Okay, I understand that nothing was discrete before 5.1
What I'm still not understanding is what the deal was with a centre channel in the original Dolby Surround? Meaning, did it exist? If so, how did it differ from the non-discrete centre in Pro Logic 1?
If it didn't, what was the nature of the fourth channel in Dolby Surround 4.0 (after the front left, front right and mono rear surround have been accounted for)?
Somehow you have got confused. There was no Dolby 4.0 essentially. Dolby was a noise reduction company and only got into multichannel audio late in the day with Prologic.
The Quadraphonic craze of the seventies and early 80s were matrix based. There was no center channel. The speakers were in the four corners of the room basically.
There was discrete quadraphonic from commercial reel to reel tapes, for playing on four track tape recorder, not to be confused with the stacked four track stereo which where two channel and you turned over the tape to play the second side. Both sides of the tape where two track stereo, with 2+2 making four. The quadraphonic reel to reel machines had four record and playback amps, and the four tracks were recorded in the same direction and not one forward and one reverse. This was the only way to get discrete four channel, but there was NO center channel.
Now for LP and for VHS and Betamax tapes there were competing quadraphonic matrix systems. SQ Matrix from CBS, the QS Matrix from Sansui, JVC devised the CD-4 which was a carrier signal based system, Regular Matrix (RM), 45J by the National Research Development Council, Stereo 4 by Electrovoice, Dynaquad by Dynaco, and Matrix H by BBC. None of these were compatible, but Electrovoice did come out with a universal matrix decoder, and I still have mine, but do not use it, and have not for years. I do have a number of matrix LP quadraphonic recordings. The results form these matrix systems was frankly not worth the bother and expense and they died out. I will say that the Dolby DD surround up mixer decoder does a far better job, than the original decoders.
Some of these Quadraphonic recordings made from the discrete for channel master tapes have been released by Pentatone on SACD. And by the way Mercury have reissued the Fine/Cozart recordings on SACD and I think I have most of them. Now they are the front three channels and do have a center channel. They are absolutely superb, and a monument to the pioneering professionalism of that husband and wife team. They used an Ampex tape machine for some, and an optical recorder for others. They used three spaced Telefunken electrostatic mics. This Telefunken division morphed into Neumann.
As far as I know Dolby did not get into discrete multichannel recording and playback until Dolby Digital 5.1 and subsequent. Then there was competition from DTS and others.
I should mention as a foot note
Ambisonics. This was a UK system developed in the seventies, and amazingly is a forerunner of Atmos. It required a complex single Ambisonic microphone with multiple capsules. It was a true sphere surround format and highly effective. However it was too complex for general distribution. The Ambisonic microphone was massively expensive and only available for a relatively short period of time. The system was totally dependent on that microphone. All the sound sources devolved from that single microphone only. So it was only really suitable for recording orchestras and choirs etc. in large spaces.
So, I think I have now probably written your Wikki article for you. If you do publish, then ethics and etiquette would require I have attribution.