Yes, the definition of the word is strong evidence against Enterprise being a prequel to two movies that were made ten years afterwards. (A prequel is a type of sequel, not the opposite of one.)Is there any other evidence for or against ENT being a true prequel to the reboot movies?
But VST it is possible to go too far in the other direction. So it's a matter of where you as the fan draw the line.This is what I mean about suspension of belief. You have to factor that in.
You've only been here eight days, just wait for us to get into something like the thread count in the Bill Theiss costumes.otherwise you end up nitpicking
With things like relativity, and in a universe jam-packed with temporal anomalies, do we know for sure both Chekov's weren't born at the same time?But VST it is possible to go too far in the other direction. So it's a matter of where you as the fan draw the line.This is what I mean about suspension of belief. You have to factor that in.
For example, I can accept that two different actors play Pavel Chekov, but I can't simply accept that the two Chekov's were in-universe born in different years.
That violates my personal "suspension of belief" threshold.
But VST it is possible to go too far in the other direction. So it's a matter of where you as the fan draw the line.This is what I mean about suspension of belief. You have to factor that in.
For example, I can accept that two different actors play Pavel Chekov, but I can't simply accept that the two Chekov's were in-universe born in different years.
I dislike that option as much as I do the idea that Leonard Nimoy isn't playing the Spock from TOS but some other random version.Another option is that it is a different person that is named Pavel. He is actually what would have been the Prime Universe's Pavel's older brother. Since the time change was 2233, it is possible that the paths of Pavel's parents crossed slightly differently, or one of their earlier attempts at children was a success where in the Prime Universe it was a failure. This a man is born to the Chekov family four years earlier and named Pavel. It is unknown at this time if they had a second son born in 2245.
So technically, it is not the same Chekov, but he's raised more or less the same and it is possibly this one is brighter than the other one. I don't recall the Prime Pavel every trying to beam anyone up, much less doing it on the fly. Nor try to run Engineering. he did follow Spock I the sciences somewhat, but was also Navigator, Weapons Officer, Security, and Command chain, reaching first officer of USS Reliant (and technically commanding officer on the death of the ship's Captain...though it was in Kahn's hands by then...he shot down his own Command).
I thought Janice Rand was supposed to be Kirk's contemporary in (biological) age, within a few tears. With the original idea that they were going to be confidants.The old prequel novel Enterprise: The First Adventure did something similar with Janice Rand. Chronologically she was old enough to join Starfleet (and did), but biologically she was only 15 at the time.
But VST it is possible to go too far in the other direction. So it's a matter of where you as the fan draw the line.This is what I mean about suspension of belief. You have to factor that in.
For example, I can accept that two different actors play Pavel Chekov, but I can't simply accept that the two Chekov's were in-universe born in different years.
That violates my personal "suspension of belief" threshold.
So when you say we should simply accept contradictions in set decoration, I (with due respect) disagree with you. I think this is something that we can and should discuss here.
It's a legitimate subject.
I dislike that option as much as I do the idea that Leonard Nimoy isn't playing the Spock from TOS but some other random version.Another option is that it is a different person that is named Pavel. He is actually what would have been the Prime Universe's Pavel's older brother. Since the time change was 2233, it is possible that the paths of Pavel's parents crossed slightly differently, or one of their earlier attempts at children was a success where in the Prime Universe it was a failure. This a man is born to the Chekov family four years earlier and named Pavel. It is unknown at this time if they had a second son born in 2245.
So technically, it is not the same Chekov, but he's raised more or less the same and it is possibly this one is brighter than the other one. I don't recall the Prime Pavel every trying to beam anyone up, much less doing it on the fly. Nor try to run Engineering. he did follow Spock I the sciences somewhat, but was also Navigator, Weapons Officer, Security, and Command chain, reaching first officer of USS Reliant (and technically commanding officer on the death of the ship's Captain...though it was in Kahn's hands by then...he shot down his own Command).
Of course Chekov is supposed to be Chekov. He was Spock's fill-in at the science station during TOS, so he was obviously smart (even if he had the common sense of a turnip). He also switched careers to security chief for while, no simple feat (or at least, it shouldn't be). The new Chekov appears to lean toward engineering rather than the Sciences and weapons of his predecessor. For all we know, he flipped a coin to determine which subjects he'd take at the Academy beside starship navigation.
This is my thought as well.Cochrane, in appreciation for what Picard and crew did, used his clout to get the Warp Five Project's starship named Enterprise.
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