Continuity is ever evolving. The mistake is thinking it's set in stone.It's funny. The defining of Kirk's Enterprise as "Constitution Class", didn't become canon until 1987. In, "The Naked Now". IIRC.
Very, very true...Continuity is ever evolving. The mistake is thinking it's set in stone.
Continuity is ever evolving. The mistake is thinking it's set in stone.
The model on the desk seems to be labeled as USS Horizon
A USS Essex was a known Daedalus-class vessel as that was the ship named as such by Data research.
I think the name might have popped up on some graphics, but not in dialog.If I understand this reasoning correctly, there is also no such thing as a Miranda-class starship and I don't think that set of words was ever used in canon or attached to any ship.
If I understand this reasoning correctly, there is also no such thing as a Miranda-class starship and I don't think that set of words was ever used in canon or attached to any ship.
If I understand this reasoning correctly, there is also no such thing as a Miranda-class starship and I don't think that set of words was ever used in canon or attached to any ship.
The U.S.S. Brattain (using the Reliant studio model from TWOK) had a dedication plaque stating that the ship was Miranda class. No, you couldn't see the info on the plaque in the episode, no one spoke the class name out loud, but it was still there nonetheless.
The Reliant-type ships had no class name until the particular TNG episode that the Brattain was in.
but what about teh haed cannonContinuity is ever evolving. The mistake is thinking it's set in stone.
Didn't the book have the wrong name though?
The spherical hull model from Sisko's office had a ship name and registry. No, you couldn't see the info in the episodes, no one spoke the ship's name out loud, but it was still there nonetheless.
The same rules should apply every time.
No one is saying anything different. IIRC, the ship in Sisko's office is labeled "Horizon". So there is still no connection between the model and the Daedalus class.
Except that this is one theory that the company has remained consistent on in all secondary sources and tie-ins.
The spherical hull model from Sisko's office had a ship name and registry. No, you couldn't see the info in the episodes, no one spoke the ship's name out loud, but it was still there nonetheless.
The same rules should apply every time.
Kirk's middle name? We all know it's James R. Kirk.It's not canon, but it certainly suggests they would stick to it. They don't have to, but they have the option. Like I said, non-canon things have become canon before, such as Sulu and Uhura's first names, Kirk's middle name, Shi'Kahr, Vulcan's Forge, sehlats, Caitians, IKS Klothos, Antares Type ships, and no doubt many others. Non-canon ideas are, by definition, non-canon, but can, should, and often are used to enrich the canon Star Trek universe.
As for sehlasts and Caitains, I don't know how much that was considered "non-canon" given the TAS creation. GR only dismissed it as canon later on, so I always found that kind of odd.
But, I grew up reading Bjo Trimble's Star Trek Concordance, long before the idea of "canon" was given weight.
Because they keep copying it. It's not like there's any independent thought or research. It just laziness. It's in the Encylopedia so MA copies the idea. Then startrek.com does the same.Except that this is one theory that the company has remained consistent on in all secondary sources and tie-ins.
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