And yet no one does this.
I mean, the applications would be obvious, you could reboot people from backup if they die on an away team mission, for instance.
This
strongly suggests that either it is simply not possible to do this. Say, because transporter pattern buffers normally don't store comprehensive detailed records of large, complex objects, and have to be specially modified to do this a la Scotty... modified in ways that would badly or dangerously interfere with transporter operations.
Starglider wrote:Zeropoint wrote:No, wait, they put the two halves of Kirk back together that one time, and there was the Tuvix incident.
Of course, those were both one-off accidents with risky experimental procedures to fix them, and total scientific nonsense. An actual merge would require advanced cognitive engineering that the Federation doesn't appear to possess (limited mind probes do exist in Trek, so they're not that far off, but they can't reliably read, edit and rewrite memories).
Personally I always liked the idea that all the theories advanced about what had happened in the "two Kirks" episode were bullshit, and that the
real problem was that both Kirks had incomplete, moderately damaged versions of the original Kirk's brain... but damaged in different ways.
So "good Kirk" appeared with mild brain trauma that got significantly worse, and compromised his executive function, possibly among other things. "Evil Kirk's" damage seems to have been more extensive- a lot of his social skills, instincts, and even memories appear to have been missing.
And then the only way to more or less reconstruct Kirk is to map the two versions of his brain, overlaying functional parts of Evil Kirk's brain over the damaged bits of Good Kirk and vice versa.
So 'in reality' the whole thing is a neurological issue, not some kind of metaphysical good-and-evil thing. Although as a work of fiction it works quite well as a metaphysical thing.