Never, apparently. Since officially it seems to have been cured between Enterprise and Discovery, and the 2260s Klingons are just something they don't talk about with outsiders.
How many more times!!!

Discovery isn't the original timeline!


JB
Never, apparently. Since officially it seems to have been cured between Enterprise and Discovery, and the 2260s Klingons are just something they don't talk about with outsiders.
Wait, so you you are saying that there is a written version of that movie, albeit with another franchise mixed that uses the word as his first name and not as a rank?
ENT says that Vulcans and Humans cannot produce a natural offspring; it can only be attained with gene splicing. Perhaps Sarek also added some augmentation to the mix to make him super smart, too. So, I guess I'm saying that Spock is a Vulcan augment.That said, I'm convinced Spock is a clone of his father, so we're all entitled to play the game![]()
How many more times!!!
Discovery isn't the original timeline!It even contradicts ENT which also is a reiterated reality!
JB
ENT says that Vulcans and Humans cannot produce a natural offspring; it can only be attained with gene splicing. Perhaps Sarek also added some augmentation to the mix to make him super smart, too. So, I guess I'm saying that Spock is a Vulcan augment.![]()
No. Timo has been bending continuity in knots for decades and pitching his ideas so fervently they seem substantiated.
That said, I'm convinced Spock is a clone of his father, so we're all entitled to play the game![]()
ENT says that Vulcans and Humans cannot produce a natural offspring; it can only be attained with gene splicing. Perhaps Sarek also added some augmentation to the mix to make him super smart, too. So, I guess I'm saying that Spock is a Vulcan augment.![]()
Calling it a "debate" is being kind. "One person's fan theory" would be more accurate.As far as the Colonel/Cornell debate...
There is a scene in "The Final Reflection" (best ST novel ever imho) where Sarek is discussing with eminent diplomats and scientists how Spock was "created",(Spock is only about seven at this point) through some gene splicing/genetic fusion techniques. Tellingly, Amanda is with Sarek as he boastfuly explains the leaps in Vulcan science that has achieved this, and she is described as having a very tight and distressed expression!ENT says that Vulcans and Humans cannot produce a natural offspring; it can only be attained with gene splicing. Perhaps Sarek also added some augmentation to the mix to make him super smart, too. So, I guess I'm saying that Spock is a Vulcan augment.![]()
Roddenberry has an "interview" with Sarek on his Inside Star Trek record album* where Sarek describes in detail the techniques that enabled them to carry Spock to term.There is a scene in "The Final Reflection" (best ST novel ever imho) where Sarek is discussing with eminent diplomats and scientists how Spock was "created",(Spock is only about seven at this point) through some gene splicing/genetic fusion techniques.
GR: And Spock was the result. The first Human-Vulcan mixture.
Sarek: No, not the first. But the first to survive. As you must know, an Earth-Vulcan conception will abort during the end of the first month. The fetus is unable to continue life once it begins to develop its primary organs. The fetus Spock was removed from Amanda's body at this time--first such experiment ever attempted. His tiny form resided in a test tube for the following two Earth months, while our physicians performed delicate chemical engineering, introducing over a hundred subtle changes that we hoped would sustain life. At the end of this time, the fetus was returned to Amanda's womb. At the ninth Earth month, the tiny form was again removed from Amanda, prematurely by Vulcan standards, and spent the following four months Vulcan term pregnancy in a specially designed incubator. The infant Spock proved surprisingly resilient--there seems to be something about the Earth-Vulcan mixture, which created in that.. tiny body.. a fierce determination to survive.
This really ruins it for me. I'd much rather that Spock was conceived and birthed in the usual manner, which I'm sure is what everyone associated with the show and fans assumed all along.Roddenberry has an "interview" with Sarek on his Inside Star Trek record album* where Sarek describes in detail the techniques that enabled them to carry Spock to term.
So according to Roddenberry, it was 13 months between the time that Spock was conceived and when he was delivered.
*Roddenberry got Mark Lenard to appear instead of Leonard Nimoy because Nimoy was still in the midst of his lawsuit against Paramount over his likeness rights at the time.
I agree that would be what most people assumed. But I guess that people like me enjoy brain storming the "what if's" and "how's".This really ruins it for me. I'd much rather that Spock was conceived and birthed in the usual manner, which I'm sure is what everyone associated with the show and fans assumed all along.
And I think for me it has always been about the effect of different blood chemistry's. I stand to be corrected, but (with my very limited knowledge) presume that some sort of genetic manipulation would be needed to create some sort of iron/copper blood chemistry compatibility to enable a child to be concieved and born?
But there's nothing in the show to indicate any genetic manipulation was necessary. The writers would have someone tell us if that were the case.That's always been my assumption, yes.
Just like they told us how warp drive, transporters and phasers work?? ☺But there's nothing in the show to indicate any genetic manipulation was necessary. The writers would have someone tell us if that were the case.
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