Why, there's no other Human races out there that may or may not come from Earth? TOS was abound with races that for all intents and purposes certainly looked Human. Are you saying they weren't?
Now, though, Ael looked around this bewildering collection of aliens -- all these Terrans and Tellarites and Andorians and Sulamids and three kinds of Denebians, and whatnot else -- and was bewildered. Four hundred kinds of 'humanity,' the ship's library computers called them. She found that bizarre. There was only one kind of humanity, everybody knew that. But to judge from the way these people worked together, one would think they didn't know it...
And also Azetbur's reaction to Chekov's "inalienable human rights"-line in that same film.So Duane was not talking about literal humans. In her version of the Trek universe, the Federation referred to all sentient species, including nonhumanoids such as Sulamids and Denebians, as "humanities" as a non-discriminatory usage (even though it's actually profoundly ethnocentric -- see Spock's reaction to "Everybody's human" in TUC).
Technically they aren't speaking English, we're just hearing the translation through the Universal Translator.I was hopeful this was the tip of a litverse iceberg. Always been intrigued by the ubiquitous English speaking alien humans that populate the galaxy. It gives Trek an antiquarian dimension that’s never really explored, on screen at least.
Technically they aren't speaking English, we're just hearing the translation through the Universal Translator.
This brings up a thought for me, would aliens who serve on mostly human crewed ships learn English, as a precaution in case the universal translators suddenly fail?
Actually it just dawned on that Spock would have had to have been speaking English in The Voyage Home since he spoke to Gillian with no problem while they were back in 1986.
I've read interviews where Nimoy talked about how, while he didn't exactly give Spock an accent, he did try to speak in a very precise, clipped way, thinking Spock probably learned English off a computer rather than growing up speaking it with a community of native speakers.Actually it just dawned on that Spock would have had to have been speaking English in The Voyage Home since he spoke to Gillian with no problem while they were back in 1986.
In the Wounded Sky, Diane mentions the 683 species of humanity that exist in our universe. What does that refer to? Does it include the various non terrestrial humans scattered across the various worlds as seen in TOS?
I was hopeful this was the tip of a litverse iceberg. Always been intrigued by the ubiquitous English speaking alien humans that populate the galaxy. It gives Trek an antiquarian dimension that’s never really explored, on screen at least.
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