Kane Starkiller wrote:I'm not interested in non canonical information but I would be interested in your explanation of why is it not plausible that immigrant species enter politics in the Federation.
It's not particularly plausible that a given person happens to be an individual immigrant. If a large number of immigrants of a particular species joined the Federation, we could have the situation of having more species than homeworlds, meaning the Federation "member species" count could exceed the Federation "member planet" count.
I don't see what is the difference between your analogy and mine. In both cases we have territories that became states. How many of the seen colonies have more than a few hundred or a few thousand people?
Archer IV had hundreds of millions pretty early, but most colonies have low population.
Could you quote yourself? I really can't seem to find it.
Sure.
I wrote:I have, actually. The complete lack of any canonical mention of a Federation colony being considered a member world establishes it as rare at best. As I have stated; I have also provided perfectly logical motivations for such.
I wrote:Your claim to a reduced number of member species therefore, in its strongest form, taps the claim that colonies may become members of the alliance. However, we know of no colony world identified as a Federation member, out of a minimum of 40 Federation members.
I wrote:I would not be surprised if in theory a colony world could qualify for membership, and it may even have happened a couple times. However, it's not likely to have happened many times, due to the political considerations. ("You're just aiming for more representation in (GOVERNING BODY) - we have just as many citizens on our home planet as you do on your three colonies you're claiming as independents!")
I wrote:However, in favor of conflating planetary members and member species, no fully canonically explicitly identified member has been a colony planet. (The quasi-canonical Federation Day data from a prop but not seen onscreen, is the closest exception, identifying Alpha Centauri Colony as a founding member. This information does not match with the portrayals of the founding of the Federation in Enterprise.)
I've also mentioned the very logical political difficulty in admitting colonies as members. These are both good reasons for rejecting your hypothesis that some significant number of colony worlds are included in the count of 150.
I wrote:In fact, all the evidence in favor of your claim of colonies being included in the member count mentioned so far - the quasi-canonical "Federation Day" album - has been brought up by me. So I'll give you your next-best piece of data:
Memory Beta refers to a total of eleven human, or partially human, planets as Federation members. Out of a total of 175 total identified Federation members.
I wrote: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.
No one said Federation shrank by a factor of six merely that there is a possibility colonies were abandoned. Again most colonies seen had a few hundred or a few thousand people. Not exactly firmly established.
That possibility is remarkably unlikely given the continual search for new colonies, continual expansion, and continuing advances in terraforming technology. Still an absurdity to claim that Kirk and Picard are talking about the same kind of planet.
You are misrepresenting my argument.
No more than you misrepresent mine.
While there is no evidence of more than 40 species my argument can work equally well with 143 species. I never said how many major planets are there. In fact, from what we have seen, there could be very few major planets which are not homeworlds or possibly none at all. My point was always that there is no evidence of further major planets beyond 150.
If that's really the sum total of your claim, then you have no place arguing against me. You need to have a claim that actually
contradicts my claim, rather than making vague objections. Regarding major worlds outside the homeworlds, I've simply stated that data is insufficient.
And yet - Archer IV. Major planet,
not a homeworld,
never referred to as a member in any literature. Even the apocryphal, AFAIK. What you're saying here is that you
have nothing with which to dispute my assessment and my actual argument, which is that the total number of species that are members of the Federation should be very close to "over 150" as of ST:FC.
After
two hundred years or more, the population of any colony world, between immigration and natural population growth, could increase very substantially. That's a real probability we need to account for before claiming 900 billion is too high.
Again you'll have to be more specific than that.
In YE, an alternate timeline exists where the Klingon Empire and Federation go to war. This goes very badly for the Federation, which grows much more slowly as a result. By the late TNG era, the Federation is mightier than the Empire, and in some timelines at least, the Klingon Empire becomes a
part of the Federation several generations later.
Logistic population growth model assumes that population growth rate will be limited by something: natural resources, population density etc. But the limiting factor could be of social and cultural nature, not wanting to have more than 1 or two children for example. In any case you failed to support your argument that we would see higher growth with discovery of new planes.
That was not my argument. As I've pointed out multiple times. What I've pointed out is that there is
no global carrying capacity restricting growth.
If we should make any assumption, it is that humanity grows at its normal "unrestricted" rate, rather than the arbitrary rate of any particular country, or the slowing rate seen globally as the population approaches the presumed carrying capacity of Earth.
Yes but if there is a choice you'll always try to get a rock that just happens to be a fertile planet.
Actually, gravity wells and atmosphere make it harder to shoot at enemy ships, so... no.
Who said anything about assuming radical changes in reproduction? You showed zero evidence about their population or population growth assumptions. Furthermore you claim to have intimate knowledge of what Bashir considered sufficient population. You don't.
Yet again you fail to show what Bashir considered to be a sufficient population to mount a rebellion against Dominion.
I do
not claim to know what population levels Bashir thinks are necessary to mount a rebellion against the Dominion. However, in order for the models to produce
identical results five generations out while remaining plausible, the casualties being ably recovered in that time is a necessary precondition. Anything short of that means that a large number of highly implausible things should be happening in the model.
Reductio ad absurdum; since the model is canonically a plausible model, 900 billion casualties represents a recoverable fraction of the Federation population on the five generation timescale.
Obviously each homeworld inside the Federation will be a member. That doesn't mean each member is a homeworld nor does it mean Picard included only homeworlds when talking to Lilly.
As I explained to you at great length, it is highly unlikely that any significant number of colonies are included in that total, for political reasons, for statistical reasons, for
logical reasons.
What you consider good reasons but without providing evidence.
But I have provided evidence.