So...bumpy Kilingon foreheads in TMP - continuity error or canon violation?
The fact that they use "Time Warp" Drive in The Cage
Pike: "Our Time Warp...Factor 7"
and later on the planet:
Ensign: "And you won't believe how fast you can get back, the Time Barrier's been broken..."
When in the second pilot Where No Man has Gone Before - it's now a space warp drive; and it's a signifigant difference as a few episodes in the first season deal with the 1701 and crew getting into time warps, and they are shocked and surprised by them. If they HAD a 'Time Warp' drive (as stated in The Cage); I doubt they'd be all that surprised by, or unfamiliar with time warps as they are in the later episodes.
Klingons call humans "Earthers", too, so they aren't exactly a reliable source for what things are called.It was actually last used by Kor in "Errand of Mercy". Vic Lundin's Klingon uses "Vulcan" in the same episode.
Perhaps "Vulcanian" is a colloquial variation, like "Scottish" and "Scotch".
The term was last used by the colonists in The Paradise Syndrome
The people on the Enterprise aren't really accellerating past or even near the speed of light, though, right? Space is normal inside their warp bubble. That is why they're not a totally different age from the people they left at home (a la Planet of the Apes).
So maybe the line about the time barrier being broken means that space can be warped at ftl "speeds" but the people don't face the problem of time dilation: a "barrier" that would keep many people from wanting to travel at near-c speeds before warping was invented.
I can't believe I'm conjecturing about why a fictional character spoke a certain way in a 1960s teleplay!
After Trek it was cannonised by Gene that each speed is double that speed of light. Warp 1=2xs speed of light, W2=4x speed of light, Warp 3=8 and so on.
The speed of light/time travel thing is based on one of Einstein's math theories but there's no way to actually prove it unless you go past the speed of light.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.