Doctor Who isn't Star Trek.
Yes, saving lives is a good thing, using those tech for "Good Purposes" is "Good" for the bigger picture of life.This is rich coming from the guy who, in godawfully long post after godawfully long post, for pages and pages, has been going on and on and on about how we should use telepathy and time travel to prevent anything bad from ever happening.
No it isn't, but it's a show all about Time Travel.Doctor Who isn't Star Trek.
Which is when the show started catching my interest.Doctor Who is very rarely about time travel. Often times, it's about the adventures the Doctor and companions getting into adventures with time travel just bein the mode of transport. It wasn't until Steven Moffat took over in 2010 the show actually became about time travel.
Yes. After all, they are vetted and trusted. Not like us lowly plebes.Would you want some Government Bureaucrat / Public Servant to say that you can't get your
Which is fine. Keep time travel out of Trek.No it isn't, but it's a show all about Time Travel.
You think so little of us "Plebs".Yes. After all, they are vetted and trusted. Not like us lowly plebes.
Unlikely given how many episodes of Trek are about Time Travel.Which is fine. Keep time travel out of Trek.
Nope.You think so little of us "Plebs".
Are we talking about the same BTTF that hadI guess you hate "Back to the Future" trilogy or "Legends of Tomorrow"?
You're criticizing others for being risk averse...while consistently displaying an obsession with preventing anything bad from ever happening. Can you not see the irony in this?Yes, saving lives is a good thing, using those tech for "Good Purposes" is "Good" for the bigger picture of life.
Doesn't mean we don't use it. I'm not afraid to use it on a mass scale and see society progress to use it on a mass scale.
Imagine how much better if Murders were far easier to solve. If lives could be saved via Time Travel.
You won't have to see families suffer through the sadness of losing a loved one due to murder, accidents, mishaps, tragedies.
If you were living in that world, where all this tech could exist to help your life.
Would you want some Government Bureaucrat / Public Servant to say that you can't get your loved ones back?
That because of ___ reason, we can't put in any effort to get ___ loved one back because of ___ reason?
How would you feel if you were that person?
In the end, Marty & his family ended their adventures by being better off than where they started.Are we talking about the same BTTF that had
1.) Marty almost accidentally erasing himself from existence because his mom fell in love with him,
2.) Doc Brown alluding to severe consequences stemming from you interacting with your past or future self (as your past self can have a heart attack and die), and
3.) Old Biff stealing the Grays Sports Almanac and giving to his 1955 self that led to the United States becoming a crime-ridden dystopia with Richard Nixon being in his 5th term?
Yeah, sure, it's a great, positive portrayal of time travel as something that's useful and would enrich humanity. I've loved the trilogy as a kid, but I never pretended it didn't portray time travel as anything other than something too dangerous to meddle with.
Because there's a middle ground and shades of gray between the extreme ends that you're proposing.You're criticizing others for being risk averse...while consistently displaying an obsession with preventing anything bad from ever happening. Can you not see the irony in this?
None of which has been argued in this thread. It's been accept it or go to hel...neo Luddites colony.There is plenty of room in between to come to a acceptable solution.
I really enjoy time travel stories for the most part. Many of my favorite scifi stories have time travel components, but I don’t think it being used as a way to undo death in Star Trek, or most stories in general, is a good idea at all.
Time travel used as a magic undo button, as others have pointed out already, robs a story of any drama, and can undermine any sense of consequence, permanence, or finality in a world where people are continually but selectively hitting a rewind button.
It’s not a viable system for any kind of scifi setting. And any time travel story worth a damn acknowledges that erasing and re-erasing, and re-re-erasing events would turn the fabric of time itself into Swiss cheese, and treat such behavior as a cautionary tale, not an everyday practice.
Death happens, tragedy happens, and a scifi society not using time travel to circumvent it isn’t a matter of not using technology to its fullest potential, it’s using, or refraining from using it responsibly by recognizing the limits of being finite beings with finite lifespans.
I'm not the one saying to "NEVER, EVER, USE those two techs ever again!". You guys are.None of which has been argued in this thread. It's been accept it or go to hel...neo Luddites colony.
I'm not the one saying to "NEVER, EVER, USE those two techs ever again!". You guys are.
Just because I don't think aggressively editing the timeline to achieve my preferred outcome is good use, it doesn't mean I don't think regulated time travel can exist in sci-fi. It just cannot aim to change history. Go back, observe and learn, that I can totally see happening in an optimistic sci-fi, especially if we allow the dramatic exaggeration of "as long as you stay beneath notice, you won't change the timeline". Not allowing to change the past does not mean a blanket ban on time travel.I prefer controlled / regulated time travel for good use.
Your ideas on telepathy seem to hinge on it appearing as a distinct minority in existing populations like with a specific gene in Babylon 5, leading to the society in question regulating those members that show the ability, and where telepaths are a distinct minority in every other alien society as well, regulated in their own ways. Even this kind of regulation is discriminatory, as it reduces a minority to second-class citizens simply because of their genetics, just like it did on Babylon 5. The only way I wouldn't consider it discrimination would be if telepathy was instead achieved by devices that people like members of the military were trained to use.I'm Pro Telepathy & Time Travel in intelligent / regulated usage for the greater good.
Show me where I proposed either.Because there's a middle ground and shades of gray between the extreme ends that you're proposing.
Completely Allowing Willy Nilly Time Travel without any restriction and No Time Travel, ever again.
Show me where I said anything about that.Then there's using Telepathy arbitrarily without any restrictors and Never using it ever again because you're afraid of the liberties you'll lose.
That I disagree, it wasn't used willy nilly. I limited it to whom it can target since I stated the problem came in the form of government/military officials.The only advocacy for the tech is to use it in the invasion of privacy. I object to that strongly. And since no compromise was offered it became binary.
I'm not asking to change "Pre-Time Travel Era History" or Critical Points in time without thought on the consequences.Just because I don't think aggressively editing the timeline to achieve my preferred outcome is good use, it doesn't mean I don't think regulated time travel can't exist in sci-fi. It just cannot aim to change history. Go back, observe and learn, that I can totally see happening in an optimistic sci-fi, especially if we allow the dramatic exaggeration of "as long as you stay beneath notice, you won't change the timeline". Not allowing to change the past does not mean a blanket ban on time travel.
In humanity, Telepathy or any Psionic powers are incredibly rare.Your ideas on telepathy seem to hinge on it appearing as a distinct minority in existing populations like with a specific gene in Babylon 5, leading to the society in question regulating those members that show the ability, and where telepaths are a distinct minority in every other alien society as well, regulated in their own ways. Even this kind of regulation is discriminatory, as it reduces a minority to second-class citizens simply because of their genetics, just like it did on Babylon 5. The only way I wouldn't consider it discrimination would be if telepathy was instead achieved by devices that people like members of the military were trained to use.
I wouldn't allow that to happen in my Head Cannon.Whereas in Star Trek, you have entire species that are telepathic. Enacting any kind of legal restriction that applies to people based on their species is literal racism which I can never ever see the Federation condoning.
If it wasn't you, then it was somebody else.Show me where I proposed either.
Show me where I said anything about that.
Strawman much?
Because it was still all access to the mind. No protection, and if you didn't want to be scanned time travel was threatened to up end a person's whole life. Thats not freedom.But you didn't think that was restrictive enough, so I added in more restrictions like needing a proper judge approved warrant for it's use.
Saving lives is an important job. I'm intent on saving them.Because it was still all access to the mind. No protection, and if you didn't want to be scanned time travel was threatened to up end a person's whole life. Thats not freedom.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.