Lets not forget that Gothos was a mobile planet and could watch just about any time period it wanted to just my moving closer or further away. Trelaine simply didn't take that into account.
JAEGER: Notice the period, Captain. Nine hundred light years from Earth. It's what might be seen through a viewing scope if it were powerful enough.
TRELANE: Ah, yes. I've been looking in on the doings on your lively little Earth.
KIRK: Then you've been looking in on the doings nine hundred years past.
Speaking of which, I'm a little confused regarding the status of Alpha Centauri. Alpha Centauri IV and VII have both been described as planets populated by the "Centauran/Centaurian" culture, which came before the current, main novel continuity. In the current continuity, which seems to have ignored the native Centaurans, Alpha Centauri III is also said to be settled by humans, with New Samarkand as its capital. So is Alpha Centauri III the only inhabited world of that system in the current continuity?I found it an overly contrived and self-conscious way of rationalizing the existence of an Alpha Centaurian civilization. Don't get me wrong, those were excellent books, but the "native Centaurians" thing never worked for me.The Reeves-Stevenses did develop some interesting things regarding the Alpha Centaurans, in Memory Alpha and Prime Directive, describing a technologically advanced culture so concerned with maintaining a low profile that the Earth expedition only discovered the high-tech civilization at Sol's nearest neighbour as it was entering into planetary orbit, the Centaurans later melding well with the Terrans, et cetera. I live happily enough without them, but it is just interesting.
Speaking of which, I'm a little confused regarding the status of Alpha Centauri. Alpha Centauri IV and VII have both been described as planets populated by the "Centauran/Centaurian" culture, which came before the current, main novel continuity. In the current continuity, which seems to have ignored the native Centaurans, Alpha Centauri III is also said to be settled by humans, with New Samarkand as its capital. So is Alpha Centauri III the only inhabited world of that system in the current continuity?I found it an overly contrived and self-conscious way of rationalizing the existence of an Alpha Centaurian civilization. Don't get me wrong, those were excellent books, but the "native Centaurians" thing never worked for me.The Reeves-Stevenses did develop some interesting things regarding the Alpha Centaurans, in Memory Alpha and Prime Directive, describing a technologically advanced culture so concerned with maintaining a low profile that the Earth expedition only discovered the high-tech civilization at Sol's nearest neighbour as it was entering into planetary orbit, the Centaurans later melding well with the Terrans, et cetera. I live happily enough without them, but it is just interesting.
There are two class-M planets in the Alpha Centauri system, Centauri III orbiting A and Centauri VII orbiting B. (There are at least seven planets orbiting A and B combined, I think--Centauri VII is the second planet of B, A having five planets.)
I don't see why the arrangement of the real-life Alpha Centauri solar system has to have anything to do with the version in the ficticious Star Trek universe.
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