Talk:Universal translator
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Don't forget Starfire's ability to absorb language through lip contact. That should fit right after Hawkman's reference.
[edit] Impossible Technology?
Is there any basis for the statement that "a universal translator is a somewhat improbable technology." Where does this information come from, and how can you be so sure? Tell someone 100 years ago about today's technology and they would think you were insane. Who's to say what is possible and not possible 100 years or more from now? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.150.203.74 (talk) 16:59, 4 October 2007 (UTC)
- Probably experts in the field. There's a magazine for Star Trek fans with a monthly column called "Building Treknology." To my knowledge they've looked at the feasibility of the holodeck, they've probably done one about the UT. Cromulent Kwyjibo 16:18, 16 October 2007 (UTC)
- Considering the fact that the UT must depend somehow on telepathy, I'd say it should be considered improbable. The UT is very old school, if you think about; the UT depends on a Platonic realism or at least an empirical understanding of language as potentially transparent, but, especially post-Wittgenstein, this seems unlikely. A UT might work in basic transactions (as with voice recognition software), but in fluent communication it seems improbable. --Junius49 04:07, 3 December 2007 (UTC)
[edit] I am willing to suspend my disbelief only when the UT is ignored
Bear with me, my point might be a little hard to communicate clearly. I think the UT is an absolutely essential plot device, it would be impossible to write Star Trek without it. However, it would be very difficult to write science fiction with a UT that is internally consistent, and it would be even harder to make it plausible. In Star Trek, the UT is both inconsistent and implausible, but that is alright most of the time. Where is the UT located, in the comm badge, or an implant? I don't care. How does it translate everything correctly, considering how ambiguous language is? I don't care.
However, I get really annoyed whenever Star Trek draws attention to the UT. I am willing to suspend my disbelief and ignore the UT, so long as the writers ignore it too. Here is a prime example of the writers drawing unnecessary attention to the inconsistencies of the UT: In the episode Civilization (Enterprise), the universal translator is working as usual, and allowing Captain Archer to mingle among pre-warp aliens without them realizing he is from another planet and cannot speak their language. Then his UT malfunctions temporarily, and he cannot comprehend or speak the local language. Why did the writers put that in? It brings up all the questions I wanted to ignore, such as: What did his lip movements look like while the UT was working, and what would they have looked like while it malfunctioned? Clearly, if he was successfully impersonating the locals, the UT not only changed the sounds the others heard coming from his mouth but also changed the appearance of his lips to match.
The UT creates numerous inconsistencies which cannot be explained gracefully, and the explanations themselves are often completely improbable. Using my previous example: the UT in this episode of Enterprise is clearly a hand held device that Archer carries, and he covertly tweaks this device when it malfunctions. This single device enables him and any other humans in the room to hear English and see English lip movements, while at the same time any aliens in the room will hear alien language and see corresponding alien lip movements. This means that the device is telepathically communicating with the aliens to change their perception of the sounds AND visuals surrounding them, because that was required for successful infiltration. This change in perception is probably telepathic and illusory, because it would be very difficult to change the physical sound waves and photons. The sound waves and photons could only be changed if they were changed into multiple forms - English sound waves and photons for the humans in the room, others for each set of aliens also in the room. That is conceivable, you could target one hologram to the left and a different one to the right, but then what about echoes? What if a camera records someone speaking with a UT, and then the video tape is played back without a UT to an audience of multiple species? Can all of the audience members understand the speaker? Or just one species? How does the camera know which lip movements to record, or will the visual be modified, months or years later, between the screen and the eyes of the viewers? If they have UTs that are so skilled at deception (either telepathic or holographic), then how come they can't use those technologies for other purposes?
These are all the questions that I start asking myself after just one mention of the UT. The answers are not graceful, they are not clever, they are just kludges. In science fiction, you should focus on a piece of technology if it is cool, clever, or graceful. If it was just a plot device, IGNORE IT LIKE THE PLAGUE!
The exception to this is Little Green Men (DS9), in which the Ferengis' UTs malfunction because of the nuclear bombs on Earth. That is just hilarious. The writers were clearly poking fun at the awkward and inconsistent nature of UTs.Fluoborate (talk) 03:59, 23 April 2008 (UTC)