| Kirk: Too much of anything, Lieutenant, even love, isn't necessarily a good thing! ("The Trouble with Tribbles") Chekov: I was making a little joke, sir. Spock: Extremely little, Ensign. ("The Trouble with Tribbles") Kirk: Love is the most important thing on Earth, especially to a man and a woman. ("The Gamesters of Triskelion") Kirk: All your people must learn before you can reach for the stars. ("The Gamesters of Triskelion") Kelinda: This business of love, you have devoted much literature to it. Why do you build such a mystique around a simple biological function? Kirk: We enjoy it. Kelinda: Literature? ("By Any Other Name") Spock: Doctor, if I were able to show emotion, your new infatuation with that term would begin to annoy me. McCoy: What term? 'Logic'? Medical men are trained in logic, Mister Spock. Spock: Really, Doctor? I had no idea you were trained. Watching you, I assumed it was trial and error. ("Bread and Circuses") Spock: It is not a lie to keep the truth to oneself. ("The Enterprise Incident") Miramanee: The sooner our happiness together begins, the longer it will last. ("The Paradise Syndrome") Spock: Humans do have an amazing capacity for believing what they choose and excluding that which is painful. ("And the Children Shall Lead") Spock: In critical moments men sometimes see exactly what they wish to see. ("The Tholian Web") Kirk: The best defense is a strong offense. And I intend to start offending right now. ("The Empath") McCoy: I'm a doctor, not a coal miner. ("The Empath") Spock: Change is the essential process of all existence. ("Let that Be Your Last Battlefield") Surak: I am pleased to see that we have differences. May we together become greater than the sum of both of us. ("The Savage Curtain") |