*is amused by a thread about personal headcanon devolving into arguments about objective canon, which is always just personal anyway...*
So they're the same as all of the other books then. All of the books are part of my personal continuity until they're contradicted, and then when are I just shift them off to their own parallel universe.Perhaps but until it clashes with something, you might as well think it’s canon. So far it’s the only good thing to come out of it.
Actually, the idea of five founding members goes back to Franz Joseph Schnaubelt's Technical Manual. He had Sol/Earth, Alpha Centauri, Vulcan, Epsilon Indii (which other authors identified with the Andorians), and 61 Cygni (which other authors identified with the Tellarites).
Very likely. Certainly either that or one of ADF's TAS novelizations (my initial thought), and I'm leaning toward the Medical Reference. (I have both the self-published and Bantam editions of that one in my own library; the Bantam edition has a few pages that weren't in the self-published edition.)As far as I know, it was the Star Fleet Medical Reference Manual by Eileen Palestine and Geoffrey Mandel that first identified 61 Cygni with Tellar and Epsilon Indi with Andor (correcting Schnaubelt's misspelling -- the constellation is Indus, not Indius), as well as making the Vulcan/40 Eri link more explicit.
Certainly either that or one of ADF's TAS novelizations (my initial thought)
So much so, unfortunately, that they have impossible things like "Path of Enterprise-A (2280)" on there and a few copypastes from random Wikipedia pages40 Eridani is identified as Vulcan on an almost illegible map in DSC.
Probably only because their maps are based off Star Charts.
The typo definitely spread-- Strangers from the Sky also uses "Epsilon Indii."No. Foster referenced the SFTM's founder-nation names in his "Counter-Clock Incident" adaptation (complete with the "Indii" typo, dammit) in the flashback to the launch of the Enterprise from Robert April's POV, but he didn't identify them with any alien races.
The typo definitely spread-- Strangers from the Sky also uses "Epsilon Indii."
You'd think by now they would know better. If anybody is going to pause and zoom in to see every tiny detail on something like that it's Trekkies.So much so, unfortunately, that they have impossible things like "Path of Enterprise-A (2280)" on there and a few copypastes from random Wikipedia pages
It really wasn't meant to be seen close up.
Well, he had 40 Eridani, which he didn't explicitly identify as Vulcan, but James Blish had postulated it as Vulcan's home star in his 1968 "Tomorrow is Yesterday" adaptation. And it was the only one of the five whose emblem and flag designs implied an alien culture rather than a human colony.
Well, except for the stylized "E" and "4" right in the centre!![]()
Or an uppercase sigma*.Those look like they're meant to be alien script, although I suppose I can see how Schnaubelt might have been loosely basing them on "E" and "40" (though the one on the left looks more like an M if you look at it sideways).
Let us not forget that Superman: The Movie established (assuming it hadn't been established in the comic books at some point) that the S-looking insignia worn by Superman wasn't an "S for Superman" at all, but rather some sort of family or clan escutcheon.
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