spock would have no problem, but McCoy and Scotty might.
"I don't see no points on your ears, boy...but you sound like a Vulcan!"
"No, sir. I am an android."
"Hmph...almost as bad."

Spock would have no problem, but McCoy and Scotty might.
Data and the EMH are more than just machines in the world of Star Trek. Data represents the "outsider" just as Spock did. His journey is a metaphor for that of other "outsiders" struggles for acceptance in society. Its an expansion of the ideas of TOS and what "humanity" encompasses.Data (and Voyager's Doctor) is a toaster -- a slap in the face to everything the original series was trying to say about man.
A non-human struggling to understand what it means to be human goes along PERFECTLY with what ST:TOS was trying to say about man.
Star Trek, like any good Sci-Fi, works best when it shows us something about ourselves while using the fantastic as a proxy.
Stating there's nothing special about man and that he's no better than his machines is he very opposite of what TOS was saying.
Spock would have no problem, but McCoy and Scotty might.
"I don't see no points on your ears, boy...but you sound like a Vulcan!"
"No, sir. I am an android."
"Hmph...almost as bad."
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Kirk admired and respected Flint's creations. It's true they were in the guise of a beautiful woman, but I don't think he would have respected them less were they not.
Data (and Voyager's Doctor) is a toaster -- a slap in the face to everything the original series was trying to say about man.
Data (and Voyager's Doctor) is a toaster -- a slap in the face to everything the original series was trying to say about man.
A non-human struggling to understand what it means to be human goes along PERFECTLY with what ST:TOS was trying to say about man.
Star Trek, like any good Sci-Fi, works best when it shows us something about ourselves while using the fantastic as a proxy.
Stating there's nothing special about man and that he's no better than his machines is he very opposite of what TOS was saying.
A non-human struggling to understand what it means to be human goes along PERFECTLY with what ST:TOS was trying to say about man.
Star Trek, like any good Sci-Fi, works best when it shows us something about ourselves while using the fantastic as a proxy.
Stating there's nothing special about man and that he's no better than his machines is he very opposite of what TOS was saying.
That's not what TNG's Data and VOY's Doctor were saying at all. Just because they're special, too, doesn't invalidate that humanity is special.
It's like the specious argument that gay marriage constitutes a threat to straight marriage. It's a canard.
Here's another thought: as you recall, both Data and the Doctor strove to be more than what they were, to be more human. Isn't that an homage to humanity being special?
And didn't Picard often marvel at the complexity of the human equation, and defend it to beings like Q, quoting Hamlet's "What a piece of work is man" soliloquoy, although not as a cynical criticism of humanity, but as a paean to it.
And just to stir the pot even futher, is man really that special? In a huge universe of billions of galaxies, each with billions of stars, maybe not!
Red Ranger
Stating there's nothing special about man and that he's no better than his machines is he very opposite of what TOS was saying.
That's not what TNG's Data and VOY's Doctor were saying at all. Just because they're special, too, doesn't invalidate that humanity is special.
It's like the specious argument that gay marriage constitutes a threat to straight marriage. It's a canard.
Here's another thought: as you recall, both Data and the Doctor strove to be more than what they were, to be more human. Isn't that an homage to humanity being special?
And didn't Picard often marvel at the complexity of the human equation, and defend it to beings like Q, quoting Hamlet's "What a piece of work is man" soliloquoy, although not as a cynical criticism of humanity, but as a paean to it.
And just to stir the pot even futher, is man really that special? In a huge universe of billions of galaxies, each with billions of stars, maybe not!
Red Ranger
I actually agree with Beaker here. Data is a tool with a great user-interface same as the EMH. I also think the striving to be human was just a bit of programming, added in to make humans feel less threatened by these marvels of modern technology.
Stripped of there programming... what would they actually be? Could they figure a way to survive? Could they learn to survive by watching those around them like an organic being?
Commander Maddox was right on the mark on this one in 'Measure of a Man'.
That's not what TNG's Data and VOY's Doctor were saying at all. Just because they're special, too, doesn't invalidate that humanity is special.
It's like the specious argument that gay marriage constitutes a threat to straight marriage. It's a canard.
Here's another thought: as you recall, both Data and the Doctor strove to be more than what they were, to be more human. Isn't that an homage to humanity being special?
And didn't Picard often marvel at the complexity of the human equation, and defend it to beings like Q, quoting Hamlet's "What a piece of work is man" soliloquoy, although not as a cynical criticism of humanity, but as a paean to it.
And just to stir the pot even futher, is man really that special? In a huge universe of billions of galaxies, each with billions of stars, maybe not!
Red Ranger
I actually agree with Beaker here. Data is a tool with a great user-interface same as the EMH. I also think the striving to be human was just a bit of programming, added in to make humans feel less threatened by these marvels of modern technology.
Stripped of there programming... what would they actually be? Could they figure a way to survive? Could they learn to survive by watching those around them like an organic being?
Commander Maddox was right on the mark on this one in 'Measure of a Man'.
Strongly disagree with you there, pal. Commander Maddox was a bigot, pure and simple.
If you or I were "stripped of our programming," we couldn't survive either. You're looking at the characters in a narrow way, assuming that they're just the sums of their programs. I thought Data argued that effectively when he doubted that Maddox's method of downloading the information from his positronic brain would retain the "flavor" of his memories.
As you recall, in the ep with Ira Graves, when he downloaded his memories into Data's positronic brain, he retained the flavor of his individuality. When he later downloaded it into a more conventional computer, that flavor was lost. This can be seen as evidence that Data's positronic brain is more than just a memory bank.
I do think creating an AI with sentience, and even a soul, is possible, and we better hope it's more like Data than Skynet from the Terminator movies.
Red Ranger
I actually agree with Beaker here. Data is a tool with a great user-interface same as the EMH. I also think the striving to be human was just a bit of programming, added in to make humans feel less threatened by these marvels of modern technology.
Stripped of there programming... what would they actually be? Could they figure a way to survive? Could they learn to survive by watching those around them like an organic being?
Commander Maddox was right on the mark on this one in 'Measure of a Man'.
Strongly disagree with you there, pal. Commander Maddox was a bigot, pure and simple.
If you or I were "stripped of our programming," we couldn't survive either. You're looking at the characters in a narrow way, assuming that they're just the sums of their programs. I thought Data argued that effectively when he doubted that Maddox's method of downloading the information from his positronic brain would retain the "flavor" of his memories.
As you recall, in the ep with Ira Graves, when he downloaded his memories into Data's positronic brain, he retained the flavor of his individuality. When he later downloaded it into a more conventional computer, that flavor was lost. This can be seen as evidence that Data's positronic brain is more than just a memory bank.
I do think creating an AI with sentience, and even a soul, is possible, and we better hope it's more like Data than Skynet from the Terminator movies.
Red Ranger
If you strip him down to basic urges, "I'm hungry", could he make that leap as to what he'd need to do to feed himself? Without programming him on what he'd need to do? A child instinctively knows at birth to suck on a tit. Would an android make the leap to go plug himself into a wall socket?
People continue to make this leap that Data is greater than the sum of his programming. Yet no one knows what his programming actually is. Except for Soong. Same things apply for the EMH.
It's just another case of people wanting their toys to come to life. It's actually kind of sad.
What does it mean to be "human"?Data had no "journey." At most he should have been a foil for humanity. Instead they chose to make it about him -- an inanimate object -- and cheapen everything it means to be human in the process.
Data had no "journey." At most he should have been a foil for humanity. Instead they chose to make it about him -- an inanimate object -- and cheapen everything it means to be human in the process.
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