bungakertas: (star trek)
2019-05-31 08:06 am

Black Sails, White Sails

Rating: PG-13
Warning(s): discussion of theoretical major character death
Pairing(s): none
Disclaimer: Star Trek and all attendant characters and concepts are the property of Paramount Studios. No money changed hands and no copyright infringement is intended or implied.
Summary: First, suppose that the famous ship sailed by the hero Theseus in a great battle has been kept in a harbour as a museum piece. As the years go by some of the wooden parts begin to rot and are replaced by new ones. After a century or so, all of the parts have been replaced. Is the "restored" ship still the same object as the original?

Second, suppose that each of the removed pieces were stored in a warehouse, and after the century, technology develops to cure their rotting and enable them to be put back together to make a ship. Is this "re-constructed" ship the original ship? And if so, is the restored ship in the harbour still the original ship too?

Or...how do transporters really work?
Spoilers: Everything is up for grabs (barring DIS or anything involving JJ Abrams, all of which are Emphatically Not Canon, as far as I am concerned). Anything about Vulcans in ENT that contradicts previously established canon from TOS through VOY is likewise tossed.
Author's Notes: The title is a reference to the sails on Theseus' ship in Greek mythology.

Black Sails, White Sails )
bungakertas: (star trek)
2019-04-25 04:44 pm

White Flag

Rating: PG-13
Warning(s) : none
Pairing(s) : none
Disclaimer: Star Trek and all attendant characters and concepts are the property of Paramount Studios. No money changed hands and no copyright infringement is intended or implied.
Summary: Spock and McCoy have a conversation after their experiences on Platonius. It does not end with an argument.
Spoilers: Everything is up for grabs (barring DIS or anything involving JJ Abrams, all of which are Emphatically Not Canon, as far as I am concerned). Most specifically, though, “Plato’s Stepchildren.”
Author's Notes: I recently re-watched “Plato’s Stepchildren” and…that episode is tough.

This story is written with the assumption that you have also watched “Plato’s Stepchildren” and know what happened in it. The episode is on Netflix if you need a refresher.

White Flag )