Talya wrote:
Corolinth wrote:
Part of the problem here is that Star Wars is space opera. The "technology" of Star Wars follows pretty much the same guidelines as magic.
This.
Star Wars tech is not definable or compatible on a comparitive scale to Star Trek. Trek is actual science fiction. Every single technology in Star Trek has some scientific basis (whether or not it's actually feasible or accurate.) There are real physics behind the fantastical. Star Wars tech is no less mystical or arcane than the stuff the jedi masters pull - it is fantasy, not science fiction. This makes Star Wars vs. Star Trek comparisons comparable to, say, Gandalf vs. Batman.
You might as well ask whether Harry Potter could beat a Xenomorph.That's hilarious. As a matter of fact, you can observe the capabilities of a xenomorph and Harry Potter and objectively compare them to determine which is more likely to win a confrontation, although the conditions of the fight would also be a big factor.
In any case, Star Wars is no more or less "Fantasy" than Star Trek is. Plenty of beings in Star Trek exhibit mystical powers. Capabilities of ships and other machines in Trek are not based any more on physics than Star Trek, or BSG or any other major sci fi franchise.
All Trek does is dress it up in a lot of Trechnobabble; Data being the worst offender. Star Wars does not spend as much time talking about the science of it ebcause in Star Wars, they are not primarily engaging in exploration and research, while in most Star Trek series that, ostensibly, is a major goal of Star Fleet.
In any case, they certainly can be compared objectively. To the greatest degree possible, we compare things based on the way we already know the universe works. When we encounter things that we don't know how they work, we observe their capabilities, and that allows us to compare them to each other, to real life objects, or to other sci fi series and determien their relative capabilities. We can certainly measure the energy output of turbolasers, phasers, and photon torpedoes because there are numerous instances where they can be observed, giving us plenty of data points. Occasionally there are anomolies, which means a plausible explaination for the anomoly must be found, and usually one is available in the conditions of the anomolous event. However, some things like phasers have lots of anomolies, and that requires a more exotic explaination to fit the facts, such as the "reduction to neutrinos" hypothesis.
We certainly can't figure out
how things work because they are presumably based on laws of physics that the characters of those universes know and we don't, but we certainly can figure out
what they do. More importantly, we observe that things like gravity, the speed of light, the human body, and most other day-to-day things work the same way as they do for us. The only reason to say that Star Wars technology is "magical" is that it's advanced beyond anything we have here, and the characters spend little time discussing how it works. The only difference with Star Trek is that the size and power of what they can build is lower, and they babble incessently about technology and science, often inaccurately.