Do you think it's weird that the Federation keeps standard time aboard vessels and stations such as 100 hours, 1200 hours, 2200 hours?
We keep track of time as it is relative to the cycle of the planet we live on. It's an obvious method of organizing our activities to measure our days.
But in space, where there is no cycle to keep track of, why use Earth hours? Why use a cyclical time system at all to track the on-goings of a star ship?
There are moments where a crewman asks another, "why are you up so late at night?" But there is no night or day on a star ship. Therefore, you cannot be "up late" because time would not be defined by the rise of the sun or moon.
Further, how are Star dates and years defined? A year is a complete rotation around the sun for a planet but a station or a starship is not bound by any rotations.
Maybe humans use Earth to help keep track of their own time but why would non-human crew be forced to keep track of time using conventional Earth standards? Why would Earth time mean anything to a Vulcan or a Klingon? Ocampa's only live 9 years, apparently, but is that Earth years or Ocampa years? What if Ocampa years are equal to 5 Earth years? So and Ocampa would actually live 45 years in Earth terms.
I know in DS9 the station seems to run on a 26 hour set up which shows that not everyone is forced to abide by Earth standard, but that's hardly stretching the imagination.
And would there be a need for a person to have an age if time was not measured by planetary cycles? I wonder if people would be defined as just infant, toddler, child, adolescent, young adult, adult, and elder.
btw: I know they did this just to keep things simple on the show but in reality, I wonder just how time really would be kept on a vessel such as the Enterprise or a station such a DS9?
Have I blown anyone's mind yet or has this been figured out already?
We keep track of time as it is relative to the cycle of the planet we live on. It's an obvious method of organizing our activities to measure our days.
But in space, where there is no cycle to keep track of, why use Earth hours? Why use a cyclical time system at all to track the on-goings of a star ship?
There are moments where a crewman asks another, "why are you up so late at night?" But there is no night or day on a star ship. Therefore, you cannot be "up late" because time would not be defined by the rise of the sun or moon.
Further, how are Star dates and years defined? A year is a complete rotation around the sun for a planet but a station or a starship is not bound by any rotations.
Maybe humans use Earth to help keep track of their own time but why would non-human crew be forced to keep track of time using conventional Earth standards? Why would Earth time mean anything to a Vulcan or a Klingon? Ocampa's only live 9 years, apparently, but is that Earth years or Ocampa years? What if Ocampa years are equal to 5 Earth years? So and Ocampa would actually live 45 years in Earth terms.
I know in DS9 the station seems to run on a 26 hour set up which shows that not everyone is forced to abide by Earth standard, but that's hardly stretching the imagination.
And would there be a need for a person to have an age if time was not measured by planetary cycles? I wonder if people would be defined as just infant, toddler, child, adolescent, young adult, adult, and elder.
btw: I know they did this just to keep things simple on the show but in reality, I wonder just how time really would be kept on a vessel such as the Enterprise or a station such a DS9?
Have I blown anyone's mind yet or has this been figured out already?