|
|
|
Lieutenant
Commander Data
Data a humanoid android so sophisticated that he was regarded as a
sentient life-form with full civil rights. ("Encounter at Farpoint,
Part II" [TNG]).
Creation.
Data was built around 2336
by the reclusive scientist Noonien Soong and his wife, Juliana Soong at the
Omicron Theta colony. Data was actually the fifth positronic android
constructed by Soong; the first three were unsuccessful.
("Inheritance" [TNG]). The fourth, the first to become functional,
was known as Lore. ("Datalore" [TNG]). After Lore's
behaviour forced
Soong to disassemble him, Soong pursued the idea of manufacturing an
android free of emotions. Soong hoped this new android would not
exhibit the dangerous cruelty shown by Lore. Juliana had wanted Data
to have a female form, but Noonien, as before, created Data in his
own image. Following his activation, Data was much like a baby,
though he was made in the form of a full grown adult. Data had
difficulty learning basic social skills, and "social niceties" had
to be built into his programming. In addition, a creative capacity
was also programmed into Data by Mrs. Soong, who reasoned that
without emotions, the android would need another way to express
himself. After this initial period, Data was thought unsuccessful
and was deactivated. ("Inheritance" [TNG]). He was programmed with
the logs and journals of the Omicron Theta colonists in an effort to
help Data function better in human society. ("Datalore" [TNG],
"Silicon Avatar" [TNG]). Unfortunately, before Data could be
reactivated, the Crystalline Entity attacked the colony, and Soong
and his wife Juliana, were forced to abandon their work. Fearing
that when reactivated, Data might behave as Lore did, Juliana made
Dr. Soong leave Data at the colony site. ("Inheritance" [TNG]). Data
remained in a dormant condition underground, where he was discovered
in 2338 by the crew of the Starship Tripoli. Data subsequently
joined the Starfleet and eventually became operations manager aboard
the Enterprise - D. ("Datalore" [TNG]).
Form and function.
Data was based on a sophisticated positronic
brain developed by Soong, from concepts first postulated in the 20th
century by Dr. Isaac Asimov. ("Datalo re" [TNG]). Data's body
closely mimicked humanoid form, and contained approximately 24.6
kilograms of tripolymer composites, 11.8 kilograms of
molybdenum-cobalt alloys, and 1.3 kilograms of bioplast sheeting.
("The Most Toys" [TNG]). His upper spinal support was polyalloy,
while his skull was composed of cortenide and duranium. ("The Chase" [TNG]). Soong went to
extraordinary lengths to create a naturalistic human appearance in
Data. He gave Data a functional respiration system, although its
purpose was primarily for thermal regulation. (Data was in fact
capable of functioning for extended periods in a vacuum. ["Brothers'
(TNG)].) He gave Data a pulse in his circulatory
system that distributed biochemical lubricants and regulated
microhydraulic power throughout Data's body. Data's hair was even
capable of growth at a controllable rate. ("Birthright, Part I" [TNG]).
Data did not require food; he occasionally ingested a semi-organic
nutrient suspension in a silicon-based liquid medium. ("Deja Q" [TNG]).
Although Data's systems were primarily mechanical, cybernetic, and
positronic, sufficient biological components were present to allow
him to become infected by the Psi 2000 virus in 2364. While under
the influence of the inhibition-stripping effects of that virus,
Data apparently became intimate with Enterprise -D security chief
Tasha Yar. ("The Naked Now" [TNG]). Data's basic programming
included a strong inhibition against harming living beings, but he
nevertheless had the ability to use deadly force to protect others.
("The Most Toys" [TNG]). |
|
Data in Starfleet.
Prior to his assignment to
the Enterprise-D, Data served aboard the U.S.S. Trieste. During this tour-of-duty, the
Trieste once fell through a wormhole. ("Cl ues" [TNG]). Aboard the
Enterprise -D, Data served as operations manager, and was in charge
of coordinating the many departments aboard the ship. ("Encounter at
Farpoint" [TNG]). In 2366, Commander Data was seriously injured
trying to save Q from an attack by gaseous creatures called the
Calamarain. In gratitude, Q gave Data the gift of allowing Data to
experience human laughter for a brief time. ("Deja Q" [TNG]).
Data
served as father of the bride for the wedding of Miles O'Brien and
Keiko Ishikawa in 2367, and found it necessary to learn to dance to
fulfil this ceremonial function. ("Data's Day" [TNG]).
Data's first
opportunity to command a starship came during the Federation
blockade during the Klingon civil war of 2368. Data was assigned
temporary command of the Starship Sutherland in Picard's armada. As
an android, Data encountered a small amount of prejudice among his
human crew, but was nevertheless able to lead effectively.
("Redemption, Part II"[TNG]). In late 2368, Data travelled back in
time to old San Francisco when bizarre evidence was found suggesting
that he had died some 500 years ago. The evidence was Data's severed
head, unearthed from beneath the city of San Francisco, where it had
been buried for five centuries. ("Time's Arrow, Part I" [TNG]).
Back
in the year 1893, Data uncovered a plot by aliens from the planet Devidia II who were using the cholera plague of the time to conceal
their murder of humans. While attempting to stop the Devidians,
Data's head was severed, and his body was sent forward in time, back
to 2368. Aboard the Enterprise -D, Geordi La Forge was successful in
reattaching Data's head and body. ("Time's Arrow, Part II" [TNG]).
Data and Lore.
Upon returning to the Omicron
Theta colony site in 2364, Data participated in the discovery and
activation of his android brother, Lore. Physically identical to
Data, Lore had radically different personality programming, and
attempted to commandeer the Enterprise-D before he was beamed into
space. ("Datalore"
[TNG]). Although Soong was believed to have died at Omicron Theta,
he was discovered to have escaped the colony when, in 2367, he
remotely gained control of Data, commanding his creation to visit
him in his new secret laboratory. There, Soong attempted to install
a new chip in Data's positronic brain that would have given Data the
ability to experience human emotions. Unfortunately, Lore also
responded to Soong's call, and stole the emotion chip from Soong's
lab. Dr. Soong died shortly thereafter. ("Brothers" [TNG]). Data
began to experience emotions in 2369 when Lore secretly bombarded
Data with signals that triggered negative emotions in his positronic
brain. Lore used these negative emotions to guide Data into joining
him and the Borg against the Federation. When Data realized that
Lore was manipulating him and harming the Borg, he was forced to
deactivate Lore. Data kept Soong's emotion chip, but was reluctant
to install it for fear of causing further harm to his friends.
("Descent, Parts I and II" [TNG]).
Efforts to understand
humanity.
Data's attempts to understand
human nature once included an effort to learn about the concept of
humour, which he studied with the
assistance of Guinan and a holodeck-created comedian. ("The
Outrageous Okona" [TNG]). Data even tried a beard once, to the
considerable amusement of his shipmates. ("The Schizoid Man" [TNG]).
Aboard the Enterpris e-D, Data shared his living quarters with a cat
that he named Spot. Data tried to provide for Spot's well-being, but
found it difficult to predict the cat's preferences in food.
("Data's Day" [TNG]). One of Data's more challenging efforts to
experience humanity was his attempt to pursue a romantic
relationship with Enterprise -D security officer Jenna D'Sora in
late 2367. Although D'Sora was attracted to Data, he was unable to
return the affection, at least in a manner that she wanted. ("In
Theory" [TNG]). Data began to experience dreams in 2369 as a result
of an accidental plasma shock received during an experiment. It was
later learned that the shock had triggered a program designed for
this purpose by Soong, who had hoped the program would be activated
when Data reached a certain level of development. Data's initial
dreams were of Soong as a blacksmith, incongruously forging the
wings of a bird, which Data believed represented himself.
("Birthright, Part I" [TNG]). Those dreams turned to nightmares
while under the influence of interphasic organisms in 2370.
("Phantasms" [TNG]). Later that year, following the Enterprise -D's
discovery of the D'Arsay archive, Data's own personality became
completely submerged by a series of personas, enacting the mythology
of a long-dead civilization. Following the experience, Captain
Picard commented that even if Data never become human, he had
transcended the human condition by becoming an entire civilization.
("Masks" [TNG]). One of Data's most noteworthy efforts in his quest
for humanity was his construction of an android daughter in 2366.
Data employed a new submicron matrix transfer technology to allow
his own neural pathways to be duplicated in another positronic
brain, which he used as the basis for his child. His daughter, whom
he named Lal (Hindi for "beloved"), developed at a remarkable rate
and showed evidence of growth potential beyond that of her father,
even experiencing emotions. Lal died after having lived little more
than two weeks, when she experienced a serious failure in her
positronic brain. ("The Offspring" [TNG]). In 2371, Data finally
decided to install the emotion chip that Dr. Soong had created for
him. Although Data had initial difficulty coping with the resulting
flood of emotions, a problem made worse when the chip became fused
into his neural net, the chip represented a significant step in his
quest to become more human. (Star Trek: Generations).
Android rights.
The question of Data's sentience,
and more specifically whether Data was entitled to civil rights
under the Constitution of the United Federation of Planets, was
addressed in a number of important legal decisions. The first, in
2341, was rendered by a Starfleet Academy entrance committee that
permitted Data to enter the Academy and serve as a member of
Starfleet. Several years later, the question was more definitively
addressed when Judge Advocate General Phillipa Louvois ruled that Data was indeed a sentient being
and therefore entitled to civil rights, including the right to
resign from Starfleet if he so chose. As of stardate 42527, Data had
been decorated by Starfleet Command for gallantry and had received
the Medal of Honor with clusters, the Legion of Honour, and the Star
Cross. ("The Measure of a Man" [TNG]).
Brent Spiner |