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The Intersection of Canon and the Prime Timeline

So, which of these applies to you?!

  • Discovery is canon and it takes place in the prime timeline

    Votes: 35 45.5%
  • Discovery is canon and takes place in the Kelvin timeline

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Discovery is canon and takes place in another universe that we have never seen before

    Votes: 23 29.9%
  • Discovery is canon and takes place in another unvierse that we have seen before (if so, which?)

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Discovery is non-canon and therefore doesn't take place in any universe in the Star Trek multiverse

    Votes: 5 6.5%
  • I don't care about canon

    Votes: 14 18.2%

  • Total voters
    77
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You might not like the visualization, but you can't get more TOS than the Enterprise.
And for those who want to nitpick it cause it didn't look like it fell off the Desilu lot, to quote Lorca, "I still don't give a damn"

I still like the TOS and TMP Enterprises better* -- with the TMP Enterprise being my absolute favorite -- but this is an Enterprise that doesn't look out-of-place on Discovery. In the context of DSC, it works for me as much as it doesn't work for others.
 
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I wish some of you folks would get a better understanding of the difference between "continuity" and "canon."

Well, that's easy. Let me know if I got it right:

"Canon" simply means what's on the screen. In that regard, DSC is part of the Star Trek canon, as is TOS, TAS, TNG, DS9, VOY, ENT, and all the Star Trek films. However, that does not mean that they all have to be internally consistent. That's something different. That's...

"Continuity," which simply means that whatever it is you're creating should be consistent in every way to whatever creation you're basing it off of. And in that regard, DSC does not have continuity with what it's supposedly based off of.

Simple enough?
 
No it isn't. It's updating it for the modern times.

Not to open a can of gagh but the main reason that DSC looks so different from the rest of the TOS timeframe is because the series was legally required to implement the "25% different" rule in order to keep CBS and Paramount from going all Defcon 1 on each other and destroying the show. I have no doubt that the series would have looked even more "modern" than ENT appeared because it's now the late 2010s and no longer 2001, but I sort of doubt the differences would be this extreme were the 25% changes rule not in effect and enforced at CBS.
 
And since it is "updated" then it is by definition different, and so it is objectively true to say that it does not fit canon.
No, not really. Canon is simply what is on screen--it need not be consistent with other iterations, nor even coherent. It merely needs to be made by the IP holder and screened for viewing.

Edit: see Dukhat's post (no. 168) for more details.
 
Fuck me! I went to Kroger tonight, and they refused to sell me a steak unless I cooked it exactly as they specified!

:guffaw:
 
No, not really. Canon is simply what is on screen--it need not be consistent with other iterations, nor even coherent. It merely needs to be made by the IP holder and screened for viewing.
Now that would be an example of a subjective opinion, rather than an objective fact.
 
I stated two objective facts :

1) Updating a thing is, by definition, a change to that thing.
2) A thing that has been changed is no longer the same as before it was changed.

Which of those things do you believe is not a part of reality?

And that's the only way I can swallow some of DSC's ship designs and other visuals. By ignoring them and just pretending that they look more like the designs we're used to from the original Prime run of 1964-2005.
 
Now that would be an example of a subjective opinion, rather than an objective fact.
Wrong. The notion of "canon" comes from canonical law. Canonical law is defined by the institution which has the authority to do so. In the case of Trek, the IP holder (the authority) has decreed that what is on screen is "canon". That is a fact. What you are arguing is DSC does not conform to "prime" continuity. That argument is debatable, but what constitutes "canon" in Trek is not.
 
And that's the only way I can swallow some of DSC's ship designs and other visuals. By ignoring them and just pretending that they look more like the designs we're used to from the original Prime run of 1964-2005.
Reminds me of the Red Letter Media review where Mike said he enjoyed Discovery by pretending it was in the post TNG era of a different universe. Such mental gymnastics are beyond me, so I guess I'm lucky that I don't feel compelled to swallow STDs ship designs in the first place.
 
Wrong. The notion of "canon" comes from canonical law. Canonical law is defined by the institution which has the authority to do so. In the case of Trek, the IP holder (the authority) has decreed that what is on screen is "canon". That is a fact. What you are arguing is DSC does not conform to "prime" continuity. That argument is debatable, but what constitutes "canon" in Trek is not.
Another subjective opinion.
 
If it wasn't true then that's even more reason to be skeptical of them. They weren't constrained but decided to "super kewl" up everything to extreme levels for no reason other than "super kewl."
 
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