You might think that Star Trek is a show about exploration, about science, about morality, about what humanity is capable of if we truly embrace the best of ourselves
That is a misconception! Star Trek is, in fact, a show about the weirdest chairs you've ever seen.
I'm sure you can; some might just be harder to find than others because they're discontinued and you have to buy them used off eBay or whatever.
I'm also very sure that some of the more famous ones, like the van der Rohe Barcelona Chair, are readily available new in reproduction/knock-off versions.
I need some new dining room chairs. I might very well go for the shell chair, Emeco navy chair, or Knoll toledo. Two of those I had been considering before even seeing them on that page and finding out they were used in Star Trek.
This TNG Engineering chair came with the toy version of the warp core. I have never been able to get any action figure to sit in it without tape, glue, or something to support it.
There have been many ways, both formal and informal, to try and measure human progress towards a proper, humanist utopia. In the 20th century, the Human Development Index was created as a measurement. Karl Marx famously pointed out as a rule of thumb: "Social progress can be measured by the social position of the female sex". But all of those were, in fact, wrong.
It was only centuries after, when without a doubt, the true measurement of progress was found: The Chair Weirdness Index.
I've always loved the idea of non-human chairs that confirm to other body structures.
The Snakeellian diplomat greeted the Captain with a solemn but kind face. Despite their opposing objectives, both sides knew an alience must be formed or both parties would be destroyed.
"Please, have a seat," he said, gesturing to a horizontal spike poking through a ring held together with a thin vertical pole