Hell, from the first to the second pilot both warp drive changed terminology and the sets and uniforms were altered and lithium crystals became dilithium crystals by the time the number of produced episodes had reached double digits!
Sure.And then dilthium crystals and phasers became nailed down as a technology in the series for the next 60 years.
TOS, TNG, DS9, VOY, and ENT have all been confirmed as having writers bibles.Star Trek has never had them or needed them before.
If so, when do they take actual classes?
Are they ignoring it, though? They’ve actually shown us (or just mentioned) a number of classes the cadets are taking. I’m sure I’ve missed a couple, but here’s the ones I’ve written down …The writers are choosing what to show though. I made this point on another board, but just because a show is teen drama doesn't mean they necessarily ignore the thing they do.
You gotta wonder why they even have that, after all, temporal technology is banned.Temporal Mechanics (with Jett Reno)


^ Ah yes, the scientific approach, where you don't learn about stuff that’s banned.
Seriously though, I suppose that class is mainly about the various temporal phenomena the average Starfleet officer will encounter during their career. Can’t very well ban those, I guess.![]()
Time Travel is so easy to do in Star Trek that anyone with a Warp Drive and sufficiently powerful computational device can do it.It's like criminal investigators learning about the psychology of crime. The goal isn't for them to commit crimes, but solve/prevent them.
Actually, DS9, VOY and the TNG movies did follow the stardates from TNG in the same way.The writers on some of the new shows seem to use that calculator or one of the many copies.
Except lower decks, they had their own way of doing stardates. 1000 dates did not equal 1 year like in the TNG system apparently did.
The science advisor for all the shows, Dr. Erin MacDonald created a new formula, but hasn’t publicly released it.
Unlike TOS, the TNG star dates were not entirely random they had a IRL, meaning the second digit represented the TV season, and most (not all) consistently advanced the numbers. Now obviously that’s not the case for DS9, VOY and the TNG movies.
Given that most galactic powers had mastered time travel and fought in a war with weaponised time travel there are undoubtedly many defences against it to prevent it and temporal sensors so that incursions can be detected before the changes ripple forward.Time Travel is so easy to do in Star Trek that anyone with a Warp Drive and sufficiently powerful computational device can do it.
The only way the current timeline can exists at all given the billions of beings who would want to undo the Burn, requires either a perfect galaxy wide defense against temporal alteration, or a complete banning of any knowledge about time travel.
Learning a variety of subjects makes you well-rounded.
Did the episode mention Jeffrey at all? Though "Kenneth"'s daughter may have died, he still had a wife and son. Unless he played the program through their lives to the end with no resets and they've since "died" too.
None of which were treated as unchangeable. As with Pirate Code, they were more of a guideline. The bibles were things that listed the characters, the setting, the terminology and a few dos and don'ts. It didn't tell the writers how phasers worked and warp theory. That tech the tech stuff was probably worked out on a script to script basis. And when needed brought back in or ignored.TOS, TNG, DS9, VOY, and ENT have all been confirmed as having writers bibles.
So your statement is incorrect.
This gets often repeated, but that’s actually not how it’s presented in “Real Life”: B’Elanna didn’t change the Doctor’s program so his holographic daughter would die. She said she would “tweak it to bring it closer to real life”, which the Doctor elaborates as her “simply adding some randomized behavioral algorithms to the program […]. Events will simply unfold as a natural evolutions of probabilities within the program. But there’s no way to predict what those might be.”B'Elanna jimmied the Program so that Belle had to die …
This gets often repeated, but that’s actually not how it’s presented in “Real Life”: B’Elanna didn’t change the Doctor’s program so his holographic daughter would die. She said she would “tweak it to bring it closer to real life”, which the Doctor elaborates as her “simply adding some randomized behavioral algorithms to the program […]. Events will simply unfold as a natural evolutions of probabilities within the program. But there’s no way to predict what those might be.”
Shakespeare?When you're talking about how a Terrorist with anger issues and a suicide kick ruins a bell curve for measuring the expected, do you have any idea what happens every time some smart-ass gives your typical Klingon a typewriter?
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