Star Wars vs Star Trek

Discussion in 'SciFi & Fantasy' started by Pollux V, May 9, 2002.

?

Which universe would win?

  1. Star Trek

    227 vote(s)
    35.5%
  2. Star Wars

    268 vote(s)
    41.9%
  3. Spaceballs

    47 vote(s)
    7.3%
  4. Farscape

    12 vote(s)
    1.9%
  5. Dune

    50 vote(s)
    7.8%
  6. Stargate

    36 vote(s)
    5.6%
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  1. ricrery Banned Banned

    Messages:
    1,616
    Doesn't matter. You can't call a CANON SOURCE bias. You can't say that, that is against debating rules. In fact, Saxton was more consistent than bias. A source said that a single Imperial Star Destroyer could turn a planet to slag in an hour.

    To vaporize the oceans requires 1 exaton, and to melt the crust requires 7 exatons. That is 8 exatons, and going off Saxton's 2.218 PT/s numbers for the ISDII, you get 7.992 exatons done in an hour. That is VERY consistent.

    1E^21 J = 239 gigatons. Again, consistent.

    Too bad, because it's canon.
     
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  3. Kittamaru Ashes to ashes, dust to dust. Adieu, Sciforums. Valued Senior Member

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    He already did... you're just too stubborn to accept it.

    The Highest Canon (the movies) and the next highest (the series) override what your precious ICS says a dozen times over and yet you cling to it like a baby suckling his mothers teat... do grow up child, your antics are no longer amusing.
     
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  5. Kittamaru Ashes to ashes, dust to dust. Adieu, Sciforums. Valued Senior Member

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    It IS canon - lower canon. Any time the higher canon (movies and/or tv shows) contradict it, the movies and tv shows are what you MUST go with, as per the very "laws" that dictate SW canon.

    In this case, the ICS is wrong on damn near every account save for the sizes of the vessels and the pictures of them, and even then they screwed up a few times

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  7. Kittamaru Ashes to ashes, dust to dust. Adieu, Sciforums. Valued Senior Member

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    13,938
    Of course both are biased... however, STvSW.net at least attempts to stay within the boundaries of reality with their claims, using multiple images and videos to display examples of what is being claimed.

    SD.net just makes big claims from the ICS, which is immediately assumed to be right because "oh noes, it's a book mentioned in the canon list, it's fo realz!!!!!1111oneoneleventeenhunred"

    The truth is, it doesn't work that way
     
  8. Kittamaru Ashes to ashes, dust to dust. Adieu, Sciforums. Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    13,938
    And yet, said source was a novel, a novel that is overridden by the movies and the shows... and in the shows, we see SD's blasting at things and causing detonations that appear to be kiloton at best.

    As per your own canon rules, the shows override the books, and thus, kiloton it is.

    PERIOD

    Now, grow up or get out.
     
  9. ricrery Banned Banned

    Messages:
    1,616
    No more than a kiloton? Are you slow, or just that dense? The asteroid incident would require many kilotons, and someone a lot smarter than you and a bit more debate-understanding than Illithi did do the math that you were too lazy to look at.
     
  10. Kittamaru Ashes to ashes, dust to dust. Adieu, Sciforums. Valued Senior Member

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    I'm not talking the asteroid scene... I was referring to the attack on the Malevolence to be precise.
     
  11. ricrery Banned Banned

    Messages:
    1,616
    That is overruled by the asteroid scene.
     
  12. Kittamaru Ashes to ashes, dust to dust. Adieu, Sciforums. Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    13,938
    Not necessarily - we're comparing different guns (HTL's and LTL's supposedly)
     
  13. ricrery Banned Banned

    Messages:
    1,616
    And when are the ESB turbos ever named for their type?
     
  14. Kittamaru Ashes to ashes, dust to dust. Adieu, Sciforums. Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    13,938
    Never that I know of - but IIRC, the claim for the asteroid scene is that they were only using Light Turbo Lasers to destroy the asteroids :shrug:
     
  15. ricrery Banned Banned

    Messages:
    1,616
    Those light turbos were firing up to 60 kilotons of energy each shot. What you've ignored is that I said that I'm not much of a Warsie.
     
  16. Ilithi_Dragon Dragon Overlord Registered Senior Member

    Messages:
    191
    60 kilotons ONLY if you ignore the fundamental principles of thermodynamics, an over-sized asteroid, and a ridiculously dense asteroid. The angle and distance of the asteroid to the camera puts it at 3 to 20 meters in diameter, much lower than the 40 Wong calculates, and a 3-20 meter asteroid of common silicate of average density would take a couple terajoules of energy to blast apart, at most. Gigajoule-range is much more likely. The energy required to blast it to smithereens like we see drops even lower if it was the much more common 'dirt clod' type of asteroid instead of solid rock.

    The asteroid wasn't vaporized completely in an instant, that violates thermodynamics. It was blown apart into very small bits. It is physically impossible for a DET to instantly vaporize anything except the section of the target it impacts on. Rock is especially hard to vaporize because silicates are poor conductors, and are very brittle and prone to shattering. They also have low densities and so can be accelerated away faster with less energy.

    In short, a silicate rock will explode into tiny pieces long before it is completely vaporized. Any claim that the entire asteroid was vaporized instantly is fallacious.
     
  17. HeartlessCapitalist Ravager of Biotopes Registered Senior Member

    Messages:
    81
    The ICS books are canon as much as any other EU. Some people don't like this, some don't care, some think they're the second coming and opposing them is heresy. However, opinions don't matter in face of Lucasfilm's official canon policy. At the end of day ... they are canon.

    Whether and to what extent they are actually contradicted by other canon is a whole other issue.

    Me, I've mostly given up on trying to quantify Star Wars. It's perfectly clear from the cartoon series the people in charge don't give squat about consistency with published material, and that makes the SW canon a hopelessly contradicting mess.

    Oh, how I miss West End Games ...

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  18. Ilithi_Dragon Dragon Overlord Registered Senior Member

    Messages:
    191
    Well, it's canon for the Star Wars: Expanded Universe, but not a part of the official Star Wars canon. Lucas and others have made it fairly clear that there are two canons in Wars, the 'features only' which includes the CGI and live-action movies and episodes, their scripts and their respective novelizations (in that order of precedence), and then there is the 'EU' canon, which is the 'features only' material plus all of the EU material falling below it in tiered ranking. Star Trek has actually adopted a similar policy, and has for many years now been attempting to maintain a more or less self-consistent 'EU' Trek universe within the novels.

    As I have maintained, I am comparing official-canon SW to official-canon ST, and as such, the ICS books are not canon. If you want to bring the SW EU into the debate, it's only fair that we also bring in the ST EU as well.

    Additionally, the ICS books are a heavily-biased, compromised source, as I have stated several times. No ethical scientific analysis can use such a source and expect a non-biased, uncompromised result.


    lol Yes, when looking at the SW:EU, things do get... hairy, to say the least. Even in the EU books, yields, power, endurances and capabilities vary wildly (with a curiously significant increase in later books, especially after 2002). That's another reason why I don't like to compare ST:EU to SW:EU: the level of inconsistency in both extended franchises becomes extreme. When dealing with just the official canon of both franchises, there is much greater consistency in both.
     
  19. HeartlessCapitalist Ravager of Biotopes Registered Senior Member

    Messages:
    81
    I've always heard it was a single overall continuity. Do you mind providing the quote establishing this? If it's been given already I apologize, but I hope you'll understand me if I as a newcomer don't feel like wading through 1,000+ pages of text in the thread.

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    "Bias" is irrelevant to whether it's canon or not, I'm afraid. Using suspension of disbelief for analysis, author's intent is not considered. Although the ICS is contradicted enough in the rest of the EU that it's basically useless as a source in most cases, anyway.

    Agreed. It's not like the prequel and original trilogies always mesh, or if the Trek series always work when taken together (especially Enterprise), but it's not quite the same confused mess. The sad thing is, the old SW EU used to be at least somewhat consistent ... and it was largely thanks to the WEG editors who took pains to reconcile the often very confused novels in their RPG books so the players could have a working overall continuity. As I said, how I miss those days ...

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  20. Ilithi_Dragon Dragon Overlord Registered Senior Member

    Messages:
    191
    lol Yeah, I've only been here for the last 45-50 pages or so (and most of those were trolls stirring up back-and-forth half-flame posts or outright flame wars). I posted this a while back, but I have no problem posting it again.

    This is the best compilation and analysis of the canon policies of both franchises I have ever encountered. (<---- said with the same air as one would use while thunking down a massive, 20x14x8-inch tome.)



    Perhaps, perhaps not, but at any rate, the definite bias of the author must be taken into consideration in any scientific evaluation of the available data, especially when giving weight to the data presented in the AOTC:ICS book.



    Yeah, I can understand that. I do have to say, though, that Trek is rather surprising in its consistency, once you get past the apparent surface inconsistencies. Many things seem inconsistent at first, but actually fit fairly well together when you really stop and think about them.
     
  21. HeartlessCapitalist Ravager of Biotopes Registered Senior Member

    Messages:
    81
    Isn't that Robert Scott Anderson, though? He's basically the same as Mike Wong, but for Star Trek rather than Wars. You'll pardon me if I'm a little ... dubious about his neutrality.

    Wookieepeedia lists a canon hierarchy that's fairly easy to understand.

    That's not how I approach novels, at least. It's verging into "author's intent" territory. What we should examine are the facts in the book themselves, and do so as objectively as possible. That's my opinion, at least.

    So, ICS is a canon source of equal value to others. Although a minority source.

    Don't read much Trek EU nowadays (and even when I did it was usually series/movie novelizations), so I can't really give either informed agreement or disagreement here. But it does appear that they are getting more consistent, while the SW EU is getting less so.

    EDIT: Heh, I couldn't even quote your link, apparently ...
     
  22. Hellblade8 Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    1,099
    There's two canon policies:

    G+T Canon, which is what Lucas often refers to as 'his world' and then there's the G+EU world (also including T), which is the traditional canon hierarchy that SW fans use.



    A good point.

    I've actually talked to him before. While I don't always agree on what he says, he isn't really a nutter.

    The only time you should verge into author'sintent is when you're looking at grammar structure or ran into an obvious error; ie, they use terrajoules instead of terrawatts or something.
     
  23. Shogun Bleed White and Blue! Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    7,635
    I have a question:

    Due to Feynman's Equation, antimatter is matter going backwards in time. So when the Enterprise and the Borg went back in time, why did they not turn into antimatter? And during the process ( assuming they went faster than C ) why did their mass now grow ( I believe it is called Lorenz equations ), also if someone is beyond C, it cannot decelerate back to less then C......

    I am confused by their time travel....
     
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