Elmarnieh wrote:
No I'm not getting butt-hurt DE, and that statement loads tons of credibility to your position.
The statement was made that lasers do not penetrate navigational shielding. So they don't - until we witness it happen to that vehicle - they don't. That is canon. Canon is not making leaps about the limits or how the limits of fantastical machinery work, when its a given it is impossible to know.
You don't get to use canon that way when we're talking about a cross-series comparison, and especially when it's an off-the-cuff character comment.
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Lasers don't penetrate navigational shields, regardless of how super they are.
Disproven
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Quoting someone whose fantasy seems to be jerking off to calculation about Star Wars does not change the canonical evidence one bit.
Your idea about canon is disproven.
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Simply because your sci fi guys like to fire lasers at each others, no matter how big they are, does not in the least affect the canonical realities of another sci fi universe - regardless of how much you or someone else really really wants it to.
Simply because your sci-fi guys like to make comments about obsolete weapons in your universe does not make them invulnerabl to weapons that mine uses based on the superficial similarity of their names.
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Untill there is canonical cross over where we see any laser from Star Wars penetrate the shields, they wont. You still have your ion cannons and torpedoes.
Spurious reasoning. You're just trying to give special privileges to your preferred universe. We never have seen any phasers or photon torpedoes penetrate SW shields either, so obviously they can't!
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We've never seen SW shields stop phasers, so they probably can't."
"We've never seen SW shields stop transporters, so they probably can't."
"We've never seen ion cannons disable ST technology, so they probably don't."
There are hundreds of variations upon this theme, some of which go so far as to claim that a SW ship venturing into our galaxy would be shieldless, blind, and trapped at sublight speeds, and that any Jedi Knights on board would lose their powers, by virtue of the fact that they've never demonstrated any of their capabilities in our galaxy. They are treating all unobserved phenomena as impossibilities. You could also call this a "false limit" fallacy if you wish. The problem is that although the observation of a phenomenon can conclusively prove that it is possible, the failure to observe a phenomenon does not prove that it is impossible. It leaves open the possibility that it is impossible, but it does not act as proof. It would be unwarranted to assume that it is impossible, and it would also be unwarranted to assume that it is possible, in lieu of any supporting evidence either way. To make projections either way, we would need more information.
For example, if someone claims that it is impossible for a 30mm shell to punch through the armour of a main battle tank, we can easily disprove him by observing the infamous A-10 "Warthog" in action. However, if someone notes that we've never seen an M-1 Abrams' armour stop a projectile made entirely of Play-Doh, this would hardly constitute proof that an M-1 cannot survive Play-Doh shells! Although it is true that the observation of an event is the only absolutely conclusive proof that it can happen, it is wrong to assume that everything we have failed to observe is impossible (particularly when we are limited to a less than ten hours of observations, as is the case with Star Wars).
If you're going to make the claim that something can or can't happen, you have to quantify energies and/or describe mechanisms. You can't simply say "we've never seen this particular event, so it's not possible." In the case of the Play-Doh shells, we've never seen an M-1 Abrams survive a hit from Play-Doh weaponry but the kinetic energy and thermomechanical properties of a reasonably-sized Play-Doh projectile should make it less dangerous than other weapons which the M-1 has been observed to easily shake off. Therefore, there is no justification for claiming that the M-1 would be helpless before attackers armed with Play-Doh.
Similarly, although we've never seen SW shields stop phasers (for the obvious reason that we've never seen a crossover SW/ST movie or television episode), we have seen them survive attacks from energy weapons of similar or greater energy yield. And although we've never seen SW shields stop transporters, we have seen that transporters are actually very easy to stop (having been stymied by everything from radiation to the presence of certain minerals, or by "inhibitor fields" which are so weak that they stop nothing else). And although we've never seen ion cannons acting on ST technology, we know that they disrupt electrical equipment, and we've seen enough arcing and sparking components on the bridge of the Enterprise to know that electricity is still being used heavily. So we don't have conclusive proof that these things can happen (since we would need direct observation for that), but we certainly don't have any grounds for stating that they are impossible.
Another problem with this type of argument is that it's mindlessly one-sided. One could just as easily take all of those arguments and reverse them: "we've never seen phasers knock down or penetrate SW shields, so they probably can't", or "we've never seen transporters go through SW shields, so they probably can't", or "we've never seen ST technology withstand an ion cannon attack, so it probably can't." If you're going to claim that one technology will be unstoppable against another technology, you have to provide better reasoning than "we've never seen it, and any unknown should always be assumed to go in the direction most favourable to my side".
At some point, we have to concede the importance of fair play. After all, we're talking about a pair of fictional universes, and even the most objective analysis must contain some underlying assumptions related to fair play. I have noticed that a common thread among Trekkie debaters is to spend all their time trying to tip the playing field to their advantage, by inventing technobabble reasons why SW technology would be useless against unfamiliar ST technology (but of course, ST technology will be omnipotent against unfamiliar SW technology). I hope it should be obvious why such tactics are blatantly one-sided and unreasonable. A debate about sci-fi is virtually impossible without the following assumptions:
The laws of physics are constant, and shared between both universes in the crossover (ie- no silly claims about subspace not existing in the SW galaxy, or hyperspace not existing in the ST galaxy).
Canon events really happened (ie- suspension of disbelief).
Both sides' technology performs normally (ie- a shield designed to stop energy weapons will stop energy weapons even in another galaxy, a weapon designed to disrupt electrical systems will disrupt electrical systems even in another galaxy, a superluminal propulsion system will move the ship at superluminal speeds even in another galaxy, etc).
Yes, these assumptions are just that: assumptions. But if you refuse to accept them, you're basically throwing the rulebook in the garbage, and saying that "anything goes." The assumptions are designed for the simple sake of fairness; remember fairness? Some people don't.
You're going to next claim that no one in SW ever said they are immune to phasers. It doesn't matter. It doesn't matter that what was said in ST about lasers is canon either.
The only thing that is canon is the fact that someone said that. Yoiu are sommitting a hasty generalization and no limits fallacy trying to extend it to any other situation, especially one involving weapons which are observably not lasers.b
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If you want to go with what you observe than we simply transport photon torpedoes onto your vessel's bridges, engines, or power cores. After all it was never observed that Star Wars shields can stop transporters, right?
We don't need to. We have observed that Trek transporters are disrupted by a wide variety of things, including shields (especially shields) This idiotic argument has been addressed over and over elsewhere on the net.
You're just dishonestly relying on a lack of crossover products to claim anything you want to be possible is possible just becaus we never see it not work and anything you want to be impossible is impossible just because we never see it happen.
In other words, you're butt-hurt and having a tantrum because someone came up with way better arguments than your off-the-cuff analysis. Repeating your "It's canon!!!!11!!!onehundredthoussandeleven" argument over and over won't make the fact that
the only thing canon is the fact that someone made the comment.