But even the oldest ships were still be more advanced than anything we’ve seen before.
Sp a king of which, I wonder if Starfleet even got to the other galaxies by then. The Enterprise J being a Universe Class ship gave the implication that they might.
The Enterprise J being a Universe Class ship gave the implication that they might.
True. Discovery season 3 could also be just another possible future as well.That’s assuming the class even existed in Discovery’s current timeline and that the writers fully accept Doug Drexler’s vision beyond what was established on ENT.
True. Discovery season 3 could also be just another possible future as well.
True. Discovery season 3 could also be just another possible future as well.
He did design the 1701-J as part of the Temporal Wars...
Looking over the fence at the other side of Expanded Universe,
STO has the Battle of Procyon V still take place, with Captain Dax leading a similar-looking Enterprise-J into battle. The Sphere Builders simply recreated their expanse at some point after NX-01 destroyed the Command Sphere.
However, there's one thing I'm not getting. Why are we to believe that being a time-traveller is somehow pangalactically illegal? The whole premise of the setting is that there's no single governing body anymore, only fractions ruling over bits of space. So, illegal by whose jurisdiction? And why would anyone care at all, given the sorry state of the universe? :-)
Thank you for this clarification. Still, I guess I'm just not buying this part of Season 3's premise. It's already been roughly 300 years since the (end of) Temporal Wars; significantly fewer since the Burn. And if there's anything that should've generated a taboo, it's dilithium: one should think oneself crazy to even touch it.It was explained in episode 3x1 that time travel had been outlawed after the Temporal Wars, because the wars had been so devastating. I would assume that all the societies that survived the Wars developed a pretty strong taboo against time travel and mutually agreed to outlaw and destroy all known methods of achieving it. Thus, when the Burn happened decades later, society fragmented, but the various fragments still shared that overarching taboo.
Thank you for this clarification. Still, I guess I'm just not buying this part of Season 3's premise. It's already been roughly 300 years since the (end of) Temporal Wars; significantly fewer since the Burn.
And if there's anything that should've generated a taboo, it's dilithium: one should think oneself crazy to even touch it.
After the Burn, in my opinion, the sensible reaction to a time traveler would not be 'HEY! A CRIMINAL!', but rather 'Amazing! Can we somehow benefit from this surprising occurrence?'
I have different intuitions regarding this last bit. It's not as if such a 'holocaust' lets any agent's subjective experience contain 1) a moment M in which some civilisation existed in the past and 2) a later moment N in the past of which that civilisation did not exist, but in which the agent retains the memory of the moment M and 'its' past. It's just that for the agent at N the civilisation in question did not exist at all. (Please correct me if I'm wrong.)
Whereas in the case of the Burn, anyone entering a ship which uses dilithium willingly goes into something which, as is commonly known, may explode for no seeming reason.
To me personally, the lack of explanation would make a difference.
In the case of the Burn, the causes are unknown (at the beginning of Season 3): even if you had all the power in the world, you wouldn't know what to do to lower the risk of a similar catastrophe reoccurring...
In the case of the Burn, the causes are unknown (at the beginning of Season 3): even if you had all the power in the world, you wouldn't know what to do to lower the risk of a similar catastrophe reoccurring...
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