... isn’t likely to be presented to the human race in the near future, but when it does, it is bound to be difficult, as Star Trek reminds us. Star Wars, being a much less sprawling franchise, has dealt with the dilemma of single-planet populations...
... scene depicts more literally the phrase ‘alcohol in space’ than this opening scene of the 1994 film, Star Trek Generations. In this 23rd century ship christening ceremony, we see a new Starship Enterprise entering service in a fictional, futuristic...
... a 24-hour marathon of The Original Series, but the show was not just a distraction. It was a revelation. Thanks to Star Trek, I came to believe that space is for everyone and every living thing is alive because of space. As a Trekkie, my attention...
... to the Stone Age. I like to illustrate this in terms of popular TV serials: either our future will look like Star Trek, complete with the philosophical musings of Captain Kirk, or it will become as desperate and violent as Game of Thrones. Meanwhile...
...setting. Lost in Space and Dr Who and then later, Star Trek and Space 1999; the Lensmen novels of EE ‘Doc’...say “Space” they still gravitate to Apollo, the Moon and (often) Star Trek. They, like many politicians, assume space is ‘cool’. They seem ...
... thus prevent the Artemis Accords from being adopted as a global framework for responsible behaviours in space. Just as in Star Trek, the Khitomer Accords of 2293 were followed by the Second Khitomer Accords in 2375, so as the Artemis Accords attain...