Stewart at SDI wrote:In ST-5? IIRC, the Enterprise goes from the very edge of the galaxy to the very center in 6.7 hours, or about twice to four times as fast as Darth Maul's trip. Do not cite Voyager times because they are obviously much slower that Kirk's ship.
Of course, we can't bother you to explain why Kirk's much older ship would be so much faster than Voyager, which is claimed to be technologically superior, or why the "center of the galaxy" looks nothing like it should, nevermind why a single example based on secondary evidence standing out among hundreds of examples based on direct evidence would be statistically significant, including other observations of the maximum speed of Kirk's ship. The observed speed of Darth Maul's ship is based on direct evidence, and matches all other known examples of primary and secondary evidence for SW ships. If you understand the scientific method, it should be clear to you which conclusion is the correct one.
For being someone who concentrates so much on the visuals of the asteroid shooting in TESB, this is bad style of you, Stewart. You pick only what evidence that suits you. If I ever had any doubts about you having scientific credentials, they are decidedly gone by now, as in proven negative. I'm not going to bother answering your other points, already rebutted by others.
Here's some advice for you to go by in the future:
1. Visuals are objective evidence while dialogue is not, for rather obvious reasons. Visuals are available for measuring and direct interpretation, while dialogue brings in the whole going through secondary sources, ie a character saying something from his/her perspective, not yours. The "center of the galaxy" being a prime example.
2. Do *not* only present your favoured evidence, neglecting to explain contradictory evidence
when you clearly know there are. This is an unscientific approach.
3. Maintain consistency in your arguments. And by consistency, I don't mean "consistently proven wrong". You go from observation to conclusion to question to hypothesis to prediction to theory via deductive logic. A conclusion is
not "SW ships are slower than ST ships". A conclusion is "Ship A travelled from point A to point B in time T. This gives an average speed of Y. Ship B has an observed speed of X. Since X>Y, ship B is faster than ship A".
4. Be as clear in your presentation as possible. State your observations, conclusions based on reasoning, backed by evidence. Name your sources and explain why contradictory evidence should be neglected. I know it's hard to be clear while speculating, but if that is what you are doing, you are nowhere near a working theory yet.