It could have been the result of time travel from a later century back to an earlier one, thereby taking place at/with the involvement of two moments in time.
The animated graphic of the Terran Empire's logo seen in Enterprise shows Earth spinning in the opposite direction, meaning in the MU the sun would rise in the west and set in the east. For awhile, it was my "hed canon" that the difference in humanity between the two universes was triggered by cavemen travelling in the direction of the sun.When did it begin? If the mirror universe split off the prime universe as a result of something the prime universe people did, the future mirror universe inhabitants would inherit the name "mirror universe" from their prime predecessors.
That only works with polarity.Unless somebody went back in time and reversed the rotation somehow.
Or it's just shorthand the writers use to inform the audience what they're doing.Calling one's reality the "mirror universe" implies knowledge that it mirrors something.
Most likely the writers didn't think it through. Indeed, when Georgiou said she was from the Mirror Universe, it was the first time that term was used onscreen in Star Trek. I'd say the writers were probably so used to saying it amongst themselves, they accidentally inserted it into the script forgetting that it's never been used within the show before.Calling one's reality the "mirror universe" implies knowledge that it mirrors something.
It honestly doesn't bother me that much. Georgiou is very much aware that the reason she is in Burnham's universe is because of who she reminds Burnham of, but that's a Georgiou she never was, and a life she never lived, except mirrored.Most likely the writers didn't think it through. Indeed, when Georgiou said she was from the Mirror Universe, it was the first time that term was used onscreen in Star Trek. I'd say the writers were probably so used to saying it amongst themselves, they accidentally inserted it into the script forgetting that it's never been used within the show before.
Calling one's reality the "mirror universe" implies knowledge that it mirrors something.
I always thought, until DS9, that certain events or characters were quantumly linked but choices over time eventually allowed the two to separate away, resulting in the Klingon-Cardassian Union and further disparate events. And, given Kovich's comments about the two timelines being further apart by his time it seems that quantum link degraded over time.So the universes are twinned? Meaning however many universes there are, it must always be an even number?
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