It always does.
I just took that as being typical of the way old-school spy-fi shows often dialed up the technology for dramatic effect. Were THE AVENGERS or THE MAN FROM UNCLE or THE SIX MILLION DOLLAR MAN set in alternate timelines just because they might feature imaginary space missions or insane computers or cybernauts? Were the early Bond films set in an alternate timeline just because SPECTRE was occasionally sabotaging fictitious NASA missions, or launching their own rockets and death-ray satellites from hollowed-out volcanos?
If I remember correctly, trying to stall telomere division just causes cancer rates to go up exponentially. But there may have been a problem with the mice(?) used in the study, which in theory puts many clinical studies from the 1990's that used the same mouse supplier into question. Off memory from a podcast with an evolutionary biologist from 2017, and its far from my field...Telomeres dictate a human lifespan of about 120 years. We can live longer than 120 if someone can overcome the telomeres shortening over time.
Exactly. Star Trek isn't a comic book or James Bond. At least until (ahem) recently, Star Trek took the continuity very seriously to the point that you could have encyclopedias and chronologies written. You can't pull off continuity call backs or foreshadowing if the past is an unreliable narrator.I feel like comic books are different Star Trek though. They have a very flexible continuity. I always thought Star Trek was more fixed and focused.
Blade Runner and Alien (sans Alien vs Predator, which the subsequent films haven't treated as canon) have both handled this incredibly well. Unintentional or explicit retro-futurism have been maintained in following productions.If we reach a point at which we’ve colonized the Solar System, have enhanced ourselves far beyond the Augments, have nanotechnology and artificial intelligence far more advanced and ubiquitous than the Federation’s, and have indefinite lifespans, how might we then reset Star Trek?
No, the fans took it very seriously and then the fans turned pro wrote everything out in "chronologies" and "encyclopedias". The information contained with in was free to be ignored by any all writers.Exactly. Star Trek isn't a comic book or James Bond. At least until (ahem) recently, Star Trek took the continuity very seriously to the point that you could have encyclopedias and chronologies written. You can't pull off continuity call backs or foreshadowing if the past is an unreliable narrator.
Yeah, that's not how it works.All the SNW example did was further establish SNW as an alternate continuity, not only changing the dates of the Eugenics Wars, but greatly expanding the level of death and destruction discussed in FC.
You might be thinking of the four Yamanaka factors—the genes Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, and c-Myc—which can reprogram adult cells into induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). c-Myc seems to be a protoöncogene, meaning its overexpression can cause cancer, so the other three (OSK) are used without it.If I remember correctly, trying to stall telomere division just causes cancer rates to go up exponentially. But there may have been a problem with the mice(?) used in the study, which in theory puts many clinical studies from the 1990's that used the same mouse supplier into question. Off memory from a podcast with an evolutionary biologist from 2017, and its far from my field...
The writers do not care as much as the fans do about obsessing over the details. That's my experience. Yes, you have beautifully written chronologies which created a beautiful facade, a wonderful illusion of continuity that simply didn't exist to the degree that fans expect.No, the fans took it very seriously and then the fans turned pro wrote everything out in "chronologies" and "encyclopedias". The information contained with in was free to be ignored by any all writers.
Comics reference books are not unheard of. Comic book companies have been issuing "who's who's" and "handbooks" to their universes since the eighties. Then internet had made such things obsolete for Comics and Trek.
I'm will to bet the current crop of writers and producers look more at MA than the Berman era folks looked at the Chronology and the Encyclopedia.( Yeah I know Okuda and Sternbach were on the lot). I devoured both when they came out. But even the Okudas abd Sternbach acknowledge they were there as guidelines not immutable facts.
In fiction, the past is always an unreliable narrator.
Indeed, no it does not. Fans can rework it to fit in with however they want to make the story work. Be it updating to say that the Eugenics Wars didn't happen, or that Star Trek is a separate continuity from our reality.Yeah, that's not how it works.
"But it didn't happen in the real world, update Star Trek, fix it!"The writers do not care as much as the fans do about obsessing over the details. That's my experience. Yes, you have beautifully written chronologies which created a beautiful facade, a wonderful illusion of continuity that simply didn't exist to the degree that fans expect.
It's wonderful to look at the world and imagine it as being coherent, but Star Trek, as a fiction, is at the whim of the memory and desire of the writer. We can disagree over their efforts, but, to quote a friend of mine, they can do whatever they want and don't owe the fans a damn thing.
Indeed, no it does not. Fans can rework it to fit in with however they want to make the story work. Be it updating to say that the Eugenics Wars didn't happen, or that Star Trek is a separate continuity from our reality.
I'm a bit more simple now as I get older: Star Trek has always taken our world as part of its history, which means things move and update to reflect that change. It's not a separate reality or a historical period to recreate but a projection in to the future based on our currrent knowledge and events.
When they travel in time they go to our 80s, our 90s, our 60s, our 2020s. So clearly that is a common reference point for Star Trek and projecting in to our future. I don't subscribe to it's a different timeline thinking. The reference points are our shared history. Updating it makes more sense to me."But it didn't happen in the real world, update Star Trek, fix it!"
I don't understand this thinking. I was totally fine with the Eugenics War happening in the 90's while I was a teenager in the 90's. I understood it was fiction.
I'm not saying it's a different timeline. I'm saying it's fiction. It's not our future, it's Kirk's future.When they travel in time they go to our 80s, our 90s, our 60s, our 2020s. So clearly that is a common reference point for Star Trek and projecting in to our future. I don't subscribe to it's a different timeline thinking. The reference points are our shared history. Updating it makes more sense to me.
And I'm saying it draws references from our future and our history so it is part of our timeline in that sense. Of course its fiction, but the projection in to the future will be based on our understanding and current events. That's usually how fiction works. It doesn't invent things whole cloth.I'm not saying it's a different timeline. I'm saying it's fiction. It's not our future, it's Kirk's future.
That was in Goldfinger, actually. Dr. No was released in 1962, when the Beatles were barely known in the U.K. and totally unknown in the U.S.. . . Remember Sean Connery joking about the Beatles in "Dr. No."
I understand where you're coming from. What's your stance on WW3 being the 2050's and First Contact being 2063? Once we catch up to that in the real world, I hope they don't go rewriting the "history" of Star Trek. Just leave it as it is.And I'm saying it draws references from our future and our history so it is part of our timeline in that sense. Of course its fiction, but the projection in to the future will be based on our understanding and current events. That's usually how fiction works. It doesn't invent things whole cloth.
Thank you for taking the time to type this out.I watched both Back to the Future, Part II and Blade Runner in the theaters this year, thanks to Special Screenings. I should've first seen BTTF II in the theater when I was 10 instead of on VHS, but stupidly didn't, and I finally corrected that mistake. But anyway...
The fact that we've shot past the futures in those movies doesn't make me like them any less. Blade Runner is in fact my favorite movie. Period.
I'm also looking forward to the series Blade Runner 2099 in 2025. Just like with Blade Runner 2049, they're not changing when things happened to match what happened in the real world. I'll be looking forward it all the same. Doesn't affect my enjoyment, doesn't confuse me.
The idea that Star Trek is "our future" is preposterous. I love Star Trek (in general, not all of it), but I can't fool myself into thinking that. I could when I was 11, but not now. The Expanse is probably what it would be more like. If anything.
Even The Expanse is unrealistically cishumanist: halfway through the 24th century, humanity still has no significant genetic engineering, nanotechnology, cyborgization, neurointerface, simulated reality, teleoperation, artificial superintelligence, healthspan and lifespan extension, or biostasis. The only exceptions are the protomolecule and stargates built by the ancient civilization which apparently descended to the final level of the Barrow scale.The Expanse is probably what it would be more like. If anything.
Exactly. Star Trek isn't a comic book or James Bond. At least until (ahem) recently, Star Trek took the continuity very seriously to the point that you could have encyclopedias and chronologies written. You can't pull off continuity call backs or foreshadowing if the past is an unreliable narrator.
Sounds like something one might find on TVTropes.CE: "You have Hawkman here. According to the DCE, he's dead."
Me: "He got better."![]()
That they will likely rewrite Trek history because Trek is fiction and totally mutable. It is not a history, it is not a historical period, and it is not immutable.I understand where you're coming from. What's your stance on WW3 being the 2050's and First Contact being 2063? Once we catch up to that in the real world, I hope they don't go rewriting the "history" of Star Trek. Just leave it as it is.
Infraction for flaming. Comments to PM.I don’t think you really read this forum so much as bloviate on it.
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