That's terribly vague. How is it supported? All I see is that the star resurrection achievement is indeed supported, and that there were references about terraforming worlds.Mith wrote:I was saying how it was mentioned by the author of the show and was supported in the show. In that show, the terraformer used protomatter to reignite a star and had used that technology to terraform other planets.Mr. Oragahn wrote:That's from a quote that never appeared in any of the shows, right? You said it was a writer commentary of some kind. If so, it's not canon.
What you call support is speculation as far as I can tell.
For all we know, it could completely fail. Thinking that just strapping three exotic elements together and saying it will work is pure wishful thinking.That's rather assumptious given that we have no idea how that stuff works. For all we know, simply adding the three together could create that; like matter and antimatter.
Making a fairly simple fission bomb requires very specific conditions, parameters and minute tweaking.
The non canon commentaries lead you to think that way. If you work from what is presented, and only that, the rest is speculation.It was, but my point was how the show was a pointer to ST2 and ST3, I didn't soley base it on that comment. Don't you think it would be odd to have something be a tribute to something else, but not have any mention of it in said episode?
I'm not the one who writes Trek. You cannot keep saying the UFP has collected the most important part of the data and yet fails to show any standardization of such achievements or related protomatter technology beyond the tricks played by lone eccentric geniuses in remote corners of the galaxy.So, you're suggesting that a scientist ready to perform suicide and wanted his success to live on would not write down anything about it (and he isn't selfish enough to keep it to himself, just in that episode he gave away his prized secret sauce for kicks), that Starfleet would let him borrow a Nebula class starship , and allow the use of protomatter, a highly dangerous substance on a star without any kind of back up of his claims? Besides that, we know that Dax was supposed to be working on it with him, one might hope that she would have an idea of what he was doing, given that she was a) the science officer and b) his assistant.
What you're claiming is basically that a scientists did not keep any records of his experiment. Why in God's name would any scientist worth their salt do that? Making notes and such is pretty much a given for all but the most incompetent amongst them.
No, that's the big line. I'm talking about the rules of thumbs, little secrets, details all that stuff that scientists, borderline artists, working alone, wouldn't necessarily bother putting down on paper.I'm sorry, but what? Are you suggesting Starfleet has no idea how protomatter could be used for terraforming? Why would that even make any sense?People seem to only know the big lines, not the real scientific key factors which matter, nah?