“You know, I’ve thought for a while that we’re living in the delusional fantasy of a naive thirteen year old girl.
That basically sums up our culture.”
— Peterson
SPOCK:
I have successfully penetrated the next chamber of the alien's Interior, and I am witnessing some sort of dimensional image which I believe to be a representation of V'Ger's home planet. I am passing through a connecting tunnel. Apparently a kind of plasma-energy conduit. Possibly a field coil for gigantic imaging systems. Curious. I am seeing images of planets, moons, stars, whole galaxies all stored in here, recorded. It could be a record of V'Ger's entire journey. But who, or what, are we dealing with? The Epsilon Nine station, stored here with every detail.
Captain, I am now quite convinced that all of this is V'Ger.
That we are inside a living machine.
Ilia.
The sensor ...must contain some special meaning.
I must try to mind-meld with it.
Aaaaarhh!!!!
[Enterprise sickbay]
CHAPEL:
Now scanning pons area.
Spinal nerve fiber connection.
McCOY:
Indications of some neurological trauma.
The power pouring through that mind-meld must have been staggering.
SPOCK:
Jim, ...I should have known.
KIRK:
Were you right?
About V'Ger?
SPOCK:
A lifeform of its own, a conscious, living entity.
CHAPEL (OC):
A living machine?
KIRK:
It considers the Enterprise a living machine.
That's why the probe refers it as an entity.
SPOCK:
I saw V'Ger's planet, a planet populated by living machines.
Unbelievable technology.
V'Ger has knowledge that spans this universe.
And, yet with all this pure logic, ...V'Ger is barren, cold, no mystery, no beauty. I should have known.
KIRK:
Known? Known what?
...Spock, what should you have known?
SPOCK:
This simple feeling ...is beyond V'Ger's comprehension.
No meaning, ...no hope, ...and, Jim, no answers.
It's asking questions.
‘Is this ...all I am?
Is there nothing more?'
KIRK:
Spock. ...Spock?
(as Spock turns Kirk and McCoy see that he is crying)
KIRK:
Not for us?
SPOCK:
No, Captain, not for us, ...for V'Ger. ...I weep for V'Ger, as I would for a brother.
As I was when I came aboard, so is V'Ger now, empty, incomplete, ...searching.
Logic and knowledge are not enough.
McCOY:
Spock, are you saying that you've found, what you needed, but V'Ger hasn't?
DECKER:
What would V'Ger need to fulfil itself?
SPOCK:
Each of us, at some time in our life, turns to someone, a father, a brother, a god and asks
‘Why am I here?'
'What was I meant to be?'
V'Ger hopes to touch its Creator to find its answers.
KIRK:
'Is this all that I am?
Is there nothing more?'
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