I can see, though, Starfleet taking some issue with that with Kirk. I believe it was always understood, at least going back to "Bread and Circuses" that a Starfleet Officer took an oath to put their life on the line if necessary, as Spock did.
To prevent the things that actually
matter, though -- to protect a culture from being conquered or enslaved or forced to follow a political or belief system other than its own. The notion that even a single tiny exposure to outside information is automatically destructive is ridiculous and dumb. That's not how cultures work. As I
literally just said in the passage you quoted, if you expose a culture to a new idea and leave it to its own devices, it will not be "contaminated" or destroyed -- it will take that idea and fold it into whatever it
already believes, or else will just reject it if it doesn't fit their existing beliefs.
The myth that any and all exposure to outside ideas is automatically harmful is just a copout -- it's a lie Western civilization tells itself to avoid confronting the fact that its contacts with other cultures were harmful to them because
it actively tried to destroy and assimilate them. As I already said, if the indigenous culture has the freedom to
choose for itself how it handles the new information, then it can be strengthened by the contact, like how Europe was when it adopted the aforementioned technologies and innovations from Asian cultures. As with everything else, it makes a huge difference who has consent and power in the interaction.
It's one reason I'd love to see a Lost Era book that does a story about WHY the PD's interpretation was changed by the time of TNG. Was their some disastrous mission involving the PD that caused Starfleet to become more reactionary in its interpretation?
I've considered doing a story like that from time to time, but sometimes I think it was really just the result of the kind of lazy literalism that sets in over time when people only pay attention to the letter of a law and forget the purpose it was formulated to serve. It's the result of seeing non-interference as an end in itself rather than a means to an end.
I guess maybe I got the wrong impression? When Gary says he got distracted during the battle, watching the Leonov's actions, he let the Sacagawea drift into the line of fire. Maybe I read to much in Gary making choices about allowing for things that distract his concentration, like how he holds hands with the yeoman during potentially dangerous maneuvers in the second pilot. Was Gary experiencing genuine confusion during battle with the cylinder ships, that even Kirk would also have done the same thing in Gary's place? It was a moment that confused me, and I went with my first impression. I don't want to pin it all on poor Gary, I like the character, even with some of his unlikable character traits.
No, I just meant it to be a "fog of war" situation, so much happening so quickly that there wasn't time to react to everything. If there's any negligence involved, it's strictly mine; I was never entirely satisfied with that beat as a way of getting the ship into the line of fire, but it got the job done, so I never thought of a stronger alternative.
The Captain's Oath in some sense feels like a response or answer to complaints that Kirk of the Kelvin-timeline didn't earn his way to command. Some fans watched the 2009 movie and were looking for the answers that TCO is offering us now, and I remember reading a lot of complaints. We didn't see Kirk work up through the ranks, or Kirk should have been shown commanding a more modest starship before Enterprise, or we needed to see Kirk faced with hard decisions that he sometimes might get wrong and learns from. It feels like The Captain's Oath is the story that they were actually wanting. Complementary to what some fans felt was missing.
I didn't specifically intend it that way; I was just trying to tell a plausible story for how the Kirk of TOS earned his command, based on the formulation in
The Making of Star Trek that he earned a ship of the
Enterprise's size and importance after proving himself in command of at least one smaller ship. That's the version of Kirk's backstory I've known for over 40 years, so naturally it loomed larger in my thoughts than a 10-year-old movie. I was aware that telling the story in that way would contrast with the Kelvin version in a way that highlighted its logic problems, but that wasn't my specific purpose, just a side effect.
The Kirk of the Star Trek (2009) and STID was much more fly by the seats and not concerned with regulations...
At least in Beyond, Kirk seemed more like the Kirk of the prime universe. He was more mature at the very least.
Yeah, I think it was always the intent to show Kirk's maturation into the captain we know. They gave him a very different childhood and upbringing due to the changed history, but once he entered Starfleet, befriended Spock and McCoy, and began realizing his true potential, it shaped him into the same fully realized personality that we knew from the Prime universe. They could've done a smoother and more effective job conveying that arc, but I think that was always the idea. It's sort of like some of those
Elseworlds Superman graphic novels where Kal-El landed on Earth in a different place or time but still ended up becoming pretty much the same Superman, because it was always in his nature.