Vulcan had planetary unity, globalisation, one world government for almost 2000 Earth years so the culture is less diverse compared to Earth.
On Earth there are caves that have existed for many thousands of years, you are probably safer in a cave during a major earthquake than you would be in many buildings. The problem in ST'09 was the planet was collapsing.Another silly plot device, - there is a major earthquake and the Vulcan government stands in a cave
Is that part of your head canon, or were you pulling that from a episode?Vulcan had planetary unity, globalisation, one world government for almost 2000 Earth years
control of feelings
Did someone say he was? The point is Vulcans can and will kill or use violence is there is a logical reason to do so. Spock was more than willing to kill Gary Mitchell, because it was the logical action. Sarek could have killed Gav, if there was a logical reason.Sometimes, like now, the quote function doesn't work, so Nerys Mek... Your quotes are very familiar to me, and they don't mean what you think. All Our Yest's: 5000 years ago, Vulcans were barbarians, SO WERE WE. Sarek is capable of killing in the same sense that he is probably capable of tying his shoes. He has an ability to defend himself if necessary. He's not some habitual murderer.
Not sure why you're talking about expressing emotions through action or expression. The point is Vulcans suppress their emotions.. When that control slips, as it did in Amok Time, All Our Yesterdays, The Naked Time and This Side of Paradise we see how deep those emotion run. The result is pretty violent. Monitor crushing violent. Attempted murder violent. Tray of plomeek across the room violent.All flesh and blood beings feel. Again, I'm NOT part of this ridiculous cartoonish black-and-white fan argument between two silly extremes... between (1) Vulcan are blank of all feeling like robots and (2) Vulcans feel everything even MORE than we do. I'm saying a THIRD thing, which was the original intent in TOS... they reduce and suppress what they feel as a mental discipline. Pay attention to TOS, and you'll notice line after line after line about Vulcans feeling less. You'll even hear them claiming to feel nothing, but long term, it becomes clear that it's not so total and absolute, and it couldn't be. Flesh and blood humanoids will always naturally feel, but the extreme mental discipline to replace feeling with logic does change who and what Vulcans are. The state of mind is drastically different than ours as a result. They wouldn't care about a discipline that just makes them not act out on violent impulses, and makes them show no emotion in their faces while still feeling it all just as deeply as ever. Why would they? Who cares what their face muscles look like? What would that accomplish? And controlling violent or irrational impulses MEANS controlling the MIND, first. On Earth, in real life, there are many mental disciplines, meditation etc... this is another. It would be a bizarre decision to devote a society to maintaining mental and emotional chaos inside, while caring only that it doesn't show in their actions. Actions aren't necessary the most important thing. How you experience life, your mental life, is #1.
They barely used Vulcans in TNG and DS9. Probably at the direction of Gene Roddenberry in trhe case of the former.Later Trek series de-emphasized Vulcans and the idea of Vulcans, and got sloppy when portraying them, muddying the ideas because a lot of people don't care for the whole concept, especially the inherent criticism of the violence of the human race. I would get the idea Rick Berman probably wished he could get rid of them entirely...
It's both. It's always been both. The inner feeling and the outward expression.So many people these days, I think, hear "emotion" and think of someone yelling, jumping up and down, hitting, "getting all emotional" as people say. The popular meaning has drifted. Emotion itself is the feeling, not the resulting behavior. That changes everything you hear in TOS, if you think emotion is actions.
If it's DS9, you can usually assume it's gibberishmade up by the scriptwriters. The only exception I can think of is Qoy qeylIS puqloD ("Hear, sons of Kahless", the warrior anthem), which originated in the game Star Trek: Klingon, which Okrand supervised on.In, I wanna say "Looking for Parmak in all the Wrong Places" (if that's the one where Quark is getting Worf's help to seduce a Klingon babe Cyrano de Bergerac style), I believe he refers to whichever language Worf is coaching him in as Klingonese.
I don't know how much Okrandian thlingan Hol that really was.
Wait, how does Tommy Westphall fit into this?The Roddenberry-verse, Meyer-verse, Berman-verse and Abrams-verse are all part of the fictional multiverse created by Benny Russell. So, by the way, is the Kelley-verse (Boston Legal). Sometimes, there's contact or slippage between the universes, which is why Denny Crane remembers being captain of a starship.
And while I'm on the subject of Boston Legal, Clarence and Claire both work in the New York office now, and they're still together.
He has large snow globe collection.Wait, how does Tommy Westphall fit into this?
I like his idea that the Federation government and Starfleet academy were both located on a giant space station, and not on a planet.In my personal head canon the Franz Joseph Starfleet designs are canon.
My take, while of course they are members of the Federation, being a member of the Federation doesn't define these planets.Starfleet defends the Federation and explores space
Planetary forces defend local land based systems
E.G Starfleet in space defends the Sol system and is diverse
Earth forces on land defends Earth is for Earth citizens (human or otherwise) only to join
Don't forget the "Crane-verse," Fraser Crane also remembers being the captain of a starship.So, by the way, is the Kelley-verse (Boston Legal). Sometimes, there's contact or slippage between the universes, which is why Denny Crane remembers being captain of a starship.
Both Earth and the Federation acknowledge and celebrate the Republic's orderly and peaceful transition of power between two opposing factions.The election of a US President garners no fanfare whatsoever from the rest of the Federation or even Earth
Why should the rest of the Federation care who the President of the USA is? In the ST universe there is no one human superpower. The rest of Earth might have as much interest as they do who is the Prime Minister of India. And by then places like India and China might be the new superpowers. The Western influence over Earth culture is due for an implosion..Both Earth and the Federation acknowledge and celebrate the Republic's orderly and peaceful transition of power between two opposing factions.
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