I have seen a lot of episodes that support the theory that aliens visited earth in human past and also that humans were genetically engineered by aliens. Does this mean, Star Trek and it's creators believe in and support the ancient astronaut theory
You're forgetting "Who Mourns for Adonais?"
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And I am aware of not so much as a single canonical reference giving the name "Arret" to "Sargon's Planet." The only canonical "Arret" is the one in the reverse-time universe visited in "The Counter-Clock Incident." Mentioning something in the stage directions of a script does not make it canonical; if it doesn't appear either in dialogue or in on-screen graphics, it's not canon.
I have seen a lot of episodes that support the theory that aliens visited earth in human past and also that humans were genetically engineered by aliens. Does this mean, Star Trek and it's creators believe in and support the ancient astronaut theory
You're making a huge leap assuming that writers have to "believe in and support" far-out concepts in order to employ them in fiction. You don't have to literally "believe" in some imaginative notion to see its story potential.
It would be very naive to think the Earth is the only planet in the universe with intelligent life forms![]()
Tattoo flat out says Chakotay's people encountered aliens that were later found in the DQ.
"Dammit, Bones, I'm a starship captain, not an ancient historian!"Yeah, that too. Which got the timing absurdly wrong, because the heyday of Greek culture and mythology was a lot less than 5,000 years ago.
Plus Vulcans visiting Earth as well in "Carbon Creek," and possibly again.Plato's Stepchildren also features aliens living among ancient Greeks. Likewise, Paradise Syndrome indicates there was contact between Native Americans and aliens, though that contact might exclusively have been abduction and relocation.
Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow introduces the idea the timeline has been mucked with by aliens from the future. Times Arrow showed us a variety of aliens, including at least 1 El-Aurian visited Earth in the past.
Tattoo flat out says Chakotay's people encountered aliens that were later found in the DQ. The 37s revealed a number of humans were abducted by aliens and taken to the DQ. Distant Origin indicates an entire species arose on Earth and reached the level of spaceflight before humans were on the scene.
Lots of Ancient Astronauts to choose from.
IIRC, Roddenberry always hated the Ancient Astronaut theory and didn't want Star Trek to indulge in it. Even in the 60s when he knew he was just a man producing a TV show and hadn't yet drunk the Gene's Vision Kool-Aid.
I have to say I've always found the ancient astronaut hypothesis to have elements of elitism and discrimination. To me, it always approaches human wonders like pyramids, astronomy, math, etc., among mostly non-European cultures from the perspective of no way could "primitive savages" have come up with the science to accomplish these things on their own without help.
On Voyager Episode Distant Origin, the ancient astronauts in that episode are related to the dinosaur genus of hadrosaur, lived on Earth during the Cretaceous (65 million years ago), and are now living in the Delta Quadrant and call themselves Voth.
At least the writers held back from showing aliens built the pyramids and what.
Probably because "Stargate" already did it, but it's something, right?
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