Dude, we still debate the length of the TOS Enteprise.. what do you think that chart, made by a fan, proves? :P
Heh. Even the TMP Enterprise's length is also debatable as well if you had to build it out

Dude, we still debate the length of the TOS Enteprise.. what do you think that chart, made by a fan, proves? :P
That's true of every version of Star Trek. Yet trying to figure out how all the pretend spaceships may or may not work is fun.Wingsley said:in essence, the size of the various JJ space vessels in the 2009 movie is pretty much irrelevant, isn't it?
Ditto TOS and TNG, or any series and Enterprise. Trek writers have always treated it like a mythology, where they can pick and choose what bits to follow and which to ignore, rather than the strict canon many fans obsess over. For technical details, TOS and TMP don't add up at all, and they're only a few pretend years apart. The TOS writers never envisioned TNG, ENT or STXI's USS Kelvin (which pre-dates Nero's time tampering) when they were writing or designing the show, but they're all part of Trek's 45-year-old shared universe.there's an old-school TREK, and now a Gen Y TREK, and the two seen only very vaguely related.
or STXI's USS Kelvin (which pre-dates Nero's time tampering)
Nero drops in 2230's which affects TOS that has at least two episodes where they go back in time to the 1960s and once to 1930s. By not restoring the timeline then that affects the past as much as the future and puts the whole thing in another continuity. Of course which continuity they started from is anyone's guess - how did Kirk die in the "Prime" continuity?![]()
or STXI's USS Kelvin (which pre-dates Nero's time tampering)
Any time tampering in Star Trek has repercussions that can pre-date it, especially if the intent is to leave (or follow) the altered timeline (and continuity) in place.
Nero drops in 2230's which affects TOS that has at least two episodes where they go back in time to the 1960s and once to 1930s. By not restoring the timeline then that affects the past as much as the future and puts the whole thing in another continuity. Of course which continuity they started from is anyone's guess - how did Kirk die in the "Prime" continuity?![]()
or STXI's USS Kelvin (which pre-dates Nero's time tampering)
Any time tampering in Star Trek has repercussions that can pre-date it, especially if the intent is to leave (or follow) the altered timeline (and continuity) in place.
Nero drops in 2230's which affects TOS that has at least two episodes where they go back in time to the 1960s and once to 1930s. By not restoring the timeline then that affects the past as much as the future and puts the whole thing in another continuity. Of course which continuity they started from is anyone's guess - how did Kirk die in the "Prime" continuity?![]()
Those are paradoxes, which don't exist if the multiverse all branches from a shared past, as the STXI writers say (a branching multiverse fits most of Trek's prior time travel stories, too). If the timeline changed as you say, then Nero and Spock Prime would have erased themselves the minute history changed.
Dukhat said:But in two of those instances, the Enterprise crew weren't supposed to have been there in the first place, and had to take actions to restore things back to normal. Now, the very high possibility that they will never be there at all just keeps everything normal anyway. And as for Gary Seven, I'm sure he would be able to accomplish his mission without Kirk's help. As long as the outcome is the same, the miniscule differences probably won't matter in the end.
And as for your second question: Kirk Prime died on Veridian III.![]()
I'm confused here:
Wasn't the JJ Abrams' 2009 movie the ultimate repudiation of both canon and any previously established tendency in TREK toward any kind of technical logic of any kind?
No.
Primarily because canon and technical logic only hold the importance they do for a small, esoteric subset of trek fans. If anything it's a (highly successful) attempt to repudiate the practice of pandering to an elite fanbase at the expense of alienating a broader audience. So no expense has been provided and little official sanction has been given for technical details other than the most bare bones details of the film. On some level even JJ Abrams knows that the fans will fill in the blanks with their own imaginations anyway, and we're probably better off for it: people who care will commit their imaginations to it (as we are doing right here and now in this thread) and people who don't care about the details don't have to.
That only works if you almost everything said or done in the movie!blssdwlf said:Or Nero and Spock are from the altered universe and things are happening as they should relative to them but they don't know it![]()
It wouldn't, because the various timeline branches are always and equally there. Thus in the shared past of the multiverse, Kirk Prim still watches Edith Keeler die, Quark Rom, Odo and Nog crash in Roswell 1944, Spock Prime melds with whales in the 80's, Janeway stops Henry Starling in 1996 (note two Braxtons from alternate futures) and Picard and co. still stop the Borg at First Contact. They're ghosts from a future that (from STXI's POV) won't come to pass - just as Daniels (whose timeline diverged at "Shockwave") and Old Janeway from "Endgame" are to Enterprise and Voyager.If you're arguing that the past version was always the "Prime" Trek then the timeline would have to be restored for that argument to work![]()
But were things restored back to normal? When they went back to the 30's, McCoy's phaser kills a man. That was never undone. In the 60's, the Enterprise's appearance as a radar contact triggered a scramble alert from an AFB with Christopher. By not appearing that would've altered history as well - they might have been meant to be there to be part of history. And without Kirk and Spock interfering with Gary Seven, his secretary might never have known about what was going on triggering another series of differences.
I agree that the outcome would likely be the same, but the minuscule differences would add up to the variations we see between the many series and movies.
As to answering my second question, then was the aired TNG episodes in the "non-Prime" universe?
That only works if you almost everything said or done in the movie!blssdwlf said:Or Nero and Spock are from the altered universe and things are happening as they should relative to them but they don't know it![]()
![]()
It wouldn't, because the various timeline branches are always and equally there.If you're arguing that the past version was always the "Prime" Trek then the timeline would have to be restored for that argument to work![]()
Thus in the shared past of the multiverse, Kirk Prim still watches Edith Keeler die, Quark Rom, Odo and Nog crash in Roswell 1944, Spock Prime melds with whales in the 80's, Janeway stops Henry Starling in 1996 (note two Braxtons from alternate futures) and Picard and co. still stop the Borg at First Contact. They're ghosts from a future that (from STXI's POV) won't come to pass - just as Daniels (whose timeline diverged at "Shockwave") and Old Janeway from "Endgame" are to Enterprise and Voyager.
But were things restored back to normal? When they went back to the 30's, McCoy's phaser kills a man. That was never undone. In the 60's, the Enterprise's appearance as a radar contact triggered a scramble alert from an AFB with Christopher. By not appearing that would've altered history as well - they might have been meant to be there to be part of history. And without Kirk and Spock interfering with Gary Seven, his secretary might never have known about what was going on triggering another series of differences.
Maybe, but think of it this way. That episode of DS9 (I can't remember the name at the moment) where that Bajoran solar sailor/poet from the past returns and challenges Sisko for the title of "True Emissary." When the guy returns to the past, history is changed and he ends up writing some extra stanzas to his poem. However, in that instance a new timeline/alternate universe wasn't created and didn't continue from that point on, because Kira remembered the old poem that didn't have the extra stanzas and now acknowledges that it's different.
Perhaps in the fictional story known as "Star Trek," very miniscule changes in the timeline do not automatically create a new universe.
... therefore not caused any significant change to the timeline.
As I stated above, I don't quite agree with that.I agree that the outcome would likely be the same, but the minuscule differences would add up to the variations we see between the many series and movies.
Maybe I missed something you said earlier, but why do you think "Generations" took place in the non-Prime universe?As to answering my second question, then was the aired TNG episodes in the "non-Prime" universe?
Actually, I replied that if you believe Kirk to have died on Veridian III as seen in "Generations" to be of the "Prime" universe, then the TNG series "Relics" episode would suggest that at least parts of TNG are not in the "Prime" universe.SCOTT: The Enterprise? I should have known. I bet Jim Kirk himself hauled the old girl out of mothballs to come looking for me.
Saying it must be an alternate universe simply because it's not how you envisioned the pre-TOS era is utterly preposterous.
What's preposterous is to assume to know what the "Prime" universe is given all the different incarnations of Star Trek and the lack of cohesion between series and movies. Is the "Prime" universe the same as TOS? Or TMP? Or TNG? Or "Generations"? Or Voyager? Or the whole of Star Trek which is not possible unless you consider a single timeline that is constantly being overwritten which would instantly make STXI an altered "single" timeline before Nero arrived once there was no attempt to restore the timeline since no one in the future ever went back to the past the same way
What's funny is that I wouldn't have cared if the new movie was a complete reboot. Star Trek as it has been presented for 40 years was dead anyway. And you're right. There'd be far less discussion. And fights.On the other hand, there would be less discussion if it were handled like comic books and simply rebooted like how Superman is.
or STXI's USS Kelvin (which pre-dates Nero's time tampering)
Any time tampering in Star Trek has repercussions that can pre-date it, especially if the intent is to leave (or follow) the altered timeline (and continuity) in place.
Nero drops in 2230's which affects TOS that has at least two episodes where they go back in time to the 1960s and once to 1930s. By not restoring the timeline then that affects the past as much as the future and puts the whole thing in another continuity. Of course which continuity they started from is anyone's guess - how did Kirk die in the "Prime" continuity?![]()
Those are paradoxes, which don't exist if the multiverse all branches from a shared past, as the STXI writers say (a branching multiverse fits most of Trek's prior time travel stories, too). If the timeline changed as you say, then Nero and Spock Prime would have erased themselves the minute history changed.
I'm confused here:
Wasn't the JJ Abrams' 2009 movie the ultimate repudiation of both canon and any previously established tendency in TREK toward any kind of technical logic of any kind?
No.
Primarily because canon and technical logic only hold the importance they do for a small, esoteric subset of trek fans. If anything it's a (highly successful) attempt to repudiate the practice of pandering to an elite fanbase at the expense of alienating a broader audience. So no expense has been provided and little official sanction has been given for technical details other than the most bare bones details of the film. On some level even JJ Abrams knows that the fans will fill in the blanks with their own imaginations anyway, and we're probably better off for it: people who care will commit their imaginations to it (as we are doing right here and now in this thread) and people who don't care about the details don't have to.
Well, this is even more confusing. You say "no" and then you expand on your answer which is essentially a "yes".
But at the end of the day, a common reference point needs to be made so that people who are watching the movie who may not know the intricacies of TOS like we do (and I'm guessing there were a LOT of people like that who bought tickets) can understand that there was at least a show called "Star Trek" and that this movie is a continuation of that show (and old Spock is the same guy from that show), up until Nero changes things.
I've said this repeatedly: If the movie already took place in an alternate universe from the one we saw in TOS, then why bother creating yet another one?
Kal-L is from the Pre Crisis Earth-Two.
STXI is just another parallel universe that some has decided to chronicle, IMO.
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