I mean beyond "Data mimicing humanity".
Riker said:Mr. O'Brien says the weapon was in a state of discharge...
Now I'll assume the OP is inquiring about why Data didn't openly admit he'd fired on Fajo, because ultimately it isn't an outright lie. It's an omission, in a report to a superior, that Riker clearly shows he is suspicious about.Data said:Perhaps something happened during transport, commander
That's why I always tell people Data didn't lie. He just omitted things from his report at that momentAnd to be fair, something DID occur during transport....Data pressed the trigger and the transporter stopped the beam.
That's why I always tell people Data didn't lie. He just omitted things from his report at that moment
I actually took it as the passionless, android equivalent of a "None of your business" type remark. I mean Data wasn't really on duty here. His actions were outside his role as an officer, so any questioning by his superior, in that context, is moot imhoIndeed. He simply gave a half-assed report to a supervisor per McCoys Law (the bureaucratic mentality is the only constant in the universe).
I actually took it as the passionless, android equivalent of a "None of your business" type remark. I mean Data wasn't really on duty here. His actions were outside his role as an officer, so any questioning by his superior, in that context, is moot imho
I actually took it as the passionless, android equivalent of a "None of your business" type remark. I mean Data wasn't really on duty here. His actions were outside his role as an officer, so any questioning by his superior, in that context, is moot imho
Lol what ? ?Look, Data just tried to kill an unarmed dude because Data was really pissed off and decided to mete out some instant android justice.
I think this time, this will be the only point of yours I will address directly, dude, because I can't even say I get what you mean here. Data is most assuredly not a superman by any imposed standard that goes beyond possessing a few better-than-human abilities, which makes him only one among countless, in the Star Trek universe, who can boast similarly. He's not omnipotent. He's not wholly unstoppable, & given that he's dead, he's not immortalYet separate is the issue of whether Data really had to fire. He's Superman, with many explicit superpowers
Everybody would intellectually know he's a dangerous machine who could rip them to bloody shreds without breaking a sweat, and moreover a machine of unknown origin and specifications. Instinct would be what matters, though, and Data would strive to appear harmless, gullible and a bit silly, just as Soong intended (even if the striving is all of Data's own clever doing in practice). When the push came to a shove, though, nobody should be allowed to doubt that Data would shove, and through duranium walls if need be.
Data is a victim & captive, not an offender.
It wouldn't even matter if he had vaporized Fajo right then, because Fajo is telling us that's Data's only option.
It's not illegal or wrong for Data to kill in defense of himself or others.
It only supposedly goes against some instilled pacifistic programming guideline.
They are still captive aboard his ship. His ship is his weapon.
Any concocted opinion of what is true of Data in this situation does not trump what the narrative is saying.
The show is not required to supply an explanation for every possible theory a viewer has.
All we need know is that they've specifically prepared to hold Data. They know him right down to how much of every constituent element is in him. There were deliberate preparations made to indefinitely hold a Soong android in captivity aboard that ship.
if someone wrongfully abducts & imprisons someone else, the latter is justified in whatever casualty befalls their captors, in order to free themselves.
Data is most assuredly not a superman by any imposed standard that goes beyond possessing a few better-than-human abilities, which makes him only one among countless, in the Star Trek universe, who can boast similarly.
He's not omnipotent.
He is merely a fallible being that has on numerous occasions been outwitted, out-maneuvered, out-gamed, subjugated, etc...
I'd be fine allowing you the opinion that this is a poor episode for failing to satisfactorily explain away every discrepancy you might have
...to suggest he is in some way a murderous person.
I don't know if I understood your post correctly at all. When reading it, it sounds like you're describing Data as some lethal 'killing device'
whereas the whole series proves the exact contrary.
Just because he's strong enough to bend steel bars with his bare hands doesn't mean he'll go around killing people...so how exactly is he more dangerous than other fierce and powerful fighters like Worf ?
And since I'm naming Worf : his irritability, his aggressivity and his lack of patience make him much more unstable and dangerously unpredictable than Data, IMHO.
That event with Fajo was the only moment in the whole series (not taking movies into account here) when Data took the logical decision to kill someone
And I honestly doubt Noonien programmed Data's behaviours to be innocent just in order to hide his 'dangerousity'...
The more I think about ST Androids, the more convinced I am than their personalities is mostly built by experience through heuristic algorithms, so I don't even believe Noonien programmed Data's innocent and clumsy personality. I think Data programmed himself by trial and error.
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