The words you are looking for are "personal canon," verse "CBS Television canon."... the word you are looking for is CONTINUITY, not CANON.
"Personal canon" IS continuity.
The words you are looking for are "personal canon," verse "CBS Television canon."... the word you are looking for is CONTINUITY, not CANON.
^ As has been pointed out several times, the word you are looking for is CONTINUITY, not CANON.
We should say continuity instead of canon
Is that canon?
^ As has been pointed out several times, the word you are looking for is CONTINUITY, not CANON.
We should say continuity instead of canon
Is that canon?
I think it's fair to say that at this point, the word "canon" has become synonymous with "continuity", at least within the realm of popular fiction, whatever it originally meant.
There is no head canon. It's not the fans' place to choose what is canon and what is not. That goes against the very MEANING of canon. That word only applies to what the official material is - meaning, whatever is onscreen. Whatever the people making it, says it is.
My canon would also include my own ideas concerning the Federation's economic system, the organization of Starfleet, and the Federation as a alliance (not a nation-state).
Have you made any previous threads/posts elaborating on those concepts (they'd make for a good read)?
If not, could you explain further, here?
I don't know about some sort of central source which establishes this but I have my reasons. For one thing, whenever they rattle off Enterprises no one ever mentions the NX-01 in any of the other shows. Some would argue that it wasn't a Federation starship, so it wouldn't be included... yet it seems to me that there is a strong continuity from "Earth Starfleet" to "Federation Starfleet," so that distinction seems pretty artificial to me. Another clue is in the Voyager episode "Hope and Fear" where the crew encounters a cutting edge Federation starship sent to rescue them This starship is the Dauntless NX-01-A. As it turns out (spoiler alert) the ship was a fake presented by an alien with his own objectives. HOWEVER, the crew is in no way flustered by the idea of a starship named Dauntless labeled as NX-01-A. Now, we know from the Enterprise letter suffixes, they make it possible for a new ship to honor the memory of an older one by recycling both its name and number. By this logic, we would have to assume the NX-01 would have to be (at least in the memories of the Voyager personnel) Dauntless.
So in First Contact, when the Enterprise crew throws the temporal prime directive out the window and spills all the beans for Zephram Cochrane, even so far as showing them their own starship Enterprise through his own telescope, they corrupt the timeline in a big way. I can imagine that "Prime" timeline would have had similar events to what we see in Enterprise, but with differences. The first warp five ship would have been named Dauntless, a reference to humanity proceeding into the unknown undaunted by hand-wringing Vulcans. Contact with the Klingons would have happened quite a bit later. But, temporally corrupted Cochrane, influenced now by his encounter with the future astronauts on their "some kind of star trek," suggests the new ship be named Enterprise instead of Dauntless. Enterprise has different missions than it would have as Dauntless including encountering leftovers of the future robot zombies from the north pole who came along with the future astronauts. Who knows what other differences would have happened? It's a good way to explain away the many continuity differences between the Enterprise show and the four or five other shows which precede it. (Five if you count TAS... which I do.)
The thing is that certain aspects of the Trekverse are not quite so absolute, including The fore-mentioned Franz Joseph works and TAS and their somewhat "gray area" canonical involvement, being attached to corporate/official Paramount projects on-screen.Canon is corporate and official.
Fanon is personal choice on what one considers to be official (historically or technically).
Ever heard of a fighter plane named the F4?
This should be a Q&A sticky.Ain't no such thing as head canon. Fans have every right to like what they like and not like what they don't, but they don't get to decide what is and is not canon. If you want the right to do that, create your own sci fi property.
Even more than that. Wildcat was the F4F. The Corsair was the F4U. F4D was the Stingray. The F4 Lightning was a variant of the P-38. The Phantom II was the F4. The Phantom was the FH or FD. Just a mess within twenty years.Ever heard of a fighter plane named the F4?
Ain't no such thing as head canon. Fans have every right to like what they like and not like what they don't, but they don't get to decide what is and is not canon. If you want the right to do that, create your own sci fi property.
This should be a Q&A sticky.Ain't no such thing as head canon. Fans have every right to like what they like and not like what they don't, but they don't get to decide what is and is not canon. If you want the right to do that, create your own sci fi property.
The only ones who really have to deal with canon are companies who have licensed Trek out from CBS for merchandising purposes.
Otherwise, fans are just talking about things they personally want to follow or ignore. One can ignore the things in Trek they don't like, but that's nothing short of pretending they don't exist. It's kind of reverse for those who want to include things that didn't happen onscreen (pretending that something off-screen happened).
Exactly.The OP asked what people personally follow or ignore, that was the whole point of the thread.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.