• @concrete_baby Today, I learned that Star Trek ALSO has a galactic barrier. Not hear even, I was catching up on Discovery earlier. So now I am coming across Star Trek’s galactic barrier twice, for the first time, on the same day. (Though, I must have seen it referenced on TOS at a some point.)

    • concrete_baby@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      1 year ago

      According to Memory Alpha, the barrier appears in at least three TOS episodes: “Where No Man Has Gone Before”, “By Any Other Name”, and “Is There in Truth No Beauty?”

    • porthos@startrek.website
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      1 year ago

      I kind of love the galactic barrier in how weird and obviously differing from our reality it is, scifi shows don’t need to make their universes behave the way ours does.

      I realllllly loved the discovery episode where they went out the galactic barrier, it was just so damn weird.

      As long as the characters behave with a scientific frame of mind, it doesn’t really matter if the physics of star trek is absurd. It doesn’t matter if the calculations do or don’t add up for some fantasy tech in star trek, it matters how characters interact with the unknown and approach trying to understand problems (where the heart of science really lives). The 4th season of Discovery did an amazing job with this in my opinion, it was cool to see the crew sent to meet with 10-C stumbling through the logic of trying to figure out a way to make contact (or even WHAT 10-C was before they found them).

  • Haus@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I’m with you on the transporters, but the fly in the ointment for me has always been inertial dampeners. If it’s possible to sidestep conservation of inertia, I’d be pretty surprised. If not, the crew will be converted into stew the first time a ship slows down or makes a course correction.

    • taladar@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      The other part of that is, of course, that they don’t seem to use the technology (or artificial gravity or the tractor beams for that matter) for anything else. In particular no weapons or defence systems.

  • killall-q@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Because teleportation is murder. Whatever comes out on the other side may look and act like you, but isn’t you, because you’re now dead for having been disassembled by the teleporter.

    • zalack@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Teleporters are interesting because when you think about it long enough, you realize the person on departure end died.

      You think about it more… and if the person that comes out the arrival end is an exact replica – down to the atom – and, further, has internal continuity of experience… You realize that if you accept they died then you kind of also have to accept that the “you” of any given instant is constantly dying and giving way to the “you” of the next instant. That person living that experience at that exact moment will never exist again; they’re dead.

      So you’re kinda back to transporters being business as usual again, but with a fun new existential crisis on the side.

      • SeeJayEmm@lemmy.one
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        1 year ago

        In practice, I agree with you. The transporter scans, disintegrates, and reconstructs the thing being transported. But when the thing being transported is reconstructed at a subatomic level it is effectively identical.

        I can imagine the society we see in startrek having already worked through the moral and philosophical implications. I would have loved to see that addressed in an episode tho.

        • concrete_baby@sh.itjust.worksOP
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          1 year ago

          Is one carbon atom the same as another carbon atom, philosophically? Can you keep your identity when all your atoms are replaced by other atoms of the same kind? It’s the ship of Theseus problem

          • Count Zero@lemmy.villa-straylight.social
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            1 year ago

            Do you think you have the same skin cells as last week, yesterday, 20 minutes ago?

            Do you think the new cells come from the same carbon atoms?

            We’re already being disintegrated. It’s just a lot slower with imperfect replication. In fact, one could make the argument that that is a decent argument for life. Although it does include viruses and prions, so maybe not that far.

        • LibraryLass@startrek.website
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          1 year ago

          It’s not just effectively identical, it’s completely identical. The same matter, the same quantum state, the same consciousness.

        • Eva!@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Outside of measure of a man-type episodes, I don’t think they’ve ever had a super in-depth discussion on selfhood and the soul as characters see it in universe. , but it seems like materialism is the generally accepted philosophy. Post Enterprise, people who have hangups on the transporters (perhaps more based in dualism) are treated as weirdos.

          More evidence for materialism: Q, the godlike being who might be able to tell the difference, treats Golem-Picard the same entity. And last I checked nobody’s going around saying that Thomas Riker and William Boimler are p-zombies.

          (I guess Gray Tal is the odd man out, since there was some consciousness that got somehow ceremonially split off before shoving it in a golem. Maybe that’s just trill symbiont weirdness though).

        • taladar@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          The real question is why they wouldn’t use the transporter buffers effectively as backups for away teams. Have an away team member killed? No problem, rematerialize them from the buffer.

            • taladar@sh.itjust.works
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              1 year ago

              Well, Thomas Riker proves you can create duplicates and the doctor’s daughter in Strange New Worlds as well as some other episodes prove that the patterns can be stored in the buffer for extended periods of time.

              • LibraryLass@startrek.website
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                1 year ago

                Here’s the thing: Does Tom Riker actually prove that? That’s the explanation suggested in the episode, but the preponderance of information about the mechanisms of transporter technology, as given both before and after, conflicts with it. But there’s another hypothesis, a simpler one, and one that we know for a fact transporters are capable of, because it’s a recurring element in Star Trek: Thomas Riker is from another universe, brought to the Prime universe by similar means as many of the various visits to and from the Mirror universe.

    • Lockely@pawb.social
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      1 year ago

      This is refuted by in-universe POV accounts. We have traveled through the transporter with several characters, and not once is their stream of consciousness or even vision broken.

      Barclay even observes creatures slightly out of phase in the transport stream and manages to pull them in. (TNG, “Realm of Fear”)

      I know it’s described as disassembling and reassembling, but in practice it looks more like they’re being adjusted out of phase, pushed to their location using the annular confinement beam, and resequenced into phase with the rest of the universe. This is what happens with Geordi and Ro in TNG, “The Next Phase.”

      It doesn’t explain transporter clones or most transporter accidents, or even TNG, “Relics” but the transporter as a whole is kinda sorta space magic anyway.

    • LibraryLass@startrek.website
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      1 year ago

      No the fuck it isn’t. Dualism is clearly true in Star Trek’s universe and even if it weren’t we see consciousness is maintained while beaming but is normally too brief to be perceived. (TNG: “Realm of Fear”)

      Beaming is no more death than sleeping, or existing for longer than a single Planck unit of time is.

    • waspentalive@startrek.website
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      1 year ago

      Dr. McCoy famously hated the Transporter. He always complained that his atoms were being scattered, but never once did he voice the opinion that the transporter killed the transportee. Also, I don’t believe even with Badmirals abounding, that Starfleet would allow such a death machine to be in regular use.