Though, yeah, it is kind of dumb that in the 25th century medical technology in general won't be able to cure someone who fell off his horse and broke his spine.

Moderator: NecronLord
I'm not talking about that, I'm talking about stuff like that Star Trek episode where Worf breaks his back and ZOMG without some risky experimental procedure he'll be crippled for life. Or when I was watching the trailer for Avatar I was thinking "they can give people telepresence waldo robots and presumably build starships but they can't fix whatever's wrong with that guy's legs, what's up with that?"*Shroom Man 777 wrote:You need specialized facilities to clone limbs and shit. It's not like a modern day warship is going to have a medbay that doubles as an operating room theater with enough material and staff equipped to perform brain surgery, or even an appendectomy.
SpoilerJunghalli wrote:Or when I was watching the trailer for Avatar I was thinking "they can give people telepresence waldo robots and presumably build starships but they can't fix whatever's wrong with that guy's legs, what's up with that?"*
That's an unfortunate legacy of older days when the idea of psychic powers wasn't as thoroughly proven-stupid as it is today. Sort of like having humanoid robots in settings that still need human gunners sitting at controls.adam_grif wrote:Also, psychic spacemen. The idea that humanity will inevitably "evolve towards greater things", one of which is always psychic powers and/or energy beings.
For this to make any sense (which is, admittedly, a stretch), you have to interpret "evolve" in a more general sense, as a synonym for "develop" (which most writers back in the day weren't smart enough to do).Zixinus wrote:This sort of thing is nothing more than new-age bullshitism. Psychic powers do not make sense in the evolutionary timeline, we do not see it in any other animals, there is no evolutionary need for them. Primitive natives easily dominate their environment without such tools. Humans are easily the most powerful and terrifying creatures on Earth, they don't need such bullshit to wank them further. Raw intelligence and attitude can do more than such copout wank.
The only quasi-sane explanation I can think of is that it isn't something you need a complex physical structure for. From the point of view of someone dissecting a psychic's brain or sequencing their genome, they are little or no different from everyone else; the trick is that they're using some kind of learned technique to train their brain to do something unusual.Junghalli wrote:...The problem is that in a world where people had these things everybody should be able to do it. Writers usually seem to treat psychic powers as something you can get from a single gene or mutation, which is utter bullshit. Any mechanism that lets you read minds or start fires with your mind or whatever is going to be complex...
And since this requires huge amounts of time and all the intermediate stages are going to have to be useful (or else they wouldn't be selected for) they should be disseminated over the entire human race...
Then there's the writers who suggest that everybody has latent psychic powers and some people just have it "activated", which is just as bad. Apparently we're to believe that people developed complex physical mechanisms that let you do all this awesome shit with your mind while it was TOTALLY USELESS in almost all the population.
Groan. Now THAT kills me.adam_grif wrote:Evolution in general is treated horribly in fiction. The evolution of psychic powers is just one offshoot of this horrible characterization. The worst is shit like that Trek episode where evolution was "killing off the species to make room for an upcoming dominant species".
Remember? The Vorlons messed around with pretty much every younger race to make them see the Vorlons as messianic figures. Hell, we watched the creation of one of the major religious figures of the Minbari. B5's religions aren't exactly blind faith.adam_grif wrote:For some reason this reminds me of something else that got to me a little bit when watching Babylon 5. Pretty much every person and every alien is totally into mysticism and religion.
The point wasn't that the Vorlons revealed themselves. The point is that they tampered in B5 species development to be universally more religious.adam_grif wrote:All the more reason for them to be extremely disillusioned when they suddenly start getting their planets cracked open like eggs by them. Iirc the vorlon tampering was not exactly a widespread secret. Things should have been getting more than a little fishy after every single diplomat claims to have seen their own version of the angel.
And even so, Vorlon tampering is supposed to have happened in the RL timeline, but of course irreligion is still higher amongst educated first world people and so on. It's not like Angels were showing up on a frequent basis in public, the Kosh incident was most assuredly the exception, not the rule.
Ahhh, yes.... Star Trek: Enterprise. It may have had some moments of bright, shining goodness, but in the end run, no matter how you try to spin it, the Enterprise N-X still goes down in history as the only starship in science fiction history that got fudge-packed by fucking piston-engine Stukas.Styphon wrote:You know, for all its general horribleness, Enterprise was actually pretty decent about a few things on this list...
Paranoid, huh? Who told you to say that?Zixinus wrote:I mean, come on: we, humans, have small population that is devoted to learning and mastering warfare: soldiers. They learn to be aggressive, to be paranoid, to be careful, to be armed, etc.
Except that analogy doesn't work very well because the mechanisms you use to fire a rifle have many other physical uses. What does the organ that lets the pyrokinetic set things on fire with his mind do in a normal human who can't heat things up with his mind?Simon_Jester wrote:The only quasi-sane explanation I can think of is that it isn't something you need a complex physical structure for. From the point of view of someone dissecting a psychic's brain or sequencing their genome, they are little or no different from everyone else; the trick is that they're using some kind of learned technique to train their brain to do something unusual.
For instance, we evolved the physical structures of hand-eye coordination. We evolved to estimate distances and do ballistics in our heads. But we did NOT evolve to shoot rifles, and we don't get the hang of it by instinct. The fact that some people can shoot is a sign that they took faculties which everyone has and deliberately used them for a purpose that evolution had not identified. This also explains why animals can't shoot on their own, even given the tools to do so; they aren't smart enough to think of the specific use of their existing abilities that would make it possible.
You could get planets with much more uniform land conditions that Earth realistically. For instance, if you have a planet that's really hot, and you make the continents really small or skinny so you have no major rain shadows, you can more-or-less have your "jungle planet". Take the same planet, make it colder, and move the small/skinny continents into the temperate zones and you have your "forest planet". The unbelievable thing is when this sort of state of affairs appears to be the rule rather than the exception. Of course, a "forest planet" or "jungle planet" with no oceans would be really stupid. Where exactly is all that rain supposed to be coming from?Coyote wrote:Along the same lines as suspending believability, is the mono-thematic planet. I suppose I can forgive extreme climate types-- we have evidence of desert worlds (Mars), ice worlds (Europa) and water worlds (that funky new extrasolar planet), but when you have an entire planet covered with complex plant life ("the FOREST moon") and no tropical zones? Or "Jungle" planets? Or all-weather planets: the RAIN planet, for example.
Coyote wrote: Along the same lines as suspending believability, is the mono-thematic planet. I suppose I can forgive extreme climate types-- we have evidence of desert worlds (Mars), ice worlds (Europa) and water worlds (that funky new extrasolar planet), but when you have an entire planet covered with complex plant life ("the FOREST moon") and no tropical zones? Or "Jungle" planets? Or all-weather planets: the RAIN planet, for example.
Just from memory, the entire surface of the planet looks completely homogeneous from orbit. Not that you can necessarily conclude that it's all swamp, but it certainly looks as though it is.Junghalli wrote:Was it ever explicitly stated in the movies that Dagobah was a "swamp planet"? I can't remember it, and we only ever saw the immediate area of Yoda's dwelling. Concluding it's all swamp from that would be like concluding Earth is all swamp if all you saw of it was the home of some hermit who lived in the Everglades. Although if it wasn't representative of most of the planet's land area you do have to wonder why Yoda would choose such an unpleasant dwelling-place, unless he likes those conditions.
Not that I'm saying Star Wars doesn't have a problem with the single biome planet brainbug, and I bet Dagobah = swamp planet was author's intent if they thought about the issue at all, I'm just wondering.
*Cough* TTT. The proximity of the Dark Side cave masked his presence from the Emperor?Junghalli wrote: Although if it wasn't representative of most of the planet's land area you do have to wonder why Yoda would choose such an unpleasant dwelling-place, unless he likes those conditions.