In the episode they got most of the "pieces" for the Delta Flyer out of storage, they only replicated a small portion of the new ship. That's likely how they built it so quickly.
Still, whether it's shuttles or torpedo casings or battle damage, Voyager can obviously manufacture (or trade for) what they need. It isn't a case of making due with what they arrived in the Delta Quadrant with.
We never saw the crew of Moya on "Farscape" trading or buying supplies much, and no one complained there.
Depends on which episode you watch. There's roughly a 500 year margin of error.Well the funny thing is, if you only consider TOS as canon and ignore the rest of the spin-offs and movies with the exception of TMP, then Star Trek TOS takes place in the 22nd century and not the 23 century.
That's my feeling. Does it have to happen? No. Does it build continuity in a meaningful and realistic way? Yes, absolutely.Considering the replicators generally work by refashioning bulk material into new patterns, they wouldn't really need to trade with anyone. Just fly through a nebula here or there to fill up the matter tanks or skim the atmosphere of a gas giant or two. Hell, they could probably re-stock their cargo bays from the Malon garbage dumps if radiation shielding wasn't a problem.
It's just, a little effort to SHOW this happening wouldn't be missed. They made a big deal in season one about replicator rations and Neelix turning Janeway's dining room into a kitchen because they were short on supplies... what's the point of that if your replicators seem to be working just fine anyway?
Yes, but we never really SAW any of it. If Voyager made mentions of how Neelix was handling trade issues, but we never saw it, I doubt anyone would let it go.
^^I always just assumed McCoy was just trying to get a reaction out of Spock. Yeah, I guess that is kind of weak.
I wonder what the actual intention was with that line?
I think the intention was that Earth had conquered Vulcan.
Except for "The Squire of Gothos", which takes place in the 27th Century.OK correction. One would have to omit Star Trek:TMP because of Deckers line about the Voyager 6 probe that launched from Earth 300 years ago.
So therefore it is TOS and TAS that takes place in the 22nd century.
Are there particular episodes that indicate Vulcans do touch their food and mind melds were legal in the 22nd Century?Certain things they did with Vulcan culture in Enterprise. Like Vulcans not touching food with their bare hands. Or mindmelds being illegal and a societal taboo during that time.
Certain things they did with Vulcan culture in Enterprise. Like Vulcans not touching food with their bare hands. Or mindmelds being illegal and a societal taboo during that time.
^^I always just assumed McCoy was just trying to get a reaction out of Spock. Yeah, I guess that is kind of weak.
I wonder what the actual intention was with that line?
I think the intention was that Earth had conquered Vulcan.
Bingo. Given that it was the 60s, I'm guessing somebody was thinking Westerns and assumed that Spock was Tonto, a loyal native sidekick from a planet colonized by Earth.
Or Gunga Din, or Kato, or . . ..
The idea, on the writer's part, was probably that Earth had "conquered" space and assimilated a few friendly alien races. It was a momentary burp of old-school Western imperialism.
Obviously, that notion didn't stick, leaving that line to stand out like a sore thumb.
TOS seems pretty vague on this and most things. Information varied from episode to episode. Trying to establish a clear and concrete continuity from TOS is akin to herding cats.I think the intention was that Earth had conquered Vulcan.
Bingo. Given that it was the 60s, I'm guessing somebody was thinking Westerns and assumed that Spock was Tonto, a loyal native sidekick from a planet colonized by Earth.
Or Gunga Din, or Kato, or . . ..
The idea, on the writer's part, was probably that Earth had "conquered" space and assimilated a few friendly alien races. It was a momentary burp of old-school Western imperialism.
Obviously, that notion didn't stick, leaving that line to stand out like a sore thumb.
The idea was that in TOS, the Federation was really the "Earth Federation", a benign Terran Empire. Humans had been one of the first one to invent Warp Drive and had gone out there. They'd make aliens they encountered weak partners in their group instead of conquering them outright.
The Klingons were supposed to have been another species that had developed Warp Drive around the same time and been expanding as Humans did, but with conquest instead of offering membership.
By TNG, they'd changed their minds on a lot of this.
Speaking of eating habits...Was Chakotay a vegetarian or wasn't he?
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