Re: Probert's REAL N.C.C.-1701-C
Stories that rely heavily on time travel and convoluted sci-fi logic always open up more possibilities and divided opinions than any other type, not least because so much of it boils down to subjective interpretation. It is perhaps the episode's greatest weakness, saved only by it also being a strong character piece (with the logical gymnastics being only a vehicle to get the story going).
As a stand-alone episode in Season 3, mere time travel was undoubtedly the creators' intent, despite the S/T continuum mess it made. However, from the perspective of Season 7, with episodes like Parallels and Redemption to add the mix (not to mention other pan-dimensional weirdness that the crew encountered), the presence of other realities are at least a possibility. After all, in the original YE Tasha was never intended to survive, that only came later (complete with Marty McFly style DNA). Since it turns out she did survive, her point of origin being a close parallel universe seems a lot stronger than a temporary reality which stopped existing the second she left.
YMMV. All this is just opinion, after all
Stories that rely heavily on time travel and convoluted sci-fi logic always open up more possibilities and divided opinions than any other type, not least because so much of it boils down to subjective interpretation. It is perhaps the episode's greatest weakness, saved only by it also being a strong character piece (with the logical gymnastics being only a vehicle to get the story going).
The E-C we got was the real C. The passage was through time, not dimensions/universes. The other timeline didn't count because it was created when the E-C left its time. And as for (ALT)Tasha, most likely protected from her timeline erasure when she went back with E-C. It wouldn't be the first time it happened (ST:FC).
As a stand-alone episode in Season 3, mere time travel was undoubtedly the creators' intent, despite the S/T continuum mess it made. However, from the perspective of Season 7, with episodes like Parallels and Redemption to add the mix (not to mention other pan-dimensional weirdness that the crew encountered), the presence of other realities are at least a possibility. After all, in the original YE Tasha was never intended to survive, that only came later (complete with Marty McFly style DNA). Since it turns out she did survive, her point of origin being a close parallel universe seems a lot stronger than a temporary reality which stopped existing the second she left.
YMMV. All this is just opinion, after all
