I figured Spock's 10k figure was referencing those evacuated from Vulcan.
I figured Spock's 10k figure was referencing those evacuated from Vulcan.
I could buy that if NuSpock didn't follow up that estimate with his line about being a member of an endangered species. The placement of that line suggests connecting it with the previously mentioned very small number.
The endangered species line is silly though because 10,000 intelligent creatures doesn't really constitute being endangered.
The endangered species line is silly though because 10,000 intelligent creatures doesn't really constitute being endangered.
I guess that depends on the level of genetic diversity required for Vulcans to survive a disease outbreak, doesn't it?
Star Trek: First Contact said:RIKER: Sure we do. It looks a lot different. There are fifty million people living on the moon in my time. You can see Tycho City, New Berlin, even Lake Armstrong on a day like this.
Yet Delta Vega, in eyeshot of Vulcan, is manned by one human and one... thing.
I don't think there's evidence Vulcans had interstellar capability for 3000 years. The Vulcan/Romulan schism was 1900 years prior (quoted -2000 from TNG, -1800 from ENT) and the old novels postulated that journey was flown on sublight generational ships at relativistic speeds.
Yeah, you'd expect Vulcan worlds with populations of millions, but common sense and Star Trek have never really gone together. Tut, tut - you'll be demanding a well-defended Earth next.
Spock would seem to be specifically be referring to the planet Vulcan's immediate former population when he spoke of ten thousand (Vulcan) survivors, and not Vulcanoids in general.... my home planet and most of its six billion inhabitants. While the essence of our culture has been saved in the elders who now reside upon the ship, I estimate no more than ten thousand have survived.
Three thousand years is a long time to remain a high technology civilization. If the Vulcan had a series of both atomic and large non-atomic wars every few centuries over the course of millenniums, then they might have periodically lost the technology to achieve warp flight, perhaps even space flight. The Vulcans at the P'Jem monastery and on various assorted colonies could have been cut off from the homeworld for decades or even centuries on occasion.The temple at P'Jem is three thousand years old. Which would indicate an ability to cross interstellar distances.
Also later, under the teachings of Surak, the Vulcan could have turned inward culturally, the lack of the need to explore on Vulcans parts that we saw in Enterprise (from T'Pol) easily could be philosophical aspect of their "new" culture, rather than part of Vulcans natural psychological make up.
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Two Words: Writer's Strike
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