Then what did Spock Prime admit to falsely implying?
That his meeting himself would cause a
dangerous paradox of some kind.
Lets look at this.
A Paradox has to be
possible before it can be
dangerous.
To be
possible, time must be linear.
Is it your contention that cause and effect does not apply?
How did you come to that conclusion?
That has absolutely nothing to do with whether he comes from an alternate universe or not.
It speaks to a knowledge about how time travel and alternate realities
work, and simple causality makes a Paradox impossible.
What viable, logical alternative is actually left?
There's a difference between violating causality and asserting that there's some inherent danger in doing so.
Violating causality causes a Paradox, which is aphysical impossibility.
If it is physically impossible, it simply cannot happen.
Therefore, time cannot be linear in nature.
This being the case, we have in-universe evidence of a Multiverse.
Spock already violated causality at least once by affecting his early life in "Yesteryear."
This is via the Guardian of Forever, and if time is
linear, then the Guardian simply allowed him to create a predestination causality loop.
What Spock admits to implying is the danger of time travel.
Which leads to Time Travel
not being dangerous, leading to a non-linear timestream; a multiverse then becomes the only explanation.
He says nothing about what whether he believes or is certain that he's traveled into an alternate past.
Remembering a different past for Kirk (where he knew his father) actually
shows this in a self-evident way.
He certainly doesn't suggest that he's lied to Kirk or anyone else about his point of origin.
No. He
implied that Time was linear, and that a Paradox was possible.
Therefore, he
knew this not to be true.
Cause and effect would need to be broken before the movie can cause a linear timeline alteration.
He says that Kirk inferred that there would be some terrible result from the paradox of Spock meeting nuSpock.
The very Paradox that can only be possible in a
linear time stream.
Except - who says that it's dangerous or "world ending" for a character to meet himself in the past? It's happened in the past in Star Trek without cataclysm, and happens all the time in other sf.
In those instances, things have generally been portrayed as being part of what must be.
Since Parallels shows that a Multiverse is Canon, we cannot discount it as a logically presented alternative to linear time.
Spock at no point addresses or treats nuSpock as if they are not one and the same person at different points in their life.
This implies that their past is presumably the same. The divergence in 2233 supports this.
Quite the opposite: "But you can be in two places at the same time;" "My customary farewell would seem self-serving."
He's talking on a personal level, not a scientific one.
My purpose, Christopher,
Is to not simply avoid the destruction of the home that I love...
But to create a Romulus that exists, free of the Federation.
You see only then will she be truly saved.
Nobody implied that a Miner, Nero, would have advanced multidimentional physics knowledge.
He is also quite mad.
129 years from now, a star will explode
and threaten to destroy the galaxy.
That is where I'm from Jim.
The future.
Again, a ruse on Spock Prime's part, or a simplification so that Kirk understands.
Someone who hasn't been briefed on the screenwriters carefully publicized "explanation" of events would have no reason to find anything in this movie other than a time-travel story. One passing use of the phrase "alternate reality" - which has no actual, fixed meaning with regard to the existence of multiple universes - is the only sop thrown to the whole "alternate universe" conceit. Even in the scene where nuSpock uses that phrase, he suggests that Nero is from the future, not "a" future.
MCCOY: Are you actually suggesting they're from the future?
SPOCK: If you eliminate the impossible, what ever remains, however improbable...
nuSpock's not at all clear on what's implied by an alternate reality, BTW. He says that "Whatever our lives might have been, if the time continuum was disrupted...our destinies have changed." Again, there's no suggestion there that Nero's from some other continuum or that other versions of Spock and friends are continuing along some other destiny somewhere else.
So, Uhura summizes an Alternate Reality upon hearing that destinies have changed, and that implies a simple random term?
No. She means something specific, and Spock responds "Precisely".
So, assuming they are both referring to related aspects of something, what something would have the following attributes?
- Changed Destinies
- Be termed "Alternate Reality"
Destiny change = non-linear events = time being non-linear in some way.
Therefore, causality has no effect here (physically impossible in a linear timeline), leading to either a Paradox or something else.
An "Alternate Reality" implies that there is more than one reality, otherwise Alternate to what?
She did not say Alternate Events, she said Alternate Reality.
This is a classic term for Different (Alternate) Universe (Physical Reality).