It also uses a shit ton of energy, so it's more economical for docking bays when you need to unload a ton of people or cargo. Also, a lot of religious diplomats refuse to be transported. It's a security risk, too, though, since transporters filter harmful shit and deactivate weaponry.
I'd also assume you'd be able to undock while the shields are up during an attack. It's also Cardassian, so who knows how reliable their shit was.
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Unfortunately this is wrong, but I'm assuming there's some lead-in before this that would make me understand the joke at the end that I'm missing...An excerpt from "This Book is Full of Spiders Seriously Dude Don't Touch It" by David Wong
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it's pretty good!
Unfortunately this is wrong, but I'm assuming there's some lead-in before this that would make me understand the joke at the end that I'm missing...
First it would be impossible to assume that there would be every single type of molecule or element that makes up a human body at any one location. Second, the disassembly doesn't just disseminate into the ship like they're all standing in thousands of people's dust clouds. That's ridiculous. Third, it's not a copy, matter is converted into energy, teleported, and a reassembly of the original atoms, molecules, and even some argue the soul, katra, quantum mental pattern. It's all the original you. You could say you're dead during the process and resurrected on reconstruction, but it's still all the original parts.
Below is a pic of my nerdiest of nerd collection of Star Trek related books.
The Physics of Star Trek, Nitpickers Guide for Next Generation Trekkers, Star Trek Visual Dictionary, Star Trek The Next Generation Technical Manual. Oh, an Beyond the Clouds, by Richard L. Jeffries, the brother after which the design and concept of the Jeffries tubes were named - which is a biography on the Jeffries family that leads into all of the designs and concepts behind the tech in the Original Series.
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Unfortunately this is wrong, but I'm assuming there's some lead-in before this that would make me understand the joke at the end that I'm missing...
First it would be impossible to assume that there would be every single type of molecule or element that makes up a human body at any one location. Second, the disassembly doesn't just disseminate into the ship like they're all standing in thousands of people's dust clouds. That's ridiculous. Third, it's not a copy, matter is converted into energy, teleported, and a reassembly of the original atoms, molecules, and even some argue the soul, katra, quantum mental pattern. It's all the original you. You could say you're dead during the process and resurrected on reconstruction, but it's still all the original parts.
Below is a pic of my nerdiest of nerd collection of Star Trek related books.
The Physics of Star Trek, Nitpickers Guide for Next Generation Trekkers, Star Trek Visual Dictionary, Star Trek The Next Generation Technical Manual. Oh, an Beyond the Clouds, by Richard L. Jeffries, the brother after which the design and concept of the Jeffries tubes were named - which is a biography on the Jeffries family that leads into all of the designs and concepts behind the tech in the Original Series.
View attachment 226295