Gene Coon (assuming it was he who came up with the name) was probably trying for something Biblical-sounding, like Ephraim or Ezekiel.Zephram, though...Cochrane is the first thing that comes up when I google the name.
Gene Coon (assuming it was he who came up with the name) was probably trying for something Biblical-sounding, like Ephraim or Ezekiel.Zephram, though...Cochrane is the first thing that comes up when I google the name.
Brief research points to possible transliteration of the Hebrew name "Ephraim." Though also possibly connected to the Greek word "Zephyr."As far as I know, Zefrem (<<spelled) IS a Biblical name. Any variant spellings of it are caused by time+translation.
As far as I know, Zefrem (<<spelled) IS a Biblical name. Any variant spellings of it are caused by time+translation.
Ah, okay, I jumped to conclusions. It's actually spelled "Zefrem" in the Star Trek Concordance. James Blish spells it "Zefram," which is apparently the correct version, going by the Encyclopedia and Memory Alpha. It's "Zephram" in the first edition of the Star Trek Compendium, corrected to "Zefram" in the second. So why did we think it was "Zephram?"
So how can the name be Biblical?
He's a human from Alpha Centauri. I believe the intent was humans colonized Alpha Centauri before the invention of warp drive.He was originally presented as "Zefram Cochrane of Alpha Centauri", with the intent he be an AC native. One of the histories even includes that idea, with an Earth crew meeting him and communicating through mathematics at first. They ultimately got tripped up by the surname Cochrane, which is from Earth, and subsequent books, and eventually episodes and films began to include that in their storylines.
Metamorphosis said:MCCOY: He's human, Jim. Everything checks out perfectly.
He was originally presented as "Zefram Cochrane of Alpha Centauri", with the intent he be an AC native.
Space pseudo Biblical.
Now address the Spaceflight Chronology (I remembered which book) having an article stating that Cochrane was a native of Alpha Centauri and had their peculiar thumb-lice little fingers, and deny it exists. Which it does.This is a myth that refuses to die. Gene Coon's original story outline actually described Cochrane as "one of the great space pioneers...in the first expedition to Alpha Centauri." https://www.trekbbs.com/threads/zefram-cochrane-of-alpha-centuri.276565/page-4#post-11323843
"Metamorphosis" stated explicitly and repeatedly that Cochrane was human. He was "of Alpha Centauri" in the sense that T.E. Lawrence was "of Arabia" -- he was famous for going there, for adopting it as his new home after traveling there with the warp drive he invented.
Incidentally, I've found sources asserting that the name Zefram is derived from the Greek Zephyros, meaning the west wind.
Now address the Spaceflight Chronology (I remembered which book) having an article stating that Cochrane was a native of Alpha Centauri and had their peculiar thumb-lice little fingers, and deny it exists. Which it does.
And does that preclude Cochrane having originated elsewhere?
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