Charles, is there some reason you're ignoring my repeated questions about whether you're proposing a human progenitor or a humanoid one?
Err, no, not even close. I think you're conflating the two very different categories of what the Federation has explored (which, according to the TNG series bible, was about 19% of the entire galaxy as of the beginning of that series) and what actually constitutes its territory. It should be easily understandable that those are two very different things. Heck, right now we've got space probes exploring Mercury, Vesta, and the moons of Saturn, but that doesn't make those locations part of United States or European territory.
If anything, ST is clearly in a galaxy that's overloaded with sentient species. Just look at all the multispecies crowd scenes in various movies and shows, all the one-shot aliens we never see again. There's obviously no shortage of life in the Trek galaxy.
What?? Once again, you seem to be talking about two entirely unrelated subjects as if they're the same thing. What does the size of the galaxy have to do with the longevity of a culture?
That is a very strange, sad notion. Learning isn't something that's supposed to stop when you get to a certain point. It's a lifelong process. And since the universe is always changing around you, it would be suicidal to refuse to change with it. Stagnation is a strategy for extinction, not eternal existence. And it would really, really suck to be immortal and have every day be exactly like every other day. It wouldn't be a life worth having at all, let alone forever.
Well, culture changes and evolves far more swiftly than genes do. Even cultures that claim to be perpetuating ancient traditions are usually far more mutable than they pretend. At the very least they go through cycles as the balance between conflicting forces within them shifts back and forth.
But yes, Star Trek already has a bit of a "small galaxy" feel in that it covers a quarter of the galaxy in the Federation and it's only a hundred inhabited planets. Meaning, despite appearances, the galaxy is a largely vastly uninhabited place filled with lots of barren rock.
Err, no, not even close. I think you're conflating the two very different categories of what the Federation has explored (which, according to the TNG series bible, was about 19% of the entire galaxy as of the beginning of that series) and what actually constitutes its territory. It should be easily understandable that those are two very different things. Heck, right now we've got space probes exploring Mercury, Vesta, and the moons of Saturn, but that doesn't make those locations part of United States or European territory.
If anything, ST is clearly in a galaxy that's overloaded with sentient species. Just look at all the multispecies crowd scenes in various movies and shows, all the one-shot aliens we never see again. There's obviously no shortage of life in the Trek galaxy.
Privately, I tend to like the "small galaxy" postulation because I prefer the idea that somehow humans will make it to be beings like the Q and will remain until the end of this wonderful universe of ours.
What?? Once again, you seem to be talking about two entirely unrelated subjects as if they're the same thing. What does the size of the galaxy have to do with the longevity of a culture?
I'm not particularly bothered by cultures which can potentially exist forever as well either since presumably after you reach a certain age you will cease to change because you've accumulated a certain amount of wisdom.
That is a very strange, sad notion. Learning isn't something that's supposed to stop when you get to a certain point. It's a lifelong process. And since the universe is always changing around you, it would be suicidal to refuse to change with it. Stagnation is a strategy for extinction, not eternal existence. And it would really, really suck to be immortal and have every day be exactly like every other day. It wouldn't be a life worth having at all, let alone forever.
Besides, culture is what matters to me as opposed to genetic legacy.
Well, culture changes and evolves far more swiftly than genes do. Even cultures that claim to be perpetuating ancient traditions are usually far more mutable than they pretend. At the very least they go through cycles as the balance between conflicting forces within them shifts back and forth.