As did ENT's episode in the mirror universe.
Right, which is why the most logical explanation is that the Kelvin is a pre-existing alternate universe that Prime characters invaded and corrupted.
As did ENT's episode in the mirror universe.
Logical? Perhaps. To me it is highly unnecessary, and just a way of jiggling about to satisfy technical details that are not pertinent nor relevant to the story.Right, which is why the most logical explanation is that the Kelvin is a pre-existing alternate universe that Prime characters invaded and corrupted.
Right, which is why the most logical explanation is that the Kelvin is a pre-existing alternate universe that Prime characters invaded and corrupted.
And that works if we're looking that film in isolation, but it doesn't work if we're looking the Star Trek as a whole. Time travel has never ever worked like that in Star Trek, it not working like that has been a central plot point in many previous stories.Sorry, not seeing that as the most logical explanation. The most logical explanation is that there was a divergence point in 2233 from the Prime universe, branching off into an alternate timeline from that but leaving the original timeline intact, with both universes having a shared past up until 2233. There's no need to have a "pre-existing alternate universe that Prime characters invaded and corrupted," because the movie wasn't about some other pre-existing universe that nobody cares about. It was about the prime universe where Spock Prime originally came from.
This is a discussion board.
If you are just going to ignore my responses to you, then feel free to either tell me to not bother wasting my time replying to you, or put me on your ignore list.
Just telling me you're ignoring me adds nothing to the discussion.
No, that's called entitlement.
You are not entitled to anything from CBS.
If they ask for your opinion, that's one thing.
But they will make their decisions based on other factors than just "one guy on the internet thinks our show is shit."
Except I don't think what CBS is putting out now is shit.
It's not perfect, but nothing ever is.
So yes, the point is moot, because me liking it and you not liking it does not help CBS determine if they are making something good or not.
And that works if we're looking that film in isolation, but it doesn't work if we're looking the Star Trek as a whole. Time travel has never ever worked like that in Star Trek, it not working like that has been a central plot point in many previous stories.
What I want is to make my opinion known, with the hope of getting other people who feel the same to follow suit, and explain why, and to bring enough detractors into the fold so that we can take actions that will cost CBS money. It's a steep uphill battle, sure, but I'm not going to stop just because one guy on the internet tells me I'm wasting my time.
But some of us do care about it. So let us.But as I've mentioned before, I don't care about Star Trek as a whole, because it's all make-believe and whoever is in charge of it can make changes to it on a whim.
But some of us do care about it. So let us.
Well, you're basically interrupting people speculating about how the fictional universe fits together with 'LOL, it is all made up so it doesn't matter.' Yes we know, but this forum exists for talking about such things. So your point is completely pointless and a tad rude.Sorry, was I stopping you? Sometimes I forget the awesome power over people’s free will I seem to have here.
Well, you're basically interrupting people speculating about how the fictional universe fits together with 'LOL, it is all made up so it doesn't matter.' Yes we know, but this forum exists for talking about such things. So your point is completely pointless and a tad rude.
An excellent point!Plus there is precedent. The U.S.S. Defiant traveled in time and to an alternate pre-existing reality.
Logical? Perhaps. To me it is highly unnecessary, and just a way of jiggling about to satisfy technical details that are not pertinent nor relevant to the story.
To me, since Prime Spock did not attempt to rectify the damage that means the Prime Timeline still exists.
YMMV.
This hypothesis is just as valid if the timeline was created by the incursion.To me, that is actually more proof towards my hypothesis that it is a completely separate universe - Prime Spock knows that his world and everything he did still exists; everyone he loved still had life. This other Universe, so recklessly damaged because of his actions, is now his responsibility, and he dedicates the remainder of his life to it.
This hypothesis is just as valid if the timeline was created by the incursion.
Ultimately, like most time travel stories, it is a plot device. Whether the Kelvin timeline was preexisting or a product of temporal branching is less concerning to me. I'm more interestedI know its a circular argument, but to me, its a definitive answer, based on past time travel stories. If Spock is truly that unconcerned with his home universe, after massive changes to the past, and the destruction of his own planet, then it obviously can not be his own past
Speaking of authorial intent-an interview with Bob Orci:If it makes you happy, you can just believe that the Kelvinverse crew had some off-camera adventure post-Beyond which reset the timeline to what it was supposed to be.
As I've said in the past though, I'm a Dolyist, not a Watsonian. I find authorial intent infinitely more interesting than headcanon, and I just fundamentally don't understand people who feel the need to square away things caused by inconsistent writing.
Anthony: So even though some things, most notably Kirk himself, are on a different path (for example he doesn’t go to the Farragut after the Academy), he still ends up on the Enterprise with Scotty, Uhura, Chekov, Spock, etc. Are you saying there is some kind of ‘entropy’ perhaps? So even though some things are different, they gravitate towards some kind of center point?
Bob: Yes. If you look at quantum mechanics and you learn about the fact that our most successful theory of science is quantum mechanics, and the fact that it deals with probabilities of events happening. And that the most probable events tend to happen more often and that one of the subsets of that theory is the many universe theory. Data said this [in "Parallels"], he summed up quantum mechanics as the theory that "all possibilities that can happen do happen" in a parallel universe. According to theory, there are going to be a much larger number of universes in which events are very closely related, because those are the most probable configurations of things. Inherent in quantum mechanics there is sort of reverse entropy, which is what you were trying to say, in which the universe does tend to want to order itself in a certain way. This is not something we are making up; this is something we researched, in terms of the physical theory. So yes, there is an element of the universe trying to hold itself together.
Anthony: OK so let’s call the timeline Nero left, as ‘the prime timeline’, so that means that the USS Kelvin, as designed and seen in the trailer, that is also in the prime timeline?
Bob: Yes
Anthony: So what happens with the destruction of the Kelvin is the creation of an alternative timeline, but what happens to the prime timeline after Nero leaves it? Does it continue or does it wink out of existence once he goes back and creates this new timeline.
Bob: It continues. According to the most successful, most tested scientific theory ever, quantum mechanics, it continues.
Anthony: So everyone in the prime timeline, like Picard and Riker, are still off doing there thing, it is just that Nero is gone.
Bob: Yes, and you will notice that whenever the movie comes out, that whatever DVDs you have purchased, will continue to exist.
Anthony: OK we just dove pretty deep into Trek physics minutiae. Is any of that discussed in the film? In "Back To The Future II," there is that scene with the Doc and Marty, where the Doc explains time travel to Marty on a chalkboard. Does Spock ever do that with Kirk?
Bob: It would seem very logical. Quantum mechanics avoids the grandfather paradox that Back to the Future relies on, which is: you can go back in Back to the Future and screw with your own birth and potentially invalidate your own birth. In quantum mechanics that is not the case. In quantum mechanics, if you go back and kill your own father, then you just live on as the guy who came in from another universe who lives in a universe where you killed some guy, but you don’t erase your existence doing that.
I do not need an engraved invitation from CBS to offer my opinion of what they produce. That would be The First Amendment.
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