my favorite episode of this season so far...love it!!!!
@jamest210111 ай бұрын
JUST WOW !!!!!!!!!!!
@canonest11 ай бұрын
indeed.
@DS9Sisko Жыл бұрын
“Vulcan's can't feel emotions…” 100% wrong, as we’ve been told from multiple times from TOS on…
@canonest Жыл бұрын
*half vulcan...
@DS9Sisko Жыл бұрын
@@canonest Still wrong. While most Vulcans do not express emotions, they still have them. Only those who follow the discipline of kolinahr have completely purged all emotions from their minds; most Vulcans still have emotions, yet do not express or release them. T'Pol states that paranoia and homicidal rage were common on Vulcan before the adoption of Surak's code of emotional control. Surak's ideas were that all Vulcans should hide emotions in order for the safety of the species. Before him, Vulcans were dangerously raging, emotional, war-like and religious and eventually it came to be that it would threaten the Vulcan race. Then, around around the 4th century BC, he created a system revolving around these ideas intended to create a peaceful society. Some Vulcans disagreed, unfortunately, causing a war to break out. The two sides separated; causing the emotional ones to become Romulans and the logical ones to become what is referred to as Vulcans modern-day. Really, the story is that Vulcans have more emotions than any other species but have to hide them so much. They occasionally have mental breakdowns. Vulcan emotions are seemingly more intense than those of humans. In the TNG episode Sarek, Ambassador Sarek warns Captain Picard that "Vulcan emotions are extremely intense; we have learned to suppress them", and that Picard would be overwhelmed by Sarek's unrestrained emotions while the two are linked during a Vulcan mind-meld. Vulcans love. Vulcans feel anger. Vulcans have rivalries. Vulcans do not EXPRESS emotions, but they have them and always have.