But OTOH Vulcans aren't unreasonable, either - not completely.
So equating "cousin" with "somebody one shares ancestors with" doesn't sound like a Vulcan thing to do at all. Sure, Spock speaks of his father as an "ancestor" on occasion, but he doesn't consider Sybok his "brother" as long as he can wiggle with "half-brother".
Would some other random Vulcan waltzing in on the Sarek estate really introduce himself as "cousin", then, if the closest link was sixteen generations ago? Is "cousin" in Vulcan the equivalent of "brother" in Harlem?
Timo Saloniemi
Technically every living human is a cousin of every other. That includes parents and children and brothers and sisters, since everyone has numerous ancestral couples who were related as cousins to various degrees, whether they knew it or not.
If someone names two randomly chosen present day members of European royality it would take a comparatively short research period for me to find examples of them being cousins, such as second cousins, third cousins, tenth cousins twentieth cousins, etc., And if I don' t stop looking when I find one first cousin relationship, I can go on and find other cousin relationships they have. European royal family trees can become so complex that I made up a little rhyme "Oh what a tangled web we weave, when first we practice to conceive".
Everyone the world has many different relationships, usually distant cousins, to everyone else, whether there are records of those relationships or not.
In my own family one of my great great great grandmothers was both the half sister and the grand aunt by marriage of one of her relativw.
In "Yesteryear" Spock told Sarek:
SPOCK: My name is Selek, an humble cousin descended of T'Pel and Sasak. I am journeying to the family shrine to honour our gods.
If T'Pel and Sasak were Sarek's ancestors enough geratiosn before him, Sarek should have several lines of descent from them, and thus be his own cousin. Thus it would have been perfectly truthful for Spock, son of Sarek, to say he was a cousin of Sarek.
So everyone is their own cousin, and the cousin of all living humans, and every time they eat meat they are eating part of their very distanct cousin, and every time they he vegitble food they h are eating part of an even more distant cousin.
So if Vulcan restrict the term "cousin" to relatives who have traced and proved genealogical relationships with them, no matter how distant, and who are a subset of the entire Vulcan Species, that seems reasonable to me.
...Would some other random Vulcan waltzing in on the Sarek estate really introduce himself as "cousin", then, if the closest link was sixteen generations ago? Is "cousin" in Vulcan the equivalent of "brother" in Harlem?
Timo Saloniemi
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A lot of amilies have family associations that family members join to keep track of births, deaths, etc. in the family and to arrange family reunions. It is quite possible that Sarek's family has a family association, or that every Vulcan's genealogy is on the Vulcan itnernet for anyone to look up, and thus each Vulcan family, however it is defined, would have a complete list of members.
People with a common ancestor 16 generations ago would be 14th cousins. And according to some inheritance rules on Earth, people that distant have inherited property.
As I wrote above in post # 82, King Henry IV inherited the Kingdom of Frances from King Henry III. Henry IV was descended in 10 generations from Louis IX, and Henry III was descended in 12 gnerations from Louis IX. So they were 8th cousins twice removed, I think.
Maximillian II Jospeh, elector of Baviaria, descended from Duke Louis II in 14 generations, died in 1777 and Bavaria was inehrited by Charles Theodore, descended from Duke Louis II in 15 generations. Thus they should have been 12th cousins once removed.
And Adolph of Nassau inherited the throne of Luxembourg from King William III of the Netherlands in 1890, being King William's 17th cousin once removed.