Kane Starkiller wrote:The other objective criterion would be population and self sufficiency. A standard small settlement with a few hundred people could hardly be expected to get a seat at the council. A larger colony like Tasha Jar's for example is known to have a right to secede from Federation.
Neither of which standard is particularly easy to gauge. A federation traditionally is made up of pieces; the UFP has
members and a charter. Ergo, the most sensible interpretation of the line about the Federation being 150 worlds is that 150 worlds have signed onto the Federation charter as members.
Moreover, the line in ST:FC isn't the only one:
ST:FC (2373):
Lily: "How many planets are in this Federation?"
Picard: "Over one hundred and fifty, spread across eight thousand light years.'
"Battle Lines" (DS9, 2369):
Sisko: "The Federation is made up of over a hundred planets who have allied themselves for mutual scientific cultural and defensive benefits."
Now which is more likely... the Federation adding signatories as it searches desperately for allies during the Dominion War, sucking in nearby friendly civilizations, or the Federation undertaking massive colonization upgrade efforts during the Dominion War?
That isn't to rule out the possibility of colony planets possibly being signatories to the Federation charter, and therefore members in their own right...
but I think it seems unlikely to happen often, given the delicate balance of power between different species in the Federation.
So let's review. The hypothesis is that by ST:FC, about 150 species have signed on. We've seen 70 in the shows that have probably signed on, most of those only in one episode. This would mean that there about 80 member species that we either haven't seen yet or that we've seen but Memory Alpha members have not identified as being probable Federation members. Completely plausible.
Your claim is that there are a certain number of colonies that are actually counted in this total, contrary to what we'd expect from the line and with no particular evidence for it. Possible, but in order for it to be significant, we need to have seen most of the species of the Federation.
If you add up all known Federation homeworlds and colonies it doesn't come to 150. The assumption that all 150 worlds are members each of which also has several major colonies which are not included in the count is an unnecessarily generous.
It comes quite close, actually. Count
all the human, vulcan, and Bajoran colonies listed in M-A and you get to 90. Add in 40 known members, and you need to trim a lot from the "probable members" list, e.g., Denobulans and Bajorans. By "probable members," I'm talking about planets that you would usually guess to be in the Federation.
Take out the independent and abandoned colonies, include all the probable and known species members, and you're at 130
identified Federation worlds as of the ST:FC quote. Which is ridiculous, really, given how much screentime most of those worlds get, there are probably lots of unseen Federation worlds.
Most of which are only seen or mentioned once. Take a minute to think about the odds of us having seen, sporadically, coincidentally, that fraction of the Federation and its members via single sightings.
Except for explicit statements by Picard, Sisko and Janeway which stated without any qualifications that Federation has 100-150 planets or worlds as opposed to Kirk's statement of over a 1000. We could assume that Kirk used a more wide filter so it's 150 major planets and 1000 small colonies that come and go but that is already being generous. Assuming further that 1000 colonies are just the ones belonging to Earth and that each of the 150 planets has 100 or 1000 colonies of it's own is completely unsupported.
That
already existed at the time. And in Kirk's time, the Federation has fewer members. If I were to guess based on the TNG era growth rates and the starting member list, probably only 20-30.
Actually it's been quite consistent in how it falls close to or below replacement level for every developed country whether it's the highly populated Japan or Canada with very low population density. Meanwhile countries with low development like Somalia, Nigeria or Bangladesh tend to have high fertility rates regardless of widespread hunger and lack of arable land.
The point remains that you have no basis in claiming that human population will start growing rapidly just because they discovered additional territory.
I'm not claiming it will
start growing rapidly. I'm claiming the human population, as a whole, will continue an exponential growth rate. That colonists tend to reproduce rapidly has been documented in many cases of colonization, e.g., the Americas.
That doesn't change my point that replicators do not make a civilization prosperous but the other way around: you need a prosperous civilization to be able to afford wasting energy on replicators.
Or can you? A single replicator can replace a wide array of more specialized equipment.
Which still tells us nothing about the availability of natural resources or the arable land.
Not nothing, but very little. And that's the theme of the subject - we have little information, and what little we have needs to be reconciled carefully.
"Some" being how costly and how long in duration? And of course how did you come up with hundreds number?
There are several thousand stars within 100 LY of Earth.
The cluster in question in "Justice" is probably either a large open cluster, with perhaps a couple tens of thousands of stars at most, or a globular cluster, with possibly a couple hundred thousand stars, but unfavorable conditions for planetary formation (because those are older population stars). In either case, we presume the Drake equation to have a very high coefficient of habitable planets per star in the ST universe.
Which tells as more about Bashir's gullibility than their abilities.
If you're going to tell me Bashir is supposed to be dumb enough to assume that reproduction rates will magically go through the roof under Dominion rule, I'm going to tell you that's an exercise in absurdity. The point of the estimates is that they're supposed to be
plausible.
Again: what information do you have about their assumptions? How do you know what population they considered to be sufficient for an uprising?
When the population hasn't even returned to its previous value, it certainly isn't
recovered. And that's the key point; five generations later, things have recovered, to the point where
it doesn't make a difference whether or not the Dominion killed off 900 billion people.
What would be "normal" exponential rate? At US growth rate of 0.883% humans would have 168 billion people by roughly 2375. At UK growth rate it would be 18 billion humans and at Germany's growth rate it would be 5.5 billion. As pointed out above you have no information on what population they considered sufficient for an uprising.
As pointed out above, there's no way you could consider the subject territories "recovered" from the invasion when they haven't even gotten back to their previous value.
Now, here's some numbers for you, as you seem to have no clue what you're talking about. Five human generations is about a century. Assume the human population to be 10 billion two hundred years before, as they were almost only on Earth, and to recover back to their previous value in 100 years.
Assume, generously, the human population takes casualties in proportion to the total Federation population in spite of being among the most militaristic of the Federation membership, and has a constant growth rate, consistent with being nowhere near their carrying capacity. Also assume other members reproduce at a similar rate, which is also being generous to you.
We have, in order for that to be the case, human population to be reduced by the fraction equal to (1+r)^100, meaning they take casualties equal to 10 bn * [(1+r)^200 - (1+r)^100] and the Federation's total population is equal to 900 bn * (1+r)^200 / [(1+r)^200 - (1+r)^100] ). In this model, the
higher the human growth rate, the
lower the Federation population has to be to meet the minimum conditions of the Jack Pack's model.
Got that? Lower population growth rates mean a slower recovery time for the human population, which means a Federation that is less human and more alien, since it can't have taken as many casualties. Higher population growth rates imply a higher Federation population to start with. Humans taking a higher percentage of casualties (as
I expect) mean a higher Federation population.
The Federation could rule as little as 1 trillion. It could rule quite a few more. With the exception of possibly having to deal with Gideon, I think the whole 1-10 trillion range is plausible. 900 billion would still be an incredible death toll if it killed one out of ten non-Gideonite Federation citizens.
Less than 1 trillion and we run into absurdity via the Jack Pack's estimates - your population needs to increase by 60% every generation to recover in five. More than 10 trillion and they better be mostly living on Gideon and similar obscure overpopulated planets. IMO.