Um, no. Nowhere onscreen has NCC-1700 ever been clearly identified as the USS Constitution. Now that's simply a fact. You may not like it, but that's actually the real truth.Acutally, there isn't.
You are factually wrong in this case. Sorry, but you are. The NCC-1700 is shown as the Constitution on screen.
Huh? When did I contest this? I don't believe I ever did.The Enterprise is called a Constitution-class ship, on screen.
No, what I think what it is is that a long-held fan belief has actually never been really proven or verified onscreen.Only the most vocal canonista will refuse to link the names on the same display, despite 40 years of evidence to the contrary.
Hmph. My bad. But by that same token, though, why should we really assume that the Constellation isn't a Constitution-class starship? Why we should we assume that the USS Constitution has a higher hull registry than the Constellation if there isn't really any onscreen material to prove that?All we can gather is that NCC-1700 is a Constitution-class ship, but nowhere--by your own admisision in your earlier post--has it ever been clearly said or shown onscreen that NCC-1700 correlates with the USS Constitution.
No, I said that Constellation was never referenced as a Constitution class ship on screen. And, it isn't, despite it being an AMT model kit of the Enterprise herself.
Actually, I could care less about it, but I'm pertaining to things established onscreen--and NCC-1700 as the USS Constitution is not one of them. As far as the writer's bible is concerned, it falls under the same category as the various offscreen reference books and technical manuals.I also said that the mindset and attributes of the Star Fleet Registrar are all fanon. And, well, they are. We can play with that all we want. But you do not get to say that things which are established on screen and in the writer's bibles, etc. didn't happen because you don't personally like them.
It's not even marked at all, really.Exactly. The Constitution being NCC-1700 is really fanon since it only is listed as such in books.
TNG: "The Naked Now". Other displays have it marked, though not as clearly.
First of all, you don't know me to make that claim. And secondly, it's false. And thirdly, it's simply wrong.Just because you don't personally like it, doesn't mean that's not what it all says. You don't get to browbeat other people with 'canon' and then convieniently ignore it when you want.
For your information, I do go with the idea of NCC-1700 as the Constitution, and that other Constitution-class ships with lower registries were upgrades from earlier designs, but I also recognize such a thing is a way to explain away a Trek oddity.
But you said that "You can't use the 'fandom' definitions for ship classes, nomenclature, and all that to come up with the 'answers' to Trek's oddities."
And that is where I'm coming from. Upon investigation of the matter of NCC-1700, I discovered it's not really an oddity at all. The registry has never been decisively confirmed onscreen as belonging to the USS Constitution. The only way we really know this is from offscreen sources. And indeed, if you do ignore those offscreen sources, there is no reason whatsoever for anyone to assume the USS Constitution has a higher registry than the USS Constellation. Yes or no?
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