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Similar to this question on ranks, and this question on roles, I would like to know which Star Trek character has appeared on screen with the most official positions?

What I am excluding is "acting" positions, such as Chekov filling in as acting science officer in Spock's absence, or acting captain when the captain is off duty. These are official, titled main jobs.

Altered timelines are in play, I don't want Q manipulations, as they are just vagaries of whim at the time. Anything where the official governing body of the force/structure the person is attached to at the time says "You are X" for your main job counts.**

** Note: This would exclude appointed tasks that are finite in nature, even though they may have a title attached. For example, Riker was assigned as a prosecutor in Measure of a Man, but that was an adjunct to his actual title/role of First Officer, Enterprise

JohnP
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    what if Romulan spies made Troi a Romulan Tal Shiar commander? – NKCampbell Mar 05 '18 at 15:48
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    @NKCampbell - Hrm. Hrm again. You're talking about Face of the Enemy, I presume. Yes that would count, even though coerced. She accepts the role, acts as such, and exerts the authority of the position even to the person that originally kidnapped her. – JohnP Mar 05 '18 at 15:55
  • What about positions held in the far future or past, when there are episodes that visit them? – DJClayworth Mar 05 '18 at 17:32
  • @DJClayworth - Fair game, if they are/were legitimately awarded by the officials of the time. – JohnP Mar 05 '18 at 17:36
  • Neelix was a jack-of-all-trades. Wonder how many roles he had. I remember him being ambassador, security, and a sort of councilor (crew morale). – n00dles Mar 05 '18 at 21:15
  • I would nominate Ro Laren but don't have the depth of knowledge to prove it (don't suppose admiral would count). – Harper - Reinstate Monica Mar 05 '18 at 21:37
  • @Harper not the rank, but even admirals have job descriptions. :) – JohnP Mar 05 '18 at 22:00
  • What about temporary positions? There are two scenarios for them that I can think of. 1) Riker is given a field commission to command the Enterprise temporarily in "Best of Both Worlds", which also affects Data as he's promoted to First Officer. 2) Data is given command of the Sutherland in "Redemption II", for which he is captain, and retains that position until the fleet assignment is completed. – Ellesedil Mar 05 '18 at 22:12
  • @Ellesedil Well Data being a temporary captain obviously counts. As for your first point, which is a really good one; I'm not sure. Wouldn't half the senior officers move up ranks with Riker in command? – n00dles Mar 06 '18 at 00:11
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    @n00dles: I actually retract part of that comment. Commander Shelby, who is temporarily assigned to the Enterprise as part of the investigation into the Borg, is made first officer so that Riker can keep everyone else at their regular positions. So, Data doesn't actually get promoted. I was envisioning Data in command red during Chain of Command. – Ellesedil Mar 06 '18 at 00:20
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    Trying to exclude things tends to lower the quality of these questions. They become nasty little debates about what "counts" and what doesn't. I encourage you to be permissive and just ask that answers provide a full break down when there's questionable occurrences that other readers (including yourself!) might decide aren't worth counting. – jpmc26 Mar 06 '18 at 01:01
  • I've seen similar posts suggesting that the best answer is.. wait for it... Nog. Gave a pretty solid list -- dude had a lot of positions at various point on DS9. – Stephen R Mar 06 '18 at 21:49
  • @StephenR I'd like to see that list. – n00dles Mar 07 '18 at 05:51
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    Here it is: https://scifi.stackexchange.com/a/99480/87750 EDIT: Hmm... maybe that's not what I saw previously. I seem to recall a longer list, but I can't be sure – Stephen R Mar 07 '18 at 22:46
  • Did I take an Ambien and write this question in a trance? – ThePopMachine Mar 08 '18 at 15:54
  • @ThePopMachine - I channeled you? :p – JohnP Mar 08 '18 at 16:25
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    Not quite the same question — positions vs. ranks – Stephen R Mar 08 '18 at 23:41
  • Aw drat. I had typed up an answer making the case for Odo, and tried to save it to post after activity around the Picard answer died down a bit, but the saved text file was only zero bytes. :( And I don't plan to re-research and re-type it all. Actually, though, Odo's various positions (Cardassian, Bajoran) were just an an example of the real, true answer, which is: the Great Link. If you keep in mind that the Great Link is both many and also singularly one, then that one entity character (which has split itself) has certainly qualified for having the most positions (simultaneously, even!) – TOOGAM Mar 11 '18 at 02:19
  • @TOOGAM I've experienced something similar, so now, if I put some time into an answer and I have to leave it, I copy, paste and save it into a txt file. It only takes a few seconds with keyboard shortcuts. – n00dles Mar 14 '18 at 23:29

3 Answers3

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Worf would be the logical guess. He appears in more episodes than anyone else, over two different series, and also has a tendency to briefly take on positions in the Klingon Empire during episodes that focus on it. I can find at least 10 or 11 positions for him that fit your requirement:

  • Bridge officer on the 1701-D (season 1 of TNG)
  • Security chief on the 1701-D (remainder of TNG)
  • Tactical officer on the IKS Hegh'ta ("Redemption II")
  • Ops officer on the 1701-D (during "The Most Toys" when everyone thinks Data is dead)
  • First officer on the 1701-D (altered timeline in "Parallels")
  • Strategic operations officer on Deep Space 9 (most of DS9)
  • Commander of the Defiant (intermittently throughout DS9 and in First Contact)
  • First officer of the IKS Rotarran (Dominion War)
  • Klingon High Chancellor (for about 5 seconds during the DS9 finale)
  • Federation Ambassador to the Klingon Empire (as of the end of DS9)

and possibly:

  • Klingon governor of Haatoria (future timeline in "All Good Things", if you think that timeline actually "happened" in some sense)
Micah
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    How did you find all those roles in an hour? 5th was my first thought when you mentioned Worf. It always sticks in my head, I think because of this question. HOWEVER, I'm not sure it should count, as it was part of an invention by the Q to test humanity's ability to 'think outside the box'. But I think that's up to the OP. – n00dles Mar 05 '18 at 19:39
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    @n00dles: I think they're pretty much all in the MemoryAlpha article for Worf. – Micah Mar 05 '18 at 19:52
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    The way I read "All Good Things" is that Q's manipulations bring the timelines together but don't create them in the first place. But "the whole episode was an illusion" is probably a valid alternate reading under which it shouldn't count. – Micah Mar 05 '18 at 19:52
  • @Micah - Is it really all an illusion? Or just Q being...Q? Maybe take it out of the "official" count, but add it as an uncertainty type footnote? I think it's going to stand either way, the most I can find in another character is 6. (Although I am completely unfamiliar with DS9, so...) – JohnP Mar 05 '18 at 20:12
  • Micah, @JohnP : Q states at the end of the episode that the Q created the whole event to test humanity (i.e. Jean-Luc). In the different timelines, Picard's attempts to destroy the anomaly is what causes the anomaly (which is an anti-time thing). It's a causality loop created by the Q. I watched it a couple of weeks ago, and after that question I linked, I was specifically watching to see if the Q created the event, and according to Q, they did. It's up to the OP, but I'd agree with John, that it should be a footnote. – n00dles Mar 05 '18 at 21:04
  • A quote from chakoteya.net (final court room scene with Picard and Q) PICARD: You had a hand in helping me get out of this. Q: I was the one that got you into it. A directive from the Continuum. The part about the helpig hand, thought, was my idea. – n00dles Mar 05 '18 at 21:09
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    I'm willing to footnote it. But I don't think "I got you into it" is incompatible with the episode being analogous to something like "Q Who", where the events are clearly real despite Q being their cause (in contrast with, say "Tapestry", which pretty clearly did not actually happen). Maybe this is worth another question. – Micah Mar 05 '18 at 21:40
  • My $0.02: "All Good Things" seemed far more than "vagaries of whim". – Paul Draper Mar 05 '18 at 21:52
  • In regards to "All Good Things", there's already a question that essentially covers it: https://scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/156065/why-doesnt-the-crew-in-the-future-remember-the-past-in-st-tng-all-good-things. To be fair, it does boil down into speculation and turns into "here's supporting evidence on why I think it's XYZ." – Ellesedil Mar 05 '18 at 22:27
  • Micah: I'd agree with that; Q set the events in motion, but lets them play out naturally. It's a tough call. "Altered timelines are in play, I don't want Q manipulations"... So what about a Q-created timeline?... (The OP possibly meant alternate timeline?? But either way... tough call) – n00dles Mar 06 '18 at 00:04
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    Can you consider Ops officer when Worf filled the role in The Most Toys? Although it was a temporary fill in the characters believed Data was dead, and in their minds it was (initially) a permanent change. – Xantec Mar 06 '18 at 02:49
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    Absent any recent entries, (Other than the Dax which is worthy), I think this is the clearest laid out grouping. If another is submitted, it can be re-evaluated. – JohnP Mar 12 '18 at 17:00
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This answer contains spoilers for multiple episodes.

I would think someone more qualified than me could make a good argument for Picard. However, I will give this a start to mention some of the more unique assignments. There's...

  1. Captain
    • (surprise! Picard's been a captain of a starship!)
    • Assigned by Rear Admiral Noral Satie, Starfleet command, Stardate 41148)
  2. Arbiter of (Klingon) Succession (Memory Alpha: TnG: Reunion)
    • assigned by Klingon Chancellor K'mpec
  3. Worf's Cha'DIch (Memory Alpha: TnG: Sins of the Father)
    • Picard fills in after Commander Kurn is attacked
    • This seems to be a very official position in the Klingon judicial system. (It led to Picard being in room, having a rather private conversation with the Klingon Chancellor.)
  4. Undercover operative (Memory Alpha: Chain of Command)
    • Vice Admiral Nechayev who then assigns Jellico as Captain of the Enterprise (so Picard is, quite clearly, no longer in the same position of being active Captain of the Enterprise). Since Picard is no longer Captain of the Enterprise, he is clearly being officially assigned a different position. Picard's role as captain was replaced with this role as undercover operative (assigned by the Federation), until that was effectively replaced by the Cardassians who assigned him a new role...
  5. "Human" (Memory Alpha: Chain of Command, Part 2)
    • No, the word "human" is not just Picard's species. This is different than when many characters call Worf by a reference of "Klingon". When Picard is a prisoner, a Cardassian Interrogator/Torturer tells Picard to expect to be referred to "only as human. You have no other identity." This is an assigned by someone with some local authority.
    • However, there is one argument that could be made that this isn't clearly an official position. Although prison populations can have some hierarchy that may have offered Picard some changes, there's the compelling case that Picard may have retained his permanently-assigned identity even if his position changed to something else (like an enslavened servant of someone of high official rank).
  6. Ambassador to Humanity (Memory Alpha: The Best of Both Worlds)
    • This is a position assigned to him by the Borg Collective. This official role is basically to let Humanity know the Borg's directives. Locutus of Borg fully complies with the expectations of this position.
  7. Dead. (Memory Alpha: TNG episode named "Gambit")
    • This is actually my personal favorite part of the whole answer. However, some people understandably don't consider "dead" to be a position. Well, if "Prisoner of War" is a recognized role/title, then I would suggest that so is "casualty". (So I propose using that term if you find that easier to accept.)
    • Although this assignment/declaration was based on incorrect information, the Federation officially considered him to be dead for some time, as local evidence indicated he was killed. Starfleet invalidated his command codes, which demonstrates Picard's officially assigned and recognized status was "dead".
    • Even once we the viewing audience found Picard was acting as a mercenary named Galen, this doesn't mean that Starfleet knew this quite so early. Starfleet still thought him to be dead for some time yet.
    • Starfleet apparently has not officially updated Picard's status by the end of this two-part episode, which plays a part in the humorous final scene (where Data is seen sending Riker to the brig).
    • Granted, Riker's role was "Acting Captain" until they got all this sorted out. So that wouldn't fit the criteria being asked for. But Picard's assigned position is different because that assignment wasn't meant to be a temporary thing. This was not a temporary ruse as part of an undercover mission. The intent was an unfortunate expectation of Picard keeping this status in the (very) long term. (This position definitely comes with a change in expected duties.)
  8. Crew member on Mercenary ship (Memory Alpha: TNG episode named "Gambit")
    • Picard was going by the name of Galen - serving under Baran. This would have been his official position, performing archaeological tests under the oversight of Tallera. The position may have been untitled, but his role and duties were clear.
    • He was accepted as a crew member by Baran, who would have granted him this position (while Starfleet simultaneously had marked Picard's position as being deceased)
  9. Commander/leader/captain of the smuggler ship the mercenary ship that Baran previously led (Memory Alpha: TNG episode named "Gambit")
    • After a mutinee that killed Baran, Picard gave orders for where the ship should go next, and they were followed
  10. Defending Legal Council (Memory Alpha: The Measure of a Man)
    • Assigned by Captain Louvois, from Judge Advocate General's office on Starbase 173. This assignment came after Picard referred to some legal regulations
    • Basically, officers were used as legal council. As a result of this official assignment, Picard essentially acted like a lawyer/attorney defending Data, arguing for Data's sentience. (Riker didn't like his related official assignment of taking the opposing side.)
  11. Prosecutor (Memory Alpha: TNG episode named "Devil's Due")
    • He went against Ardra, a woman who claimed to be the devil. In there, he challenged Ardra's claim, so arguably he was the prosecution.
    • There are other times we see Picard in a courtroom. This one may be particularly noteworthy, compared to other court scenes, because the position he held here was fulfilling a role in the Ventaxian judicial system, rather than being part of Federation Justice.
  12. The Picard (Memory Alpha: Who Watches The Watchers TNG episode))
    • Referred to as "The Overseer" earlier in the episode, Picard's name is revealed to a village who then bestow this title onto the supreme deity.
    • I had an inclination to not count this, as this title was bestowed by the town's official timekeeper, a position with no clear official authority to determine new supreme deities.
    • However, the timekeeper's actions do seem widely accepted in this small society which is willing to operate on consensus. Lacking a more formalized structure, the fact that multiple villagers perform multiple actions (standing watch, hunting an escapee) indicates Picard's official title did have both recognition and support by the locals. This seems to be how the village seemed to operate.
    • Further, "The Picard" became a title that was recognized by the local governing structure, and gave Jean-Luc a unique role if The Picard would choose to communicate with his follows (which he eventually does).
  13. Best Man (Memory Alpha: Star Trek (TnG) Nemesis movie)
    • William and Deanna Troi's Wedding
    • Presumably assigned by the groom (based on current Earth tradition, which may not have been how this was assigned). If so, this title as assigned to Picard by someone who had a superior official position in the wedding.
    • This led to Picard doing the right thing of giving a speech. So, this official position led to him having a title for the role, and he performed a related duty (speaking) on-screen.
    • However, consensus seemed to be leaning in the direction of this not counting (presumably because of the short duration). I wasn't so eager to increase the overall count, so I've moved this to the status of not being one of the counted positions.

I propose also accepting:

  1. Officer, having just graduated from being a cadet (Memory Alpha: Tapestry.)
    • Picard refers to being an officer, having recently graduated from cadet status, waiting for first assignment. (Starfleet would have assigned Picard in this status.)
    • Despite being seen in a reality created by Q, this was a historical re-creation and Picard was actually stabbed in the chest, so this wasn't just Q's fiction/manipulation, so I think that solidly counts. Unlike other Q manipulations, when Picard first sees this (near the start of the episode), Picard didn't question its authenticity at all.

I've thought of several other roles, that I determined can't be countable:

  • Ambassador (future, Memory Alpha: All Good Things) (if Worf's Klingon governor of Haatoria and High Council Member from the future counts, so should this. However, my take is that many people consider the future to be a Q manipulation, so based on the original post/question, I'm thinking this should not be counted.)
  • Commanding Officer (Memory Alpha: All Good Things... has a Q-corrupted version of this seen on-screen)
    • Just prior to gaining control of the Enterprise, we see Tasha Yar near Picard.
    • Furthermore, "commanding officer" may be a description, rather than a clear position/rank. Picard's rank may have still just been "Captain" the whole time, so I've determined this does not count as a separate title.
  • Champion of April 2323 Starfleet Academy Marathon (mentioned (Memory Alpha: The Best of Both Worlds Part 2), but we don't see Picard in that role on-screen)
  • keynote speaker of 2367 Federation Archaeology Council (I'm not offhand sure if this was on-screen at all, so at least for now I'm not counting it)
  • Child (Memory Alpha: Rascals) - not really officially assigned position
  • Captain of the Stargazer (Memory Alpha: "The Battle")
    • Although this is seen on-screen, it seems that the actual on-screen footage of this position involved a Ferrengi mind-control device. As such, this fits in the "acting captain" category of being rather temporary by nature in that episode. Although Picard clearly had this official position, I'm not offhand aware of this showing on-screen in another episode, so far now I'm deeming it non-counted.)
  • Memory Alpha: The Inner Light - Anything related to this episode, where Picard lives many years in an alternate life on a planet. Although from Picard's experience, he likely had multiple positions, and they were on-screen, it was a fantasy that conceptually was quite similar to a Q storyline, which the original post/question indicates isn't counted. In our real-time, Picard was unconscious only briefly, so no real official position was granted.

I would think that Picard, noted as an accomplished diplomat, has likely had several other honorific or functional titles in ambassadorial/diplomatic/negotiating roles, but these are just ones come up with so far. (In truth, I'm rather pleased with the variety of official positions sources/authorities from whom some of these official positions were granted.)


Edit-related Notes: This answer is not fully applicable to the current phrasing of the question. Most of this answer was initially written for an earlier version of the question. Later the question was modified in a way that specifically excludes some of parts of this answer, including the two that I felt most happy about. Rather than gut my favorite parts (which showed some creativity during answering) to leave a less amusing hollow shell version of the answer, I'm choosing to largely leave this in tact, even though some people (including the question asker) seem unlikely to agree with interpretations on whether certain posts should count.

Since I believe many people read this site for entertainment, I'm planning to leave this fun answer to continue serving its desired purpose.

TOOGAM
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    Human/Dead are not positions, they are statements of fact. Also, Best Man, Cha'Dich, even the legal counsels are not permanent positions, i.e. "Henceforth, you are legal counsel". He was still Captain, as Riker was still First Officer, it was "in addition to other duties". Interesting analysis, though! – JohnP Mar 06 '18 at 14:34
  • Even leaving out the ones I consider weak (#'s 6 and 12), this is at least as many as the Worf answer has. – T.E.D. Mar 06 '18 at 17:31
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    @JohnP: Picard brings up being Worf's Cha'Dich in a later episode when in conversation with him. This would imply that the position has meaning even after the, umm, "legal proceedings" in Klingon culture. – Ellesedil Mar 06 '18 at 19:36
  • @Ellesedil - IIRC that episode, he was referring to it as something they shared as a bonding thing, not as an ongoing thing. I could be wrong, I haven't seen that episode in a while. – JohnP Mar 06 '18 at 19:47
  • What about Picard in the village in the distant past in that episode with the flute? (I don't remember what it was called, but we once had a chat movie night to watch it.) IIRC, he had some kind of 'role' there, as a village elder or suchlike. – Rand al'Thor Mar 06 '18 at 20:34
  • @Randal'Thor: That wasn't Q, but The Inner Light (TNG 5x25) was a similar mental manipulation. Picard's real body was unconscious for 25 mins while he lived a life-time of experience. The space probe that did that to him was intended to show him a simulation of the now-dead race, not to give him an actual role. – Peter Cordes Mar 06 '18 at 21:02
  • @PeterCordes I thought there was some sort of time travel involved, so that in some sense he actually was back there living with them. Or at least someone who looked exactly like him and had his memories was. – Rand al'Thor Mar 06 '18 at 21:06
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    @Randal'Thor: nope, nothing of the sort. All in his head as a vivid fully realistic dream, and his real body was taken to sickbay. (So this is actually not like a Q manipulation at all; Q would have actually sent him back in time.) – Peter Cordes Mar 06 '18 at 21:09
  • it would be appropriate to say Picard wore more hats than anyone else. people under 60 may not get that reference – explainist Mar 06 '18 at 22:42
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    OP stated he doesn't consider "Cha'Dich" an official position for the purposes of this question, but I refuse to accept that any number of the named positions in Klingon ritual, law, and/or culture are not official positions. The title of "Cha'Dich" specifically confers upon its holder special rights and consideration, so it's an official position IMO. I could agree that "Dahar Master" is too ambiguous for anybody to say it's an official position -- "Grand Master" maybe? -- but nobody would argue against for example The Order of the Bat'leth not being an official position. – L0j1k Mar 07 '18 at 03:26
  • @JohnP - jpmc26's comment specifically warned you about exactly this :). If Earth is run anything like America (which seems likely, just as the Romulans were written to resemble secretive Cold War adversaries), then the Judicial system is a key part part of government. Certainly key roles, like the judge and lead prosecutor, are definitely official and get key privileges. If temporary military roles like Face of the Enemy count (& I agree they should), I'm not sure what basis to dismiss the official positions in courts, unless you just find military interesting and discriminate court positions – TOOGAM Mar 07 '18 at 03:58
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    @TOOGAM which part of "official, titled, main job" is so ambiguous that you have to have a wall o'text to argue edge cases? Chadich, prosecutor, all of those are transitory things. In each case, picards job is captain. I suppose that yes, that would disqualify troi's face episode. – JohnP Mar 07 '18 at 05:33
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    Some extremely dubious "roles" in this answer... You should filter or split the list into two groups - Solid and Debated. – n00dles Mar 07 '18 at 05:34
  • JohnP - mostly the text is there to show when the position was seen (listing the episode), and noting who assigned the position. Such discussions were (at least mostly) not intended to be an argument. I don't see Arbiter as Succession or Cha'Dich as being so "transitory" as Picard refers to those as (presumably active) titles in later episodes. @n00dles - I already did that somewhat (counted or not). As for splitting up counted into solid or not, that'd separate my favorite (due to creativity) part of the answer from other roles that came chronologically right afterwards. Edit request declined – TOOGAM Mar 11 '18 at 01:32
  • I've tried a few ways of formatting the information and settled on one that contains the episode information but reduces some of the scrolling. At least some of the early comments posted below this answer had much more commentary about nitpicking existing parts of the answer, or how the information is structured, rather than contributing any new ideas to expand this further. Given that, I have no further plans to go out of my way to check this answer for useful comments any time soon. – TOOGAM Mar 11 '18 at 02:12
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The Dax symbiont seems worth mentioning, though it's in a grey area. It is at once several distinct characters yet also one continuous character. In one episode there was a trial concerned with whether or not a current host is legally the same as prior ones, and so subject to punishments for the crimes of previous hosts. While arguments for both sides were given at length, no actual verdict was rendered as the trial ended when witness testimony negated the alleged crimes. Also many of the roles we see the symbiont and its hosts take on are only given in flashbacks or during the Zhian'tara episode. Still, the OP doesn't specifically exclude backstories detailed on-screen, so...

  • Lela Dax: Trill legislator.

  • Tobin Dax: Engineer and mathematician. We're not told if he holds some specific "position", though one assumes he at least had a formal title suitable for an engineer or mathematician. Also appears in the novel Star Trek Enterprise : Rise of the Federation - A Choice of Futures as the leader of a team from the Cochrane Institute.

  • Emony Dax: Olympic gymnast.

  • Audrid Dax: Head of the Trill Symbiosis Commission.

  • Torias Dax: Starfleet shuttle test pilot.

  • Joran Dax: Musician. And psychopathic murderer. This one plays a more substantive role, as this personality was initially hidden and suppressed.

  • Curzon Dax: Diplomat who helped negotiate the Khitomer accords, and mentor to Sisko.

  • Jadzia Dax: Chief Science Officer of Deep Space Nine.

  • Curzon Odo: The Curzon personality possesses Odo in the Zhian'tara, resulting in a somewhat unique blend of their personas. He's never formally stripped of Odo's position as Chief of Security, but never formally accepted as it either. The Dax symbiont retains the memories of this experience, which are available to subsequent or current hosts (Jadzia).

  • Ezri Dax: Station Counselor for Deep Space Nine.

And a dishonorable mention: The symbiont was briefly removed from Jadzia and implanted in a rebel trill who was upset he never got a symbiont. Other than being a former Symbiosis candidate, he was never known to possess any particular positions or titles or even notable roles in society (other than being a candidate, which is significant in their society at least).

zibadawa timmy
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    +1 Oh, very interesting! Even though we didn't get an in-world legal ruling to lend this credibility, this is a really good submission and I think it counts. – L0j1k Mar 07 '18 at 03:32
  • @L0j1k I'd almost forgotten about that episode. It reinforces the "grey area" bit, though, as I think leaving it legally unresolved was intentional. Data had a somewhat analogous trial that had a clear (if very limited and particular) verdict, so it's not like there was setting precedent to avoid in-world legal declarations about a character's legal status. – zibadawa timmy Mar 07 '18 at 05:30
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    @zibadawatimmy The Doctor(EMH) had a rights-based trial too, remember? I'm not gona search for the episode title, but it was regarding his holonovel about the struggles of a hologram. He wanted to regain control of his work from the publisher but the publisher claimed he was not a person and so can not own any IP and therefore can not control his work. I think they ruled the doctor not a person but an artist with respect to this holonovel only. – n00dles Mar 07 '18 at 05:46
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    @n00dles - I think that is "Author, Author". – JohnP Mar 08 '18 at 15:36
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    Yedrin Dax could be an honorable mention. – Xantec Mar 08 '18 at 16:12
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    Assuming you accept Dax as a singular character, I would guess that this is the correct answer to "for which character do we have canon evidence of them holding the largest number of official positions". But the question asks about "onscreen", and most of Dax's positions were entirely offscreen. (Lela was a legislator, and Lela also arguably appeared onscreen via the zhian'tara, but she was not a legislator at the time of the zhian'tara.) – Micah Mar 12 '18 at 17:11
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    @Micah Yeah, I think an honourable mention is the best the Dax symbiont can hope for – n00dles Mar 12 '18 at 21:32