WATCH-MAN wrote:Occam's Razor states that among competing hypotheses that predict equally well, the one with the fewest assumptions should be selected.
- You have no explanation at all.
- »special circumstances«
»specific circumstances«
»circumstance-specific conditions«
»some other explanation«
»some unique conditions«
are only wild cards for possible explanations and nothing more. This does not explain how an ounce of the in the TOS episode »Obsession« used anti-matter was able to rip away half the planet's atmosphere nor does it explain how the officers in the Cardassian/Romulan attack fleet - who were combat veterans according to Admiral Toddman - could be convinced to be able to destroy the crust of the Founder's planet in one hour and the mantle in five hours.
So you have
two instances of planet-busting firepower being used.
One was in TOS (where power levels tended to vary wildly anyway, with ships being able to cross the galaxy in days in one episode, then needing days to travel between two adjacent star systems in another), where on one occasion we see a planet-devastating demolition charge. On other instances
in that very series, let alone in other series, we see plenty of cases where Kirk and his merry band would benefit immensely from having a planet-devastating weapon... but do not have them and do not use them.
Likewise, another incident occurs in DS9, where a fleet of Star Trek ships apparently have the means to devastate much of a planetary surface in a relatively short amount of time. Except, again, this same level of power is
not demonstrated elsewhere and at other times.
So basically, we have two isolated incidents of planet-devastating firepower. We have dozens of incidents where anyone in their right mind who had planet-devastating firepower would use it... but it is not used.
It is far more logical to conclude, in the absence of
explicit statements to the contrary or a common practice of using planet-devastating firepower, that under anything like normal circumstances no such planet-devastating firepower is available. That no, the
Enterprise does not keep a handful of planet-wrecking torpedoes on hand that it inexplicably never fires at anything even when in mortal danger, just so it could use them in that one episode.
I mean, in real life, the very reason we give nuclear weapons to combat units is because we expect that if those combat units are seriously threatened they will
use the nuclear weapons. That's the strategic point- that these units are a tripwire, something you Do Not Mess With unless you're prepared for the war to go nuclear.
And yet it seems as though if you're right, Starfleet and other Trek powers routinely hand these planet-wrecker weapons out to ships for use Just In Case... but then not only do they NOT use such weapons when in severe danger, but they don't even talk or think seriously about doing them! It makes no sense.
[*]One the other side, we know already of - at least - the following treaties which are obliging the Federation:
- Jankata Accord
- No species shall enter another quadrant for the purpose of territorial expansion.
Second Khitomer Accords- Subspace weapons are banned.
Unknown treaty- Metagenic weapons are banned.
Seldonis IV Convention- Prisoners of war aren't allowed to be tortured.
Polaric Test Ban Treaty- Research into polaric ion energy is banned.
Treaty of Algeron- Development or use of cloaking device is prohibited list]
(I'm sure there are more treaties mentioned - but I can't remember any more.)
Conventions on torturing POWs and on biological warfare are irrelevant to this question, I crossed them off the list. A treaty banning territorial expansion is ALSO irrelevant to this question, plus it's a bilateral agreement between the Federation and the Cardassians anyway. Again, crossed off.
The ban on cloaking devices was part of a treaty specifically intended to enforce a neutral zone between Earth and the Romulans. And frankly it was a very unequal treaty in the Romulans' favor. Moreover, if the Federation had given up its right to planet-wrecking super-antimatter weapons in any such
bilateral treaty, that treaty would not be binding on anyone not a signatory to it. So even if, say, the Federation and the Cardassians made such an agreement, there would be nothing stopping the Klingons or the Romulans from developing the technology themselves. We see this with cloaking- the Klingons and the Romulans both independently develop the technology and routinely use it against the Federation, and each other, and other random enemies throughout the galaxy. Meanwhile the Cardassians, the Dominion, the Borg and so on don't use cloaking (much)... but by all available evidence this is because they chose not to, not because they promised not to. Italicized to mark that it's at least vaguely relevant to the topic because it's a ban on a powerful ship-to-ship weapon, but still a dumb example.
The ban on "polaric ion energy" seems to come from it being very dangerous to work with even in the lab, so nobody really wanted to violate that treaty ban. Probably signed with a sigh of relief from all involved, and
certainly not a case where everyone and their cousin already had such weapons in service and then decided to retire them... which is what you claim happened with super-antimatter weapons.
The ban on 'subspace' weapons is most germane... but again, these are banned because of unpredictable effects that can alter subspace. Since we've seen a lot of major disasters that
unexpectedly and randomly devasted entire planets or even reached out across interstellar distances courtesy of subspace events... There are good reasons to avoid such a weapon. It's the equivalent of outlawing a weapon that causes random hurricanes in real life. Even a nuclear weapon is less bad than that, because you know it will only kill what you point it at.
So in general, the only classes of banned weaponry in Star Trek are either those a
particular empire has foresworn as part of a specific agreement (as the Germans promised not to build battleships after World War I), or those which are so indiscriminate and uncontrollable in their effects that they're likely to backfire on the person using them (bioweapons, weapons that cause unpredictable rips in the fabric of space and time, et cetera).
Super-antimatter doesn't fall into either category.
Insofar it does not need much to imagine that there could be another treaty that banns super-anti-matter-weapons.
And yet this is NEVER mentioned in story. So IF you are right, a superweapon is deployed, is
common and accepted technology owned by at least three star nations, two of which are violent warlike dictatorships... and then it is inexplicably banned and disappeared and none of them even talks about using them even in the most desperate emergencies.
[*]And we know that the Federation - regardless how dire the situation has become - has not used any prohibited weapons or technologies against its enemies. Neither did we see the Federation using subspace-weapons nor metagenetic weapons or protomatter weapons. We didn't see the Federation destroying stars (as was done in an experiment in the TNG episode »Half a Life«) or using cloaking devices (not counting the illegal use of the cloaking device of the Defiant by Cpt. Sisko). Insofar it does not need much to imagine that the Federation complies with its contractual obligations.
Who argues that the Federation - if it has super-anti-matter-technology - would have used it during the Dominion war, has to explain why the Federation didn't use any of the other technologies in the direst situation. Because - even if the Federation does not have super-anti-matter-technology - according to the underlying logic, it should have used the other weapons technologies.
This is a fair point- but even if the Federation is so restrained, other powers in the Alpha, Beta, and for that matter Gamma and Delta quadrants are not!
We see plenty of evidence of both rogue actors and actual states using other 'exotic' methods to achieve their goals: time travel, dangerous space-fracturing munitions, you name it. And yet you claim that despite a widely available, relatively simple (available in the TOS era) method being around to create weapons far more powerful than a conventional photon torpedo... nobody uses it. Period.
[*]Who argues that the anti-matter used in the TOS episode »Obsession« is normal anti-matter has to explain why Kirk and Spock didn't use a photon torpedo. A photon-torpedo has an 1.5 kg anti-matter-warhead. Why draining anti-matter from the engines, if simply using a photon-torpedo would be so much simpler? And why is an ounce of the used anti-matter so much stronger that a photon-torpedo with a 1.5 kg anti-matter-warhead?[/list][/list][/list]
The torpedo warheads might not be easy to dismount, or it might be impossible to "tap" them for small quantities of antimatter on demand. Or the Enterprise might not want to expend torpedoes in a situation where a random demolition charge would do the trick.
WATCH-MAN wrote:If you did really understand Occam's Razor, you wouldn't have written what you have written.
Occam's Razor is used if you have a situation in which you do not have all facts and thus have to theorize what could have happened. You have to make assumptions. These assumptions can not be proven. Otherwise it wouldn't be assumptions and you do not have to theorize at all. If there are several possible explanations - according to Occam's Razor - the one with the fewest assumptions should be selected. But - and that is the important thing - the assumption has to have the ability to explain anything. You have to be able to make predictions with it. Neither is God, the big unknown or »special circumstances« an explanation at all. The latter is what I called wild cards. You do not know what »special circumstances« have contributed to the result, you can not make any predictions.
You can not say the same about my explanation.
Excuse me... do you have any education in formal logic? If so, I suggest you call whoever taught you formal logic and ask for your money back.
Occam's Razor is very simple and breaks down into two parts: "THE SIMPLEST THEORY" and "THAT FITS THE FACTS."
Now, the "simplest theory" part is easily satisfied by EITHER claiming the Federation has super-antimatter that powers its spaceships OR claiming that it doesn't. Both theories are in fact very simple.
Then we come to the "that fits the facts" part. The problem is that while claiming that Star Trek ships can take their super-powered ultra-antimatter fuel and turn it into a planet-shattering Molotov cocktail on demand fits
a few specific cases, it totally fails to fit all sorts of other cases.
What Kirk and Spock did in that one episode was, essentially, make a Molotov cocktail out of the fuel their ship ran on. It wasn't that hard. If they could do that any time they pleased, if
everyone had that capability, it would be used a lot more than just once in the course of about 250 episodes of various Star Trek series.
So while the "super-antimatter" theory fits the
specific facts you cherrypicked, it fails to fit the
other facts, which are far more numerous. Your theory has to fit all the facts, not just some of them, in order to be believable.
Now at that point you started backpedaling. In an attempt to make your new theory fit ALL the facts, you introduced additional ideas- what are now mockingly called
epicycles- to your theory.
You proposed an extremely efficient mechanism of treaty enforcement that bans anyone from using this commonly available fuel to make planet-wrecking Molotov cocktails. Treaties so powerful that they bind not only the Federation (which has a history of tripping over its own red tape), but also such bold, warlike, and unscrupulous powers as the Klingons, Romulans, and Cardassians. And for that matter other races throughout the galaxy that have NO prior contact with the Federation or the Alpha Quadrant powers and have NO logical reason to be bound by the same treaties, such as the Dominion and the various races of the Delta Quadrant. And for that matter, yet
other races such as the Borg who don't even have a meaningful concept of making treaties and will literally try to kill or enslave every sentient being they encounter.
The problem is that while NOW your theory "fits all the data," in the sense that there are no inconsistencies with the evidence...
You have
comically failed the "simplest theory" test now. Because now the choice is between "super-antimatter and a super-treaty that everyone inexplicably follows and doesn't even think about breaking, including people who have never heard of the treaty and spit on the very concept of treaties" and... "no super-antimatter."
Almost ANY possible explanation would fit the fact
more simply than "super-antimatter exists and is easily available and can be used to make planet-wrecking Molotov cocktails, but no one ever actually does this because of the super-treaty."
So again, find your logic tutor and ask for your money back.