• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

those damn hippies

I once read a fan Trek chronology which proposed that the amazingly beautiful planet (nicknamed Eden) was discovered in the 22nd Century, prior to the Romulan war. The records of the planet were partially lost during the war. The Romulans caused the changes to the planet's ecosystem in order to prevent it's use by the humans, hence why the hippies knew nothing about this when the rediscovered it.
Oy. So small-universe. I hate everything being connected like that. YMMV.
 
Well paradise has more connotations than simply being beautiful like being one with their God, who was Sevrin, for instance and being a mystical and mythical entry into heaven which turns out to be hell in this case. Same story as Trek V IMO plus much more and a little less. In Trek V finding out that God is the devil is not as devastating as finding out that the devil is God.
 
Oy. So small-universe. I hate everything being connected like that. YMMV.
Small universe because of the connection to the Romulan War? That's quite a broad interpretation of the label IMO.
Now, if Kirk had once been there as a midshipman or McCoy's daughter had been among the space-hippies, I could understand it.
 
That set certainly didn't live up to the name Eden, but I assume the writer intended the place to be remarkably beautiful. The Remastered version tried to improve it.
 
Small universe because of the connection to the Romulan War? That's quite a broad interpretation of the label IMO.
Now, if Kirk had once been there as a midshipman or McCoy's daughter had been among the space-hippies, I could understand it.
Small universe because everything is connected in implausible ways. A lot of fans always want there to be "reasons" for things instead of just accepting that X just happens to be that way.
 
Small universe because everything is connected in implausible ways. A lot of fans always want there to be "reasons" for things instead of just accepting that X just happens to be that way.
But there is a connection already, because evidence of the planet Eden exists in the Enterprise data banks.

If they'd just stumbled on the planet during the course of normal exploration, then an explanation for its existence would be far less neccessary. But as it stands, the planet was found and named by someone in the past already
 
It could be a location that many explorers, civilian ship captains, etc, often brag about visiting when they haven't at all, with the tales growing more unbelievable and embellished with every telling. The dangers of urban legends and braggart claims.
 
Yeah, I never got the impression that anybody in that episode believed that they were literally going to the Garden mentioned in the Bible. It was, as noted, just another mythological/literary reference of the sort Trek is fond of: like the Genesis Device or "The Paradise Syndrome" or whatever. When Khan implies that he would rather reign in Hell than serve in Heaven, he's not literally asking Kirk to beam him down to Hades.

^ For the win.
 
That set certainly didn't live up to the name Eden, but I assume the writer intended the place to be remarkably beautiful. The Remastered version tried to improve it.
That's the same problem they had in GENERATIONS. This rubbish supposed to be someone's ultimate planet/fantasy. This is the place that someone would kill hundreds/billions for?
To me a picture of Fiji would be more like Eden than the limited budget set they had,
 
Yeah, I never got the impression that anybody in that episode believed that they were literally going to the Garden mentioned in the Bible. It was, as noted, just another mythological/literary reference of the sort Trek is fond of: like the Genesis Device or "The Paradise Syndrome" or whatever. When Khan implies that he would rather reign in Hell than serve in Heaven, he's not literally asking Kirk to beam him down to Hades.

Heck, even in real life, lots of planets and moons take their names from classical mythology. Doesn't mean that anybody believes that Pluto is actually the realm of the dead or whatever . . ...

What else are you going to call a fabled paradise planet except "Eden" or "Shangri-La" or "Elysia" or something like that?

Yea, but Ceti Alpha five was in the Hades binary system, so..
 
It's the Romulans messing with the planet ergo Adam dies is where it gets silly and fannish.
Ah, I see your point now - thanks for taking the time to spell that out for me.

TBH I'm still not entirely convinced that the Romulan connection is that much of a stretch, since the planet is inside Romulan space (or at least it is by the time of the 2260s). However, at the end of the day this is just a theory without any onscreen evidence so I'm happy to trade it in for a better one :techman:
 
Ah, I see your point now - thanks for taking the time to spell that out for me.

TBH I'm still not entirely convinced that the Romulan connection is that much of a stretch, since the planet is inside Romulan space (or at least it is by the time of the 2260s). However, at the end of the day this is just a theory without any onscreen evidence so I'm happy to trade it in for a better one :techman:

If you want a better idea I think I can come up with one. Wait a minute. I'll be right back.

I found my last paragraph in my previous post number 59:

...And no doubt some of the people who spread the legend of the Edenic planet Eden in the Romulan Neutral Zone were people who wanted to restart the war with the Romulans. "Those dirty stinking Romulans, they stole Eden, the most perfect planet in all the galaxy, from us."

Let us suppose that one shore party once landed on the beautiful planet later called Eden, and perhaps only one person in it noticed the acidic plants. Then they were recalled to their ship because a Romulan ship was on the way. The Romulans pursued their fleeing ship and damaged it and maybe killed some of those who were in the landing party.

And nobody every returned to that region of space due to the long and bloody war and the establishment of the Romulan neutral zone.

And the person who knew about the acid and deadly nature of vegetation on the beautiful planet had his own ideas of what paradise was. For him paradise was living in a beautiful climate controlled palace in a beautiful high tech city and being waited on hand in and foot by hordes of robot servants and being totally idle and spending his time watching or reading his favorite stories. He wouldn't have wanted to work as hard as even south sea islanders did picking fruit and catching fish. And he couldn't stand the heat on a tropical island.

So whenever he heard someone wish to live in a tropical island paradise he snorted with amusement, knowing that person's idea of paradise was closer to his idea of hell.

And then he went to a reunion with his old crew, those who had survived the Romulan War. And someone who had been in the landing party and seen the beauty of the planet, but not suffered from the acidic plants, was talking about how beautiful it was and how it would have been like paradise to live in, and he almost told him that the pain would have been more like hell, but didn't get around to it.

And later he had an idea, and went to the leaders of the political movement to restart the war with the Romulans, who believed that the Romulans had not been punished enough, and wanted to resume fighting and kill more Romulans.

And they started a publicity campaign describing the beauty and the balmy climate of the lost planet, which they named Eden, hoping to stir up a desire to conquer that region of space from the Romulans and find Eden.

"Those dirty stinking Romulans, they stole Eden, the most perfect planet in all the galaxy, from us."

And the man who knew the truth about the deadly poisonous plant life on Eden felt it wasn't wrong to trick a bunch of fools into fighting another war with the Romulans over that false paradise, because he felt that anyone misguided enough to want to live in a primitive tropical paradise deserved anything bad that happened to him.

That pro war movement never succeeded and eventually fizzled out, but the legend of the paradise planet Eden remained a part of space lore for generations.
 
Last edited:
The legend of Eden was probably made by aliens who thought death, especially or not for Humans, was a good thing. Not the Romulans but I'm sure there are races that do consider death a good thing however misguidedly.
 
There's got to be some reason besides the lush greenery of the planet that warrants the name "Eden" since that alone is fairly common in Trek.

Perhaps it exists between a certain conflux of stars in a specific constellation, benefitting from an excess of spiritual woo?

If that were the case then it's entirely possible that no-one has ever actually set foot on the planet to experience it's scary (albeit naturally occurring) ecosystem

It would also explain them using star charts to locate the planet, as opposed to exploration records
 
Last edited:
Since there is little evidence to assume the Romulans did poison the planet to stop it becoming a beacon to the depressed minions of the Federation, I'd say it was just the typical result of finding what you want but it not being exactly how you wanted it when you got there! A bit like the saying of grass is always greener on the other side! :techman:
JB
 
Yeah, I've decided that the biggest flaw is, once again, the pitifully easy seizure of the Enterprise. Even the hippies (who, I recognize, had military and scientific backgrounds) could do it.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top