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Orci on Start Trek, timelines, canon and everything (SPOILERS)

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Really? Me to. And I don't know about you, but I never had a light directed anywhere near my face, and in fact I preferred to keep the light level low because I found it reduced the frequency of tension headaches. I also know a thing or two about design and what makes it good or bad.
Actually go talk to any optomitrist your doing it wrong. Hence why the tell you to work in a brightly lit room and only be at your computer for an hour and a half at a time. If anything you should be using glare screens.

The real reason that the command centers of naval ships are dimly light is so when in battle it's harder to ascertain the position of the battle group. Hence while tromping through the jungle wearing camo in a battle situation you don't smoke a cigarette cause the "Cherry" can be seen for miles by snipers.

As I stated before the lightconfigurations are made for treating SAD, a form of Depression cause by a lack of natural sunlight. They suggest you sit close to lights to get maximum effect...
 
The logic in Trekguide's post make complete sense to me.

Basicaly the "Official" timeline is a myriad of timelines all wrapped up around eachother.

I'm still arguing with people that in the original "Metamorphosis" Zefram Cochrane has memories of Picard and his 24th century crew and ship and keeps that to himself when he stumbles on Kirk, Spock and McCoy on his planetoid.
 
The logic in Trekguide's post make complete sense to me.

Basicaly the "Official" timeline is a myriad of timelines all wrapped up around eachother.

I'm still arguing with people that in the original "Metamorphosis" Zefram Cochrane has memories of Picard and his 24th century crew and ship and keeps that to himself when he stumbles on Kirk, Spock and McCoy on his planetoid.

Well yeah, that's why Cochrane is so shocked that Kirk and company think the idea of sex with alien energy creatures is kinda cool - he thought everyone in the future was going to be as stuffy and buttoned-down as the TNG crew. ;)
 
2. Through all the "Star Trek" series, there have been at least two dozen distinct and mutually exclusive timelines (not even including the self-fulfilling causality loops). For example, in TNG's "Yesterday's Enterprise," it depicted the original timeline where the Federation was at war with the Klingons; Picard's decision to send the Enterprise-C back in time to save a Klingon outpost created the alternate timeline that we see in every other TNG episode, where Worf serves in Starfleet and the Klingons are allies.
? No the original timeline was the one where Worf serves in Starfleet. The timelibe changed when the Enterprise C was removed from the past where it had tried to save a klingon outpost.
You've got it backwards. The Enterprise-C wasn't "removed" by anyone. It disappeared into a spatial rift formed by torpedoes during its fight with the Romulans. The torpedoes caused the rift, the rift caused the Enterprise-C to vanish, which caused the Klingons to be at war with the Federation 20 years later. No time travel or alternate timelines were involved, until Picard decided to send Yar and the Enterprise-C back in time to change the past. The re-appearance of the Enterprise-C in the past was the point of divergence that changed the timeline, leading to Worf joining Starfleet. That divergence in history was caused by Picard sending Yar and the Enterprise-C back in time from the original timeline to create this new "Lt. Worf" timeline. (The Enterprise-C disappearing did not cause any changes in any timeline, because that was the natural course of events in all timelines.)
Although I would say that an alternate timeline was created when Tasha joined the Crew of the Enterprise C and Sela was born.
That's exactly what I've been saying. That alternate timeline, which you just agreed exists, is depicted in every TNG episode other than "Yesterday's Enterprise."

The final episode of "Voyager" depicted Admiral Janeway creating a new timeline where the U.S.S. Voyager got back to Earth 20 years early. This alternate timeline was continued in the movie "Star Trek: Nemesis," as evidenced by Admiral Janeway's appearance in that film (when the Voyager and Captain Janeway would still be trapped in the Delta Quadrant for another 20 years in the "original" timeline).
No arguments with that one except that it's not an alternate timeline but the same one. It's the same situation as the new movie. Technology is changed or updated.
How can you start a sentence with "No arguments" and then say the exact opposite of what I just said? In "Endgame," the Voyager was trapped in the Delta Quadrant for 20 years. After Janeway got back to Earth, she used a Klingon time machine to go back in time and create a new, alternate, different timeline, where the Voyager got back to Earth immediately. "Star Trek: Nemesis" took place in this new, alternate, different timeline, because we see Admiral Janeway in that movie (when in the original timeline, Janeway and the Voyager would still be in the Delta Quadrant for another 20 years during the events of "Nemesis").

How can you possibly say they're the same timeline? In one timeline, Janeway is a captain in the Delta Quadrant, and in the other timeline, Janeway is an Admiral at Starfleet Command. At the same time. They are mutually exclusive.

Just like in "Star Trek Generations," in the original timeline, the sun exploded and everyone on the Enterprise-D died. Then Picard and Kirk went back before the sun exploded and prevented it, and everyone on the Enterprise-D did NOT die. Again, these two timelines are mutually exclusive. They cannot be the same timeline.

I think we are arguing over the definition of the word "timeline" -- you are using it do describe the Trek canon (the chain of events seen in all of the episodes and movies, in the order they were seen).

Chronology is not the same as causality.

Had the filming point-of-view of "Star Trek Generations" continued in the original timeline, then we would have seen the sun explode, everyone on the Enterprise-D would be dead, and they would be mourned and a whole new Starfleet crew would need to be assembled years later when an Enterprise-E is built. However, since the movie's cameras followed Picard into the Nexus, then followed him into the alternate past, we saw him prevent the events that we already saw in the original timeline, creating a new sequence of events.

This is what I mean when I say "timeline" -- a series of events following a single line of causality (i.e., event A causes event B, which causes event C, etc.). When you travel back in time, say, to after event A, then you cause event X to happen instead of event B. You have left the timeline defined by events A-B-C-D, and have now entered timeline A-X-Y-Z. A timeline is defined by the set of events that cause other events.

If you go back in time 10 minutes and shoot your younger self in the head, you're obviously creating a new timeline. You came from a timeline where you were still alive, and now you're in a timeline where you're lying in a pool of blood. That's two timelines. Different timelines. Alternate timelines. Not the same timeline. When I say "timeline," that's the situation I'm describing.

You are talking about time travel in terms of a predestination paradox, which was best illustrated in TNG's "Time's Arrow," where they found Data's head in a cave, then Data later went to the past and lost his head, which would later be found in the cave. Obviously, the time travel in that episode did not create an alternate timeline, but rather was part of a causality loop, where future events caused past events, which in turn led to the same future events. So it would be acurate to say all events happened in the same timeline, since history was never changed.

The argument could be made (and you did make it) that "Star Trek: First Contact" was a causality loop, where past events caused the Borg and Enterprise-E to go back in time, which caused events that would eventually cause the Borg and Enterprise-E to go back in time.

But we did, in fact, see the alternate timeline, where the Borg had assimilated Earth, before the Enterprise-E went back in time. In terms of causality, that timeline resulted from the Borg going back alone, killing Cochrane, and assimilating Earth. That timeline was changed when Picard made the decision to go back and stop the Borg, thus creating a third alternate timeline, which was either similar or identical to Picard's original history (depending whether those events were a predestination paradox like "Time's Arrow" or an alternate history like "Yesterday's Enterprise").

My point is that each of the last five "Star Trek" movies has taken place in a different timeline from the one before it. It makes no sense to criticize the "Star Trek XI" writers for this, when it has already been going on in the four previous films (whether the writers were aware of it or not).
In fact there is nothing, absolutly nothing to say that any of the last 5 movies took place in an alternate or new timeline.
Well, it's debatable whether "First Contact" was a predestination paradox, but in "Star Trek Generations," we saw Picard go back in time and create a new, different, alternate timeline with different events than the timeline he came from. Obviously the movie ended in a different timeline than the one in which the sun exploded and killed everyone on the Enterprise-D. And we saw in "Endgame" that Admiral Janeway created a new, different, alternate timeline with different events than the timeline she came from, and the Admiral Janeway from that new, different, alternate timeline appeared in "Star Trek: Nemesis." So it is clear that "Generations" and "Nemesis" were in two different timelines, and "First Contact" and "Insurrection" were at least in the alternate timeline created in "Generations."

There is no "official" "Star Trek" timeline.
There is one canon timeline that has tied all of the episodes and movies together. The new movie will not be tied to them.
No, the Trek canon (the continuity of all episodes you have seen on TV or at the theater) is a chronology, not a timeline. The chronology, or canon, is the order in which you saw the episodes; it is the point of view of the cameras following certain crew members on certain ships in certain timelines.

However, a "timeline" is defined as the causality of a sequence of events, regardless of whether a TV camera is recording those events, or whether those events take place in chronological order. There is only one timeline, where events happen only once, UNTIL someone goes back in time and changes those events, so that they happen differently than they did before. Then you have created an alternate timeline. That's what Picard and Kirk did in "Generations," that's what Picard and Yar did in "Yesterday's Enterprise," and that's what Admiral Janeway did in "Endgame." And, based on the plot details released so far, that's exactly what Spock and Nero will do in "Star Trek XI." If you thought "Yesterday's Enterprise" was a good episode, then you should also enjoy "Star Trek XI," since they both involve going back and changing events to create a new timeline.

Those are good examples of DIVERGENT Time Lines, but they are not considered to be THE Time Line by everyone.
I think there is confusion over the word "timeline" here. Most casual viewers think of all "Star Trek" episodes as linear, one episode leading to the next. But that progression of episodes isn't "The" timeline; it is "the canon" -- the chronology of episodes and movies in the order they aired."

A timeline is defined by a string of causality. From "Yesterday's Enterprise" we saw Lt. Yar go back in time on the Enterprise-C to change the past, which caused her half-Romulan daughter to be born in that new timeline. But just because you saw all those events on your same television doesn't mean they're all part of the same timeline. It's just that TNG, as a TV series, followed the point of view of Lt. Yar from one timeline to another.

Likewise, in "Generations," when the sun exploded, and everyone on the Enterprise-D died, and Picard disappeared into the Nexus, the cameras could have continued to show that timeline, where Riker, Troi, Data, et. al, were all dead, the planet was destroyed, and Picard would never be seen again. There would still be a DS9 and a Voyager, but the crew of the Enterprise-E would be different. However, the cameras instead followed Picard into the Nexus, then followed him into the past, where he created a new, different, alternate timeline, in which the sun did not explode. (Why didn't Picard meet his younger self when he went to the past? That's a topic for a whole different thread.)

The point is, what you think of as "the official timeline" in "Star Trek Generations" is really just Picard's point of view as he moves from one timeline, into the Nexus, and then into an alternate timeline where events are changed.

That is Picard's personal chronology, not "the official timeline." Timelines are defined by the chain of events that cause other events, not by the order in which one person remembers the events happening.

Yes, "Star Trek" has depicted many causality loops, where an act of time travel is part of an endless a chain of events that cause themselves to happen. In such predestination paradoxes, there is no free will, no one changes the past, everything happens only once, in only a single timeline.

However, "Star Trek" has also depicted many acts of time travel that led to alternate realities, or parallel universes, or divergent timelines, or whatever you want to call them, where at the same time, the same event happens two different ways:

In "Yesterday's Enterprise," the Federation was at war with the Klingons, then it wasn't. In "Endgame," the Voyager was lost in the Delta Quadrant for 20 years, then it wasn't. In "Parallels," Worf's birthday cake was chocolate, then it wasn't. In "Timeless," the Voyager crew was dead after crashing on an icy planet, then it wasn't. In "Generations," the Enterprise-D crew was dead after the sun expolded, then it wasn't.

All of these alternate, different, divergent, parallel timelines are equally real, and they all exist. None is more "official" than any other. It's just that the cameras filming the "Star Trek" series follow the points of view of specific characters moving from one timeline to another, and we as viewers are sympathetic to those characters' motivations for changing the past, so we tend to think that the new timelines they create are the "correct" or "official" timeline, and we just don't care any more about the timelines they left.

Because the "Star Trek" cameras in "Yesterday's Enterprise" followed Tasha Yar and the Enterprise-C into the new timeline, and stayed there for the rest of the series, we tend to think of that new timeline as the "official" or "true" or "real" one. But the cameras could just as easily have stayed in Lt. Yar's timeline, where the Klingons likely would have destroyed the Enterprise-D after she left, and the Federation would have lost the war, and DS9 and Bajor might have become Klingon outposts. But since no cameras were filming episodes in this timeline, we as TV viewers think it was just a "temporary" timeline. But just because we only saw 40 minutes of TV footage set in that timeline, does not mean that the timeline only existed for 40 minutes. That timeline had existed for billions of years, and would continue to exist for billions more; we just stopped caring about it after 40 minutes.
 
2. Through all the "Star Trek" series, there have been at least two dozen distinct and mutually exclusive timelines (not even including the self-fulfilling causality loops). For example, in TNG's "Yesterday's Enterprise," it depicted the original timeline where the Federation was at war with the Klingons; Picard's decision to send the Enterprise-C back in time to save a Klingon outpost created the alternate timeline that we see in every other TNG episode, where Worf serves in Starfleet and the Klingons are allies.
? No the original timeline was the one where Worf serves in Starfleet. The timelibe changed when the Enterprise C was removed from the past where it had tried to save a klingon outpost.
You've got it backwards. The Enterprise-C wasn't "removed" by anyone. It disappeared into a spatial rift formed by torpedoes during its fight with the Romulans. The torpedoes caused the rift, the rift caused the Enterprise-C to vanish, which caused the Klingons to be at war with the Federation 20 years later. No time travel or alternate timelines were involved, until Picard decided to send Yar and the Enterprise-C back in time to change the past. The re-appearance of the Enterprise-C in the past was the point of divergence that changed the timeline, leading to Worf joining Starfleet. That divergence in history was caused by Picard sending Yar and the Enterprise-C back in time from the original timeline to create this new "Lt. Worf" timeline. (The Enterprise-C disappearing did not cause any changes in any timeline, because that was the natural course of events in all timelines.)

That's exactly what I've been saying. That alternate timeline, which you just agreed exists, is depicted in every TNG episode other than "Yesterday's Enterprise."

Your logic is the only possible one supportable by the events of "Yesterday's Enterprise," but it's just never going to be popular - people will always argue against it because it makes them iggy. :lol:
 
What a cop-out....just say the movie is a reboot and be done with it. Anyway, it is most likely on my wait till HBO list now anyway as so many details have been released, I feel like I've already seen the thing.
 
Well, I've enjoyed "Alias" and "Lost" and "Mission: Impossible III," so any movie made by the same director and producers would be on my must-see list.

The fact that it's also a "Star Trek" movie puts it on two of my must-see lists.

I'm also a fan of time travel stories, so that puts it on three ... well, you get the idea.
 
2. Through all the "Star Trek" series, there have been at least two dozen distinct and mutually exclusive timelines (not even including the self-fulfilling causality loops). For example, in TNG's "Yesterday's Enterprise," it depicted the original timeline where the Federation was at war with the Klingons; Picard's decision to send the Enterprise-C back in time to save a Klingon outpost created the alternate timeline that we see in every other TNG episode, where Worf serves in Starfleet and the Klingons are allies.
? No the original timeline was the one where Worf serves in Starfleet. The timelibe changed when the Enterprise C was removed from the past where it had tried to save a klingon outpost.
You've got it backwards. The Enterprise-C wasn't "removed" by anyone. It disappeared into a spatial rift formed by torpedoes during its fight with the Romulans. The torpedoes caused the rift, the rift caused the Enterprise-C to vanish, which caused the Klingons to be at war with the Federation 20 years later. No time travel or alternate timelines were involved, until Picard decided to send Yar and the Enterprise-C back in time to change the past. The re-appearance of the Enterprise-C in the past was the point of divergence that changed the timeline, leading to Worf joining Starfleet. That divergence in history was caused by Picard sending Yar and the Enterprise-C back in time from the original timeline to create this new "Lt. Worf" timeline. (The Enterprise-C disappearing did not cause any changes in any timeline, because that was the natural course of events in all timelines.)
There was time travel involved because the Enterprise C passed through the rift. How else would it get to the future. If it had not then events would have remained the same. How can a ship that is outside of it's own time be in any way the original timeline?
We saw at the very beginning of the episode the Enterprise C pass through the rift, when it did then we actually see the timeline change from what it was to an altered future. Which is a direct result of the Ship been displaced in time. The TNG timeline is not alternate because it was only changed in one episode when the Enterprise C passed through the rift.
If this was an alternate timeline then it would have stayed with the Warship Enterprise. You could just switch to an alternate timeline in any episode then. What is actually shown is the timeline changing not switching to a new different one.

In "Endgame," the Voyager was trapped in the Delta Quadrant for 20 years. After Janeway got back to Earth, she used a Klingon time machine to go back in time and create a new, alternate, different timeline,
where the Voyager got back to Earth immediately.
In fact again there is nothing to prove this. Admiral Janeway changed the timeline and Voyager never stayed in the Delta Quadrant another 20 years. One timeline, changed.

"Star Trek: Nemesis" took place in this new, alternate, different timeline, because we see Admiral Janeway in that movie (when in the original timeline, Janeway and the Voyager would still be in the Delta Quadrant for another 20 years during the events of "Nemesis").
No, you're just basing this on a theory that every time travel event creates a new timeline. It's been established a number of times that it's the same timeline that gets changed. Not an alternate one.

How can you possibly say they're the same timeline? In one timeline, Janeway is a captain in the Delta Quadrant, and in the other timeline, Janeway is an Admiral at Starfleet Command. At the same time. They are mutually exclusive.
Again how so? We see Janeway and crew return Home. That means that Admiral Janeway that we saw in this episode will never have existed because she changed the timeline. We don't see either of them together again after Janeway and the crew get back home. If we did then I'd agree with you that she is from an alternate timeline but that Admiral Janeway will never be.

Look at the episode "Twilight" in Star Trek Enterprise. When the parasites is Archer's brain are destroyed they are removed from all scans of his brain taken in that timeline. Therefore it can't be an alternate timeline because in the very same timeline we see that the scan of years before has changed due to the parasites been eliminated. Can you explain how that is not the same timeline? An alternate timeline would not show this.

Look at "Time Squared" in TNG, because Picard didn't leave the ship the future version of himself vanished because those events never happened. Same timeline there. No predestination paradox in the slightest. This is the strongest argument that there is only one timeline and it's proven so in this episode.


Just like in "Star Trek Generations," in the original timeline, the sun exploded and everyone on the Enterprise-D died. Then Picard and Kirk went back before the sun exploded and prevented it, and everyone on the Enterprise-D did NOT die. Again, these two timelines are mutually exclusive. They cannot be the same timeline.
Yes they can be because we don't see them both exist. We see one timeline changed and changed again.


I think we are arguing over the definition of the word "timeline" -- you are using it do describe the Trek canon (the chain of events seen in all of the episodes and movies, in the order they were seen).
And I think you are using alternate timeline to make reference to any change due to time travel. But have we really witnessed this? As I mentioned in First Contact the timeline changed before the crew's eyes. If this had created an alternate timeline then this wouldn't have happened.


Had the filming point-of-view of "Star Trek Generations" continued in the original timeline, then we would have seen the sun explode, everyone on the Enterprise-D would be dead, and they would be mourned and a whole new Starfleet crew would need to be assembled years later when an Enterprise-E is built. However, since the movie's cameras followed Picard into the Nexus, then followed him into the alternate past.
What is alternate though when he returned? Kirk was there but what is there to say it's an alternate timeline?


If you go back in time 10 minutes and shoot your younger self in the head, you're obviously creating a new timeline.
No, I'm creating a paradox.
You are talking about time travel in terms of a predestination paradox, which was best illustrated in TNG's "Time's Arrow," where they found Data's head in a cave, then Data later went to the past and lost his head, which would later be found in the cave. Obviously, the time travel in that episode did not create an alternate timeline, but rather was part of a causality loop, where future events caused past events, which in turn led to the same future events. So it would be acurate to say all events happened in the same timeline, since history was never changed.
Ok then but why can you argue that time travel creates an alternate timeline but this one doesn't? If we follow your argument there simply cannot be a predestination paradox as alternate timelines would be created. That's changing the rules.

But just because you saw all those events on your same television doesn't mean they're all part of the same timeline.
Well I completely disagree. It would be pointless to try and preserve Star Trek Canon if an alternate timeline gave them a way out each time. Even B&B said they were sticking to canon and any errors were mistakes, not alternate timelines. The agenda has been to preserve what is known and seen. This is not the case with the new movie after the events of Nero's time travel.
 
Which way is Orci saying the quantum mechanical time travel rules work?

Option One: Time Traveler leaves Universe A and Time Point X to go back to Time Point Y. At the exact instant of Time Traveler's arrival at Time Point Y, Universe B is formed. Universe A still exists - which is a universe where Time Traveler never went back in time. Any effects Time Traveler makes effects Universe B. When Time Traveler goes back to Time Point X, he is still in the Universe B his actions created.

Option Two: Time Traveler leaves Universe A and Time Point X to go back to Time Point Y. At the exact instant of Time Traveler's arrival at Time Point Y, Universe B is formed. Time Traveler does his stuff, then goes back to Time Point X, but is still in Universe A, even though he created Universe B, which is happily existing without him. Time Traveler says "Great Socks! Why did I waste my time?"

So basically you're asking, what happens if a time traveler goes back in time, monkeys around with history so as to create a new timeline branching off, and then returns to the future, is he in the future of Timeline A or Timeline B? Answer: It could work either way. Orci doesn't provide enough info to clear up which one he thinks it is. Orci simply says that there is no such thing as timelines vanishing in and out of existence. That timelines branch off, but they go on existing forever. How it's decided which timeline a time traveler ends up in when he moves around in time isn't spelled out.

As an aside, I have to say that reading Orci make the suggestion that the "many worlds" interpretation is the only possible interpretation of quantum mechanics and that it's the most tested theory in the universe hurt my eyes. But that's OK. He's not a physicist.

What he has done though is explain *a* self-consistent approach to how time travel might work. (Not the only one.....but a perfectly plausible one, if you make the great leap that time travel is feasible in the first place.) As was stated elsewhere in the thread, Star Trek has already provided us with at least a dozen different approaches to time travel that aren't even logically self consistent themselves, let alone consistent with each other. If Trek were to actually pick one approach to time travel (such as this one) and stick with that, that would be a massive improvement.

In any case, it's really not worth getting too far into the weeds on this until we see the movie. I could spend a few hours trying to debunk the time travel logic of some of the arguments in this thread, but......why?
 
The more I read about all this the more I wish they just made this a TOS origin story that did not involve the 24th century at all instead of adding all of this very confusing (and overused) Time Travel stuff.
 
? No the original timeline was the one where Worf serves in Starfleet. The timelibe changed when the Enterprise C was removed from the past where it had tried to save a klingon outpost.
You've got it backwards. The Enterprise-C wasn't "removed" by anyone. It disappeared into a spatial rift formed by torpedoes during its fight with the Romulans. The torpedoes caused the rift, the rift caused the Enterprise-C to vanish, which caused the Klingons to be at war with the Federation 20 years later. No time travel or alternate timelines were involved, until Picard decided to send Yar and the Enterprise-C back in time to change the past. The re-appearance of the Enterprise-C in the past was the point of divergence that changed the timeline, leading to Worf joining Starfleet. That divergence in history was caused by Picard sending Yar and the Enterprise-C back in time from the original timeline to create this new "Lt. Worf" timeline. (The Enterprise-C disappearing did not cause any changes in any timeline, because that was the natural course of events in all timelines.)
There was time travel involved because the Enterprise C passed through the rift. How else would it get to the future. If it had not then events would have remained the same. How can a ship that is outside of it's own time be in any way the original timeline?
We saw at the very beginning of the episode the Enterprise C pass through the rift, when it did then we actually see the timeline change from what it was to an altered future. Which is a direct result of the Ship been displaced in time. The TNG timeline is not alternate because it was only changed in one episode when the Enterprise C passed through the rift.
If this was an alternate timeline then it would have stayed with the Warship Enterprise. You could just switch to an alternate timeline in any episode then. What is actually shown is the timeline changing not switching to a new different one.


In fact again there is nothing to prove this. Admiral Janeway changed the timeline and Voyager never stayed in the Delta Quadrant another 20 years. One timeline, changed.


No, you're just basing this on a theory that every time travel event creates a new timeline. It's been established a number of times that it's the same timeline that gets changed. Not an alternate one.


Again how so? We see Janeway and crew return Home. That means that Admiral Janeway that we saw in this episode will never have existed because she changed the timeline. We don't see either of them together again after Janeway and the crew get back home. If we did then I'd agree with you that she is from an alternate timeline but that Admiral Janeway will never be.

Look at the episode "Twilight" in Star Trek Enterprise. When the parasites is Archer's brain are destroyed they are removed from all scans of his brain taken in that timeline. Therefore it can't be an alternate timeline because in the very same timeline we see that the scan of years before has changed due to the parasites been eliminated. Can you explain how that is not the same timeline? An alternate timeline would not show this.

Look at "Time Squared" in TNG, because Picard didn't leave the ship the future version of himself vanished because those events never happened. Same timeline there. No predestination paradox in the slightest. This is the strongest argument that there is only one timeline and it's proven so in this episode.



Yes they can be because we don't see them both exist. We see one timeline changed and changed again.



And I think you are using alternate timeline to make reference to any change due to time travel. But have we really witnessed this? As I mentioned in First Contact the timeline changed before the crew's eyes. If this had created an alternate timeline then this wouldn't have happened.



What is alternate though when he returned? Kirk was there but what is there to say it's an alternate timeline?



No, I'm creating a paradox.
You are talking about time travel in terms of a predestination paradox, which was best illustrated in TNG's "Time's Arrow," where they found Data's head in a cave, then Data later went to the past and lost his head, which would later be found in the cave. Obviously, the time travel in that episode did not create an alternate timeline, but rather was part of a causality loop, where future events caused past events, which in turn led to the same future events. So it would be acurate to say all events happened in the same timeline, since history was never changed.
Ok then but why can you argue that time travel creates an alternate timeline but this one doesn't? If we follow your argument there simply cannot be a predestination paradox as alternate timelines would be created. That's changing the rules.

But just because you saw all those events on your same television doesn't mean they're all part of the same timeline.
Well I completely disagree. It would be pointless to try and preserve Star Trek Canon if an alternate timeline gave them a way out each time. Even B&B said they were sticking to canon and any errors were mistakes, not alternate timelines. The agenda has been to preserve what is known and seen. This is not the case with the new movie after the events of Nero's time travel.
no the rift was created in both timelines it was picard's an yar's choice to or send the ship back, In both timelines the ship was missing/presumed destroyed, or actually destroyed. The only thing that changed was the circumstances around that outcome, which caused a ripple effect which moved everyone into a new branch of the multi-verse.

More to the point Berman and Braga are no longer in charge of Trek so the rules change as we now have a new Man in Charge, just like when a new manager takes over a business he may make changes to policy, Abrams, Orci and Kurtzman are the new keepers of Trek so we have to abide by their rules, not pigeon hole them into what came before from a man who forgot what Trek was about.

Saul you really need to read up on Parrallel Universe Theory.

The use of this theory doesn't exclued Predestination paradoxes. Time is very fluid. We are also firmly rooted to watching one specific choice set in Star Trek, they aren't hopping around the multi-verse and watching ever Enterprise, I'm sure there is a Universe where Date never went back in time, or Data never lost his head, or there simply WAS NO DATA...

There is a universe that exists where I didn't get up and go to work this morning.
 
I'll do some research on it and get back to you.

No need. I have all of the relevant documentation ranging from Relative State Formulation of Quantum Mechanics by Hugh Everett (Rev. Mod. Phys. 29, 454–462 (1957)) and The Many-Worlds Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics by Bryce S. DeWitt & Neill Graham (Princeton University Press, 1973) to more recent papers such as Many Worlds: See Me here, See Me There (Nature 448, 15–17 (2007)). However, after half century of the theory's existence I have still not encountered a serious proposal to actually test it experimentally, and if Abrams et al are going to invoke MWI in ST:XI I daresay it is very likely going to date the film as badly as the (now more or less discredited) Steady-State Cosmology Theory dates the TAS episode The Magicks of Megas-Tu.

TGT
 
I have a new theory that might make some sense as well as make up for some TOS inconsistencies.

I'm beginning to think this is a causality loop here.

-Nero goes back in time and destroys the USS Kelvin creating an alternate timeline.
-In this timeline, the characters have much different lives including a kirk who does not go to the academy until he runs into Pike and an Enterprise that is built 15-20 years later. The being built later earns Enterprise a 1700 level registry.
-Nero attacks Vulcan while destroying 47 Klingon ships along the way. In respsonse starfleet command deploys all current cadets to operational commands. Kirk is not picked but Bones helps him board the enterprise.
-Stowaway cadet kirk tires to warn Pike and spock that its a trap and is exciled to the ice planet where he meets Scotty and old spock.
-Kirks warning not acted upon, like the Klingons the bulk of the federation fleet is destroyed by Nero.
-Kirk with Scotty's help manages to get back up on the Enterprise.
-The Enterprise arrives at Vulcan to find Nero's drill plans almost complete.
-Whether Kirk mamages to stop Nero or not the damage to the timeline is too severe. Kirk, now having assumed command of the ship seeks old Spock's help to travel back to where the timeline diverged. He must stop Nero from destroying the Kelvin. In doing so, Kirk sacrifices the Enterprise
-After hearing of the gallant way that this mysterious starship saved the Kelvin, Starfleet names the second ship of the new Constition-class project Enterprise, although offically after Archer's NX-01 and previous US Navy ships. The incident is considered highly classifed and never publically revealed. This ship, the one we know is launched in 2245.
-The first batch of ships are given 1700-series registrations while later ships are given more time appropriate registires. This would explain ships like the Eagle (NCC-956) and Constellation (NCC-1017) given much lower registry numbers than the Constitution's NCC-1700.
-George Kirk raises his son to be top notch starfleet officer.
-The movie ends in the restored timline with Kirk assuming command of the Enteprise from Pike.
 
I have a new theory that might make some sense as well as make up for some TOS inconsistencies.

I'm beginning to think this is a causality loop here.

[...] In doing so, Kirk sacrifices the Enterprise
-After hearing of the gallant way that this mysterious starship saved the Kelvin, Starfleet names the second ship of the new Constition-class project Enterprise, although offically after Archer's NX-01 and previous US Navy ships. The incident is considered highly classifed and never publically revealed. This ship, the one we know is launched in 2245.
-The first batch of ships are given 1700-series registrations while later ships are given more time appropriate registires. This would explain ships like the Eagle (NCC-956) and Constellation (NCC-1017) given much lower registry numbers than the Constitution's NCC-1700.
-George Kirk raises his son to be top notch starfleet officer.
-The movie ends in the restored timline with Kirk assuming command of the Enteprise from Pike.
Your theory sucks! No one except for a few fanboys would be interested in that. The new timeline will not be restored to fit the old show, that's ridiculous.
 
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