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|    rec.arts.startrek.fandom    |    Star trek fandom, or a mental disorder    |    2,013 messages    |
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|    Message 1,846 of 2,013    |
|    The Doctor to All    |
|    AI/LLM reviews of STNG Inheritance (1/2)    |
|    18 Nov 25 14:59:02    |
      XPost: rec.arts.startrek.misc, rec.arts.ssf.tv, rec.arts.tv       XPost: can.arts.sf       From: doctor@doctor.nl2k.ab.ca              AI/LLM Review Star Trek The Next Generation - Inheritance              Google Gemini              he Enterprise responds to an emergency at a remote stellar nursery. Among the       scientists evacuated from the collapsing colony is Juliana Tainer, a brilliant       robotics expert who claims to be the former wife of Dr. Noonien Soong. This,       she explains, makes        her Data's biological "mother," as she was deeply involved in his creation.              Data and Juliana spend time bonding, and she shares stories of his childhood,       his original creation on Omicron Theta, and the complex personality of Dr.       Soong. Data is fascinated and experiences a sense of family and history he has       long sought. However,        during a performance, Juliana suffers a catastrophic injury, and when Dr.       Crusher attempts medical intervention, the horrific truth is revealed: Juliana       is an advanced android, created by Soong after the real Juliana left him, and       is unaware of her own        artificial nature.              Data finds a subroutine in her system that contains a final message from       Soong, confirming that the real Juliana never knew. Soong created this       synthetic version to live a full, human life. Data is faced with the agonizing       choice of activating a final        chip that will tell "Juliana" the truth, which would shatter her programmed       reality, or respecting Soong's final wish and letting her continue to live her       illusion. Data chooses to let his "mother" believe she is human.              Strengths              Emotional Core for Data: This episode delivers a powerful emotional arc for       Data, giving him the sense of a genuine family history before dramatically       taking it away. The exploration of his longing for a parental figure is       exceptionally well-handled.              The Soong Legacy: It adds crucial and bittersweet depth to Dr. Noonien Soong.       His act of creating an android copy of his ex-wife, programmed for human       growth and emotions, demonstrates his profound, if flawed, genius and deep       loneliness.              The Ethical Dilemma: The climax—Data’s choice to keep the secret—is a       superb piece of science fiction morality. It forces Data to choose between the       cold, hard truth he values, and the compassionate, human act of protecting       someone's happiness,        leading to a profound moment of "humanity" for the android.              Weaknesses**              Familiar Trope: The "long-lost parent/relative" trope is common in television,       and while the execution here is strong, the initial setup is somewhat       predictable before the major twist.              Convenient Timing: The timing of Juliana's accident and the subsequent       immediate discovery of the hidden Soong message feels overly convenient,       serving the plot's need for the final ethical showdown.              Overall Impression              "Inheritance" is a beautiful, melancholic exploration of identity, love, and       the complex nature of creation. It serves as a fitting capstone to Data's       journey toward understanding humanity, showing that sometimes, compassion       means prioritizing a        cherished illusion over a destructive truth. It stands as a necessary,       tear-jerking chapter in the Data/Soong mythology.              Rating: 8.6/10              That episode is high on my list for Data-centric stories!              ChatGPT              Good call — *Inheritance* (TNG, season 7) is a very interesting episode with       some real emotional ambition, though it has notable flaws. Here’s a detailed       review + rating (based on the Chakoteya-style structure + themes).              ---              ## Review of *Star Trek: The Next Generation – Inheritance* (based on       Chakoteya transcript / episode)              **What Works Well**              1. **Strong Emotional and Philosophical Core**               * The premise — Data meeting someone who claims to be his mother — is       inherently powerful. The idea of “family,” identity, memory, and what       makes someone “real” is deeply explored. ([Memory Alpha][1])        * The twist (that Juliana Tainer is herself an android) raises important       ethical and existential questions. Memory Alpha confirms this secret: she has       been built by Soong, with his memories, but she doesn’t know she’s not       “real.” ([Memory        Alpha][1])        * Data’s decision at the end — to let her continue believing she’s       human — is emotionally rich. It shows Data’s compassion, but also his       struggle between logic, truth, and the “well-being” of another sentient       being. ([Doux Reviews][2])              2. **Character Insight – Noonian Soong**               * Even though Soong is not physically present, his legacy looms large.       Through Juliana and her memories, we get deeper insight into Soong’s       loneliness, his love, and his darker impulses (building a replica of his       wife). ([AV Club][3])        * The ethical implications of his actions — building an android to       replicate a person, giving her memories, and designing her to believe she’s       human — are morally murky and thought-provoking. ([AV Club][3])              3. **Performance / Acting**               * Juliana (played by Fionnula Flanagan) brings real warmth and sincerity to       her “motherly” role. Some reviewers (e.g., on MarkWatches) say her       emotions feel genuine, and that helps make the reveal more poignant.       ([markwatches.net][4])        * Data (Brent Spiner) is, as always, convincing in his internal conflict:       his emotional “distance” because of his nature as an android, weighed       against a deep desire for connection.              4. **Moral Ambiguity**               * The episode doesn’t give an easy “right answer.” Data, Crusher, and       others debate whether to tell Juliana the truth; but even at the end, the       decision to hide it is left morally ambiguous. ([Doux Reviews][2])        * The secrecy feels ethically problematic. Some critics point out that not       telling her she’s an android violates her right to know her own identity.       ([jammersreviews.com][5])        * It raises AI / personhood questions: Is an android with memories and       emotions “less real” if they don’t know they are artificial? What       responsibility do creators have?              5. **Plot Device + B-Story**               * The subplot about Atrea IV’s cooling core gives the episode a       science-fiction justification for the Enterprise’s presence. Memory Alpha       notes that it’s part of the reason the Enterprise is there. ([Memory       Alpha][1])        * The use of a “memory chip” or positronic component to store       Juliana’s memories (and the revelation via a hidden chip) is classic sci-fi       / Trek tech in a Data-centric story.              ---              **What Doesn’t Work / Weaknesses**              1. **Pacing & Focus**               * Several reviews argue that the episode spends too much time on “cute”       backstory or sentimental scenes early on, before the real twist comes.       ([angriest.blogspot.com][6])        * The moral dilemma is interesting but is not explored as deeply or for as       long as it could be. According to Doux Reviews, the episode “barely       scratches the surface” of its most compelling question — whether Juliana       should know the truth. ([Doux        Reviews][2])                     [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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