I used to love the idea from TOS that a starship was a very special posting, that there were only 12 of them in the fleet (Diane Carey's novel Final Frontier goes into detail about how this might have been). Since ENT and now with DSC, we see there really isn't anything special about the classic Enterprise, Starfleet have been making ships with the same abilities for a hundred years.
I'm not sure what you mean by "abilities" here. If you mean technologies, it doesn't make much sense to me to expect a naval fleet to limit the deployment of a useful technology to a single class of ship. If you mean the types of mission profiles it's capable of, I think we've seen that
Discovery does indeed have different abilities/specializations than the
Constitution class. It's specifically a reseach vessel, designed for conducting scientific experiments and as a testbed for new propulsion technology, while the Connies are more general-purpose vessels designed for long-range space exploration and long-term patrol missions, as well as colony support, diplomacy, etc. The Connies are frontier vessels, probing space far beyond the Federation's borders and protecting those who travel and settle the frontier. That's what makes them special and important.
Discovery so far has been set much closer to home, mostly within Federation territory or on its fringes.
As for ENT, the NX-class ships were deep-space explorers, but that was it. They weren't designed with the same kind of military and diplomatic objectives in mind, though NX-01 ended up fulfilling a lot of those functions out of necessity.
Star Wars made The Force less special
I think
The Last Jedi and recent
Rebels episodes have added whole new layers of specialness and spiritual weight to the Force.
Besides, isn't the whole point of the Force that it isn't some special elite thing? It's an energy that pervades
all living things equally.
I can get behind these ideas:
- Canon is anything depicted onscreen (this includes visuals and sound).
- Due to several factors, canon may or may not contradict itself.
- Continuity is the degree to which canon "hangs together" .
I disagree with point 1. As I've said, it isn't the medium that makes something canonical, it's whether it's the original work or something derived from it. The canon is the source of the fictional franchise, the original from which the ideas spring. Apocrypha are the reflections of that source, the imitations and homages made by others. A canon can exist in both screen and print works
if the original creators produce and manage both. In the case of
Star Trek, though, they don't.
Also, canon is about the aggregate, not the details. People often mistake the "canon is what's onscreen" shorthand for a statement that every single image or detail is "fact." That's not true, because there are plenty of details that are in-jokes or errors or contradictions. The canon is the overall whole that presents itself as a consistent reality, even though it has inconsistencies on a granular scale. Canon is not a case-by-case seal of approval for individual details, just a nickname for the overall whole. Like I keep saying, fans are far too obsessed by a word that has a very limited and largely unimportant meaning.
I was thinking about an interesting concept as I was going to sleep last night that ties in with all of this, and I saw a post on the same topic on Facebook this morning. So let me get thoughts on this:
- Are Star Trek Continues and Star Trek New Voyages canon? They are made by producers, who happen to be (in a legal sense) unofficial producers. On the other hand, they've arguable done a better job of creating Trek than anyone in the last 30 years. (I believe this is because they are creating a labor of love, with an artificially long development period.) They also, again arguably, do a better job of fitting material into continuity than anyone in the last 30 years.
- If they are canon, then what makes other, similar but "lesser quality" series (in whatever way we wish to interpret that phrase) non-canon. Or are all productions canon?
- Finally, in fan productions are canon, are novels and fanzines canon? They're not onscreen, but theyy're telling stories which are ostensibly in the same continuity?
Those are all the very things that the word "canon" exists to
exclude. Canon is the original work, the stuff from the original creators or their direct, official inheritors. Apocrypha are derivative works made by other people
based on someone else's concepts. It has nothing to do with quality or consistency. It has nothing to do with how good you think something is. It's not a value judgment of any kind. It's just a label for describing the difference between the original creation and its imitations or adaptations.
Let's use my written fiction as an example. I've written a bunch of
Star Trek novels and stories and a couple of Marvel Comics novels under license from Pocket Books. I've also written
original fiction in two ongoing universes of my own creation -- the so-called
Only Superhuman universe (including the novel of that title and nearly all the stories in my upcoming collection
Among the Wild Cybers) and the Hub universe (including the stories collected in
Hub Space: Tales from the Greater Galaxy). In the case of
Star Trek, what the shows' and films' own writers and producers create is the canon, and what I write is apocrypha, because I'm just hired to write an outside imitation of what they create. In the case of the OS and Hub universes, though, what I write is the canon, and what other people might do based on my creation (which so far is just the audiobook adaptation of
Only Superhuman, unless there's some Troubleshooter fanfic out there I don't know about) is not. What I write is canonical if it's my creation, non-canonical if it's a derivative of someone else's creation.