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Memory Alpha

AT: "mu"

For the prime universe counterpart, please see Spock.

Template:Nt disambiguation


"I do not desire the captaincy. I am much more content with my scientific duties. And I am frankly content to be a lesser target."
- Spock

Spock was the Terran/Vulcan hybrid first officer of the ISS Enterprise in 2267. He was a logical being who was loyal to his captain, James T. Kirk, and chose to warn him when he was ordered by the Terran Empire to kill him and take command if he did not launch an attack against the Halkans in retribution for their refusal to negotiate with the Empire.

Based on his captain's apparently erratic behavior, Spock correctly deduced that Kirk had actually been accidentally replaced by his counterpart from another universe, and devised a means of returning Kirk, Scotty, McCoy, and Uhura to their original ship.

Before Kirk left, believing that Spock would one day become captain of the Enterprise, he planted a seed of doubt about the inevitability of the Empire, asking Spock if violence was the only logical answer. When Spock said the odds of one man bringing about peaceful change to the Empire were virtually insurmountable, Kirk revealed the existence of the Tantalus field, an assassination device that the mirror universe Kirk had used to eliminate his enemies. Spock appeared intrigued, and promised to consider Kirk's words. (TOS: "Mirror, Mirror")

As Kirk predicted, Spock later on became the captain of the Enterprise. Spock used the ship as a power base to accumulate influence, and eventually rose to become leader of the Terran Empire. He instituted major reforms, turning the Empire into a more peaceful and less aggressive power. Unfortunately, Spock's reforms left the Empire unprepared to fight the united Klingon-Cardassian Alliance, who conquered the entire Terran Empire, enslaving the Terrans themselves as well as the Vulcans. (DS9: "Crossover")

Background

Mirror Spock was played by Leonard Nimoy, who also portrayed the "regular" universe Spock. Both characters were identical, except for the beard on the mirror version.

In 1998, Nimoy said he would have liked to play the mirror Spock in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, but this never came to fruition. (citation needededit)

The representation of Spock in "Mirror, Mirror" was the inspiration behind the name for the progressive-metal group "Spock's Beard".

Apocrypha

  • In the Star Trek: The Next Generation novel Dark Mirror by Diane Duane, Jean-Luc Picard, masquerading as his mirror universe counterpart aboard the other's USS Enterprise-D, briefly investigates Spock's history after his encounter with the primary universe Kirk. According to the official history, Spock succeeded, briefly, in becoming a powerful figure in Starfleet and the Empire, thanks to his own cunning and the use of the Tantalus Field, but his advocacy of more less warlike policies eventually made him too many enemies. Both Spock and his father were discredited, then convicted of treason and executed (this history contradicts the history sketched in "Crossover").
  • Spock appears in the Glass Empires story "The Sorrows of Empire". The story focuses on Spock's rise to the leadership of the Terran Empire, his rule, and the events leading to its destruction by the Alliance.

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External link

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