Once you're into the thousands of years age-group, would a century either side be worth mentioning?
That was my thinking as well.
Once you're into the thousands of years age-group, would a century either side be worth mentioning?
Maybe Spock just gave up at that point? Figuring it was useless correcting humans on their own history?![]()
DAYS! [Romulans don't wait long for ANYTHING!]Yes, for an Earth ale. For a Romulan ale....
DAYS! [Romulans don't wait long for ANYTHING!]![]()
Yeah they’re always willing play the long game and they’re always willing to pull the strings. Even if it takes a little bit longerThey are the one race that will wait. Only they seem, of the major races, to take the long view.
The big issue I have is accepting the round figure of 200 or 300 as exactly 200 or 300 years. When we talk of events that far in the past, few are terribly accurate. TOS is all over the place and it has been pointed out how many times the 300 years in the future time would work and is pretty average for the wide range of given times in the future it was supposed to be set. I would say 250 years minimum, but 300 fits better. Few time periods that come up in conversation are really that round. Most are messy and we shorten them all the time. We celebrated the 50th anniversary of Star Trek on the date it was first broadcast, but by the The Cage was nearly 2 years old and the series went on for 3 more years. Taking dates from TOS as gospel is assuming they mean something that I don't think the writers or producers intended.
When a particular event is described as having taken place "about a century" before a given episode, we are in most cases arbitrarily assuming that it was exactly one hundred years ago.
PICARD: When Pierre de Fermat died they found this equation scrawled in the margin of his notes. X to the nth plus Y to the nth equals Z to the nth, where n is greater than 2, which he said had no solution in whole numbers. But he also added this phrase. Remarkable proof.
RIKER: Yeah, that's starting to come back to me. There was no proof included.
PICARD: For the eight hundred years people have been trying to solve it.
SCOTT: Lincoln died three centuries ago on a planet hundreds of light years away.
FELLINI: I am going to lock you up for two hundred years.
KIRK: That ought to be just about right.
And as for Spock not correcting his crewmates, he would have to have the information in his head to do so and Earth history does not seem to be one of the areas he has studied. Plus he is from Vulcan and the Vulcan year is different. Not that the calculation would be hard, but he would need a reason to do it and his specialty is science, not history. He corrects people for time and distance but not history.
KIRK: Identical. Earth, as it was in the early 1900s.
SPOCK: More the, er, mid-1900s I would say, Captain, approximately 1960.
SPOCK: (pulling the bloody spear from Latimer's body and examining it) Folsom Point.
BOMA: Sir?
SPOCK: There's a remarkable resemblance to the Folsom Point discovered in 1925, old world calendar, New Mexico, North America. A bit more crude about the shaft, I believe. Not very efficient.
KIRK: An old Earth vessel, similar to the DY=500 class.
SPOCK: Much older. DY-100 class, to be exact. Captain, the last such vessel was built centuries ago, back in the 1990s.
SPOCK: No such vessel listed. Records of that period are fragmentary, however. The mid=1990s was the era of your last so-called World War.
MCCOY: The Eugenics Wars.
SPOCK: Of course. Your attempt to improve the race through selective breeding.
SPOCK: If you're suggesting this was a penal deportation vessel, you've arrived at a totally illogical conclusion.
KIRK: Oh?
SPOCK: Your Earth was on the verge of a dark ages. Whole populations were being bombed out of existence. A group of criminals could have been dealt with far more efficiently than wasting one of their most advanced spaceships.
KIRK: Common courtesy, Mister Spock. He'll spend the rest of his days in our time. It's only decent to help him catch up. Would you estimate him to be a product of selective breeding?
SPOCK: There is that possibility, Captain. His age would be correct. In 1993, a group of these young supermen did seize power simultaneously in over forty nations.
KIRK: Well, they were hardly supermen. They were aggressive, arrogant. They began to battle among themselves.
SPOCK: Undeveloped. Sherman's Planet is claimed by both sides, our Federation and the Klingon Empire. We do have the better claim.
CHEKOV: The area was first mapped by the famous Russian astronomer Ivan Borkoff almost two hundred
KIRK: John Burke.
CHEKOV: Burke, sir? I don't think so. I'm sure it was
SPOCK: John Burke was the Chief Astronomer at the Royal Academy in old Britain at the time.
CHEKOV: Oh, Royal Academy. Well
SPOCK: They do seem to have escaped the carnage of your first three world wars, Doctor.
MCCOY: They have slavery, gladiatorial games, despotism.
SPOCK: Situations quite familiar to the six million who died in your first world war, the eleven million who died in your second, the thirty seven million who died in your third. Shall I go on?
IRK: Johnny? He called me lke, you Frank, Bones Tom, and Billy. Ike Clanton, Tom and Frank McLowery, Billy Claiborne, Billy Clanton.
SPOCK: Captain, I pride myself on my knowledge of your Earth history. The names were known in the annals of the opening of the western sector of America. the United States of America, that is.
KIRK: In the late nineteenth century in Arizona, two factions fought for control of the town of Tombstone. The Earps, Morgan, Virgil and Wyatt, who were the town marshals, along with Doc Holliday.
SPOCK: And the Clanton gang. On October 26th, they had it out.
CHEKOV: Who won?
KIRK: The Clantons lost, Mister Chekov.
CHEKOV: And we are the Clantons?
SPOCK: This is the most splendid private collection of art I've ever seen, and the most unique. The majority are the works of Leonardo da Vinci, Renaissance period, some of the works of Reginald Pollack, 20th century, and even a sten from Marcus Two.
SPOCK: Envy. None of these da Vinci paintings has ever been catalogued or reproduced. They are unknown works, all apparently authentic to the last brush stroke and use of materials. As undiscovered da Vinci�s, they would be priceless.
KIRK: Would be? You mean you think they're fakes?
SPOCK: Most strange. A man of Flint's obvious wealth and impeccable taste scarcely needs to hang fakes. Yet my tricorder analysis indicates that the canvas and pigments used are of contemporary origin.
SPOCK: Captain. Something else which is rather extraordinary. This waltz I just played is by Johannes Brahms.
KIRK: Later, Spock.
SPOCK: Captain, it is written in manuscript. In original manuscript, in Brahms' own hand, which I recognise. It is totally unknown, definitely the work of Brahms, and yet unknown.
It does to me. Hey bones was still alive in the next generation and Spock was still an active ambassador. And sarek was alive even though he was a hundred in TOS. If tos took place in 22nd century then he would be too old to be ambassador even for Vulcans. Vulcans can’t like for That long.That's ridiculous, why would the storytellers plant identical timelines where Earth II would be far away from Earth??? Does anyone here even understand our timeline is based around the Earth's revolution to the Sun? Please, folks, use your brain instead of bending over backwards to make the chronology fit. The 23rd timeline doesn't fit nor makes sense to Star Trek.
The second Miri Earth was never explained. To be so identical and exact in land masses, technology, language, etc., it couldn't be natural or even constructed. Most likely it was pulled into our universe from a parallel dimension due to some sort of spacial rift. If so, then the timeline may not be the same as our Earth; + or - centuries.Now, that is of course assuming that 1960 on Earth II happened at the same time as Earth I.
The second Miri Earth was never explained. To be so identical and exact in land masses, technology, language, etc., it couldn't be natural or even constructed. Most likely it was pulled into our universe from a parallel dimension due to some sort of spacial rift. If so, then the timeline may not be the same as our Earth; + or - centuries.
Just because the culture had an Earth analog doesn't mean the timelines matched.
And plus the enterprise seems to advanced for only the 22nd century. I see no reason to change times just because of a few writing errors (to me that is) during a show that really created the Star Trek universe as it progressed
Well, in "Miri", the one thing that was specified as 300 years old was the grand(ish) piano. Since pianos in bourgeois homes tend to be 1-100 years old, both the prominent models for the timeline are equally valid.
they hit the parallel Earth beats with a sledgehammer.
That line was the first thing that made me think. And if that was all there was it would be easier to think it could be 300 to 400 years in the past. But it was stated a few more times that the plague was 300 years prior their arrival there, at least twice more I think.
They spent days on the planet's surface with equipment beamed down from the ship. The fact that Spock dated events multiple times in the episode really indicates that the timeline was supported by all of their in-universe scientific analysis.but this was all on the basis of Spock's single-point assessment
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