Talk:Day of the Dove

Latest comment: 17 years ago by Sir Rhosis in topic Untitled

Untitled

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Klingon Devil: Owing to the great many writers and facts being misplaced, here Trek contradicts itself again. Worf states that the Klingons killed their gods, possibly including their devils. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.113.49.13 (talkcontribs)

Possibly.

Also, Four thousand throats may be cut in one night by a running man.

—Klingon soldier, "Day of the Dove," "Star Trek"

Devil an an entity of pure evil is an ancient concept. Devil as a trickster and betrayer (Satan/Lucifer)who tempts otherwise good people into hurting others on its behalf without doing the dirty work itself is a modern concept. Perhaps the Klingon devil is pure evil and doesn't resort to tricks. Tricks would be dishonorable.

Again about Trek being anti-god: Gods were cheap villains, and Gene was cheap. GENE himself stated that while he was an athiest, he did NOT want to force his ideas on others. He hated that concept. That's part of what formed the NON interference directive which became the Prime Directive. It's in his interviews, he said it often at the early conventions. Its a statement of fact and MAJEL will verify if asked. People that read TREK as being anti-god, any god, are reading too much into a children's television show.

Not site-to-site transport

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In the notes section this article states that "intra-ship beaming" later becomes common in The Next Generation and known as "site-to-site transport." This is actually incorrect. Site-to-site transport is the transport from one location to another without going to/from a transporter pad. In this episode, Kirk and Mara transport from the transporter pads to a location within the ship. See Memory Alpha's entry on site-to-site transport and Memory Alpha's entry on intra-ship beaming for more information.

It is not clear in the episode why this is dangerous...perhaps because the ship is traveling at warp 9 at the time, so the coordinates for rematerialization would be difficult to calculate? Memory Alpha also contemplates this oddity, and the apparent plot hole that such a technique would perhaps have been feasible to free the crewman trapped below the bulkheads, though presumably the alien would have intervened to stop this and maintain the balance of power.