See, I can easily imagine these magical space-and-reality-warping mushrooms turning up in any of the previous Star Trek series; they've all made use of plot devices just as outlandish. It's just that, on those shows, the mushrooms would likely only be the focus of a single episode, and then never be mentioned again. Making them central to the season's overall story draws a lot more attention to them.clearspira wrote: ↑Sat Aug 25, 2018 10:00 pmYou know guys, I've suddenly worked out what STD secretly wants to be: Farscape. Because magical warping, talking to the dead mushrooms sounds exactly like something I could see happening on that show. I can see it now: Crichton bouncing around the ship singing Amazing Grace as he warps to different planets whilst being chased by zombie Peacekeepers, all the while the little Scorpius inside his head is wearing an Hawaiian shirt and dancing on the hood of a Cadillac.kaingerc wrote: ↑Sat Aug 25, 2018 9:14 pm Yeah, at this point in the show the mushrooms basically become 'The Force'. (midichlorians or whatever)
They can zap you around the universe, allow you to communicate across the multiverse and I think in the next episode they show that they allow you to also speak to dead people.
The only thing that was missing was that they would also somehow allow you to move things with your mind and you could basically call Stamets Obi-Wan.
Except of course that Farscape established itself as exactly this kind of show from day one rather than coming from a lineage of sci-fi that takes itself far more seriously.
Star Trek (DIS): The Wolf Inside
Re: Star Trek (DIS): The Wolf Inside
Re: Star Trek (DIS): The Wolf Inside
Good point. It's easier to gloss over when it's one time magic. When it becomes central to your entire show... yeah, not so easy to ignore.Fianna wrote: ↑Sat Aug 25, 2018 11:46 pmSee, I can easily imagine these magical space-and-reality-warping mushrooms turning up in any of the previous Star Trek series; they've all made use of plot devices just as outlandish. It's just that, on those shows, the mushrooms would likely only be the focus of a single episode, and then never be mentioned again. Making them central to the season's overall story draws a lot more attention to them.clearspira wrote: ↑Sat Aug 25, 2018 10:00 pmYou know guys, I've suddenly worked out what STD secretly wants to be: Farscape. Because magical warping, talking to the dead mushrooms sounds exactly like something I could see happening on that show. I can see it now: Crichton bouncing around the ship singing Amazing Grace as he warps to different planets whilst being chased by zombie Peacekeepers, all the while the little Scorpius inside his head is wearing an Hawaiian shirt and dancing on the hood of a Cadillac.kaingerc wrote: ↑Sat Aug 25, 2018 9:14 pm Yeah, at this point in the show the mushrooms basically become 'The Force'. (midichlorians or whatever)
They can zap you around the universe, allow you to communicate across the multiverse and I think in the next episode they show that they allow you to also speak to dead people.
The only thing that was missing was that they would also somehow allow you to move things with your mind and you could basically call Stamets Obi-Wan.
Except of course that Farscape established itself as exactly this kind of show from day one rather than coming from a lineage of sci-fi that takes itself far more seriously.
- hammerofglass
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Re: Star Trek (DIS): The Wolf Inside
I gave up any hope of this show having a clue on science in the third episode when Stamets went on a rant about how his research was bridging the previously unknowable gap between physics and biology.
In other words, the writers literally don't know the first thing about biology or that chemistry is even a thing.
In other words, the writers literally don't know the first thing about biology or that chemistry is even a thing.
...for space is wide, and good friends are too few.
Re: Star Trek (DIS): The Wolf Inside
They actually wrote that?!? Wow, that's almost as bad as claiming that number theory isn't maths.mathewgsmith wrote: ↑Sun Aug 26, 2018 5:59 pm I gave up any hope of this show having a clue on science in the third episode when Stamets went on a rant about how his research was bridging the previously unknowable gap between physics and biology.
In other words, the writers literally don't know the first thing about biology or that chemistry is even a thing.
Soulless minion of orthodoxy.
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Re: Star Trek (DIS): The Wolf Inside
The STD writers are idiots barely capable of blowing their own noses, of COURSE their science is absurd. XD
- clearspira
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Re: Star Trek (DIS): The Wolf Inside
Far be it for me to defend STD, but the Traveller's transwarp abilities from TNGs ''Where No One Has Gone Before'' is based off the universe and thought being the same thing - or in other words, the previously unknowable gap between physics and biology. This is actually canon as absurd as that is.Mindworm wrote: ↑Sun Aug 26, 2018 6:38 pmThey actually wrote that?!? Wow, that's almost as bad as claiming that number theory isn't maths.mathewgsmith wrote: ↑Sun Aug 26, 2018 5:59 pm I gave up any hope of this show having a clue on science in the third episode when Stamets went on a rant about how his research was bridging the previously unknowable gap between physics and biology.
In other words, the writers literally don't know the first thing about biology or that chemistry is even a thing.
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Re: Star Trek (DIS): The Wolf Inside
That's the gap between physics and consicousness.
Which is another animal.
The Force would make more sense than the fungus because energy fields exist in space. Fungus isn't everywhere with no soil, water, or atmosphere.
Which is another animal.
The Force would make more sense than the fungus because energy fields exist in space. Fungus isn't everywhere with no soil, water, or atmosphere.
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Re: Star Trek (DIS): The Wolf Inside
I'm kinda confused as to why people are all frustrated with the space mushroom / fungus business. Trek sciences has always been laughably bad and kinda silly. It's just a new kinda silly as opposed to a classic silly.
Re: Star Trek (DIS): The Wolf Inside
Because this is a new silly. You don't get free mistakes just because you've made other mistakes in the past. That argument makes no sense to me.DisgruntleFairy wrote: ↑Mon Aug 27, 2018 4:46 am I'm kinda confused as to why people are all frustrated with the space mushroom / fungus business. Trek sciences has always been laughably bad and kinda silly. It's just a new kinda silly as opposed to a classic silly.
I'd prefer a Trek that makes less stupid errors about actual science as it goes on. Honestly, there's really no excuse for it. The amount of access to information is greater today than at any time in the past.
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Re: Star Trek (DIS): The Wolf Inside
I would certainly like for them to be better. But I doubt that will happen.Deledrius wrote: ↑Mon Aug 27, 2018 5:33 amBecause this is a new silly. You don't get free mistakes just because you've made other mistakes in the past. That argument makes no sense to me.DisgruntleFairy wrote: ↑Mon Aug 27, 2018 4:46 am I'm kinda confused as to why people are all frustrated with the space mushroom / fungus business. Trek sciences has always been laughably bad and kinda silly. It's just a new kinda silly as opposed to a classic silly.
I'd prefer a Trek that makes less stupid errors about actual science as it goes on. Honestly, there's really no excuse for it. The amount of access to information is greater today than at any time in the past.
All media has pretty horrible science. So I guess it really doesn't even really register to me anymore.