The Joys of living in another time zone...Bounty wrote:He never had the intent to pass the test for any sort of academic credit?Darth Wong wrote:So if you cheat but you make a big joke out of it all, then you're not cheating? Precisely what definition of "cheating" do you use?Atlan wrote:I never said that it is a valid justification for the above.
I pointed out that the accusation of academic cheating is unjust.
Since he made his cheating so blatantly *obvious* it seems extremely unlikely he thought he'd get away with it, and if he knew he wasn't going to do this unnoticed he did it because he wanted attention drawn to the test being unwinnable. So yes, he "cheated", but not with the intent of getting any sort of personal gain out of it.
If he'd sabotaged a compulsory test and tried to cover his tracks; yes, that would have been ground for severe disciplinary action. And he should still be in trouble for hacking the simulator. But as a formal charge, I doubt cheating would have stood up very long.
Thank you Bounty, for making my position abundantly clear.
It didn't, to me, look as if Kirk was trying to get academic credit out of this. All it is to him is a joke or a way of calling attention to the KM test. It can easily be argued that it was a bad/inappropriate joke, and it can certainly point to a lack of responsibility to do something like this with SF Academy equipment and manpower, but as Bounty points out, academic cheating it wasn't.