Many ST writers have been genuine science fiction buffs, but the people running the shows haven't always been - and their requirements for how 'technobabble' should be implemented often took internally-plausible events and rendered them into silliness. (I believe Diane Duane has written about how scripts in the TNG era were required to say things like "then we [TECH] the [TECH]", and 'appropriate' words would be put in by the producers.) But when the writers aren't SF fans either, the result tends to be complete nonsense.Deledrius wrote: ↑Fri Sep 03, 2021 6:31 pmEveryone writing for Star Trek seems to have a general computer knowledge aptitude somewhere around "I know how to operate a typewriter or standalone word processor, as long as it's working perfectly". Somehow this seemed like a good idea for science fiction writers.
TOS prided itself on making gestures towards real science. (Yes, even as they often ignored it in favor of making an early-1960s TV show work.) So did B5, actually, although when they insisted upon shoehorning mystic concepts that make only sense to naive human intuition into the narrative I don't see the point in bragging about how the Starfuries moved realistically. But did they make gestures. Even DS9 did, like the episode in which probability is being manipulated and the neutrinos all have the same spin. Of course, neutrinos DO all have the same spin in reality, so it was a big blooper, but at least they'd heard something about actual physics and tried something plausible sounding.
Recent Trek? There's no awareness of actual science there at all. Not even the level necessary to consciously lampshade that something in the show makes no sense in reality; the people involved don't have enough understanding to have a 'sense' in the first place. They'd find actual science smuggled into the scripts indistinguishable from word salad technobabble.