Was NCC-1701 active for 40 years?

Discussion in 'Trek Tech' started by Brannigan, Jan 22, 2014.

  1. C.E. Evans

    C.E. Evans Admiral Admiral

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    No, this is really a painfully simple issue.

    Sure, fans can argue over everything and anything though.
     
    Last edited: Jul 15, 2014
  2. CorporalCaptain

    CorporalCaptain Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    You're right. It is painfully simple. No film or episode has ever established whether all ships registered to an individual planet are automatically registered to the Federation.

    From the Trek Tech FAQ:


    I think that speaks for itself.
     
  3. Ithekro

    Ithekro Vice Admiral Admiral

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    The Federation seems at times more like an alliance of planets. Each world still has its own laws and ships. At least in the 22nd and 23rd centuries. In the 24th century things seem to start getting closer together, but not in Kirk's day. You have Starfleet ships run entirely by Vulcans and lots of ship crewed entirely by humans. But these are Starfleet....military ships. What of the civilian ships, the ships that are still part of the planetary defense forces that are not under Starfleet?

    The trouble is that we don't have a good equivalent to test this in history. The closes we have would be the United States in the 1780s under the Articles of Confederation. In the days when it was one country but also 13 countries with there own taxes, and forces. You might have a United States ship, but you might also have a Virginian Ship. The ships would identify as from the state rather that the country more often than not. This stayed somewhat like this even after the Constitution was adopted and even to the 20th century when the state militia were changed into the National Guard. Prior to that you might have a ship as part of the New York Militia and it not technically an American warship, though it had been, and by that point the line were going way. But it took time even following the Civil War to get then all to be American ships, rather than ships from a particular state, unless it was part of the military or registered specifically to the United States.

    The other option would the European Union. You would also have British trawlers, that while still part of the European Union, would not be a European ship. It is a British ship. If the EU had a unified or more allied military structure, you might ship warship (or today in space you do see European station bits) listed as European, but you would also see ships that are British or German or French. These would not be European ships, even though they are part of the European Union.

    Similarly, a Vulcan ship not under Starfleet would more than likely be a Vulcan ship, not a Federation ship, even though Vulcan is part of the Federation. The ship would not be part of a listing of Federation ships, as it is specifically Vulcan, not Federation.
     
  4. C.E. Evans

    C.E. Evans Admiral Admiral

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    Sure, it does and to say otherwise is just flat out denial here. Whenever there's mention of ships from Federation member worlds, they're Federation ships, just like how citizens of a Federation member world are Federation citizens.

    It really shouldn't have to be spelled out.
     
  5. CorporalCaptain

    CorporalCaptain Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Ithekro pretty much hit the point on the head.
     
  6. C.E. Evans

    C.E. Evans Admiral Admiral

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    But the truth is that the Federation has ships other than Starfleet ones. It's just like saying America has American planes. Not all of them are military.
     
  7. CorporalCaptain

    CorporalCaptain Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Of course there are ships in the Federation other than Starfleet ships. And we know even less about those.

    Here's a quote from Memory Alpha:

    I see a lot of room, including for local governments to have their own ships manned and under the authority of their own local military services that are not automatically bequeathed to the Federation.
     
  8. C.E. Evans

    C.E. Evans Admiral Admiral

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    That's really splitting hairs. They would still be Federation ships when all is said and done.
     
  9. CorporalCaptain

    CorporalCaptain Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    So you keep saying. You still haven't cited a source that says so.
     
  10. AirCommodore

    AirCommodore Lieutenant Commander Red Shirt

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    Yes, I can see member worlds having their own ship registries. Obviously non member planets would. But even the Federation worlds could have many non-Federation registered ships.
     
  11. C.E. Evans

    C.E. Evans Admiral Admiral

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    I cited several of them, you chose to ignore them.

    Any time there's been mention of Federation ships other than Starfleet ones.
     
  12. Ithekro

    Ithekro Vice Admiral Admiral

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    Thus a grey area within the Federation to have more ship named Enterprise that are not strictly Federation ships. It is highly unlikely that the member worlds would have starships in their forces or registered to civilian companies on their planets, and it is unlikely they would have explorers, as that is Starfleet's job. But there is room for other types of ships that might take the famous name of Archer's command.

    It could be as simple as a passenger ship. If one thinks about American ships named Constitution, the list almost always comes out with only one ship. Sometimes it adds in the cancelled battlecruiser that was to take that name. What is usually not seen is the passenger liner SS Constitution. While the ship was built and registered in the United States, it is not considered an American ship because she's not owned by the American government. She was a civilian vessel.

    Likewise, ships owned by State governments are not generally considered American ships because they are not owned by the United States government. They are owned by the state they operate in. While the state is part of the United States, the usage of ownership and reference to what the ship is usually does not cover it under a listing of American ships.

    Something similar would be logical for the Federation, who is suppose to have an even more loose relationship to its member worlds that the United States has to its states, and civilian ships would not be considered owned by the Federation, but by a company or individual. Jones's J-type vessel was not a Federation ship if I recall.
     
  13. C.E. Evans

    C.E. Evans Admiral Admiral

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    I think the ship's computer would still have included such vessels as Federation ships called Enterprise, even if they were civilian.
     
  14. CorporalCaptain

    CorporalCaptain Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    :lol: The mere mention of a Federation ship says nothing about whether worlds can have their own ships that are not Federation ships. The concept of private ownership exists on other worlds besides Earth. There's no reason why all property in the Federation belongs to the Federation.

    I don't agree that the only way to parse "Federation ship" is as meaning a ship somewhere in the Federation. A perfectly reasonable way to parse "Federation ship" is as meaning a ship belonging to the Federation. Parsing it the latter way would exclude any ships registered to member worlds that are not also registered to the Federation.
     
  15. C.E. Evans

    C.E. Evans Admiral Admiral

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    Once again, that's splitting hairs because a ship that comes from the Federation or operates under the authority of a single Federation member world/agency is still a Federation ship. You can be more specific by saying that it's from Earth or Vulcan, but as long as those worlds are recognized as Federation members, so are their ships, especially in foreign (non-Federation) affairs.
     
  16. Nebusj

    Nebusj Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    For what it's worth, the chakoteya.net transcript of the episode quotes the dialogue thusly; I haven't had the chance to confirm it's precisely what was said on-screen:

    Can't fault the computer for not knowing which ship Scott meant to start with there, since there's (according to the transcript) eleven ships Scott might plausibly have meant. Between ``my old ship'' and ``the Enterprise'' the computer should've been able to pin it down to one of just two (possibly three, if Scott had a hand in constructing the Enterprise-B enough to have a credible emotional claim to it).

    Best I can work out is maybe the computer started from ``any of the ships Scott had served on'', narrowed to ``NCC 1701 ships'' and then not-quite-appropriately expanded that from two/three to the five NCC 1701 Enterprises. I can almost make out the logic in that chain of search results.
     
  17. CorporalCaptain

    CorporalCaptain Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    That's if you parse "Federation ship" to mean that. The whole point here is that that need not be the way it was parsed in "Relics". What you are saying is only one assumption of what it might mean. Clearly, it's the one you favor, but that doesn't mean it's the only reasonable way to read it.
     
  18. C.E. Evans

    C.E. Evans Admiral Admiral

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    It actually is the only reasonable way to read it, otherwise you're talking about non-Federation ships or unknown/outlaw ships that aren't registered anywhere.
     
  19. CorporalCaptain

    CorporalCaptain Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Obviously, that's your opinion, and just as obviously, not everybody here agrees.
     
  20. Ithekro

    Ithekro Vice Admiral Admiral

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    Most ships like that might not have a "bridge" as oppose to a control room, or pilots chair.

    Also in the two instances where the numbers for Enterprises come up, firstly the Computer seems rather clever. Assuming there was a non-Federation ship, or not Starfleet ship named Enterprise, it was likely no longer around by the time the NCC-1701 was commissioned. The computer was clever enough to pick up on Scotty wanting to see a Federation ship named Enterprise, without going to said one of the aircraft carriers named Enterprise. So we can assume the computer is clever enough to exclude things that don't logically match the questions from a given person...to a degree,

    The other instance was Temporal Investigations. They would of course assume it was a Federation ship named Enterprise since Sisko saw it on Defiant's viewscreen and he had not mentioned being in a ocean or planet of any kind. However the NX-01 was not considered at all (mindful of course that that series would not exist for several more years at that point). Perhaps they could tell it would be a Federation ship just by how Sisko said it. Though we did not actually hear that part of the conversion. We got the flashback of it happening, then after the break the investigators questioning which Enterprise it was, saying there had been 5...6. The NX-01 is not on their minds, nor is the ring ship Enterprise. So we can assume there are some logical bounds for what is usually considered when one wants to see the Enterprise or when one talks about an Enterprise. But there are always possibilities...as well as things not said. Temporal Investigations missed at least one spaceship, more than likely two that were named Enterprise, probably because stuff happens to starships named Enterprise, but no one talks about Archer's ship like they talk about ships with a registry of NCC-1701.

    Thus, an opening. Not for anything grand, or even anything important. Just an opening for something named Enterprise between 2161 and 2244. There isn't much in the away of opening after that, though again there could be civilian ships or craft that use the name Enterprise that would not be considered Federation ships, They would also be more or less unimportant. Like a sail boat in a marina in Richmond named Enterprise or a planetary survey ship named Enterprise registered on Alpha Centauri. No one would pay them any mind in most history text.