I read it about 40 years ago. How exactly does that relate to common practices of TV production? We are talking about a TV show, right?
I have no problems whatsoever if the original creators for whatever reasons make a premise change. It's their baby, their prerogative and privilege. The problem I'm having - obviously - is the apparent prominent methodology many Star Trek fans apply defining canon, i.e. it's not the revision (usually by others than the original creators) that requires rationalization (and can often be attributed to lackluster research efforts or bias or worse) but the original premise that has been altered.
The dystopian world of
1984 describes how people are systematically deprived of their knowledge of history by having that history constantly rewritten and altered. Captain Kirk is a kind of hero. Who's to say that the next production in "our" fictional universe doesn't turn him into a despicable child killer (that's what happened with Darth Vader):
"The new supersedes the old"
Thus, considering Star Trek promotes utopian ethics, applying dystopian methodology in our pseudoscientific treknological rationalization efforts somehow doesn't look compatible to say the least.
Regarding the Memory Alpha quote you provided, it has been written by Memory Alpha contributors / fans which is as relevant as
Greg Jein's original treatise where the Enterprise became a Constitution Class starship to make his pet theory work.
The phaser schematic remains inconclusive. This is the part these fans use to arrive at their conclusion:
KHAN: Captain, I wonder if I could have something to read during my convalescence. I was once an engineer of sorts. I would be most interested in studying the technical manuals on your vessel.
And here is the scene (featuring the phaser schematic!) these fans prefer to ignore:
KHAN: I've been reading up on starships, but they have one luxury not mentioned in the manuals.
Khan is studying more than just the manual of the
Enterprise, he is reading the manuals of other starships as well (obviously including the Constitution Class).
And how do we know that Enterprise doesn't belong to the Constitution Class? Because the creators refer in
The Making of Star Trek - written after "Space Seed" - twice to the "Enterprise [Starship] Class" and not to a "Constitution Class".
@ J.T.B.
I don't need to assume what the first two registry digits stand for, because the creator of the
Enterprise, Walter Matt Jefferies made that obvious in his TOS pre-production sketch, IMHO:
And for the context of TOS and into the first films it works perfectly (
Constellation notwithstanding, plausible rationalizations possible):
17th design series - Enterprise Class
18th design series - Miranda Class
19h design series - Soyuz Class
20th design series - Excelsior Class
From the starship status chart in "Court-Martial" we also know there are starships with a "16" prefix belonging to the 16th design series.
And we have several of these "16" prefixes attributed to Constitution Class starships. This obviously suggests that the 16th design series would be the Constitution Class (hence my
BillJ obviously finds fault with).
@ BillJ
Do you really believe I'm aiming for a definitive "win"? In a Star Trek forum? Here at the BBS?
No, I'm presenting an solution to a riddle which I believe answers the most questions and doesn't give raise to new ones.
You are free to regard this with approval, disapproval, or indifference.
Was it ever confirmed that USS Constitution was NCC-1700?
No. It simply happened that Greg Jein and Franz Joseph, for reasons I'm unaware of, both felt that NCC-1700 should be the registration of the
Constitution.
Frankly, that reminds me of the analogy that in the land of the blind the one-eyed-man is king. But even if two one-eyed-men see the same thing, it still doesn't mean their vision is accurate.
Bob