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Transporter Technology

tyranthraxisiityranthraxisii Member Posts: 0 Arc User
edited March 2014 in Ten Forward
In the Star Trek universe where peoples molecules are disassembled, stored in a computer system, then reassembled somewhere else from said stored data, why would anyone actually perma die? Could you not just "load last save" if something unfortunate happened?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?NR=1&v=TREQGl54BU8&feature=endscreen
I thought WoW's forums had angry elitist snobs, but I never could have imagined the level STO forums has.:confused:
Post edited by tyranthraxisii on
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  • solomonk1ngsolomonk1ng Member Posts: 35 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    From the Memory Alpha entry on Pattern Buffer:

    "A matter stream could not be stored indefinitely in the buffer; after 420 seconds, the stored pattern would degrade and the object was lost. The only known occurrence of a person surviving in a buffer longer than the theoretical maximum was Captain Montgomery Scott on board the USS Jenolan."
  • tyranthraxisiityranthraxisii Member Posts: 0 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    From the Memory Alpha entry on Pattern Buffer:

    A matter stream could not be stored indefinitely in the buffer; after 420 seconds, the stored pattern would degrade and the object was lost. The only known occurrence of a person surviving in a buffer longer than the theoretical maximum was Captain Montgomery Scott on board the USS Jenolan.

    seems like an awefully lame way to fix that loose end, and drop a hippy reference in the process, but apparently that is the official story.....
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?NR=1&v=TREQGl54BU8&feature=endscreen
    I thought WoW's forums had angry elitist snobs, but I never could have imagined the level STO forums has.:confused:
  • starkaosstarkaos Member Posts: 11,556 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    Actually, the ethical quandaries of transporter technology are far more complex than that. In essence, you are destroying one body and creating a completely identical body in a different location. Therefore, it is entirely possible that every single person that stepped through a teleporter has died and copies have been running their lives. So Tasha Yar didn't die from that black slime monster, but when she first used the teleporter and a copy of a copy of a copy of Tasha Yar is the one that was killed by the black slime monster. The only "safe" teleportation system is the Folded-Space Transporter in TNG that was slowly killing the Ansata Separatist terrorists/freedom fighters that were using it since their original bodies weren't killed instantaneously. A species in Voyager used a similar method, but it was incompatible with Voyager technology.

    If the Soul is transferred to the new body, then that renders this ethical problem moot, but the Soul is an unscientific concept that can't be proved.
  • purplegamerpurplegamer Member Posts: 1,015 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    starkaos wrote: »
    Actually, the ethical quandaries of transporter technology are far more complex than that. In essence, you are destroying one body and creating a completely identical body in a different location. Therefore, it is entirely possible that every single person that stepped through a teleporter has died and copies have been running their lives. So Tasha Yar didn't die from that black slime monster, but when she first used the teleporter and a copy of a copy of a copy of Tasha Yar is the one that was killed by the black slime monster. The only "safe" teleportation system is the Folded-Space Transporter in TNG that was slowly killing the Ansata Separatist terrorists/freedom fighters that were using it since their original bodies weren't killed instantaneously. A species in Voyager used a similar method, but it was incompatible with Voyager technology.

    If the Soul is transferred to the new body, then that renders this ethical problem moot, but the Soul is an unscientific concept that can't be proved.

    Bingo.

    The teleporter is a fantastic experiment for the Mind/Body/Soul philosophical quandary. Depending on where you stand (mind, body, or soul), there are some issues with transporter technology as presented in Star Trek:

    Mind: People who follow this line of reasoning would conclude that unless you can teleport a person's consciousness, the person arriving on the other end would not be the person that stood on the original platform. You'd have effectively destroyed the original to spawn a clone at a different location--a clone with no memories of their original. They'd essentially be a new person.

    Body: If you think our identity resides in our physical bodies, then you likely wouldn't use a teleporter since the technology destroys the original body completely and assembles a copy with wholly different material at the other end. The person stepping off the destination pad isn't the same physical being that left for the origin point.

    Soul: Those who believe in the existence of a soul wouldn't have an issue with teleporters, provided you could transfer the soul. This is sorta like the mind, but not quite.

    There was a fantastic quiz we took for a personal identity course which covered this issue and helped you figure out to which of the three philosophies of identity you gravitated.
  • kianazerokianazero Member Posts: 247 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    "And what of the immortal soul in such transactions? Can this machine transmit and reattach it as well? Or is it lost forever, leaving a soulless body to wander the world in despair?"
    — Sister Miriam Godwinson, "We must Dissent" (Accompanies the Secret Project "Bulk Matter Transmitter")

    "The first living thing to go through the device was a small white rat. I still have him, in fact. As you can see, the damage was not so great as they say."
    — Academician Prokhor Zakharov, "See How They Run" (Accompanies discovery of the "Matter Transmission" tech)

    There's a lot of discussion about it, from the soul, to it being a Murder Copy Machine. And even when the writers or the creator himself says differently, people will argue that they don't control what they created.
  • tyranthraxisiityranthraxisii Member Posts: 0 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    kianazero wrote: »
    "And what of the immortal soul in such transactions? Can this machine transmit and reattach it as well? Or is it lost forever, leaving a soulless body to wander the world in despair?"
    — Sister Miriam Godwinson, "We must Dissent" (Accompanies the Secret Project "Bulk Matter Transmitter")

    "The first living thing to go through the device was a small white rat. I still have him, in fact. As you can see, the damage was not so great as they say."
    — Academician Prokhor Zakharov, "See How They Run" (Accompanies discovery of the "Matter Transmission" tech)

    There's a lot of discussion about it, from the soul, to it being a Murder Copy Machine. And even when the writers or the creator himself says differently, people will argue that they don't control what they created.

    I Absolutely LOVE that you are quoting Alpha Centauri!
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?NR=1&v=TREQGl54BU8&feature=endscreen
    I thought WoW's forums had angry elitist snobs, but I never could have imagined the level STO forums has.:confused:
  • jslynjslyn Member Posts: 1,788 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    In the Star Trek universe where peoples molecules are disassembled, stored in a computer system, then reassembled somewhere else from said stored data, why would anyone actually perma die? Could you not just "load last save" if something unfortunate happened?




    I also considered them dead the first time they were disintegrated with a transporter. Clearly it has nothing to do with the moving the actual person; they are just clones. Look at Thomas Riker. (TNG: Second Chances). If the transporter was just moving the one person then there would not have been two of him.



    From the Memory Alpha entry on Pattern Buffer:

    "A matter stream could not be stored indefinitely in the buffer; after 420 seconds, the stored pattern would degrade and the object was lost. The only known occurrence of a person surviving in a buffer longer than the theoretical maximum was Captain Montgomery Scott on board the USS Jenolan."



    Yeeeeeeah. Remember when everyone was kiddies and then they used the save data to restore them to adults? (TNG: Rascals). That episode was slightly longer than 420 seconds.
  • daedalus304daedalus304 Member Posts: 1,049 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    starkaos wrote: »
    Actually, the ethical quandaries of transporter technology are far more complex than that. In essence, you are destroying one body and creating a completely identical body in a different location. Therefore, it is entirely possible that every single person that stepped through a teleporter has died and copies have been running their lives. So Tasha Yar didn't die from that black slime monster, but when she first used the teleporter and a copy of a copy of a copy of Tasha Yar is the one that was killed by the black slime monster. The only "safe" teleportation system is the Folded-Space Transporter in TNG that was slowly killing the Ansata Separatist terrorists/freedom fighters that were using it since their original bodies weren't killed instantaneously. A species in Voyager used a similar method, but it was incompatible with Voyager technology.

    If the Soul is transferred to the new body, then that renders this ethical problem moot, but the Soul is an unscientific concept that can't be proved.

    I thought the transporter decompiled already exsisting matter and energy then compresses it and recompiles it in the same order, kinda like melting a block of ice, shooting the water through a pipe, then freezing it again in the same shape. though it does have a digital copy of them just in case something didnt come out right.

    we've seen Sato go through the transporter still concious, so it means you are always you through it.

    if it just destroyed the target and then made an exact copy, it'd render the deletion useless.
  • kianazerokianazero Member Posts: 247 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    I thought the transporter decompiled already exsisting matter and energy then compresses it and recompiles it in the same order, kinda like melting a block of ice, shooting the water through a pipe, then freezing it again in the same shape. though it does have a digital copy of them just in case something didnt come out right.

    we've seen Sato go through the transporter still concious, so it means you are always you through it.

    if it just destroyed the target and then made an exact copy, it'd render the deletion useless.

    Don't forget that Barclay allowed us to see what being beamed looked like from a first person perspective.

    If he was being killed first, how would he be able to see the transportation or the people trapped there?
  • anitonenanitonen Member Posts: 14 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    From the Memory Alpha entry on Pattern Buffer:

    "A matter stream could not be stored indefinitely in the buffer; after 420 seconds, the stored pattern would degrade and the object was lost. The only known occurrence of a person surviving in a buffer longer than the theoretical maximum was Captain Montgomery Scott on board the USS Jenolan."

    They shouldn't need a stored pattern. In the Unnatural Selection episode of ST:TNG, they cured Dr. Pulaski of an infection and reversed its debilitating physical symptoms based on a healthy DNA sample from a strand of hair. Based on that, there should be no disease or injury that can't be cured if the transporter is used to reassemble the patient using a previous medical scan of a time when they were healthy.
  • straengestraenge Member Posts: 0 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    You know, aside from what's already been said, there is another avenue I don't think has been discussed. Consider the possibilities that you are transformed into energy.. something many believe is the ultimate process of evolution. You have to wonder if some mad scientist attempted it.

    Also, it's funny. Right a little before the servers went kaput, we were discussing transport technology and I wondered. Imagine the early stages of development.. somewhere, there is a planet filled with dograts and catbird carcasses.. For all we know, tribbles could be our early transport attempts on animals that we mushed together using antimatter, science and our insane need to be instantly somewhere else.
  • solomonk1ngsolomonk1ng Member Posts: 35 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    jslyn wrote: »
    Yeeeeeeah. Remember when everyone was kiddies and then they used the save data to restore them to adults? (TNG: Rascals). That episode was slightly longer than 420 seconds.

    According to Memory Alpha, due to interference from a molecular reversion field, Captain Jean-Luc Picard, Keiko O'Brien, Ensign Ro Laren, and Guinan had their ribo-viroxic-nucleic structures removed from their DNA during transport. They re-materialized as children, though all their memories and mental capacities remained those of adults. They were subsequently returned to their correct physical appearances when they were transported again and the structures were restored using bioscans from their medical records. Nothing was retrieved from the buffers.
  • starswordcstarswordc Member Posts: 10,963 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    anitonen wrote: »
    They shouldn't need a stored pattern. In the Unnatural Selection episode of ST:TNG, they cured Dr. Pulaski of an infection and reversed its debilitating physical symptoms based on a healthy DNA sample from a strand of hair. Based on that, there should be no disease or injury that can't be cured if the transporter is used to reassemble the patient using a previous medical scan of a time when they were healthy.
    TV Tropes calls it Reed Richards Is Useless. Definition: Fantastic tech is only used to solve fantastic problems, presumably because it would make life too easy for our heroes if they thought like actual practical people.

    Definitely on the list of speculative fiction pitfalls to avoid. Think about the full implications of your phlebotinum before you implement it.
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  • iconiansiconians Member Posts: 6,987 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    starkaos wrote: »
    In essence, you are destroying one body and creating a completely identical body in a different location. Therefore, it is entirely possible that every single person that stepped through a teleporter has died and copies have been running their lives. So Tasha Yar didn't die from that black slime monster, but when she first used the teleporter and a copy of a copy of a copy of Tasha Yar is the one that was killed by the black slime monster.

    That makes sense.
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  • solomonk1ngsolomonk1ng Member Posts: 35 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    anitonen wrote: »
    They shouldn't need a stored pattern. In the Unnatural Selection episode of ST:TNG, they cured Dr. Pulaski of an infection and reversed its debilitating physical symptoms based on a healthy DNA sample from a strand of hair. Based on that, there should be no disease or injury that can't be cured if the transporter is used to reassemble the patient using a previous medical scan of a time when they were healthy.

    That whole episode is a bit wack. The genetic engineering on the children apparently ignores the fact that such engineering is banned and outlawed in the Federation. This is stated in at least three different Star Trek series (ENT: "The Augments", DS9: "Doctor Bashir, I Presume", TNG: "A Matter of Time") albeit all of them were produced after this episode, so the script writers at the time may not have been aware of this stipulation.

    It's tough to resolve issues like this. I blame Maurice Hurley. He might have given us the Borg, but he drove away Gates McFadden and several writers, including Tracy Torm
  • kianazerokianazero Member Posts: 247 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    That whole episode is a bit wack. The genetic engineering on the children apparently ignores the fact that such engineering is banned and outlawed in the Federation. This is stated in at least three different Star Trek series (ENT: "The Augments", DS9: "Doctor Bashir, I Presume", TNG: "A Matter of Time") albeit all of them were produced after this episode, so the script writers at the time may not have been aware of this stipulation.

    It's tough to resolve issues like this. I blame Maurice Hurley. He might have given us the Borg, but he drove away Gates McFadden and several writers, including Tracy Torm
  • bobbydazlersbobbydazlers Member Posts: 4,534 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    Bingo.

    The teleporter is a fantastic experiment for the Mind/Body/Soul philosophical quandary. Depending on where you stand (mind, body, or soul), there are some issues with transporter technology as presented in Star Trek:

    Mind: People who follow this line of reasoning would conclude that unless you can teleport a person's consciousness, the person arriving on the other end would not be the person that stood on the original platform. You'd have effectively destroyed the original to spawn a clone at a different location--a clone with no memories of their original. They'd essentially be a new person.

    Body: If you think our identity resides in our physical bodies, then you likely wouldn't use a teleporter since the technology destroys the original body completely and assembles a copy with wholly different material at the other end. The person stepping off the destination pad isn't the same physical being that left for the origin point.

    Soul: Those who believe in the existence of a soul wouldn't have an issue with teleporters, provided you could transfer the soul. This is sorta like the mind, but not quite.

    There was a fantastic quiz we took for a personal identity course which covered this issue and helped you figure out to which of the three philosophies of identity you gravitated.

    atoms are a curious thing, scientists still dont yet understand them as much as they would like to.
    your living soul and memories could be contained in a group of atoms that would be completely invisible to the naked eye but tecnology such as the transporter would see these atoms and be able to transmit them along with the rest of the atoms that form your body to be reassembled in another place.
    the only time these living soul and memories atoms would be seperated from your body would be at the point of your death.

    in theory.

    when you step onto a transporter pad your atoms are broken down and stored and then transmited in a stream to the new location.
    when they get there they are reassembled into you, thay are not differant atoms they are your atoms transmited in a stream much like how electricity is trasmited down a wire.
    if however there is a malfunction and some of the matter is lost much of it can be replicated by the transporter the replicated atoms would be 100% dulicates of the originals this would include your memory and soul atoms as is what happened to will riker.

    When I think about everything we've been through together,

    maybe it's not the destination that matters, maybe it's the journey,

     and if that journey takes a little longer,

    so we can do something we all believe in,

     I can't think of any place I'd rather be or any people I'd rather be with.

  • moonshadowdarkmoonshadowdark Member Posts: 1,899 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    starkaos wrote: »
    Actually, the ethical quandaries of transporter technology are far more complex than that. In essence, you are destroying one body and creating a completely identical body in a different location. Therefore, it is entirely possible that every single person that stepped through a teleporter has died and copies have been running their lives. So Tasha Yar didn't die from that black slime monster, but when she first used the teleporter and a copy of a copy of a copy of Tasha Yar is the one that was killed by the black slime monster. The only "safe" teleportation system is the Folded-Space Transporter in TNG that was slowly killing the Ansata Separatist terrorists/freedom fighters that were using it since their original bodies weren't killed instantaneously. A species in Voyager used a similar method, but it was incompatible with Voyager technology.

    If the Soul is transferred to the new body, then that renders this ethical problem moot, but the Soul is an unscientific concept that can't be proved.

    Wow. That's a very enlightened and intelligent point of view about transport technology.

    It was even more impressive when Sheldon Cooper posed it to Leonard on Big Bang Theory.
    "A life is like a garden. Perfect moments can be had, but not preserved, except in memory. LLAP"

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  • jslynjslyn Member Posts: 1,788 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    According to Memory Alpha, due to interference from a molecular reversion field, Captain Jean-Luc Picard, Keiko O'Brien, Ensign Ro Laren, and Guinan had their ribo-viroxic-nucleic structures removed from their DNA during transport. They re-materialized as children, though all their memories and mental capacities remained those of adults. They were subsequently returned to their correct physical appearances when they were transported again and the structures were restored using bioscans from their medical records. Nothing was retrieved from the buffers.





    So the buffer is pointless because they could just anything to make a new copy, such as the aforementioned hair. That only reinforces my old belief that they were not the same people that had originally left. They were recreated from stored records and merged with the partial living templates that they had on hand.



    kianazero wrote: »
    A lot of illegal substances are still tested by governments, and other things are done in controlled cases. A non-in-universe example is Mass Effect.




    Ah, Mass Effect. I just finished playing that series yesterday. How very much of its story is lifted from the 'Revelation Space' novels.
  • starkaosstarkaos Member Posts: 11,556 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    Wow. That's a very enlightened and intelligent point of view about transport technology.

    It was even more impressive when Sheldon Cooper posed it to Leonard on Big Bang Theory.

    Actually based it on an Outer Limits episode. Original is "deleted" when teleportation happens, but it is not instantaneous. However, origin side didn't get signal that copy arrived safely due to interstellar communication problems so the original and copy existed at the same time until the destination side could send a signal that indicated the transportation was successful.

    I suppose we could be just telepresence robots and our signal is just locked into these bodies so if another body is available that can process our signal is available, then the signal would just go to that body. Of course, it all goes back to where we exist, the mind, body, or soul and that is a question for philosophy and religion not science since it is not provable.
  • sander233sander233 Member Posts: 3,992 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    16d89073-5444-45ad-9053-45434ac9498f.png~original

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  • bobbydazlersbobbydazlers Member Posts: 4,534 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    That whole episode is a bit wack. The genetic engineering on the children apparently ignores the fact that such engineering is banned and outlawed in the Federation. This is stated in at least three different Star Trek series (ENT: "The Augments", DS9: "Doctor Bashir, I Presume", TNG: "A Matter of Time") albeit all of them were produced after this episode, so the script writers at the time may not have been aware of this stipulation.

    It's tough to resolve issues like this. I blame Maurice Hurley. He might have given us the Borg, but he drove away Gates McFadden and several writers, including Tracy Torm

    When I think about everything we've been through together,

    maybe it's not the destination that matters, maybe it's the journey,

     and if that journey takes a little longer,

    so we can do something we all believe in,

     I can't think of any place I'd rather be or any people I'd rather be with.

  • mustrumridcully0mustrumridcully0 Member Posts: 12,963 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    atoms are a curious thing, scientists still dont yet understand them as much as they would like to.
    your living soul and memories could be contained in a group of atoms that would be completely invisible to the naked eye but tecnology such as the transporter would see these atoms and be able to transmit them along with the rest of the atoms that form your body to be reassembled in another place.
    the only time these living soul and memories atoms would be seperated from your body would be at the point of your death.

    in theory.

    when you step onto a transporter pad your atoms are broken down and stored and then transmited in a stream to the new location.
    when they get there they are reassembled into you, thay are not differant atoms they are your atoms transmited in a stream much like how electricity is trasmited down a wire.
    if however there is a malfunction and some of the matter is lost much of it can be replicated by the transporter the replicated atoms would be 100% dulicates of the originals this would include your memory and soul atoms as is what happened to will riker.

    There is a lot of evidence suggesting that our memories and personality are not stored in some undiscovered space inside atoms or anything, but are stored in our brains, because if the brain is damaged, we can see that memories get lost, or that our personalities change.

    You can still theorize that the brain is just a form of "communication interface" between our real soul and the world, and damage to the brain makes this communication harder and causes changes in our world that are not part of the original soul. But from a scientific point fo view - unless this hypothesis offers some prediction different from "our self is part of our physical bodies", it's just philosophy, not science.


    That said - if our identity/personality is inherent in our bodies and not some external entity, then we have to remember that all our cells and atoms are changed during our life, and we don't experience it as "dying" and being "cloned" all the time, we still see it as a continous experience and existence. Matter-Disssembly and Reassemby could still mean a continous experience and existence (it certainly looks that way in Startrek), so, no, you're not killed and cloned, you're still you, because you remember yourself being yourself and that is all there is to make out the "You".
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  • artan42artan42 Member Posts: 10,450 Bug Hunter
    edited March 2014
    starkaos wrote: »
    Actually, the ethical quandaries of transporter technology are far more complex than that. In essence, you are destroying one body and creating a completely identical body in a different location. Therefore, it is entirely possible that every single person that stepped through a teleporter has died and copies have been running their lives.

    If the Soul is transferred to the new body, then that renders this ethical problem moot, but the Soul is an unscientific concept that can't be proved.

    That is not a ethical quandary at all once you think about it. The human body is replaced cell by cell (including brain cells) all the time, every 7 years the person that walks around is not the same person biologically at all. In addition a persons neurons and brain functions change over their lifetime, meaning you are physically not the same person, biologically or mentally every decade or so.

    A person is the sum of their memories not a 'soul', a person isn't a fixed concept, they evolve throughout their lives, a 'soul' is meaningless with regard to transporters.
    The person isn't killed anymore than they are killed by their own biology.
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  • norobladnoroblad Member Posts: 2,624 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    If the tech is re-creating the body from other material, as some here suggest, then one would think the klingons would already have set up a "break apart once, reassemble 1000 times" room to clone the best warriors.


    couple that with various discussions -- like the new movies, where young scotty is trying to beam onto a moving ship -- and one gets the impression that the beaming IS indeed particles sent from here to there, not a "higher quality" replicator.
  • markhawkmanmarkhawkman Member Posts: 35,236 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    artan42 wrote: »
    That is not a ethical quandary at all once you think about it. The human body is replaced cell by cell (including brain cells) all the time, every 7 years the person that walks around is not the same person biologically at all. In addition a persons neurons and brain functions change over their lifetime, meaning you are physically not the same person, biologically or mentally every decade or so.

    A person is the sum of their memories not a 'soul', a person isn't a fixed concept, they evolve throughout their lives, a 'soul' is meaningless with regard to transporters.
    The person isn't killed anymore than they are killed by their own biology.
    you have a strange definition of soul....
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  • jonsillsjonsills Member Posts: 10,458 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    Does someone have a definition of "soul"? Particularly one that doesn't depend on a given religious interpretation?
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  • starkaosstarkaos Member Posts: 11,556 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    artan42 wrote: »
    That is not a ethical quandary at all once you think about it. The human body is replaced cell by cell (including brain cells) all the time, every 7 years the person that walks around is not the same person biologically at all. In addition a persons neurons and brain functions change over their lifetime, meaning you are physically not the same person, biologically or mentally every decade or so.

    A person is the sum of their memories not a 'soul', a person isn't a fixed concept, they evolve throughout their lives, a 'soul' is meaningless with regard to transporters.
    The person isn't killed anymore than they are killed by their own biology.

    A Star Trek Transporter is just a cloning device that can send the clones to wherever they want with a minor modification. How it works is that it dismantles the body into a bunch of particles and reassembles it at another location. As long as you have the a person's pattern stored, then you can keep on sending clones to various locations by having a storage of material available. After all, you just need a certain amount of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and a few other trace elements to form a human. So just hook up some storage tanks of these elements to the transporter, scan a person, and instant cloning machine. Therefore, Starfleet doesn't need to send anyone down to the planet. Kirk stays on the Enterprise while his clone heads the away team.

    After all, this is already proven by Thomas Riker in the Second Chances episode. So Transporter clones actually occur in Star Trek. Therefore, the original body is destroyed and an identical copy is created for normal Transporter operation and it is just a simple matter to use it to clone an army with enough energy and material.

    So if a person is the sum of their memories and not due to the soul, then there is absolutely no difference between the original and the copy. So Transporters have killed millions of people in the Star Trek universe since the original and copy have equal rights to exist.
  • jonsillsjonsills Member Posts: 10,458 Arc User
    edited March 2014
    If the "soul" exists, and is not replicated by the transporter, that would explain a lot about STO. We're charging about, shooting first and asking questions never, because we are in fact a bunch of soulless killing machines! :)
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  • artan42artan42 Member Posts: 10,450 Bug Hunter
    edited March 2014
    starkaos wrote: »
    A Star Trek Transporter is just a cloning device that can send the clones to wherever they want with a minor modification. How it works is that it dismantles the body into a bunch of particles and reassembles it at another location. As long as you have the a person's pattern stored, then you can keep on sending clones to various locations by having a storage of material available. After all, you just need a certain amount of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and a few other trace elements to form a human. So just hook up some storage tanks of these elements to the transporter, scan a person, and instant cloning machine. Therefore, Starfleet doesn't need to send anyone down to the planet. Kirk stays on the Enterprise while his clone heads the away team.

    After all, this is already proven by Thomas Riker in the Second Chances episode. So Transporter clones actually occur in Star Trek. Therefore, the original body is destroyed and an identical copy is created for normal Transporter operation and it is just a simple matter to use it to clone an army with enough energy and material.

    So if a person is the sum of their memories and not due to the soul, then there is absolutely no difference between the original and the copy. So Transporters have killed millions of people in the Star Trek universe since the original and copy have equal rights to exist.

    No it doesn't clone. It can accidently duplicate a signal in two. If it was a cloning machine why wouldn't the Dominion just beam one Jem Hadar onto DS9 5000 times?

    It copies a persons 'signal' (for want of a better term) and duplicates it in another location and destroys the previous one, if that signal is split in to by an ion storm, or whatever, they you have Thomas Riker.

    There is no difference between them, my point was that they are not been 'killed' by the transporter any more than by their own biology.
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    Norway and Yeager dammit... I still want my Typhoon and Jupiter though.
    JJ Trek The Kelvin Timeline is just Trek and it's fully canon... get over it. But I still prefer TAR.

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    '...I can tell you that we're not in the military and that we intend no harm to the whales.' Kirk: The Voyage Home
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