And coercion. And tying into the nervous system.I don't see any resemblance beyond general parasitism.
And coercion. And tying into the nervous system.I don't see any resemblance beyond general parasitism.
And coercion.
And tying into the nervous system.
My personal headcanon is and was always the federation once the crises of the 24th century conclude, ends up on a roll, unifying the alpha and beta quadrants, and then expanding outward, joining with the dominion and eventually encompassing all four quadrants. By the 31st-32nd centuries, the federation had a substantial intergalactic presence as well as the time police. Inter universal contact was common and from there it only grew ever more advanced, ever more dynamic, ever more triumphant.I am doing the same![]()
My personal headcanon is and was always the federation once the crises of the 24th century conclude, ends up on a roll, unifying the alpha and beta quadrants, and then expanding outward, joining with the dominion and eventually encompassing all four quadrants.
From a purely distance related perspective, the federation had been developing many new forms of FTL-trans warp, slipstream, artificial wormholes and so on. Presumably these advances in FTL method and speed would have mitigated some of the issues you speak of here.I don't think that would ever work, or even be a good idea. The larger a single political body gets, the more exponentially difficult it becomes to manage it and hold it together. Stretch it too thin and it collapses.
Which is basically what the Federation had done by the 31st century and why they were so screwed over by the Burn.I don't think that would ever work, or even be a good idea. The larger a single political body gets, the more exponentially difficult it becomes to manage it and hold it together. Stretch it too thin and it collapses.
From a purely distance related perspective, the federation had been developing many new forms of FTL-trans warp, slipstream, artificial wormholes and so on. Presumably these advances in FTL method and speed would have mitigated some of the issues you speak of here.
As for diversity-I believe in Fearful Symmetry an alternate universe is presented where the federation had absorbed just about all of its rivals and allies.
Even so, what your saying and what I’m suggesting need not be mutually exclusive, a loose alliance of Democratic states across the galaxy and the quadrants could grow ever closer politically, culturally, and economically.
Such a process would no doubt take centuries, but it could and in all likelihood would happen.
Which is basically what the Federation had done by the 31st century and why they were so screwed over by the Burn.
That is profoundly underestimating the vastness of the galaxy. Given how many different civilizations are known to exist just in the tiny percentage of the galaxy known to the UFP in the 24th century, there would be far too many civilizations in total to be brought together under any kind of single political or social structure. It would take centuries just to meet representatives from that many millions of worlds. There's no possible way that many entities could cooperate or coordinate with each other all at once.
Which is a horrible idea. In this post-colonialist era, we know better than to buy into that outdated Manifest-Destiny fantasy of a single culture assimilating everything. "Absorbed?" What an imperialistic notion. It's not diversity if everyone's under a single governmental structure.
I really fail to see the problem here. The federation is composed of geniuses and by the end there are ever more AIs that exist as federation citizens. What your describing is a difficult problem but it can be surmounted with sufficient brain power(organic or computer).It's got nothing whatsoever to do with distance. It's about complexity. The more entities you have under a single governing structure, the more exponentially difficult it gets to manage them all and serve all their needs.
I don't understand how knowing the way the Novelverse ends means you enjoy previous books any less.
Like, newsflash, we're all going to die one day too, but that doesn't make our day-to-day any less meaningful.
And I thought you said it wasn’t a factor of distance?
The earth itself has multiple climactic zones yet a global government uniting humanity is-technologically speaking, within reach this century(if not politically). The same principle-technological advances in communication and travel speed make these things overcome.
Perhaps not absorbed, that would be a poor or inaccurate choice of words? Joined, united, incorporated? And no one is saying all these groups would need to fold into some sort of homogeneous “federation” culture and not one remain distinct, and two influence the federation by their union.
I referenced Fearful Symmetry’s prologue because that’s in text evidence of what I’m proposing.
I really fail to see the problem here. The federation is composed of geniuses and by the end there are ever more AIs that exist as federation citizens. What your describing is a difficult problem but it can be surmounted with sufficient brain power(organic or computer).
The issue is not that the timeline ends, but that any previous events have been erased from the in-universe multiverse too. So when you read a 2016 post-2373 novel, it’s about events that have never occurred in the first place (to paraphrase Tessa Omond).
Gonna take a while to rip the now irrelevant TrekLit content from a Memory Beta pages.
I suspect one of the issues of trying to run a familiar franchise over long periods of time, is that it ignores the passage of time because humans are really bad at measuring it. The idea that the federation exists in any form in 3188 when we've last seen it onscreen in 2380 or so is about as ridiculous as suggesting the Eastern Roman Empire of 1214 has any business existing in 2022. And our historical experience has been that the shelf life of empires and civilizations only shortens as we advance - Rome lasted, in one form or another as Kingdom to Byzantium, for over 2,000 years, the British empire a quarter of that and in the modern era, we're running the clock on how long you can be a world hyperpower, but it's not looking like 500-2,000 years.
Eastern civilizations often think of their history and cultural identity stretching back through the ages, in a way that Westerners have difficulty comprehending.
I don't understand how knowing the way the Novelverse ends means you enjoy previous books any less.
Like, newsflash, we're all going to die one day too, but that doesn't make our day-to-day any less meaningful.
The issue is not that the timeline ends, but that any previous events have been erased from the in-universe multiverse too. So when you read e.g. a 2016 Trek post-2373 novel, it’s about events that have never occurred in the first place (to paraphrase Tessa Omond).
Yeah but like... how does that matter when they're not reading the novel within the in-universe multiverse?The issue is not that the timeline ends, but that any previous events have been erased from the in-universe multiverse too. So when you read e.g. a 2016 Trek post-2373 novel, it’s about events that have never occurred in the first place (to paraphrase Tessa Omond).
Why would they have to? Memory-Alpha for example has plenty of articles about people, things and events from timelines that no longer exist. M-B should just have a disclaimer saying that the events in the following section are from a former reality or something. Which they already do for other things.Gonna take a while to rip the now irrelevant TrekLit content from a Memory Beta pages.
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