First Contact & Regeneration
PICARD: “Mister Data, lay in a course for the twenty-fourth century. I suspect our future is there waiting for us.”
A major point of this discussion of the Prime timeline is First Contact and Enterprise “Regeneration”, both stories which I love. There is no question that, even though the Enterprise-E crew prevented the first altered timeline where the Borg assimilate the entire Earth in the 21st century, there is a second altered timeline created in which the Borg plot is defeated and humanity’s official first contact with the Vulcans takes place as their original timeline remembers it. However, Lily and Zephram Cochrane now knew of the Borg and the future, and some Borg survived on Earth to be revived in the 22nd century and defeated by that time’s Enterprise crew.
In the special features of “Regeneration” the episode’s writers state that they had the Borg transmission that would take 200 years to reach it’s intended reception to imply a predestination explanation for how “Regeneration” does not mean that First Contact created a significantly different timeline. The time travel of the Borg and the Enterprise-E was supposedly destined to happen and the ENT Borg episode just “explains” how in the 24th century the Borg Collective on the other side of the galaxy found out about a race ripe for the picking to assimilate in Alpha Quadrant in the first place. An argument against that predestination proposition can be made because, before the Enterprise-E followed the Borg sphere back in time, they saw an alternate timeline in which the Borg succeeded in their mission. If the Enterprise-E had always been predestined to go back in time to help create that past, then they couldn’t have possibly ever seen an alternate timeline in which the Borg succeeded.
I also do not feel that First Contact/”Regeneration” constitutes evidence of a significantly new timeline, but not for the same reason that the writers. There can still be an original timeline in which the time travel didn’t happen, so there doesn’t have to be predestination. In the original timeline, there never were any Borg frozen on Earth so the 22nd century Enterprise just did not have that particular adventure. Cochrane never made his drunken statement about cybernetic beings from the future, and Archer and his crew never encountered or knew about the Borg. The 24th century Borg had never gotten any message from Alpha Quadrant. They just made their way to our side of the galaxy in search of new races to assimilate, or maybe when Q had taken the Enterprise-D to encounter the Borg in TNG “Q Who,” the Borg somehow got an idea where the Enterprise was from so made their way there as a result.
Then in the new timeline resulting from First Contact, Cochrane did once mention cyborgs from the future then recanted it later, and since he was a known alcoholic, it was shrugged off by the public as fantasy. Perhaps he said a lot of crazy things in both timelines so it was just another wild thing he said. Lily never told anyone about the future and her life didn’t impact the sequence of events leading to the 22nd century or beyond. In the new altered timeline, the NX-01 Enterprise’s mission did include one adventure that was not there before, “Regeneration”. That adventure did not impact any other adventures, so before and afterwards, things proceeded as they had before the changes to the timeline. The Borg in that ENT episode sent their transmission, but maybe the 24th century Borg were already on their way here when they got it or maybe the Collective never received the message and came this way without it anyway. Maybe “ Q Who” didn’t happen in the new timeline because Q would no longer need to warn Starfleet about the Borg, but some other adventure happened that is still referred to in the same way briefly in dialogue in TNG “Best of Both Worlds”. Or maybe the 22nd century Borg incident was completely covered up and classified to prevent panic, so maybe “Q Who” still happened as in the original timeline - perhaps some high ranking Starfleet officials (or Section 31) may have already known about the Borg while Picard didn’t. (I don’t like Q and didn’t care for the “Q Who” episode, so I choose something else happening instead of “Q Who” in the altered timeline, but I wanted to show there are multiple solutions). And then either way, every Borg encounter starting with “Best of Both Worlds” and other stories happens the same as in the original timeline, leading up to the time travel in First Contact. Just like in my TVH example above, the Borg, Picard and the Enterprise-E crew of the altered timeline were virtually identical to the original versions, so they went back in time and made all the same choices their original version had thus completing the loop: a “stable” new timeline emerged that still results in the time travel events that originally created it.
…
PICARD: “Mister Data, lay in a course for the twenty-fourth century. I suspect our future is there waiting for us.”
A major point of this discussion of the Prime timeline is First Contact and Enterprise “Regeneration”, both stories which I love. There is no question that, even though the Enterprise-E crew prevented the first altered timeline where the Borg assimilate the entire Earth in the 21st century, there is a second altered timeline created in which the Borg plot is defeated and humanity’s official first contact with the Vulcans takes place as their original timeline remembers it. However, Lily and Zephram Cochrane now knew of the Borg and the future, and some Borg survived on Earth to be revived in the 22nd century and defeated by that time’s Enterprise crew.
In the special features of “Regeneration” the episode’s writers state that they had the Borg transmission that would take 200 years to reach it’s intended reception to imply a predestination explanation for how “Regeneration” does not mean that First Contact created a significantly different timeline. The time travel of the Borg and the Enterprise-E was supposedly destined to happen and the ENT Borg episode just “explains” how in the 24th century the Borg Collective on the other side of the galaxy found out about a race ripe for the picking to assimilate in Alpha Quadrant in the first place. An argument against that predestination proposition can be made because, before the Enterprise-E followed the Borg sphere back in time, they saw an alternate timeline in which the Borg succeeded in their mission. If the Enterprise-E had always been predestined to go back in time to help create that past, then they couldn’t have possibly ever seen an alternate timeline in which the Borg succeeded.
I also do not feel that First Contact/”Regeneration” constitutes evidence of a significantly new timeline, but not for the same reason that the writers. There can still be an original timeline in which the time travel didn’t happen, so there doesn’t have to be predestination. In the original timeline, there never were any Borg frozen on Earth so the 22nd century Enterprise just did not have that particular adventure. Cochrane never made his drunken statement about cybernetic beings from the future, and Archer and his crew never encountered or knew about the Borg. The 24th century Borg had never gotten any message from Alpha Quadrant. They just made their way to our side of the galaxy in search of new races to assimilate, or maybe when Q had taken the Enterprise-D to encounter the Borg in TNG “Q Who,” the Borg somehow got an idea where the Enterprise was from so made their way there as a result.
Then in the new timeline resulting from First Contact, Cochrane did once mention cyborgs from the future then recanted it later, and since he was a known alcoholic, it was shrugged off by the public as fantasy. Perhaps he said a lot of crazy things in both timelines so it was just another wild thing he said. Lily never told anyone about the future and her life didn’t impact the sequence of events leading to the 22nd century or beyond. In the new altered timeline, the NX-01 Enterprise’s mission did include one adventure that was not there before, “Regeneration”. That adventure did not impact any other adventures, so before and afterwards, things proceeded as they had before the changes to the timeline. The Borg in that ENT episode sent their transmission, but maybe the 24th century Borg were already on their way here when they got it or maybe the Collective never received the message and came this way without it anyway. Maybe “ Q Who” didn’t happen in the new timeline because Q would no longer need to warn Starfleet about the Borg, but some other adventure happened that is still referred to in the same way briefly in dialogue in TNG “Best of Both Worlds”. Or maybe the 22nd century Borg incident was completely covered up and classified to prevent panic, so maybe “Q Who” still happened as in the original timeline - perhaps some high ranking Starfleet officials (or Section 31) may have already known about the Borg while Picard didn’t. (I don’t like Q and didn’t care for the “Q Who” episode, so I choose something else happening instead of “Q Who” in the altered timeline, but I wanted to show there are multiple solutions). And then either way, every Borg encounter starting with “Best of Both Worlds” and other stories happens the same as in the original timeline, leading up to the time travel in First Contact. Just like in my TVH example above, the Borg, Picard and the Enterprise-E crew of the altered timeline were virtually identical to the original versions, so they went back in time and made all the same choices their original version had thus completing the loop: a “stable” new timeline emerged that still results in the time travel events that originally created it.
…