So I wonder what facet of an alien culture they would believe humanity represents?
So I wonder what facet of an alien culture they would believe humanity represents?
One of the areas where later Trek lost me. We went from explorers to missionaries preaching the greatness of humanity.
I mean I see it as organic in universe, as well as the outside reasons. The Federation is 200 years old, its now sure of itself, it got a bloody nose, it reevaluates. It feels 'alive'.
This was especially unsettling when first watching the series in the '70s. We were basically conditioned to expect World War III. We just didn't know when it was coming.Quite so. Still, being a kid when first encountering the dialogue, I felt a bit uneasy when Spock mentioned there would be at least two MORE world wars after Hitler. (TOS was nothing if not a violent-utopian combo.)
As much as I disliked the depressing Dominion War story arc, there's one line that came from that that's applicable to our current world: "It's easy to be a saint in paradise." (Sisko, in DS9; I don't remember the episode title)I mean, we still have a dark side. TOS was quite clear on that, while future installments would downplay it.
Retconning was pretty much the only thing that made sense. From the perspective of the '60s, the mid-'90s would have seemed as far off as a century, and none of the producers or writers could have guessed that we'd all still be debating this over 50 years later. When Janeway and her crew ended up on Earth of the mid-1990s and everything looked normal - not a hint of war in one of the U.S.'s major cities - it was pretty obvious that the Eugenics War/WWIII had been moved to later.Not really. Spock said in "Space Seed" that the Eugenics Wars were the last world war, so the intent at the time was probably that the Eugenics Wars and the Third World War mentioned in "Bread and Circuses" were the same thing. It wasn't until "Encounter at Farpoint" retconned WWIII to take place in the mid-21st century that fandom began assuming that the EW and WWIII were two separate conflicts, glossing over what "Space Seed" asserted.
Genocide didn't stop with the Holocaust, either physical or cultural. It just wasn't as widespread, and most people weren't at risk of being the victims.Another thing we can see in adjectiveless history is that in the past societies had never been too concerned about discrimination and genocides. The white man orders, the black slave obeys; that's the order of things. Genocide, just another way to do war.
And then WWII and the Holocaust happened. Initially, it was just a war between an expansionist country and those in its way. Concentration camps and the ideas of Hitler about Jews were known, but nobody cared too much. But when the war ended, the concentration camps were liberated and the full scale of what had transpired there came to public light... the collective horror and shame of the human race as a whole was enough to kickstart a complete change of mentality. Genocide became fundamentally unacceptable under ANY circumstances, and movements for the rights of minorities started everywhere. It was not a 180º change, and those movements had to face resistance before eventually prevailing, but the change happened. So yes, a horror that is big enough CAN force a change in the human race, because it has already happened.
The Maquis, Part 2:As much as I disliked the depressing Dominion War story arc, there's one line that came from that that's applicable to our current world: "It's easy to be a saint in paradise." (Sisko, in DS9; I don't remember the episode title)
That's something Sisko should have told Picard.
An additional thing I like about Enterprise is how it showed that humanity became an important power, not because humans were superior in any way, but because as the newcomers on the scene, we were a neutral party and didn't have the centuries of historical baggage that led Vulcan, Andoria, and Tellar to mistrust one another. So humans were the only ones who could act as neutral intermediaries and make alliances with the others. We became important because we were the only ones the others trusted.
The Maquis, Part 2:
KIRA: Commander?
SISKO: Just because a group of people belongs to the Federation it does not mean that they are saints.
KIRA: Excuse me?
SISKO: Do you know what the trouble is?
KIRA: No.
SISKO: The trouble is Earth.
KIRA: Really?
SISKO: On Earth there is no poverty, no crime, no war.
So I wonder what facet of an alien culture they would believe humanity represents?
Maybe the flying leg kick.
Physical and social awkwardness?
Would’ve been a nice followup to B5’s “The Deconstruction of Falling Stars”.That means they could also make a distant future series where Humans (in the form of the Federation or not) are one of the established powers with centuries or millennia of historical baggage, and vested interests everywhere, and lots of ancient sympathies and grudges between species, and an entrenched mindset, having to deal with an upstart species that relegates them to second fiddle because everyone trusts them rather than us, and as a new species, they still have the flexibility we've lost over time. (After all, there's no good reason to assume humans are inherently special.)
I might watch that series.
The show is made by and for humans, so it's going to be inevitable. The few times sci-fi tried to make something non-human-centric, like where everyone on screen is a giant bug battling an evil caterpillar, either the makers lost touch with the proceedings or most audiences had no clue what was going on. On the plus side, that's qualifier for what is known as "cult classic".![]()
As for humans being "special" for not fitting into any personality stereotype...we usually see the show from a largely Human POV. The Humans might not be as special in-universe as they think they are. I head-canon that in the "Star Trek" universe, Humanity's stereotype is its ego. Klingons are warlike, Vulcans are logical, Bajorans are religious, and Humans have their heads up their own asses. That's what Humans are known for behind our backs.
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