Unless Spock Prime or someone else went and dug it up, it's still there.
Sounds like you're misremembering Time's Arrow. Contrary to the way causality is usually presented in Star Trek, the Data's head thing was presented as an ontological paradox or a closed causal loop where the time travel incident was triggered by the discovery of Data's head, which was only there because of the time travel incident.Nothing was magically deleted from the timeline. Unless Spock Prime or someone else went and dug it up, it's still there.
Sounds like you're misremembering Time's Arrow.
Scrawny71 said:I don't recall any reference to the creation of an alternate timeline.
Scrawny71 said:A simpler answer is that it's a 40-year-old franchise where the fantasy physics quite rightly exist just to tell whichever story you happen to be experiencing at a given time.![]()
Read my posts, Set. and if you're going to reply then this time at least address one of my points. In your last post you were too busy pontificating on a logically fallacious position, strawmanning the second part of my post that you quoted and taking the first opportunity you could for infantile sarcasm. None of these constitutes a meaningful or remotely considered reply, or anything but a waste of everyone's time and energy.
Okay, enough - there's no need to make it personal.Read my posts, Set. and if you're going to reply then this time at least address one of my points. In your last post you were too busy pontificating on a logically fallacious position, strawmanning the second part of my post that you quoted and taking the first opportunity you could for infantile sarcasm. None of these constitutes a meaningful or remotely considered reply, or anything but a waste of everyone's time and energy.
It's only a waste of time because of your apparent determination to follow the strategy illustrated above, despite the fact that I'm holding your hand and walking you through the sequence of events. Nothing in the above flailing addresses the point: the magical disappearance of Data's head for no reason at all when Nero goes back in time, which is the "logically fallacious" position. Whatever it is you're using to come to that conclusion, it isn't logic. You may be unable to see the contradiction of your position as "meaningful", but it does in fact have meaning. It's just that you don't approve of that meaning, so you're simply being blatantly dishonest.
They should just have nuPicard, nuJaneway and nuSisko all show up in Kirk's time, with no explanation whatsoever. It'd be fun just for the online reaction.
It was the same right up until the Narada arrived in 2233, including all he visits from the Prime future. Branching universes. Many-worlds theory. Spock says it. The writers said it. The novels back it up.Since the NuUniverse was separate all along then any of Prime Trek's visits to the past wouldn't be in the NuUniverse's past, including First Contact, and not even Enterprise is as certifiably canon in this universe because of that.
Since the NuUniverse was separate all along then any of Prime Trek's visits to the past wouldn't be in the NuUniverse's past, including First Contact, and not even Enterprise is as certifiably canon in this universe because of that.
Well then like in Back To The Future any physical evidence of the Primers past visits would disappear including old newspapers.
Since "Watching the Clock" is set a few years prior to the supernova, and Prime universe peeps wouldn't know the STXI alternate from any of the other infinite billions, it doesn't overtly mention it. But, there is a hypothetical discussion at one point about black holes, one-way time travel and alternate realties.What does Watchin the Clock says happened?
Is Enterprise still relevant?
Is it an altered timeline or a mirror universe of of sorts. I mean the Abramverse.
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