Vulcan nerve pinch

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Spock performs the Vulcan nerve pinch on a Red Shirt during a fight from "And the Children Shall Lead"
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Spock performs the Vulcan nerve pinch on a Red Shirt during a fight from "And the Children Shall Lead"

As used in the fictional Star Trek universe, the Vulcan nerve pinch is a technique used mainly by Vulcans to render another lifeform unconscious by pinching the base of the victim's neck with all four fingers opposing the thumb. Normally this is done to other humanoids, although in Star Trek V: The Final Frontier, Spock successfully uses the nerve pinch on a horse-like creature.

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[edit] Origin and use

Leonard Nimoy conceived the maneuver in the early days of the original Star Trek series. At least one early script called for Spock to pistol whip another character, but Nimoy felt that such an action would be undignified for a Vulcan — he therefore invented an alternative.[citation needed] In Star Trek's scripts, the pinch is referred to as the FSNP, for Famous Spock Nerve Pinch.

Since Spock, various other characters in the Star Trek spin-offs use the technique, including non-Vulcans such as the android Data[1], Emergency Medical Holograms[citation needed], the Changeling Odo[citation needed], and the humans Jean-Luc PicardTemplate:Starship Mine and Jonathan Archer[citation needed]. In the episode "The Omega Glory", Spock comments that he tried but failed to teach it to James T. Kirk.

It is not shown whether the nerve pinch works on Vulcans, but the USS Voyager's Doctor daydreams about using it against a Borg-infected Tuvok.

[edit] Physiology

There is no on-screen canon explanation of how the pinch works. Over the years, fans and Expanded Universe writers have made a number of suggestions as to how it works.

The book The Making of Star Trek by Stephen E. Whitfield and Gene Roddenberry offers a simple explanation: the pinch blocks blood and nerve responses from reaching the brain, leading to unconsciousness. In this earliest of Star Trek reference books, the pinch is referred to as the "Spock Pinch".[2]

One conjecture was that, due to Vulcans' telepathic nature and incredible control over their own bodies, they are able to send a burst of neural energy into another being and overload its nervous system, rendering it unconscious, although the pinch does not work on all species.[citation needed] This explanation was rendered moot by the fact that many non-telepathic characters have used it.

Another conjecture is that it can be done by applying very strong and surgically precise pressure over baroreceptors of the carotid sinus at the base of the humanoid neck.[citation needed]

A less popular theory is that Vulcan physiology allows for a buildup of excess bioelectricity that can be discharged on command into a "victim” temporarily disrupting their nervous system resulting in unconsciousness for an indefinite amount of time.[citation needed]

[edit] Death grip

The Star Trek episode "The Enterprise Incident" makes reference to a Vulcan "death grip", which is supposedly a more powerful and lethal version of the nerve pinch. Spock pretends to use it on Captain Kirk in order to complete a mission. Dr. Leonard McCoy later asserts that the death grip is a myth, later confirmed by Kirk still being alive. Spock does, however, do something to Kirk that simulates death to such a degree that Romulan doctors certified him dead. Kirk stated that Spock used a nerve pinch to simulate his death, but what Spock exactly does is not explained.

[edit] Other references

  • The Beastie Boys' song "Intergalactic" says the listener's "knees'll start shaking and your fingers pop / Like a pinch on the neck of Mr. Spock". Note that the lyrics refer to it as a pinch "of" rather than "from" Spock.
  • In the Mel Brooks comedy Spaceballs, Lone Starr attempts to knock-out a Spaceball guard using the technique, prompting the following dialogue:
Guard: What the hell are you doing?
Lone Starr: The, uh, Vulcan Neck Pinch...
Guard: No, no, stupid. You've got it much too high. It's down here were the shoulder meets the neck.
Lone Starr: Like this?
Guard: Yeah! (Faints)

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Unification, Part II." Star Trek: The Next Generation.
  2. ^ Whitfield, Steven E., Gene Roddenberry [1968] (1970). The Making of Star Trek. Ballantine Books. ISBN 0-345-21621-0.
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