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Timelines, reality,star trek, canon, and the Truth!

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anothertrekfan;2974511I said:
actually have to agree with that. This theory of time travel makes absolutely no sense. Which, in my opinion, the only explanation to give if you want the prime universe's timeline to be preserved is that the black hole transported Nero and Spock back through time in another quantum universe. But people, it's useless arguing with 3D Master because I've already tried and this is the response I got...

Actually, I think what happened is similar to what happened with the Mirror/Mirror U. Not just a branching timeline, but an alternate reality. Unstable space is what sent the Defiant there in The Tholian Web. It's possible the Red Matter black holes set up similar conditions for the Jellyfish and the Narada.

Parallel universes DO exist in Star Trek. However, I do believe that multi-branching timelines could exist in it as well.
 
No, your brain doesn't work hard enough to understand. Or rather you simply refuse to understand it, you don't want to understand it, so you simply ignore it. The above that I wrote down for the second time now, is simple logic. Anyone coming to it with functioning logic and not willfully ignore it, will know I'm right.
3D Master, it must be frustrating being the only person in this forum with a functioning brain. I applaud your patience.

However, you are bending over backwards to excuse all previous inconsistencies and stating that all time travel in "Star Trek" is always the same, but then, when you discuss "Star Trek XI," which does not show anything that hasn't happened in a dozen other episodes, you are saying some rule was broken.

But different methods of time travel DO produce different results.

It's one thing to be caught inside a temporal anomaly, or a time loop, or a predestination paradox, but it's another issue entirely to jump backwards in time and tinker with the past.

And then there's a third phenomenon, where there's an ongoing gateway between two timelines, where people can pass through the gateway at different times.

For example, in "Yesterday's Enterprise," the rift remained open for many hours, allowing the characters to choose whether or not to go back through it.

In "Star Trek XI," the black hole creates an ongoing gateway between Ambassador Spock's timeline and the new timeline where Nero has been stirring up trouble for 25 years.

Likewise, in "In a Mirror, Darkly," there was an ongoing interphasic rift between the 23rd Century and 2155 in the Mirror Universe, through which the U.S.S. Defiant slipped.

That episode, alone, establishes the precedent that time travel can involve different alternate realities connected by a "hole" in space.

I personally don't see anything new or different with Spock and Nero going back through the black hole in this movie.

Lt. Yar going back on the Enterprise-C and living out her life in the new timeline is exactly what Spock is doing in "Star Trek XI." If you were to ask both Lt. Yar and Ambassador Spock where they are a year after each of those stories, they would both say the same exact thing: "I am living in the past of an alternate timeline, different from my own."

To say otherwise is just applying your own personal opinions of the stories. You can twist the meanings of the words and events from the movies and episodes to suit your argument, but you clearly have an agenda to set this new movie apart from every other "Star Trek" episode, while stretching credibility to forgive every obvious contradiction from previous time travel stories.


As to the Nexus in "Generations," Guinan entered and left the Nexus before Kirk, then Kirk entered and left the Nexus before Picard entered, then Picard left the nexus before he entered. Obviously, they are all echoes to each other, since none of them were in the Nexus at the same "time," but they all knew each other inside the Nexus.

Also, each of the characters entered and left the Nexus exactly once, and their bodies physically entered and left. Why then, when Picard and Kirk left the Nexus, did Picard not see his younger self on the planet with Soran? (There should have been two Picards, like there were two Janeways in "Endgame.")

Did Picard "quantum leap" into his own younger body? If so, whose body did Kirk "quantum leap" into? Not only is that method of time travel inconsistent with any other episode, it is inconsistent within the movie itself.

(And after Soran entered the Nexus with Picard, he is still free to leave the Nexus at any time, just as Picard and Kirk were, so he could pop out again at any time in the past or future. They never really defeated him.)


And since you seem to have an answer for everything, 3D Master, why did the Enterprise beam the captured Air Force officers back into their younger bodies as they returned to the future in "Tomorrow is Yesterday"? How would that be any different from, say, just dumping them out an airlock, since their younger selves would still be alive in the past, and would never be aboard the Enterprise in the future? What was accomplished by beaming them during the slingshot? That whole scenario does not seem consistent with picking up a couple whales and taking them to the future.
 
1. The rift originates in the future, the following sequence of events happens: Enterprise-C gets destroyed, we have peace. Rift opens. Enterprise-C goes to the future and is not destroyed. Time changes, there is now war. Enterprise-C goes back to the past carrying Tasha Yar. She survives the destruction, gets captured, and we are now in a third time line that is the same on the Federation and Klingon side of the equation.

2. The rift originates in the past, the following sequence of events happens: Enterprise-C enters the rift and arrives in a war-torn future. Enterprise-C takes Yar on board. Enterprise-C returns, gets destroyed defending a Klingon outpost. We are now in a timeline that has peace between the Klingons and the Federation.

But if there was ever a state where the hole didn't exist in the timeline (speaking from an outside perspective, of course), then the Ent-C didn't fall into the hole, of course. I don't see how case 2 is possible unless you're going for outright predestination as far as the hole existing. Though I guess this distinction makes no difference. From outside the timeline all events are predestined.


No, that did not happen. The E-E did NOT go into another reality, it stayed in ITS reality. The timeline of that reality however was CHANGED. You could see this, because the Earth actually turned into a Borg world in their very future before they even moved through any displacement event. The timeline they were in before they entered the wake, is GONE, finito, finished, done, over, no longer present.

Star Trek XI wants us to believe, that the timeline did NOT get changed at all. The timeline they came from still exists, fully, just in another reality; that upon time traveling a new reality was simply split off. This is entirely different from FC and all other time travel stories in Star Trek up until the new movie.

I agree with your analysis of FC, but I don't see how this applies to XI. Who says the original timeline exists? That isn't in the film. If you mean that some of the writers are taking that position off-camera, who cares?

Apply this to Future Picard of Number 1; and you'd get the same thing. The thing is though; he wouldn't have had to have done the time loop once, but many, many, many times. His mind would similarly start to notice something wrong about constantly repeating the same time; with people around him who refuse to listen and seeing the Enterprise destroyed over and over, the combination of psychological pressure and his mind's instinctive knowledge of time being all wrong; would have finally broke him down, reducing him to his coma state.

And in all those many times through the loop, Future Picard didn't find any way to break the loop? Find any way to convince himself that he was telling the truth? Try not getting into the damn shuttle just once? This is your position?
 
Who says the original timeline exists? That isn't in the film. If you mean that some of the writers are taking that position off-camera, who cares?
Actually, the film SHOWS us the original timeline still exists. When Spock "prime" is mind-melding with Kirk, we see, quite clearly (and are told as much), that Spock entered the singularity AFTER Nero. If the original timeline had been "erased" by Nero at the site of the attack on the Kelvin, then Spock would have "disappeared" and never crossed through the black hole.
 
Who says the original timeline exists? That isn't in the film. If you mean that some of the writers are taking that position off-camera, who cares?
Actually, the film SHOWS us the original timeline still exists. When Spock "prime" is mind-melding with Kirk, we see, quite clearly (and are told as much), that Spock entered the singularity AFTER Nero. If the original timeline had been "erased" by Nero at the site of the attack on the Kelvin, then Spock would have "disappeared" and never crossed through the black hole.

That is actually a very good point and one I haven't seen argued yet. Good job.
 
Except in the assumption that time as we know it exists in the Nexus. Clearly it does not. Events may flow, as we can percieve them, but since you can move all around them and what not and manipulate them to your will, then cause and effect, that with which we measure time, has no meaning there.

Also, things are ageless in the Nexus, shaped to whim, rather than the tick of the clock.

So no, 3dM is wrong, time, if it exists at all in the Nexus, exists in such a way that is not at all analogous to what exists in our realm.

And that does not at all mean that everything must freeze, because Nexus does not operate according to the rules of our universe, rather, rules all it's own.

Which doesn't matter one bit. All that matters is that some kind of time flows there; and we see this happening. If no time flowed, we would not be able to see what happens in the Nexus at all. If some time flows in the Nexus, that's all we need. There is no inconsistency.

And no, there is no one single view of time travel in the Trek U. There seems to be several.
Wrong, there is a single view, and I've shown it.

Not to mention parallel universes and the like, which Star Trek seems to dabble more into.
Parallel universe have nothing to do with time travel unless you describe to the theory of Trek XI that time travel creates parallel universe. Star Trek never did before, and has thus no baring on how time travel works.

But in the nexus time WASN'T FLOWING. Kirk was jumping from one moment to another with no Linear cohesion. He wasn't moving forward he was jumping all around. He was at point A and then suddenly at point c without ever moving through point b...
 
Who says the original timeline exists? That isn't in the film. If you mean that some of the writers are taking that position off-camera, who cares?
Actually, the film SHOWS us the original timeline still exists. When Spock "prime" is mind-melding with Kirk, we see, quite clearly (and are told as much), that Spock entered the singularity AFTER Nero. If the original time line had been "erased" by Nero at the site of the attack on the Kelvin, then Spock would have "disappeared" and never crossed through the black hole.

That is actually a very good point and one I haven't seen argued yet. Good job.

I was thinking of the same thing last night! It makes sense to me that for the events in this movie to have taken place then all that came before it must have happened, else, none of the events in this movie could have occurred...It all took place or else Spock Prime would not "BE." Spock Prime remembers all of it, and in my mind anyway, Star Trek as I've known it and experienced it is preserved...and now I get to see it all unfold in new ways......This is, of course, assuming that all of this is actually for real...I mean, it is, isn't it? Star Trek is FOR REAL?
 
Wrong, as I have already pointed out, and have proven to a certain fact, and anyone with a functioning brain can see this, that indeed some type of time flows inside the Nexus. If there was no time there at all, nobody would be able to do anything or see anything.

That's the way it is in our reality. But the Nexus isn't our reality, not even close. As has been pointed out already and anyone with a "functioning brain" would know that.

Anyone with a functioning brain also knows your talking out of your ass now. If the above were the case; pigs would be flying without wings inside the nexus, Blackbeard is running around for the hell of it - the actual Blackbeard not a figment of someone's imagination, and you can walk up walls without any problems.


They'd simply be frozen stuck; unable to move, unable to see anything, unable to speak, unable to meet anyone, or go anywhere, unable even to think.
You don't know that.

Wrong, I DO know that. There's again using logic and your brain.

No, you are of this odd view that all these fictional universes operate exactly as YOU say they do.

When they don't.

They are fictional constructs and aren't subject to your suppositions.

The end.

:sighs: Nope, it's on screen. I use logic and reason and arguments based on what's on screen to support any of my claims.

Unlike some people who can only seem to say: I don't care what's on screen, I just don't want you to be right, so you're not right - and that's that.


You know again; you might want to try and keep up with the thread. It should be so heard to remember what was in a post; and if you're not able to, you can always go a few pages back and reread the stuff. You do have a function short-term memory right? I'm not asking to insult you, I'm genuinely worried.

To answer your: so?

Because time travel is what we've been discussing this entire ffing thread. Any talk of alternate realities are only as a fringe subject of time travel. It's ALL about time travel.

Time travel.

Are you starting to get it yet?

TIME TRAVEL.

Because being able to change your own timeline, and splitting off a new reality every time you travel through time are two mutually exclusive time travel mechanisms. If you split off a new reality, thus leaving your own timeline unscathed in the old reality, you will never be able to change your own time line.
And why not? Why aren't both possible? Considering we are just making things up here...and several possibilities exist for all this, I'm allowing for multiple possibilities.

Again, if you can't grasp logic, and a basic understanding of what would make something mutually exclusive there is no point in debating you, because you are incapable of basic rudimentary logic that is required to at least understand each other's most basic words and reasoning.

You aren't.

And that's ok. But don't think for a second that all roads of logic must lead to your conclusions.

Well, that's where you are wrong. I'm allowing for lots of possibilities as long as what's on screen allows for these possibilities. And I can't allow for both time travel mechanisms to exist, because they are mutually exclusive. Mutually exclusive is mutually exclusive, in every road of logic. If you can't grasp mutual exclusivity and/or why being able to change your own timeline, and splitting off a new reality by traveling back in time are mutually exclusive, this debate is over - because you're not capable of grasping the basic logic that is required to have a debate over this.

Except for the fact that anyone willing to apply functioning logic knows that there is no overwhelming evidence. I've been applying that logic concisely, and been explaining it several times over already.
You aren't smart, or logical, just pig headed.

No, I'm smart and logical. If I'm wrong, I will happily admit it. And if any of your arguments had any merit (hell you don't even have any arguments) I would acknowledge that too.

anothertrekfan;2974511I said:
actually have to agree with that. This theory of time travel makes absolutely no sense. Which, in my opinion, the only explanation to give if you want the prime universe's timeline to be preserved is that the black hole transported Nero and Spock back through time in another quantum universe. But people, it's useless arguing with 3D Master because I've already tried and this is the response I got...

Actually, I think what happened is similar to what happened with the Mirror/Mirror U. Not just a branching timeline, but an alternate reality. Unstable space is what sent the Defiant there in The Tholian Web. It's possible the Red Matter black holes set up similar conditions for the Jellyfish and the Narada.

Yeah, but that's not splitting of a reality as a result of time travel. That's traveling into another reality back in time. This an entirely different thing.

Parallel universes DO exist in Star Trek. However, I do believe that multi-branching timelines could exist in it as well.

Not could exist, the exist for a certain face; there's this little episode called "Parallels."

However, that they exist has no impact on whether traveling back in time causes a new reality to split off and you're stuck in that reality unable to get back to your own, without doing an actually cross reality travel like the original Defiant did.

The existence of these realities has nothing to do with how time travel works.
 
No, your brain doesn't work hard enough to understand. Or rather you simply refuse to understand it, you don't want to understand it, so you simply ignore it. The above that I wrote down for the second time now, is simple logic. Anyone coming to it with functioning logic and not willfully ignore it, will know I'm right.
3D Master, it must be frustrating being the only person in this forum with a functioning brain. I applaud your patience.

However, you are bending over backwards to excuse all previous inconsistencies and stating that all time travel in "Star Trek" is always the same, but then, when you discuss "Star Trek XI," which does not show anything that hasn't happened in a dozen other episodes, you are saying some rule was broken.

Wrong, it does. It shows, or rather claims, time travel causing a new reality to be split off, which would eliminate all possibility of changing the timeline of your own reality.

But different methods of time travel DO produce different results.

It's one thing to be caught inside a temporal anomaly, or a time loop, or a predestination paradox, but it's another issue entirely to jump backwards in time and tinker with the past.
More like the other way around. Jump backwards in time and tinker with the past is standard operating procedure for Trek. Temporal anomalies and time loops and predestination paradoxes are much much much rarer.

And then there's a third phenomenon, where there's an ongoing gateway between two timelines, where people can pass through the gateway at different times.

For example, in "Yesterday's Enterprise," the rift remained open for many hours, allowing the characters to choose whether or not to go back through it.
There is no gateway between two timelines here. There is no way for the Warship Enterprise-D to pass through a gateway and meet the Starship Enterprise-D

There's only a gateway from the past to the future; a future that happens to have BEEN CHANGED as a RESULT of the time travel; but there is no inter-timeline or rather inter-reality travel going on here at all.

In "Star Trek XI," the black hole creates an ongoing gateway between Ambassador Spock's timeline and the new timeline where Nero has been stirring up trouble for 25 years.
Nope.

According to the movie, Nero went back in time, and as a result a brand new reality that not exist before he went back in time SPLIT OFF from the parent reality, (a feat that would negate any possibility of ever changing your own timeline as we've seen happen over and over again in Trek.)

What you see is the opposite; Nero and Spock travel into an already existing other reality and travel into its past at the same time, and change its past - well actually, if it's another reality we don't know if they traveled in time at all, or that they changed anything, but now we get into the nitty gritty and semantics.

[/quote]Likewise, in "In a Mirror, Darkly," there was an ongoing interphasic rift between the 23rd Century and 2155 in the Mirror Universe, through which the U.S.S. Defiant slipped.

That episode, alone, establishes the precedent that time travel can involve different alternate realities connected by a "hole" in space.[/quote]

Whether or not you can travel into another reality matters not. As I've been saying multiple times over already: traveling into another reality is NOT time travel. You may be time traveling at the same time as traveling into another reality (although strictly speaking in the above scenario this is not necessary, but again that is nitty gritty stuff); however this is completely different from Trek XI claims has happened and has nothing to do with simple time travel.

I personally don't see anything new or different with Spock and Nero going back through the black hole in this movie.
The difference is, that the movie claims that as a result of nothing but time travel an entirely NEW reality was split off from the parent reality - a reality that did not exist before the simple non-inter-reality time travel occurred.

Lt. Yar going back on the Enterprise-C and living out her life in the new timeline is exactly what Spock is doing in "Star Trek XI." If you were to ask both Lt. Yar and Ambassador Spock where they are a year after each of those stories, they would both say the same exact thing: "I am living in the past of an alternate timeline, different from my own."
To say otherwise is just applying your own personal opinions of the stories. You can twist the meanings of the words and events from the movies and episodes to suit your argument, but you clearly have an agenda to set this new movie apart from every other "Star Trek" episode, while stretching credibility to forgive every obvious contradiction from previous time travel stories.
Except that in Trek XI it is deliberately stated, said, and shown that both the younger and the older Spock do not say they are simply living in their past, and changed past because of it. Both say, OUTRIGHT, that the original time line continues to exist parallel to their own.

Yar would say: "The Enterprise-C went back into the past, changed the timeline, I'm now living a different timeline." (Nowhere does reality / parallel universe even come up.)

Old and young spock in Trek XI say (again, I'm not making this up, or speculating, they're saying it straight to your face even in not these exact words): "Old Spock comes from a parallel reality / universe that continues onward uninterrupted. Old Spock is now in an entirely different reality where his and his fellow time travelers actions have had consequence changed the timeline which as a result split this reality off entirely from the parent reality."

As to the Nexus in "Generations," Guinan entered and left the Nexus before Kirk, then Kirk entered and left the Nexus before Picard entered, then Picard left the nexus before he entered. Obviously, they are all echoes to each other, since none of them were in the Nexus at the same "time," but they all knew each other inside the Nexus.
No. Both Picard and Kirk were real were fully present inside the nexus. They were not echose to each other they were actually there. Guinan however was not real, she was just an echoe if not entirely a creation of Picard's imagination just like his make-believe family.

Whether or not Kirk entered in a different time matters not, what matters is whether he was still inside it by the time Picard entered. He was.

Also, each of the characters entered and left the Nexus exactly once, and their bodies physically entered and left. Why then, when Picard and Kirk left the Nexus, did Picard not see his younger self on the planet with Soran? (There should have been two Picards, like there were two Janeways in "Endgame.")

Did Picard "quantum leap" into his own younger body? If so, whose body did Kirk "quantum leap" into? Not only is that method of time travel inconsistent with any other episode, it is inconsistent within the movie itself.
This is where the Nexus itself causes problems - and it is not a problem with time travel, or inconsistancy in time travel itself. This is a problem with the esoteric concept of the Nexus itself - and plotholes in the movie. Not time travel itself. I am indeed of the opinion that the Nexus - not time travel - put Picard in his old body, or merged the two.

(And after Soran entered the Nexus with Picard, he is still free to leave the Nexus at any time, just as Picard and Kirk were, so he could pop out again at any time in the past or future. They never really defeated him.)
His entire goal was to get in the Nexus, why would come back out? And they DID defeat Soran; the second time around.

And since you seem to have an answer for everything, 3D Master, why did the Enterprise beam the captured Air Force officers back into their younger bodies as they returned to the future in "Tomorrow is Yesterday"? How would that be any different from, say, just dumping them out an airlock, since their younger selves would still be alive in the past, and would never be aboard the Enterprise in the future? What was accomplished by beaming them during the slingshot? That whole scenario does not seem consistent with picking up a couple whales and taking them to the future.
Because they're not evil bastards who kill people.

1. The rift originates in the future, the following sequence of events happens: Enterprise-C gets destroyed, we have peace. Rift opens. Enterprise-C goes to the future and is not destroyed. Time changes, there is now war. Enterprise-C goes back to the past carrying Tasha Yar. She survives the destruction, gets captured, and we are now in a third time line that is the same on the Federation and Klingon side of the equation.

2. The rift originates in the past, the following sequence of events happens: Enterprise-C enters the rift and arrives in a war-torn future. Enterprise-C takes Yar on board. Enterprise-C returns, gets destroyed defending a Klingon outpost. We are now in a timeline that has peace between the Klingons and the Federation.

But if there was ever a state where the hole didn't exist in the timeline (speaking from an outside perspective, of course), then the Ent-C didn't fall into the hole, of course. I don't see how case 2 is possible unless you're going for outright predestination as far as the hole existing. Though I guess this distinction makes no difference. From outside the timeline all events are predestined.

No, no predestination at all, because there's no time travel involved to create the rift. The rift simply originates at the Ent-C time and it goes through it. Over and done. A Predestination paradox only occurs when you travel back in time, and instead of changing it, change nothing.

The poster below already answered this.

And in all those many times through the loop, Future Picard didn't find any way to break the loop? Find any way to convince himself that he was telling the truth? Try not getting into the damn shuttle just once? This is your position?
Yes.

But in the nexus time WASN'T FLOWING. Kirk was jumping from one moment to another with no Linear cohesion. He wasn't moving forward he was jumping all around. He was at point A and then suddenly at point c without ever moving through point b...

And in between the jumps, Kirk was walking, talking, baking eggs. Time FLOWED. Whether Kirk's desires made new things pop up is besides the point. If no time flowed at all; Kirk would not be able to make even a single step, he wouldn't even be able to formulate a single thought.
 
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Somehow I'm picturing this guy locked in an empty room writing time travel equations on the wall... :lol:
 
And in between the jumps, Kirk was walking, talking, baking eggs. Time FLOWED. Whether Kirk's desires made new things pop up is besides the point. If no time flowed at all; Kirk would not be able to make even a single step, he wouldn't even be able to formulate a single thought.
No it didn't flow. Does time flow on a recorded event on a video tape. He was reliving moments of his past life, hoping to make changes. The Nexus was more than just a big puffle of space time. Time didn't work by the same laws in the nexus. While Kirk was riding horses and trying to keep the woman he loved while talking to Picard in the Nexus time outside the nexus meant nothing. He could have stayed the age he entered the nexus forever infact I'd say he did because he was the same age he was when he entered the Nexus when Picard came to talk to him DECADES later.

Use a little logic man, see the facts that are before you instead of hiding your head in the sand, putting your fingers in your ears and saying "La la la I'm not listening" Kirk didn't age a day since he entered the Nexus because TIME didn't flow, his life and his desires were played out for him while he was in a timeless limbo.
 
Wrong, as I have already pointed out, and have proven to a certain fact, and anyone with a functioning brain can see this, that indeed some type of time flows inside the Nexus. If there was no time there at all, nobody would be able to do anything or see anything.

And as anyone with a functioning brain knows (and we see there are several, just not yours), the Nexus is not our reality, and this assumption above, how "nobody would be able to do or see anything" is just that, an asssumption, for the purpose of your argument, but that's it.

Anyone with a functioning brain also knows your talking out of your ass now. If the above were the case; pigs would be flying without wings inside the nexus, Blackbeard is running around for the hell of it - the actual Blackbeard not a figment of someone's imagination, and you can walk up walls without any problems.

And it's clear that you could do that in the Nexus, if it was your thing.

Wrong, I DO know that. There's again using logic and your brain.

And a set of assumptions to a fictional reality that operates according to an entirely different set of assumptions. So your conclusionis are entirely false, and you are too prideful and stubborn to consider the possibility.


:sighs: Nope, it's on screen. I use logic and reason and arguments based on what's on screen to support any of my claims.

Tedious at this point.

Unlike some people who can only seem to say: I don't care what's on screen, I just don't want you to be right, so you're not right - and that's that.

And there it is, the truth of 3dMaster and his ninja debating skills revealed.

:guffaw:


Because time travel is what we've been discussing this entire ffing thread. Any talk of alternate realities are only as a fringe subject of time travel. It's ALL about time travel.

No, it's not.

Time travel.

It would seem not.


Are you starting to get it yet?

TIME TRAVEL.

THERE! ARE! FOUR! LIGHTS!

Again, if you can't grasp logic, and a basic understanding of what would make something mutually exclusive there is no point in debating you,

This isn't debate on your part. This is dogma.

Well, that's where you are wrong. I'm allowing for lots of possibilities as long as what's on screen allows for these possibilities.

And it's clear it does, except for a few obsessed, anal retentive fanboys.

Sucks to be you, a fandom charicature.


And I can't allow for both time travel mechanisms to exist, because they are mutually exclusive.

No, they aren't. You don't have the power to make such absolute declarations.



No, I'm smart and logical. If I'm wrong, I will happily admit it.

Since when?


Yeah, but that's not splitting of a reality as a result of time travel. That's traveling into another reality back in time. This an entirely different thing.

It would seem we are doing that different thing. You just are stuck on the one thing.


The existence of these realities has nothing to do with how time travel works.

Time travel is not real. So the rules can be adjusted however the writers wish.

You are mistaking Trek for some kind of real universe where all rules and assumptions are set in stone.

Here in the real universe, we are a long way from figuring out how it all works, so in a fictional universe like Trek, what makes you think, since you aren't even involved in creating it, that you can say something like that with any kind of absoluteness and be accurate?

A writer can say, "Oh yeah?", and you are WRONG.

Get used to it.
 
Use a little logic man, see the facts that are before you instead of hiding your head in the sand, putting your fingers in your ears and saying "La la la I'm not listening" Kirk didn't age a day since he entered the Nexus because TIME didn't flow, his life and his desires were played out for him while he was in a timeless limbo.

See...but it couldn't be a timeless limbo...because Kirk could move and see stuff!

BOW BEFORE THE POWER OF MY INDESPUTABLE LOGIC, YOU ILLOGICAL PERSON!

I AM CAPTAIN CANON, MASTER OF THE THIRD DIMENSION! AND THE FORTH!

:bolian:
 
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