One thing that did surprise me is that Data specifically stated the "hole in space" has never been encountered before. Yes it has and Kirk found a giant amoeba inside.
The Ferengi stopped being credible enemies of the Federation after the first episode they were featured in.
And the Romulans were re-introduced at the end of Season 1, possibly to replace the Ferengi as "main antagonists"
I can't lie, Nagilum's end statement always felt like something out of an unused script/bit with Q that they dusted off for that scene.
Seriously, read that end assessment in De Lancie's voice at his smuggest and (other the than the remark about common ground) it feels completely natural for Q.
In any event, this has always been one of my favorite episodes. Excellent creep factor, great premise, great performances. And it kicked off the TNG season 2 theme of how dangerous space really is. (At least, I feel that was the theme. Few seasons in the franchise really capture that feel like this one did.)
For Nagilum. There's really nothing that can be remotely compared to scientific about what it's doing. It's not trying to prove some sort of scientific hypothesis, or discover a new way of understanding a scientific notion or what have you, wherein lives of subjects happened to be lost in the effort (which even in itself is debatably ethical)The comparison that comes up (and was hinted at in this episode) is that of scientists performing tests on laboratory animals...tests that occasionally result in the death of a subject.Well that's a handy rationalization I don't completely buy
For Nagilum, the (presumably human) scientists or both?
I have no problem with a totally alien being not having human ethical standards, ones which actual humans violate as mentioned.
Nagilum even does not really understand much about other creatures being capable of dying. Killing off half the crew to study that was not a surprise, he/she/it can create physical objects (or close enough to physical that for all intents and purposes they are real) which fold space to test Riker and Worf. Nagilum created a warbird indistinguishable from real just to see their reaction.
Nagilum seems comfortable with objects but lacks an understanding of biological ones. For all we know the Enterprise encounter might have been his first contact with limited biologicals and the desire to test and learn about them drives the episode. At the end he foes let them go but showing up to chat with Picard indicates he was not done, he just altered the experiment, sort of like Q's neverending trial.
Neither do I honestly. I'm not a fan, obviously, but it should be expected that they'd come across that out there. The main issue is that it's a hypocrite at the end, passing judgements on the crew as if it's somehow above those traits it condemns others forI have no problem with a totally alien being not having human ethical standards, ones which actual humans violate as mentioned.
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