Or then there is no implication.
After all, assuming of refits hinges on assuming, utterly baselessly, that the design we see is a refitted one. The default assumption would be that the ship is as it always was, since nothing else is stated. Beyond this, we apply our own default ideas. Which in this case appear simple enough...
There's no reason for Vance to be specific: "The Tikhov still flies" is simply sufficient information. And the Tikhov we see is a modern-looking ship with a suffix, just like every other Starfleet vessel. Should we assume that every Starfleet vessel is an old one a dozen times refitted? If so, why?
Timo Saloniemi
After all, assuming of refits hinges on assuming, utterly baselessly, that the design we see is a refitted one. The default assumption would be that the ship is as it always was, since nothing else is stated. Beyond this, we apply our own default ideas. Which in this case appear simple enough...
There's no reason for Vance to be specific: "The Tikhov still flies" is simply sufficient information. And the Tikhov we see is a modern-looking ship with a suffix, just like every other Starfleet vessel. Should we assume that every Starfleet vessel is an old one a dozen times refitted? If so, why?
Timo Saloniemi