JediTricks wrote:I disagree, they are the same thing, just viewed from different perspectives. The alternate timeline of Yesterday's Enterprise was told through the perspective of the single universe, but was not itself stating that it was the only universe. Parallels was the same thing only each one of those "quantum realities" was a separate divergence from a separate point expressing the multiple parallel universes thing, and Worf had broken loose from his own universe to hop from one to another, experiencing life through the shoes of other Worfs (I think the episode might have said he was actively displacing them, and that they weren't coming back once he was gone, but that's not the issue). But they're the same thing.
I don't understand where you are getting this "same thing viewed from different perspectives" idea from. They aren't the same thing at all, and as such perspective doesn't apply. The base concept behind each of these episodes is very different, and that's the whole point here. "Yesterday's Enterprise" involved time travel that resulted in an alternate timeline. "Parallels" involved shifting to parallel universes, separate from Worf's own reality. That's not the same thing at all. And just because Worf experienced several alternate realities makes no difference here.
Yeah, a wiki article is still not that reliable. And the production notes I've seen said that the theory this episode was based on was the "Many-Worlds Interpretation". Essentially a quantum mechanic theory stating that everything that could possibly have happened but didn't happen in our universe, did happen in another universe. And that is pretty much exactly how the episode itself explained it:
Deanna: What do you mean, quantum realities?
Data: For any event there is an infinite number of possible outcomes. Our choices determines which outcomes will follow. But there is a theory in quantum physics that all possibilities that can happen, do happen, in alternate quantum realities.
Worf: And somehow I have been - shifting, from one reality to another?
Data: That is correct.
Deanna: How did this happen?
Data: When Worf's shuttlecraft came into contact with the quantum fissure, I believe its warp engines caused a small break in the barriers between quantum realities. Worf was thrown into a state of quantum flux. He immediately shifted into other realities.
They are the same thing, just viewed from different perspectives. From the perspective of the people living in Universe A who are able to view the changes like Spock and Guinan, the timeline change of New Coke Trek creates Universe B by overwriting Universe A just as the timeline changes of Yesterday's Enterprise created its own change; but viewed from a larger point of view, Universe A didn't cease to exist when the Narada went back in time, it continued on parallel to Universe B, only Universe A was now minus the Narada and the Jellyfish who now reside in Universe B. They are now parallel universes with different divergent points, and in fact Universe B actually can ONLY exist as a separate universe because otherwise it would be an impossible paradox, the events that created the Narada going back in time and destroying Vulcan now are changed, erased from that universe so the Narada cannot later exist and go back in time and repeat this to self-fulfill, so it only could have come from an alternate universe.
Again, I don't see where you're getting this idea of different perspectives from, because there is a huge difference between an alternate timeline and a parallel universe. It's not the same thing at all. And how you're describing an alternate timeline isn't accurate here. Changing the timeline of Universe A wouldn't result in a Universe B. Rather, it would still be the same Universe A, only then it would be timeline B, overwriting original timeline A. That's how time travel has always been shown to work in Star Trek, such as in episodes like "Yesterday's Enterprise". That's why the only way to fix something that created an alternate timeline is to restore original events in the timeline, or at least get it close enough. It doesn't create a parallel universe that allows both to exist simultaneously. Yet,
despite this, that is how the writers of NuTrek did it so that it's both a new timeline and a parallel universe, with out the understanding that isn't how time travel is shown to work in Star Trek.
Impossible time paradox's is what generally happens with such time travel stories and not always explained. To borrow a phrase from another series that involves a lot of time travel, it's "wibbily wobbly timey wimey...stuff" that makes time travelers like that somehow the exception to alterations in the timeline. But a time paradox like this has never been explained to be a parallel universe, because that would make it the result of a parallel universe changing another universe rather than simply time travel.
In fact, when the events of Yesterday's Enterprise conclue, our heroes are now in a 3rd universe divergent from the one at the beginning before the Ent-C was thrust into a time rift, and that's trackable because of Tasha Yar and her daughter, things which never happened before that event. That was not a self-fulfilling prophecy, the Enterprise C went down originally in a different battle that didn't have the ship disappear into a rift and reappear to fight on and leave Tasha Yar as a prisoner to the Romulans.
No, that's not a 3rd universe, that is a time paradox resulting in two Tasha Yar's existing within the same timeline.