It might also be that the UFP or Starfleet does see some merit in Data, but is disinterested in mass production because of the straw-man argument used in TNG "Measure of a Man": anybody who mass-produces sentient beings may be accused of "creating a slave race" or somesuch idiocy. (I do wonder why they didn't sterilize the entire population at that point, to prevent them from "creating a slave race" via the usual means...)
Timo Saloniemi
I think the bad results of experiments in multitronics (like in TOS: "The Ultimate Computer") keep this a laboratory kind of thing, and with the bad rep from the Borg and with The Man legally unable to tear down Data, I can imagine most are unwilling, unable or both.
That's a very intriguing premise...I am quite curious what some of the adversaries, unburdened by some of the moral restrictions Federation citizens put upon themselves, have come up with in this arena. One wonders what they could do with robots and androids and thinking computers...or have done already. On a slightly different artificial life-form front, Cardassians successfully engineered sleeper agents who could impersonate someone of a different species and pass a not-particularly-exacting genetic scan, and the Romulans cloned their very own Picard...could they engineer whole artificial biological lifeforms, or "bionoids?" I wonder if they have something like Augments in their history, or if they aren't there yet?
It comes down to disposability - if you have five Datas, identical in every way, and a couple of backups in storage, then what's the difference if one gets blown up? You pull the backup out, same way you swap out a damaged transporter pad. It's this identikitness that's at issue (and look at SF's treatment of the Mk1 EMHs before you say "it couldn't happen"...)It might also be that the UFP or Starfleet does see some merit in Data, but is disinterested in mass production because of the straw-man argument used in TNG "Measure of a Man": anybody who mass-produces sentient beings may be accused of "creating a slave race" or somesuch idiocy. (I do wonder why they didn't sterilize the entire population at that point, to prevent them from "creating a slave race" via the usual means...
Depends - holodecks/holosuites (with the obvious exception of the Enterprise-D holodecks, which got so bad even the characters started mocking their inability to "keep the holodecks working right.") seem to be a generally understood technology, while androids aren't. Merely training all the SF engineers in making (parts for) & repairing Soong-type androids would take a lot of time, effort and distraction from other stuff that could be done.I don't see how one could argue a hologram to be easier to maintain, and especially not far more flexible when one takes into account they require projectors.
The limitations of it, I suppose - what do you gain through making non-sentient humanoid robots that can't be accomplished another way, using existing tech that doesn't require the sort of R&D [and the accompanying drain on resources] such automatons would? It would be easy for them to end up as glorified Rube Goldberg machines.So then why not use simple, non-sentient automatons (presuming they don't)?
Well, still, one would think even a limited automaton would have uses for uninteresting jobs that we see crewmen performing.
Then again, we don't really see people performing boring jobs... and one might argue that in the 'enlightened' age of Trek that no one finds their job boring.
I've always wondered just how much of a crew is actually needed in routine work - take out those whose job isn't to do with the ship itself (diplomats, people on the science decks, teachers, kids, etc), don't get into a firefight & don't fall into a wibbly-wobbly thing, and just how many people are needed to keep (e.g.) the Ent-D running indefinitely?Very true. Many duties aboard a starship - particularly the Enterprise-D, seem like very supervisory rather than direct control jobs, other than inputting the Captain's orders. If 'Remember Me' is to be believed, the ship can make a vast interstellar journey on automation at the voice commands of one Dr. Beverly Crusher!
Perhaps Starfleet just doesn't completely trust automatons, and therefore hasn't invested much research into building true sentient synthetic life forms? (Maybe a lot of Admirals are Asimov fans.)
Very true. Many duties aboard a starship - particularly the Enterprise-D, seem like very supervisory rather than direct control jobs, other than inputting the Captain's orders. If 'Remember Me' is to be believed, the ship can make a vast interstellar journey on automation at the voice commands of one Dr. Beverly Crusher!
I've always wondered just how much of a crew is actually needed in routine work - take out those whose job isn't to do with the ship itself (diplomats, people on the science decks, teachers, kids, etc), don't get into a firefight & don't fall into a wibbly-wobbly thing, and just how many people are needed to keep (e.g.) the Ent-D running indefinitely?
Perhaps Starfleet just doesn't completely trust automatons, and therefore hasn't invested much research into building true sentient synthetic life forms? (Maybe a lot of Admirals are Asimov fans.)
There seems to be - perhaps ironically - a narrow-but-deep Luddite streak in the Federation to some extent (even ignoring the "replicated food/candles/drink/etc isn't as good as unreplicated stuff" crowd). Genetic engineering is a complete taboo based on what happened on one planet 300 years beforehand, cloning is looked down upon too, and artificial sentients have to fight tooth and claw for recognition of sentience/the right to breed.
It's almost as if the "reproductive science = playing God" crowd won in the ST universe...
I always liked that in the seemingly infinite scientific universe of Star Trek they made self-aware AI something the Federation couldn't achieve. It made Data all the more special, and it really made it interesting that the idea of self-aware AI...the ability to make a fully aware artifical life...isn't just cracking a mathematical equation. Even Data couldn't keep his android alive.
more non-sentient R2-D2-type robots
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