About: Cloud creature   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

A cloud creature was a being that existed, at least partially, in the form of a gasous cloud. During the murder trial of lieutenant commander Montgomery Scott, Spock presented the fact that "Humans and humanoids make up only a small percentage of the lifeforms we know of." This eventually lead them to deduce that the murderer was not human, nor ghosts, but rather something that fed on emotion, especially fear, that could not be seen.

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  • Cloud creature
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  • A cloud creature was a being that existed, at least partially, in the form of a gasous cloud. During the murder trial of lieutenant commander Montgomery Scott, Spock presented the fact that "Humans and humanoids make up only a small percentage of the lifeforms we know of." This eventually lead them to deduce that the murderer was not human, nor ghosts, but rather something that fed on emotion, especially fear, that could not be seen.
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abstract
  • A cloud creature was a being that existed, at least partially, in the form of a gasous cloud. During the murder trial of lieutenant commander Montgomery Scott, Spock presented the fact that "Humans and humanoids make up only a small percentage of the lifeforms we know of." This eventually lead them to deduce that the murderer was not human, nor ghosts, but rather something that fed on emotion, especially fear, that could not be seen. With the assistance of the ship's computer, a hypothesis was correlated, using the lifeforms register, that was able to determine that there was "sufficient precedent for existence of creature, nature unknown, which could exist on emotion of fear." When asked in which composition to being would exist in, the computer replied, "to meet the specified requirements, entity would exist without form in conventional sense. Most probable mass of energy of highly cohesive electromagnetic field" and was capable of assuming physical form. The precedent for this analysis was "the Mellitus, cloud creature of Alpha Majoris I." While, Mr. Hengist, the prosecutor of the case scoffed such an analysis as "fairy tales ... ghosts and goblins", James T. Kirk confirmed that such a creature existed, describing that "in its natural state, it's gaseous; when it's at rest, it's solid." This eventually led to determination that the murderer, identified Redjac, was not Scott, but such a "creature without form, that feeds on horror and fear, that must assume a physical shape to kill." (TOS: "Wolf in the Fold" )
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