Thanks for the double posts, Warped9. they need reading more carefully.
Well, for me, even TMP gets shunted to the wayside but those are my own personal issues....I'm focused on TOS-TAS-TMP and everything after doesn't matter. Even so I do address issues in TNG.
I agree with this in that I do think the original was purposely steered away from its roots and only with reluctance had to acknowledge them due to fan resistance of the abandonment. How much this is from Gerrold's views and Roddenberry's desire to sideline any credit involvement of the previous series and writers is another matter. I swear, the man would have claimed credit for the invention of fire if he thought any would believe him.OR you're stuck with accepting that TNG is a variation on the Star Trek concept that is set apart and not consistent enough with TOS to be credible.
No, I don't subscribe to that idea. However, I'm not hostile to the idea put forth by some many years ago that interstellar space has difficult to detect variables that can affect warp values. It's a similar concept that the speed of sound on Earth depends on altitude and atmospheric density.Warped9, I only have a couple of minutes (not enough time to read all your long post), so I'll ask:
Does your theory include the concept common in Treknology of "warp highways" (ie, areas where subspace is less dense, making warp drives more efficient and much faster in terms of absolute speed than "normal" areas)? It is sometimes referred to as the "chi" factor.
I know you aren't a fan of post TOS Trek, but there is evidence in both Voyager and Enterprise that indirectly supports the "warp highway" theory...
An interesting table, and nicely presented. I wish you luck, however, trying to resolve the incredibly inconsistent manner in which the series and movies have handled all of this!
And its disappearance "150 years ago" comes from the episode "Time Trap."
The Bonaventure mentioned in “Time Trap” is said to have been the first ship with warp drive that disappeared on its third voyage 150 years earlier. This seems rather inconsistent with the established reference that the Valiant, a “galactic survey cruiser,” disappeared about two centuries prior to WNMHGB. That’s a fifty year inconsistency. However, it’s also possible that the Bonaventure is indeed the first ship with a recognized space warp drive that does predate the Valiant, but that the Bonaventure was some decades old when it finally vanished. A ship with rather low warp capability could have had voyages that were years long in duration such that it still could have disappeared on its third major voyage. The situation at the time could also be blurred by history in regards to when it became known the ship was actually overdue and missing and accepted as lost.
There is also the problem of the Bonaventure being larger and seemingly more advanced than the Enterprise to a certain degree, and bears not only Starfleet registry, a construction ethic very similar to the Constitution class, but a 5 digit NCC, well above the 1701 registry of the Enterprise.
TAS added a great deal to TOS lore. And in truth there are really only a few things and a few stories that are difficult to accept and reconcile.
Regarding the 'time barrier' mentioned in 'The Cage'. I personally feel it can reference several things.
In "The Cage" its possible GR meant the "time barrier" to imply that FTL travel had been acheived after the Columbia disappeared. Even WNMHGB's reference to the old impulse engines of the Valiant doesn't contradict that idea. But later in the series the reference to Zefram Cochrane's space warp development 150 years earlier pretty much blows that out of the water.TAS added a great deal to TOS lore. And in truth there are really only a few things and a few stories that are difficult to accept and reconcile.
I love the work you put in here Warped9, but I have to think that your inclusion of the TAS series has only made your task more difficult. Disregarding modern TREK I get, makes sense to me too.
However, to me, the writing and therefore the details and 'facts' presented in TAS is not as carefully crafted as with an ep of TOS. I don;t know if it is my anti-animation bias, but to me it seems that this was a cartoon and whatever detail was needed to fit the story, it was added and well if it fit TREK-lore or canon, so be it if it didn't , oh well.
That plus there is the back and forth as to whether or not TAS is canon.
Regarding the 'time barrier' mentioned in 'The Cage'. I personally feel it can reference several things.
The first, similar to our present day interpretation of the sound barrier, that ships can now travel beyond the control of time. Possibly the hint at being able to remove the relativity effects and near light speed travel.
Second, it could be a reference to "Hey we broke the time barrier. We can now travel around the galaxy so fast and it not take the HUGE amount of time it used to take. Time is no longer a travel concern in that sleeper or multi-generational ships are now useless."
Lastly, it could mean that all rules of relativity apply, but we found a way to bypass it by warping space and creating of traveling from place to place outside the conventional means of travel.
Just some thoughts.
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