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Where did the Vulcans come from?

Do not see Sargon's people are needed, since the race Salome Jens' people did earlier genetic changes.
I imagine the Protohumanoids seeded the Sargonians, and the Sargonians seeded the Vulcans per TOS episode. I’d forgotten about the line about Sargon’s people maybe seeding Vulcan and also thought Protohumanoids, but I think we can have both.

Again, it doesn’t have to be Sargon’s people who originated or passed down the prophesy, but I’m trying to minimize the number of ancients we’re talking about, whether or not that’s necessary or right.

How could the Mintakans fit into all of this? Were they a different kind of Sargonian seeding that’s taking longer? A Protohumanoid seeding? Did Sargonians look Vulcanoid? Or could they be the initial stock the Sargonians tweaked and deposited on Vulcan? I can’t remember from the episode how blasé they were about Vulcanoids evolving on their own on another planet. ...then again, plenty of humanoids do, so maybe mo tie is necesssry between the Mintakans and Vulcans.
 
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Narek's "arrival" meshes with what Sargon actually said about their role in the spreading of humanoids, but not in the most obvious way:

Sargon: "As you now leave your own seed on distant planets, so we left our seed behind us. Perhaps your own legends of an Adam and an Eve were two of our travelers."

"Seed" here would thus seem to be the usual biblical meaning of the word: Sargonian travelers had kids who settled on planets, then the generations down the line forgot they came from space and mistook themselves for natives.

Alternately, randy Sargonian humanoids impregnated Earth and Vulcan women or bore children for Earth and Vulcan men; if Sargon really knows his Bible, he would be within his rights to think that there were people down on Earth (still Paradise at that point) before Adam and Eve, but that those two started a new and better thing, mingling with the lesser natives.

No "placing of DNA in primordial soup/sand", then. And no forced relocation of ignorant natives from elsewhere. The first Vulcans (or the first modern Vulcans) would have been citizens of Sargon's empire, voluntarily descending from the heavens. Arguably from several different species, then, to account for the obvious differences between Vulcans and humans. Although we can argue whether Sargon's empire would feature different member species in the traditional sense, or whether Sargon's folks, originally (or after a power struggle) from a single species, would have decided to speciate themselves for variety and fun.

In light of this, the legend would have to be something that circulated among Sargon's people already, or at least this is what Narek thinks. Or, in the alternate interpretation, it is what was circulating among the people of Vulcan before the "real Vulcans" from Sargon's empire came and took over.

If Spock accepts Sargon's story as relevant to the past of Vulcan, I don't see Narek holding a radically different view. But this is possible, too - and we may even speculate the original Romulan schism was based on a deep disagreement on this very issue.

Timo Saloniemi
 
And as I said, I find those reasons flimsy and utterly unconvincing, even within the fictional context. The only "evidence" you cite is a few superficial, cherrypicked similarities in one proven liar's apocryphal and uncorroborated characterization of a myth which he has undoubtedly distorted to fit his fanatical beliefs. That's a terrible reason to believe anything.
Hi, welcome to Earth where people think 5G phone towers are the cause of Coronavirus. People believe far dumber things for far stupider reasons.

And Narek was brought up with these beliefs and then his sister and aunt shared a vision seemingly proving elements of the story at least.
 
Narek's "arrival" meshes with what Sargon actually said about their role in the spreading of humanoids, but not in the most obvious way:



"Seed" here would thus seem to be the usual biblical meaning of the word: Sargonian travelers had kids who settled on planets, then the generations down the line forgot they came from space and mistook themselves for natives.

Alternately, randy Sargonian humanoids impregnated Earth and Vulcan women or bore children for Earth and Vulcan men; if Sargon really knows his Bible, he would be within his rights to think that there were people down on Earth (still Paradise at that point) before Adam and Eve, but that those two started a new and better thing, mingling with the lesser natives.

No "placing of DNA in primordial soup/sand", then. And no forced relocation of ignorant natives from elsewhere. The first Vulcans (or the first modern Vulcans) would have been citizens of Sargon's empire, voluntarily descending from the heavens. Arguably from several different species, then, to account for the obvious differences between Vulcans and humans. Although we can argue whether Sargon's empire would feature different member species in the traditional sense, or whether Sargon's folks, originally (or after a power struggle) from a single species, would have decided to speciate themselves for variety and fun.

In light of this, the legend would have to be something that circulated among Sargon's people already, or at least this is what Narek thinks. Or, in the alternate interpretation, it is what was circulating among the people of Vulcan before the "real Vulcans" from Sargon's empire came and took over.

If Spock accepts Sargon's story as relevant to the past of Vulcan, I don't see Narek holding a radically different view. But this is possible, too - and we may even speculate the original Romulan schism was based on a deep disagreement on this very issue.

Timo Saloniemi
Oh yeah, I don’t imagine the Vulcan seeding was anything like the Protohumanoid. The latter could be something out of Prometheus for all we know, though I imagine something like a crop-dusting of the oceans.

Vulcan’s I imagine either a Galactica-mingling of Sargonians and Vulcans, or a “Neo-Luddite” pure-Sargonian colony that abandoned its old tech then forgot about it over 600k years, or even a series of alien abductions intermingling Sargonian and primate Vulcan DNA.
 
Or the Vulcans could have evolved from more primitive lifeforms, with little to no genetic contributions from Sargonians.
 
If there are mysteries in the Vulcan prehistory, then alien meddling is a likely explanation - after all, we know that it happens a lot in Trek, and contributed mightily to Earth's prehistory as well.

That Kirk jumps to defend Earth's primordial soup is just another case of Kirk missing the point altogether. Sargon speaks of space travelers coming and meddling, the very same way Kirk's folks travel in space and visit planets. He's not speaking of having usurped the role of God; he's just saying one of his great-great-grandpas quite possibly was Adam's next-door neighbor or Eve's weird uncle, or at least drove the shuttlebus that took them to Earth.

Spock gets the point all right. Perhaps Sadamk and T'Eve really were aliens, and Vulcans come from a different genetic line than all other lifeforms on planet Vulcan (except for those that Sadamk and T'Eve brought with them, which might be about 99% of Vulcan's surviving lifeforms). Or perhaps Sadamk left his copy of Shi'Kahr Gangs of the 1030s lying in a cave full of Vulcans, launching the planet into its historical era. Either way, he's admitting that it could have happened - whereas Kirk is forgetting it did happen on Earth, with Apollo and his lot, and with the Platonians and their lot, and (as he will soon learn) with Kukulkan, and no doubt with a thousand other influential visitors from outer space.

Timo Saloniemi
 
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By the Time of Archer, Katra transference was a long forgotten dirty little secret, only a hand full of monks remembered about.

The act had been scrubbed from history, for a good reason?

Abuse of power?

Assholes trying to be immortal, by overwriting hosts.

No wonder it was forbidden and forgotten
 
Still not buying that modern Vulcans cannot scan genomes of bacteria/virii/fungi as well as other life forms to determine if they evolved in situ.
 
Still not buying that modern Vulcans cannot scan genomes of bacteria/virii/fungi as well as other life forms to determine if they evolved in situ.
The proto-Vulcans Vulcaformed the entire planet down to the microbial level seeding every strata with life from their homeworld. he The few non Vulcanian lifeforms that remained are subject to debate as to their origins by Vulcan scientists.
The disaster that all but wiped out Sargon/Henoch's people also laid waste to colony worlds like Vulcan. The Vulcans survived but were reduced to stone age level and they had to begin a long road back to civilization (only to almost blow it again in Surak's era) Non sentient Vulcan lifeforms also survived and continued to evolve reaching their modern forms.
The Mintakans might be a from a colony that never quite recovered.
/headcanon theory
 
Don’t forget that the Admonition aliens wiped out all intelligent organic life 2-300k years ago. If the ancient Vulcans got anywhere between 600k and then, it was destroyed.
 
Narek says the tale of end is from a time before their ancestors came to Vulcan....! Where did the Vulcans come from before Vulcan?
T'Pol mentioned that Vulcans evolved on Vulcan, explaining why he had no problem with the blight sun due to his "inner eyelids", whereas Archer did.
 
T'Pol mentioned that Vulcans evolved on Vulcan, explaining why he had no problem with the blight sun due to his "inner eyelids", whereas Archer did.
This just tells me that the Vulcans can’t be pure Sargonians. They could have interbred. Or 600,000 years is a long time — could an eyelid have popped up in that time?
I still think it was a mistake in the script and he meant to say "Romulus"
I’m not sufficiently convinced it was a mistake, and, either way, it’s there — like, for my money, ENT, which seemed to contradict a lot more than this.
 
This just tells me that the Vulcans can’t be pure Sargonians. They could have interbred. Or 600,000 years is a long time — could an eyelid have popped up in that time?
Or it's a feature that the Sargonians share.
 
This just tells me that the Vulcans can’t be pure Sargonians. They could have interbred. Or 600,000 years is a long time — could an eyelid have popped up in that time?
Yours herein is the mistake of assuming that Star Trek has an internally consistent universe where whatever a character says can be taken as fact — characters say many things, many of which directly contradict what other characters have said.

I’m not sufficiently convinced it was a mistake, and, either way, it’s there — like, for my money, ENT, which seemed to contradict a lot more than this.
Such as, exemplī grātiā, here.
 
Yours herein is the mistake of assuming that Star Trek has an internally consistent universe where whatever a character says can be taken as fact — characters say many things, many of which directly contradict what other characters have said.
It’s about 1) intent and 2) fun.

1) If the writer intends something to be so, I’m not going to disregard it because I’d prefer it’s otherwise. At least, not initially when I’m figuring things out before I judge them for my head-canon. And I don’t think the writer intended Narek to be lying, or I’d be arguing for that intent.

2) I want to have as much fun possible figuring how it might maximally play out.
Such as, exemplī grātiā, here.
Yours herein is the mistake of assuming that sounding smart is the same as being it.
 
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Here's the thing -- even with dozens of people paying close attention and trying to catch every mistake, a few mistakes will inevitably slip through nonetheless. I've found some howlers that made it nearly or actually into print in my books despite everyone's best efforts. The most resilient one was in Only Superhuman, a book I spent seven years rewriting and revising even before I sold it and numerous other eyes went to work on error-checking, and yet somehow the line "Bimala crossed your arms" -- yes, she reached out of the book and crossed the reader's arms -- made it all the way to the galley stage and was barely caught in time.

The thing is, to a member of the audience, a single error can catch your attention and stand out and you can be amazed that anyone missed it. But the makers and editors of a story have to pay attention to every single word, and paradoxically, that need to pay closer attention in search of errors makes it more likely that a given error will be overlooked, lost among all the other words you're trying to check for accuracy.
When I was magazing editing I knew every single error in the gap between printing and getting the printed copy back. But by then I just had to wait for the physical proof of my mess up.
 
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