Warp 10 has always been the subject of much controversy - what speed it actually is, whether it would actually be possible to ever get a starship successfully to Warp 10, and what the implications of traveling at a speed that makes you occupy every point in the universe simultaneously would be.
But what if we've been asking the wrong questions? What if Warp 10 is actually just the 'brown note' of space travel - the one specific speed that causes everything - metaphorically and literally - to crap its pants whenever the threshold is hit, but above which, and below which, smooth and safe travel is possible?
As an example, my 1993 Isuzu Wizard hates doing 60 miles per hour. Up until that threshold, the truck behaves normally, but as soon as it hits that magic number, the engine gets really loud, the transmission bucks and shudders, and the RPMs red-line. But once I hit 70 MPH, everything evens out again.
So what if Warp 10 is the outer-space equivalent of my Isuzu Wizard's garbage transmission? What if it's that one specific speed that makes warp engines inexplicably rip off (even though warp engines generate no actual thrust), and makes spaceships occupy every point in space simultaneously (while somehow preventing them from destroying the entire fabric of of space and time), and turns helmsmen and captains into sex-crazed lizards? What if, beyond that speed, everything is just fine, as shown in multiple episodes of Star Trek?
And how do we get there?
Unfortunately, it wasn't really explained in All Good Things.
But what if we've been asking the wrong questions? What if Warp 10 is actually just the 'brown note' of space travel - the one specific speed that causes everything - metaphorically and literally - to crap its pants whenever the threshold is hit, but above which, and below which, smooth and safe travel is possible?
As an example, my 1993 Isuzu Wizard hates doing 60 miles per hour. Up until that threshold, the truck behaves normally, but as soon as it hits that magic number, the engine gets really loud, the transmission bucks and shudders, and the RPMs red-line. But once I hit 70 MPH, everything evens out again.
So what if Warp 10 is the outer-space equivalent of my Isuzu Wizard's garbage transmission? What if it's that one specific speed that makes warp engines inexplicably rip off (even though warp engines generate no actual thrust), and makes spaceships occupy every point in space simultaneously (while somehow preventing them from destroying the entire fabric of of space and time), and turns helmsmen and captains into sex-crazed lizards? What if, beyond that speed, everything is just fine, as shown in multiple episodes of Star Trek?
And how do we get there?
Unfortunately, it wasn't really explained in All Good Things.