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USS Enterprise (eventually) on Discovery?

Why did you make such a dishonest response? Since what follows that word explains why it's irrelevant, why respond to it out of context, especially since you were going to reply to the rest right after? I see no point to doing that, except to add to the confrontational aspect of the discussion. That's very puzzling to me.
Well, I read your post differently. It looked like you dismissing the idea of a basis for a claim being even considered in favor of an in my opinion lacking reasoning. Just to illustrate: Imagine an object and two doors, A and B, and that we know two things: That the object is on one side of the doors and that it is later on the other. Your argument appeared to me as saying that it went through Door A and upon my inquiry for why it's A and not B you said that it's consistent with both given facts. I know that this metaphor is lacking the obvious complexity of the matter, but if anything it shows how your post reat to me, and thus how my response came to be.

It's not that I dislike them; I engage in them myself from time to time. It's that they are added speculation that is not needed.
That's fair enough, I just got a bit of a dislike vibe from the capslock and the implication that it is a fool's errand.

I'll take your word for it. It does leave my question open, however: why did he ignore my points?
Ya, I'm not going to read that discussion to see who's right.

That is again NOT what I said. You quoted me, right there, saying something different that what you're claiming I said! Here goes again
Okay, I understand your argument now. Sorry for my previous response to it.

It's self-evident that there is a real-life change to Trek. Unless there's a stated, or otherwise reasonable, explanation for the change in-universe, it's entirely reasonable to assume that the change is either retroactive, or simply not meant to be mulled over.
I disagree that there has to be a stated explanation. For example "Trials and Tribble-ations" had Worf commented on the Klingon differences, but an explanation was given later in Enterprise. So I'd change it to stated difference. This in turn opens the "Are visuals canon" debate and I'm not going to engage in that one. For the otherwise reasonable explanation, we know that the Enterprise was already refitted once in an eighteen months span, so considering the timeline gaps between "The Cage", the end of Discovery season 1 and the start of TOS a refit may just be a reasonable explanation.

FWIW I agree with your conclusion that it's reasonable to assume a retcon or that it wasn't meant to be mulled over, but so is the refit option.

Take this example: Did Starfleet change the uniforms between TMP and TWOK? Or did Meyer (like everyone else) simply not like the TMP uniforms and decided to go with something more naval-looking? Who cares? There is no need for an in-universe explanation. That's the point I'm making: if you can find an easy explanation, knock yourself out. But if you have to tie yourself into knots over it, then it's not worth the time and effort, and I'd rever you to the MST3K mantra.
Okay, at this point (if it wasn't clear already) I see that we have fundamentally different approaches to Trek, with you favoring an "authorial intent" perspective and me an "in-universe" perspective. Agree to disagree?
 
For more traditionalists out there David Metlesits has done another Kirk-ified DSC Enterprise and it looks gorgeous! Hopefully he'll continue to produce more shots of her.
five_year_mission_reimagined_by_thefirstfleet-dcjufrq.jpg

Yeah I saw that model. Not a bad attempt.
 
Well, I read your post differently.

No harm done. I guess we're talking past each other.

I didn't quite get your door A and B example, but hopefully my earlier explanation makes sense.

That's fair enough, I just got a bit of a dislike vibe from the capslock and the implication that it is a fool's errand.

Well, I say it's a fool's errand because I've been there before. At some point I just realised that there was no way to make Trek consistent without breaking all rules of logic. So now I begrudgingly just go with it.

I disagree that there has to be a stated explanation.

A stated explanation OR a reasonable fan-made one, is what I was arguing. You can come up with something that makes sense, and that's fine by me. I just don't see how Pike's ship could be refit into the DSC one, then back again, and then into the TMP design. It's just too much for my little brain.

Okay, at this point (if it wasn't clear already) I see that we have fundamentally different approaches to Trek, with you favoring an "authorial intent" perspective and me an "in-universe" perspective. Agree to disagree?

Well... I don't know that I go with author intent, really. I try to go with what makes the most sense, really. If that's author intent, or visual evidence, or script, or fanwank, I'm ok with it. I guess it's a complex web of various forces at play and we all look at it from different angles.
 
Your loss. If only you'd listen
You’re probably correct. My lack of engagement here stems from an interpretation of your opinions - we have very different ideas here, obviously, and I’ve yet to convince you that my arguments are valid. Just as you have yet to convince me that your opinions are fact. Rather than get into a debate where personal characteristics such as an inability to listen are thrown around, I choose to abstain. Not ignore, but disengage.

Also, I’ve often found that if I have to complain that people aren’t listening to my points, my points probably weren’t that convincing to start with.

You just brush aside some points that I've made because -- what? You can't change your mind?
I’ve discussed many issues with people on this site and there have been many points made here that have indeed changed my mind - even about long-held beliefs I have about Star Trek.

I enjoy having my mind changed - it usually means I’ve learned something or that I was wrong about something. I enjoy the debate.

If I’ve ever given the impression that I am disregarding your points then I apologise. I may not agree with your opinions but I do respect them. I don’t think that’s necessarily a two way street here, but some of the responsibility lies with me here in not presenting my arguments in a way that is convincing enough.

By the way, have you ever considered that I agree with points of yours that I don’t pick up on? Many of the things we’ve discussed I’ve had no issue with at all. With respect I’d suggest maybe you think about assuming that people aren’t brushing your points aside - rather, highlighting only the ones that are contentious for further discussion. Don’t be so negative! :)

And now that I think about it, there IS evidence for my position on this, since in the real world they DID change the Enterprise.
That’s true. There’s also evidence for my position on this - they flagged a real world change up in the show. We seem to be at an impasse. Perhaps we just agree to disagree?

We have no evidence for any in-universe change, especially given the difficulties of explaining the change in-universe, so actually my assumption is _better_ supporter.
I don’t fully understand what you’re getting at here - I’m not trying to invalidate your point at all, I’m just not following what you’re saying. Sometimes I forget that points that make perfect sense in my brain don’t always translate to people outside of my brain, so further clarification is sometimes needed.

I'm sure many things can be said about Groppler Zorn, but I haven't met anyone in the DSC forum who is more willing to consider alternate viewpoints
Thank you very much for saying so, @Jinn :)

I'll take your word for it. It does leave my question open, however: why did he ignore my points?
As I said above, and depending on the points you’re referring to, there are two explanations. 1) having concluded that we clearly weren’t going to see eye to eye on this, I respectfully withdraw from our debate. And 2) the points I picked up on were the ones I didn’t agree with. Odds are I probably agreed with the ones you say I “ignored”.

Anyway - points if you’re still reading! The final thing I’m going to say here is that I have no desire to argue in a negative way with anyone. I enjoy debating Star Trek but I’ve got neither the energy nor the inclination to try and convert anyone else to my way of thinking. I’m tapping out at that - peace to you! :)
 
Well, it's pretty obvious at this point, absolutely nothing sinks in past that EGO of yours.

It's not obvious....that's just your opinion.

I have read through the posts very closely over time and I think Belz has gone far out of his way to explain his position(s) but a lot of people just don't accept it if it conflicts with their own....plus the fact that they don't pay any attention to his signature, even when he reminds them of it. Frankly, the frustration that Belz exhibits at times is quite understandable, considering what goes on here.

I am no one's champion, and there are times when I do not agree with the opinions that Belz expresses, but I think it's time that someone calls this whole thing out, besides Belz himself. Enough is enough.

I also think it's time for anyone and everyone to cease and desist with the one-word posts of "No" or "Yes". That's contrary to the rules of the board and does not further a discussion.
 
I didn't quite get your door A and B example, but hopefully my earlier explanation makes sense.
Well, probably because I'm shitty at explaining things. Imagine you have two rooms, and there are two doors between them, as in on the same wall. Like, how men's and women's public restrooms, just without the wall between the women's and the men's section.

A stated explanation OR a reasonable fan-made one, is what I was arguing. You can come up with something that makes sense, and that's fine by me.
So would you suggest that if no one would have come up with a reasonable explanation for the Klingon change we should ignore Worf's line? I'm not trying to argue here, I'm just genuinely curious.

I just don't see how Pike's ship could be refit into the DSC one, then back again, and then into the TMP design.
Sure, that's understandable.

Well... I don't know that I go with author intent, really. I try to go with what makes the most sense, really. If that's author intent, or visual evidence, or script, or fanwank, I'm ok with it. I guess it's a complex web of various forces at play and we all look at it from different angles.
:bolian:
 
You’re probably correct. My lack of engagement here stems from an interpretation of your opinions - we have very different ideas here, obviously, and I’ve yet to convince you that my arguments are valid.

Ok, how about we try to establish a common framework from which to have the discussion?

Also, I’ve often found that if I have to complain that people aren’t listening to my points, my points probably weren’t that convincing to start with.

Nicely played, sir. Not bad at all.

By the way, have you ever considered that I agree with points of yours that I don’t pick up on?

Sure, I do that all the time.

Don’t be so negative! :)

Thanks, Ricky! (points if you get that reference)

I don’t fully understand what you’re getting at here - I’m not trying to invalidate your point at all, I’m just not following what you’re saying.

Assuming we're talking about the same thing, I'm saying that the details and proportions are so different between the TOS and TMP ships that one can't reasonably be accepted as being a refit of the other unless we just "roll with it", as it were.

Anyway - points if you’re still reading!

Yay! I love points!
 
I think my biggest problem with the new version is how squat it is.

Yeah, it's something we'll have to get used to. I picked up on it immediately and it took me a while to really accept it, especially after seeing the Anovos model the first time. Now it doesn't bother me anymore. I do prefer the taller version, however.

Well, probably because I'm shitty at explaining things.

I have the same problem, I think. It's beautiful and clear in my head, and then I just vomit the thing all over the place.

So would you suggest that if no one would have come up with a reasonable explanation for the Klingon change we should ignore Worf's line?

When the episode aired I honestly took it as a joke. Prior to that point I always just took it as a retcon. But then people started taking it seriously, and finally Enterprise went with it, and I thought it was really silly. Now, the explanation they came up with was actually pretty well-conceived, but my issue with it is that it wasn't required, and that it opened a Pandora's box in that every other change, past or future, is expected to be explained. In fact I'd argue that Trials... and Enterprise did more to fuel the obsession for explanation than anything else, even if it existed before.
 
I have the same problem, I think. It's beautiful and clear in my head, and then I just vomit the thing all over the place.
I totally get that. Maybe we should start a support group :D

When the episode aired I honestly took it as a joke.
Oh, that's definitely an interesting perspective; I started watchingTrek about eight years ago, so all the Augment virus stuff was already in the back of my mind when I watched that episode. I of course realized that it was a joke (and a fairly funny one at that), but it didn't occur to me to see it as just a joke that wasn't meant to be taken seriously in a continuity way.

Prior to that point I always just took it as a retcon. But then people started taking it seriously, and finally Enterprise went with it, and I thought it was really silly. Now, the explanation they came up with was actually pretty well-conceived, but my issue with it is that it wasn't required, and that it opened a Pandora's box in that every other change, past or future, is expected to be explained. In fact I'd argue that Trials... and Enterprise did more to fuel the obsession for explanation than anything else, even if it existed before.
Yep, agreed. As much as I occasionally enjoy arguing about continuity and fixing it I do think that it would be nicer to live in a world where everyone just shrugs and moves on.
 
When the episode aired I honestly took it as a joke. Prior to that point I always just took it as a retcon. But then people started taking it seriously, and finally Enterprise went with it, and I thought it was really silly. Now, the explanation they came up with was actually pretty well-conceived, but my issue with it is that it wasn't required, and that it opened a Pandora's box in that every other change, past or future, is expected to be explained. In fact I'd argue that Trials... and Enterprise did more to fuel the obsession for explanation than anything else, even if it existed before.
I completely agree. The larger struggle is that if everything needs to be explained, then where are the over the top explanations for Saavik's appearance, or Picard looking different as a cadet (hair and no hair), among other details?
 
For more traditionalists out there David Metlesits has done another Kirk-ified DSC Enterprise and it looks gorgeous! Hopefully he'll continue to produce more shots of her.
five_year_mission_reimagined_by_thefirstfleet-dcjufrq.jpg

The bright white light from the globes on those end caps is way too much.

My first impression is that they are someone's front porch lights:

Globe.jpg


:borg:
 
Well, it's pretty obvious at this point, absolutely nothing sinks in past that EGO of yours.
So I'll just say one more thing...

Have a lovely afternoon...
... and leave it at that.
:cool:
It would have been better had you just said the latter and left out the personal remark. Please don't do this again.
 
The bright white light from the globes on those end caps is way too much.

My first impression is that they are someone's front porch lights:

Globe.jpg


:borg:
I mean speaking aesthetically I think the balls over all are just ugly regardless of brightness. Probably my least favorite component of the TOS Enterprise but none the less it is there.
 
That was the intent of the designers, we don’t know if the writers/producers are thinking that themselves.
We know what Ted Sullivan was thinking, for one. But you are absolutely right to point out that others could be thinking of it differently...which is exactly the point I set off to make here when you and others claimed we somehow know it to be intended purely and definitively as a visual retcon without in-universe change or explanation! Various intents can certainly conflict, and often have. No one's off-screen intent is canon, nor binding in and of itself. Re-interpretation is always possible, both at present and in future. (That's exactly why Memory Alpha isn't going to state anything conclusive on the matter until/unless it becomes further clarified on screen. But I'm confident they'd have zero problem including Eaves' and Sullivans' statements as background notes, so long as they were neutrally presented.)

Of course. And this change is even more extensive.
I'm not really seeing it, honestly...

Xxp3vv_H.png

Screenshot_2018-08-11_Federation_Starfleet_Class_Database_-_Cons.png

Screenshot_2018-08-11_heavycruiser_enterprise_jpg_JPEG_Image_1.png


However plausibly or implausibly, if the middle one can change into the latter, then the former can equally change into it.

I think we're all simply well used to rationalizing the TMP version, because it's been around for so long, and has cemented itself in our minds as part of some neat-and-tidy progression, whereas the DSC one feels shoehorned-in to us merely because it's new and messes with our preconceptions and expectations. Much like the NX-01 did at first in ENT. But the thing is, that's entirely our issue, not the show's. In other words...

How many ship changes between WNMHGB and TOS early episodes? Before DSC how many changes between the Cage and WNMHGB?
As many as it takes? As many as they/we want? Why does there need to be a definite answer? What does it matter? These shows aren't about documenting precisely how many overhauls and/or smaller modifications the Enterprise went through during its service, nor precisely how or why, and certainly shouldn't be, IMO. A handwave is plenty for me, thanks. (Like @Groppler Zorn , I do appreciate being granted that much, though.:techman:)

At any rate, the DSC version does already incorporate at least a few details similar to those present on the second pilot version that distinguished it from both the first pilot and series-proper incarnations. Besides the aft nacelle vents and bridge "window" mentioned above, there are also the dark strips around the running lights on the dorsal saucer, for instance:

thecagehd0030.jpg

Constitution07.jpg

thatwhichsurviveshd1490.jpg


For my own conjecture at the moment, based on the timeframe between each, I'd like to think that it went from "The Cage" to "Will You Take My Hand?" (DSC) in more or less one great bite, akin to the eighteen-month TMP redesign. Then it evolves and gets tweaked little by little over the following decade, as Eaves suggested. But alternatively, another major refit could take place in the two-or-more-year-span that she was apparently under Kirk's command prior to the 5YM, per oblique references in "Where No Man Has Gone Before" and "Amok Time" (TOS) that may be clarified through Whitfield and Roddenberry's The Making Of Star Trek. Then the bit-by-bit, er, bit could happen during the course of that, as she incurs wear and tear, and coinciding with the changes in engine room configuration, etc. (Or in between WNMHGB and the 5YM, since we can't even really say for sure that is, in fact, part of that mission at all! It does lack the monologue...:evil:)

DISCLAIMER: All of this may well require re-evaluation based on whatever is to be said/shown of the Enterprise in the upcoming second season of DSC. We'll see soon enough! And undoubtedly, little of it would hold up to scrutiny if zealously nitpicked. But what ever does, really?

:shrug:

Do you understand that I was talking about relative size? DIS Ent shuttlebay is much smaller relative to the size of the ship than TOS one.
I guess I don't follow why that presents such a big problem if both iterations of the ship are on the order of size suggested by the TOS interiors and Drexler's cutaway utilized for "In A Mirror Darkly, Part II" (ENT), rather than Jefferies' "originally intended" (except not, because that itself was a scale-up from Roddenberry's initially downright puny conception of a mere 200ft) length of 947ft—which was never established in dialogue or otherwise discernably onscreen, AFAIK. (It is technically on this display from "The Enterprise Incident" but even today in HD that's not clearly legible, let alone would it have even approached being remotely so back in the '60s! The numbers on that little scale bar could say virtually anything, for all we can make them out! And there is a looooong litany of such set dressings being freely contradicted or otherwise modified throughout Trek's history. So no issue there, from where I'm standing.)

My admittedly-not-well-studied understanding is that many of the TMP refit's interior sets like the Rec Deck and such suggest a potentially larger size for her as well, even if we would then have to fudge a couple of seemingly more scale-defining scenes like the travel pod docking and the wing walk. (But were even those ever truly consistent to begin with? IDK. We're getting into Size Argument Thread™ territory here, and to be quite honest I simply don't care that much. Never really been my thing...not to mention I'm generally too poor in maths to effectively compete with anyone on that front, anyway.:whistle:) But even if the TMP ship winds up having to be smaller, it seems to me that @TrickyDickie's assessment of it as a condensation of its predecessor(s) might simply prove all the more apt!:vulcan:

I don't think the remastered episodes had that issue.
Yet even despite that, and their replacement of the Constellation's noticeably differently-shaped bridge module from the original, they nevertheless still implied that, in-universe, the Enterprise and her various sister ships weren't always identical in arrangement at a given time:

"We changed the window patterns slightly on the four guest ships in 'The Ultimate Computer,' keeping the deck lines the same... There's also a single shot of the main viewscreen on the Lexington bridge in which we modified the screen slightly from the stock Enterprise screen."

-Mike Okuda, via Ex-Astris-Scientia

You can say whatever the heck you want.

My stance is the Enterprise in DSC is a retcon of the one in 'The Cage'.

My point in the last couple pages was just within the realm of TOS-R Pre-DSC. Pike's Enterprise looked different from Kirk's.
I know you weren't addressing me directly here, but just for the record, I hope it's been clear that I certainly don't think that's an unreasonable position at all. As I've said, "The Cage" was a rejected pilot cannibalized for segments in "The Menagerie" (TOS) that therein represented entirely a Talosian illusion, albeit one alleged to be accurate to "the actual events...as it happened." (But only within what ultimately turned out to be another Talosian illusion!) So I would have no issues whatever with it being visually retconned outright, if that's in fact what has happened—though I'd still say we can't be certain of that as yet. It's only jumping ahead and extending this reasoning to all of TOS at once (plus TNG's "Relics" and DS9's "Trials and Tribble-ations" et al.) that I consider too far a leap at present. That's my stance.
:beer:

The only problem I have between TOS and TMP is the word 'Refit'

Had they just said complete rebuild, it would be fine.
Well, to be fair, Scotty does say that they "have just spent eighteen months redesigning and refitting the Enterprise." But I think "refit" is the word that we fans have come to most closely identify with that process as depicted there, and thus, again, that would be why it was dropped into "Despite Yourself" (DSC). Make no mistake, that message was meant for us.

-MMoM:D
 
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I completely agree. The larger struggle is that if everything needs to be explained, then where are the over the top explanations for Saavik's appearance, or Picard looking different as a cadet (hair and no hair), among other details?

Are we really comparing the appearance of a character that appeared twice (plus a bit part) with a ship that hangs in the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum?

As far as Picard goes, hairstyles change.
 
Are we really comparing the appearance of a character that appeared twice (plus a bit part) with a ship that hangs in the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum?

I don't know why you think it being in the museum is such a massive argument, but I'd like to point out that, had Jefferies made slightly different decisions back in 1964, what's sitting in the Smithsonian would look excactly like the Discoprise.

All that aside, could you explain why the museum argument is so important to you? I'm really puzzled.
 
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