Duane posits in "Dark Mirror" that the Mirror Universe was always rather perverse from our POV, rather than "diverging" at some fixed point.
For example, Picard reads a bit of MU Shakespeare and discovers the bard to have been much more enthusiastic about blood and vengeance and a little lighter on the romance than in "our Universe."
I like that, as part of a novel; it would be a bit slippery to communicate in a TV episode (although the altered "Star Trek Enterprise" credits for the Mirror Universe episodes effectively suggested something of the kind...).
Re: Enterprise two-parter: ... we don't know that the divergence was in Cochrane shooting the Vulcans).
Although, ironically, "In a Mirror, Darkly" has Phlox state that Shakespeare's works are essentially identical in both universes, even though the rest of literature is different.
Personally I've always thought that the Terran Empire was just an interstellar Imperium extended out from the old Roman Empire, obviously there isn't any cannon to support that theory but it kind of makes sense from a military conquest stand point. There seems to be a lot of Roman influence in the Imperial Starfleet, just how they saluted each other in "Mirror, Mirror" I wouldn't be suprised if that had some kind of influence historically wise.
My real problem with this scenario is that I can't imagine a world where the Roman Empire never fell would be at the same level of technological development by the 20th century as one where Europe spent the better part of a millenium broadly stagnant.
Well, that was a time when most of the rest of the world was in an age of great cultural dynamism and innovation. Western Europe's "Dark Ages" were an exception to the global pattern, despite what we've been taught in Western-biased history classes. Without the scientific, technological, and cultural breakthroughs made in Asia during that time, the renascent Europe wouldn't have been able to achieve as much as it did. Whenever one part of the world becomes regressive or stagnant, there's still progress being made in another part. For that matter, the Romans were hardly an innovative power; they just borrowed what other cultures had devised. So I don't see it making that much difference either way.
I don't agree. Scientific progress historically coincidences with stable or better yet thriving states, with the possible exception of wealthy states in competition (Renaissance Italy, early 20th century Europe).... A strong, persistant Roman Empire would have provided the stability and theological relativism Europe lacked for the better part of a millenium, and the intellectual progress that typically goes with it.
Still, all told, I can't believe an additional thousand years of openess would have failed to advance global knowledge further than it stood the way history actually unfolded...
I don't disagree, but you're denying the premise instead of working through the extrapolation. The question was whether the Terran Empire could be read as an interstellar extension of the Roman Empire, implying a historical continuity of the latter, however unlikely it might be.
A persistant, at this point nearly three millenia old Roman state would obviously be different from what we know of that state historically, but working from the premise, it is possible to posit scenarios in which the state both persists and remains 'fresh' enough not to age into irrelevancy. Presumably, this would involve the syncretic addition of 'foreign' cultures and innovations as part of it's gradual, worldwide expansion, and possibly a number of interregnums and intermediate periods like in Ancient Egypt marked by breakdown and reorganization wherein the state would internally renew itself while still maintaining overall continuity (one could say that the civil wars of the 1st century B.C.E. would mark the first such upheaval). Just because power transfers geographically from an older part of a state to an ascendant one doesn't mean the state itself has come to an end.
Yes, that's the question, and my answer is that it couldn't plausibly be read that way because that premise is unviable.
Besides, why bother to link the Terran Empire to Rome? Just because they used that chest salute thing? Where the hell do you get "Roman Empire" from that? And isn't it about a thousand times easier and more plausible to assume they just wanted to emulate a past empire rather than being a direct continuation of it?
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