Now you will surrender your ship to me. Star Trek s2e22: By Any Other Name, Rojan to Kirk
We do not colonise, we conquer, we rule. ibid.
I’ve only got one lead: the infection resembles one developed by Earth during their bacterial warfare experiments in the 1990s. Star Trek s2e23: The Omega Glory, McCoy
Liberty and freedom have to be more than just words. ibid. Kirk
There are certain things men must do to remain men. Your computer would take that away. Star Trek s2e24: The Ultimate Computer, Kirk to Doctor Daystrum
Computers make excellent and efficient servants. But I have no wish to serve under them. ibid. Spock to Kirk
Hodgkin’s Law of parallel planet development. Star Trek s2e25: Bread and Circuses, Kirk's log
They do seem to have escaped the carnage of your first three world wars, Doctor ... The thirty-seven million who died in your third. ibid. Spock
I have never felt so helpless. Star Trek s2e26: Assignment Earth, Kirk’s log
His [Spock’s] brain is gone. Star Trek s3e1: Spock’s Brain, McCoy to Kirk
No-one may kill a man. Not for any purpose. It cannot be condoned. ibid. Kirk
I can find no reason for the Captain’s behaviour except possibly we’ve been on patrol too long without relief and diversion. Star Trek s3e2: The Enterprise Incident, McCoy
I say now and for the record that Captain Kirk ordered the Enterprise across the neutral zone on his own initiative and is craving for glory. He is not sane. ibid. Spock
It is not a lie to keep the truth to oneself. ibid. Spock
Military secrets are the most fleeting of all. ibid.
The whole place is an enigma biologically and culturally. Star Trek s3e3: The Paradise Syndrome, McCoy
How did I get here? Who am I? ibid. Kirk inside obelisk
I can’t give you Warp Nine much longer, Mr Spock. ibid. Scotty
Behold a god who bleeds! ibid. tribal bloke
Spock: Evil does seek to maintain power by suppressing the truth.
McCoy: Or by misleading the innocent. Star Trek s3e4: And the Children Shall Lead
Without followers evil cannot spread. ibid. Spock
He’s dead, Jim. Star Trek s3e5: Is There in Truth No Beauty? McCoy
Gentlemen, here’s to beauty. ibid. Kirk’s toast
Half a gallon of scotch. Star Trek s3e6: Specter of the Gun, Scotty
Physical reality is consistent with universal laws. Where the laws do not operate, there is no reality. All of this ... is unreal. ibid. Spock
We fight only when there is no other choice. We prefer the ways of peaceful contact. ibid. Kirk
You are now prisoners of the Klingon Empire against which you have committed a wanton act of war. Star Trek s3e7: Day of the Dove, Klingon hits Kirk
I too felt a brief surge of racial bigotry. Most distasteful. ibid. Spock
Asteroid has an outer shell which is hollow and surrounds an independent inner core which has a breathable atmosphere; sensors read no life-forms. Star Trek s3e8: For the World is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky
I’d say these people killed each other. Star Trek s3e9: The Tholian Web, McCoy to Kirk
Platonians: I’m sure you’ve never heard of us. Star Trek s3e10: Plato’s Stepchildren, opening scene Alexander the diddy man
Bones, knock him out fast. ibid. Kirk
Could something be making me hallucinate? Star Trek s3e11: Wink of an Eye, Kirk to McCoy
I do like you. ibid. bird to Kirk
This has all been a great laboratory. And we have been the subject of the test. Star Trek s3e12: The Empath, Kirk
The prejudices people feel about each other disappear when they get to know each other. Star Trek s3e13: Elaan of Troyius, Kirk
I will not be given to a green pig. ibid. warrior bird to Kirk
A medicine with which the Federation hopes to eliminate mental illness for all time. Star Trek s3e14: Whom Gods Destroy, Kirk’s log
Change is the essential process of all existence. Star Trek s3e15: Let That Be Your Last Battlefield, Spock
At Warp 10 we’re going nowhere mighty fast. ibid. Scotty on bridge
We must acknowledge once and for all that the purpose of diplomacy is to prolong a crisis. Star Trek s3e16: The Mark of Gideon
There are so many of us. So many. There is no place ... no street, no house, no garden, no beach, no mountain that is not filled with people. Each one of us would kill in order to find a place alone to himself. They would willingly die for it ... if they could. ibid. Odona
Is it possible the rocks have life? Star Trek s3e17: That Which Survives, Kirk
I want to touch you. ibid. alien bird to Sulu
When a man of Scotty’s years falls in love the loneliness of his life is suddenly revealed to him; his whole heart once throbbed only to the ship’s engines. Star Trek s3e18: The Lights of Zetar, Kirk
Yes we understand you. We have searched for a millennium for one through whom we can see and speak and hear and live out our lives. We are from Zetar. ibid.
The Enterprise is in the grip of a raging epidemic. Star Trek s3e19: Requiem for Methuselah
To be human is to be complex; you can’t avoid a little ugliness. From within and from without. ibid. Kirk to Flint et al
You know our purpose: We turn our backs on confusion and seek the beginning: the planet Eden. Star Trek s3e20: The Way to Eden
There are many who are uncomfortable with what we have created. It is almost a biological rebellion. A profound revulsion against the planned communities, the programming, the sterilised artfully balanced atmosphere. They hunger for an Eden where spring comes. ibid. Spock to Kirk
5818.4 A botanical plague is devastating a planet in the quadrant of the galaxy where the Enterprise is operating at present. It threatens to destroy the vegetation on the entire planet leaving it uninhabitable. Star Trek s3e21: The Cloud Minders
This troubled planet is a place of the most violent contrasts. Those who receive the rewards are separated from those who shoulder the burdens. ibid. Spock’s meditation
We are being probed, Captain. Star Trek s3e22: The Savage Curtain, Spock
59.06.4 Who or what has been beamed aboard our vessel. An alien who has changed himself into this form? An illusion? I cannot conceive it possible that Abraham Lincoln could have been reincarnated … ibid. Kirk’s log
We welcome the vessel Enterprise to our solar system and to our spectacle. We ask you to observe with us the confrontation of the two opposing philosophies you term good and evil. ibid. rock with lights to Spock & Kirk et al
I was commander-in-chief during the four bloodiest years of my country’s history. I gave orders that sent 100,000 men to their death at the hands of their brothers. There is no honourable way to kill. No gentle way to destroy. There is nothing good in war except its ending. ibid. Lincoln to Kirk & Spock
It seems that evil retreats when forcibly confronted. However, you have failed to demonstrate to me any other difference between your philosophies. Your good and your evil use the same methods, achieve the same results. ibid.
Spock: We are in a wilderness of Arctic characteristics.
McCoy: He means it’s cold! Star Trek s3e23: All Our Yesterdays
The Enterprise has received a distress call from a group of scientists on Camus II who are exploring the ruins of a dead civilisation. Star Trek s3e24: Turnabout Intruder
You’re talking about mutiny, Scotty. ibid. McCoy