David Benfell, Ph.D.

Ph.D. Human Science (Saybrook University, 2016). Post-disciplinary, Vegetarian Ecofeminist Scholar, Researcher, and Non-Magical Thinker.

I preemptively block ‘tankies’ and trolls, and I am selective about who I follow back. If you choose to follow me, please have at least some posts on your timeline.

#AntiCapitalist
#Vegan (since May 5, 2008)
#StarTrek (since I was a kid in #Pittsburgh, though I mostly lived–over 50 years–in #California)

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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: November 29th, 2022

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  • @kamenlady @Stamets

    When I think of Spock in the original series (#TOS), I find more than a few things implausible.

    Would, for example, Spock really know impossible odds with multiple unknown variables to several decimal places? More seriously, in TOS, Spock never satisfactorily explained the Vulcan logic for logic. They’ve addressed this since, but I had realized that the attachment to life is emotional, not logical, and therefore concluded that in denying emotion, Vulcans could have no logical reason to live.

    Even Leonard Nimoy’s Spock addressed some of this in the movies, and they aren’t quoting odds to ludicrous precision anymore, so I find the more recent iterations of Spock much more believable.

    As for the acting, Ethan Peck plays a younger, less experienced Spock. Given Vulcan lifespans, this probably shouldn’t make quite the difference we see. But that’s how I’ve accounted for that difference and I’ve been interested in seeing the backstory.




  • @Schal330

    This might be a case where they compressed too much for coherence.

    Yeah, there was the other guy. But in my mind, not enough had apparently been done to confirm a superficial and partial similarity of symptoms.

    To give an idea of the dissonance, I’m remembering somebody (I think it wasn’t Miles O’Brien who got the line) encountering the Cardassian systems on Deep Space 9 and complaining that they weren’t triple-redundant.

    In academia, we call it parsimony in a way that doesn’t quite seem to match a dictionary definition that I just dredged up on line: It’s when an explanation seems straightforward and satisfactory. For me, that was missing.

    I think a challenge for script writing here is keeping the story moving without dragging this too far into soap opera territory. How much do we really want get into the weeds here?

    Maybe the writers thought this was too deep in the weeds. Maybe they just ran out of episode time. Maybe we agree they didn’t get the balance right here.