He only believed in it for the last few years, considering his talk in the cage when he was going to quit...
...and didn't. You have to watch to the end.
He only believed in it for the last few years, considering his talk in the cage when he was going to quit...
And I admit that is a fair point.Goes against who Pike is the argument most have presented.
Suffering is a fact of life. To try and avoid it at all costs doesn't always lead to the best life.There are a lot of good points but I am going to say I chafe at the implication that anyone trying to actively avoid suffering in their life is automatically "selfish" or some other label that people can look down on and mock. Pike's a fictional character, but I've seen some very, very serious and permanent harm come to people who get labeled selfish just because they are trying to better their circumstances (thus shaming them to just accept horrific situations that end up damaging their lives permanently) so I certainly hope the ease I'm seeing that label thrown around in regards to Pike trying to prevent such a fate in fiction does not extend to real people said commenters know in real life.
The ironic thing is that I tried to imagine the Robert April we just saw this week repeating this post to Pike verbatim (calling him a coward etc.) if Pike asked to resign after telling April everything that happened on Boreth. And I just can't see him doing it. It's Pike's choice if he wants to stay, or not. By getting on a pedestal and morally shaming people who make choices, about their own body and health, that we may not agree with, we're actually taking that choice away from them. Which represents everything that Starfleet isn't about.I brought up it being cowardly, but only in the sense that Pike fleeing would leave someone else in the position he was in, and that knowingly putting someone else in harm’s way to protect oneself is, IMHO, a cowardly act.
I wouldn’t call someone seeking treatment for an illness a coward, because they’re not. But I would call someone who uses someone to else as a human shield cowardly, which is the closest thing to Pike’s situation were he to try to escape his fate, as I see it.
The ironic thing is that I tried to imagine the Robert April we just saw this week repeating this post to Pike verbatim (calling him a coward etc.) if Pike asked to resign after telling April everything that happened on Boreth. And I just can't see him doing it. It's Pike's choice if he wants to stay, or not. By getting on a pedestal and morally shaming people who make choices, about their own body and health, that we may not agree with, we're actually taking that choice away from them. Which represents everything that Starfleet isn't about.
How can people claim to offer freedom to people about what they can do with their own body if they're just going to be shamed to hell afterwards? Pike being labeled a coward about a choice he decides to make for his own body doesn't seem very different from certain groups who try to push moral/religious views into laws about what people can or can't decide is best for their body.
April could order Pike to stay but he knows too little about the situation to know if that's the best thing even if told everything. It's not like ordering someone to fix a dangerous warp core when you know that's the only way out of a current situation.
Insufficient context. Pike did not get a date for the disaster. Starfleet has loads of ships with identical room layouts like the one he saw. And no matter how safe Starfleet tries to make their ships, the occasional accident is inevitable. Pike cannot feasibly dedicate every waking hour 24/7 to micromanaging the lives of strangers he has not yet met...
That is true, but I wish that part written in a different way while keeping his choice.
That moment is powerful, and established Pike as a truly selfless and heroic character who places their values and beliefs, and the lives of others, above their own personal safety. If Pike were to abandon his post his position would be filled by someone else, and he’d be passing his fate onto them. It would be beyond cowardly, and Pike wouldn’t be the man he is.
Except in the episode itself Pike relates to Spock that he knows exactly when including the exact date) where and how the incident will occur. He experienced every excruciating detail in the vision he had.
Despite the rumors that Pike had a wife, the lady he was seen with seems just like a girlfriend. Also in Starfleet. Pike's entire social life seems wrapped up in his job. Most of us aren't like that. Pike may not have any loved ones/family outside of starfleet to focus on.I think there's something interesting with that. He says he is grappling with the possibility that his knowledge of the future will affect his decision making. But I wonder if the knowledge of what will happen to him a decade from now is making him re-evaluate his life.
If I knew I only had 10 years left, I think I'd want to figure out a way to spend that 10 years focusing on loved ones/family or at least trying to live a life not so tied to duty and obligation.
Which would be a source of conflict and...There can be tons of comments about how Pike leaving Starfleet is out of his character or cowardly or whatever, but if he's not up to following through on this decision he supposedly made to accept the wheelchair (as shown in this very episode) then he should just make another one because otherwise his internal conflict may be endangering other people around him.
They're definitely not married unless one or the other of them decided to keep their maiden name. They called each other by their last names in the episode.Despite all the talk here that Pike leaving Starfleet would be against his character, the thing is Pike's still waffling as shown by him ignoring the Admiral's calls. His anxiety's leaking out in his talks with first contact aliens, even going so far as to allude to the Boreth incident even though it's not really related to first contact other than him hamfisting it into the talk.
There can be tons of comments about how Pike leaving Starfleet is out of his character or cowardly or whatever, but if he's not up to following through on this decision he supposedly made to accept the wheelchair (as shown in this very episode) then he should just make another one because otherwise his internal conflict may be endangering other people around him.
Despite the rumors that Pike had a wife, the lady he was seen with seems just like a girlfriend. Also in Starfleet. Pike's entire social life seems wrapped up in his job. Most of us aren't like that. Pike may not have any loved ones/family outside of starfleet to focus on.
I think 'definitely' is a stretch considering DIS and SNW have thrown out the 1965 dialogue wherein Pike is uncomfortable serving with women and other such out-of-date social trends. It is technically plausible that addressing each other by surname is a subcultural or personal quirk in today's writing.They're definitely not married unless one or the other of them decided to keep their maiden name. They called each other by their last names in the episode.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.