Anyway, they were based on a line from a TNG episode
a line that was open to multiple interpertations
Anyway, they were based on a line from a TNG episode
a line that was open to multiple interpertations
Anyway, they were based on a line from a TNG episode
a line that was open to multiple interpertations
A Vulcan dying and then coming back? That almost never happens!The Taurik issue (was he killed or not in the Dominion War novel) reminds me of an idea I had a little while ago.
I dunno, seems like someone would have to come up with a definitive list of which episodes and films are in the same continuity first....Could we start a communal project / thread identifying and listing novels which do or do not fit with the relaunch continuity.
I actually think we would need three categories -
1) In relaunch continuity.
2) Possibly in relaunch continuity (i.e. the Taurik question - we don't KNOW he was killed when the changeling replaced him - he could have been imprisioned like Bashir) with reasoning.
3) Not in relaunch continuity.
The original statement made on the show was simply that Andorians commonly required four people for their weddings. I took this to mean that instead of one male and female getting married, there were two groups of people having separate marriages within the same ceremony, for example me getting married to my fiancee and my brother Dave getting married to his fiancee, but we're both sharing the same church hall at the same day and time.
There's no mention at all in that statement about the Andorians having four genders, and the show itself pretty much implies that Andorians have the same two sexes that humans do.
Nor does the statement imply that four people are essentially marrying each other.
^Wasn't it also implied in the books that Shar and Thriss had gotten together by themselves at some point in the past?
The verbatim line is, "Andorian marriages require groups of four people unless--" with Data's statement being cut off before the "unless." True, there's more than one way of interpreting it, but frankly yours is rather strange to me. Requiring any marriage to be paired with another marriage at the same time? How do you coordinate something like that? Would it have to be a family member getting married too, or would they just schedule any two random weddings for the same time? And why would such a thing be required? If their marriages are otherwise conventional two-partner weddings, why slap this odd addition onto the practice? You'd need to concoct a very long and elaborate explanation full of ad hoc assumptions to justify this. By Occam's Razor, the single assumption that they require four partners in each individual wedding is more likely than just performing two-partner marriages in tandem for some unspecified reason. And the simplest explanation for requiring four partners in a marriage is that they have four sexes.
Different show. Remember, Andorians were barely a presence in TNG. Data's line was one of only a few throwaway references to the species in the course of the series. When ENT came along and showed us Andorians on a regular basis, it was a decade later and different people were writing the scripts. It would be grossly anachronistic to use the portrayal of Andorians on ENT as evidence for the intentions of "Data's Day"'s screenwriters when they wrote that line.
And of course that "unless" provides a handy way for rationalizing any apparent inconsistencies in later canon. It suggests that they usually marry in foursomes but don't always have to -- so two-partner pairings like Shran had in ENT could be exceptions that fall under that unfinished "unless" clause.
Oh, it may not definitively confirm that, but it certainly implies it. It's a reasonable interpretation of the line. And it's the more interesting one by far, as the books have shown.
But that's my point: You personally do not understand how such a marriage can be arranged because it's not in your culture to do things like that. This is a completely alien culture.
I was referring to the Andorians in ENT when I said that they seem to be primarily male and female. If one is interpreting the line in TNG to imply that there are four sexes of Andorians, ENT didn't really bear that out.
Actually, Occam's Razor would imply that because Shran's two-partner pairing was what we saw, then two-partner pairings are the norm, not the exception. Shran never says "well, my people don't normally get married like this, but I'm an exception." He acts as if there's nothing abnormal about it, because whoever wrote that ENT episode didn't have four-partner pairings in mind.
Don't get me wrong: I have nothing against Marco Palmieri's interpretation of this. If Trek novel writers want to give the Andorians four sexes, fine. All I'm saying is that I personally believe that whoever wrote that marriage line for Data totally did not mean to imply that Andorians have four sexes.
But here's the thing: you can't just make up some random thing and say "they do this because they're alien." You have to have a reason why they do it, an explanation for why it makes sense for them to do things that way. You haven't offered a why for this proposition.
Yeah.. we talk about what we like and don't like on here a lot. Kind of sparks discussion.
I'm talking about what you personally think is canon and not canon. That's what starts fights.
I'm talking about what you personally think is canon and not canon. That's what starts fights.
That's an oxymoronic question. Canon, by definition, comes from a central authority. It's the direct opposite of personal opinion.
I'm talking about what you personally think is canon and not canon. That's what starts fights.
That's an oxymoronic question. Canon, by definition, comes from a central authority. It's the direct opposite of personal opinion.
No, it doesn't. Canon, by definition, consists of those texts (or other media) accepted as genuine; that acceptance is generally consensual throughout a community, whether because that community recognizes the choices of a central authority, because the textual list has been developed by slow consensus, or because of some other reason. The key element of canon is acceptance, not authority. (Of course, authority is all that matters when only that authority has exclusive legal right to the texts in question.)
(Of course, authority is all that matters when that authority has exclusive legal right to the texts in question.)
There were two really good Dominion War TNG books by John Vornholt.
But they themselves are 'discounted' by the Deep Space Nine relaunch, which directly contradicts them, so they're often considered not to be a part of the Trek Lit continuity by a lot of readers because the core continuity it essentially defined by the relaunch novels.
There's no mention at all in that statement about the Andorians having four genders, and the show itself pretty much implies that Andorians have the same two sexes that humans do.
What were the contradictions?
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