two words: making love to the eloi
This has been my experience as well.No.
Time travel always creates more problems than it solves.
I'm pretty sure it never came to Australia. How was it received in the day? I used to read SFX, which was pretty good then, They had an irregular series called "Should we give X another chance?" Example, they said Gor (look it up) and it was a lively column where the men were saying "Yeah it's OK," and the women plotted to mug them on their way home. So one edition was "Should we give Crime Traveller another chance?" Over the page, across both pages, one letter per page: N O. For a SF mag to be so firmly against it speaks volumes.How did I not know this existed?
I'm pretty sure it never came to Australia. How was it received in the day? I used to read SFX, which was pretty good then, They had an irregular series called "Should we give X another chance?" Example, they said Gor (look it up) and it was a lively column where the men were saying "Yeah it's OK," and the women plotted to mug them on their way home. So one edition was "Should we give Crime Traveller another chance?" Over the page, across both pages, one letter per page: N O. For a SF mag to be so firmly against it speaks volumes.
Props to Guy for mentioning Seven Days, first show I thought of.
As a writer, I'm aware of the problems of diverging timelines, alt universes and which timeline would a traveller return to, and thought about this a lot in relation to Seven Days specifically. The travller would have to take as complete a record as possible with him, so that when he saved the day, HQ could compare the records they have (after the change) to the ones he had (before the change), and spot the differences.
Sidenote: creating alt universes vs conservation of energy, a Theory. Every action supposedly creates a universe where this happened, and another where that happened. Can you imagine the energy involved, creating a whole new universe based on everyday choices? But the universal laws tend towards the conservation of energy. Continual splitting makes no sense. So, my theory is, two random universes with enough similarities merge together, making one, and weird artefacts like cryptids and half-remembered stories and the Voynich Manuscript are 'leftovers' from the merging that don't fit any more. As I said, a theory. I'd love to write a story about this, but still not sure how. How could a traveller explore the two different timelines? One would stop existing, all the way back to year dot. What is the instigating event that causes them to merge? It could be an interesting idea.
Instead of "Pre-Crime" have "Post-Crime" where you can't actually Travel into the past as a person, but you can Observe any point in history. So say a murder happens, you just have to look into the past to find out who done it. All crime is solved. And you can also view stuff like ancient Egypt, etc. But your just observing, not interacting, so there no "Butterfly Effect" from actual travel.
This was basically the setup of a short story (I think... pretty sure it wasn't a full novel) I read once.
A device had been invented, just as you described, that allowed one to view any period in the past. They didn't travel or interact, just view, but they could see anywhere, inside buildings, whatever. (I think it was done with wormholes, but I only really remember the broad strokes.) The technology was very tightly controlled by the government, and they allowed academics to use it on a limited basis for historical research. It was like booking time on the observatory's telescope, but much more difficult.
The main character was trying to study a particular ancient society (Carthage, IIRC), and he had kept putting submissions in to use the time viewer, but kept getting declined or bumped or whatever, to his increased frustration. Well, through the machinations of the plot, he managed to discover that the technology behind the top secret time viewer was actually just components that were already commercially available to the general public. After being blocked by the government from using the time viewer for so long, he felt that everyone should have access to the technology, and ended up releasing the plans to the time viewer out to the general public.
The government caught up to him to late to stop him; the plans were already out there. The agent/official/whatever was horrified, and asked him if he realized what he'd just done. He pointed out that the device could be used to view any time in the past... including up to just milliseconds ago. Because of human nature, people would realize this, and start using the device to start spying on others in almost real-time, and there was no way to even know you were being watched. The dawning horror started to sink in for the main character, as he realized from that point forward, no one could ever assume to be unobserved again... privacy as a concept was effectively dead.
My description probably doesn't do it justice, and obviously I forgot a lot of the details of the plot, but that ending certainly stayed with me years later.
This was basically the setup of a short story (I think... pretty sure it wasn't a full novel) I read once.
A device had been invented, just as you described, that allowed one to view any period in the past. They didn't travel or interact, just view, but they could see anywhere, inside buildings, whatever. (I think it was done with wormholes, but I only really remember the broad strokes.) The technology was very tightly controlled by the government, and they allowed academics to use it on a limited basis for historical research. It was like booking time on the observatory's telescope, but much more difficult.
The main character was trying to study a particular ancient society (Carthage, IIRC), and he had kept putting submissions in to use the time viewer, but kept getting declined or bumped or whatever, to his increased frustration. Well, through the machinations of the plot, he managed to discover that the technology behind the top secret time viewer was actually just components that were already commercially available to the general public. After being blocked by the government from using the time viewer for so long, he felt that everyone should have access to the technology, and ended up releasing the plans to the time viewer out to the general public.
The government caught up to him to late to stop him; the plans were already out there. The agent/official/whatever was horrified, and asked him if he realized what he'd just done. He pointed out that the device could be used to view any time in the past... including up to just milliseconds ago. Because of human nature, people would realize this, and start using the device to start spying on others in almost real-time, and there was no way to even know you were being watched. The dawning horror started to sink in for the main character, as he realized from that point forward, no one could ever assume to be unobserved again... privacy as a concept was effectively dead.
My description probably doesn't do it justice, and obviously I forgot a lot of the details of the plot, but that ending certainly stayed with me years later.
Asimov. The dead past.
You can read it for free here...
link removed by moderator
Wow, that's incredible that you were able to identify it, thank you! (I had read it *years* ago, and really had no idea.)
Unfortunately... that site you linked to looks like it's a piracy site, so I had to remove the link. If you can convince me it's not, I can restore the link if it's legit. But it certainly looks sketchy, and we can't be seen to be supporting piracy.
Instead of "Pre-Crime" have "Post-Crime" where you can't actually Travel into the past as a person, but you can Observe any point in history. So say a murder happens, you just have to look into the past to find out who done it. All crime is solved. And you can also view stuff like ancient Egypt, etc. But your just observing, not interacting, so there no "Butterfly Effect" from actual travel.
I'd add the excellent Stephen Baxter novel (based on an Arthur C. Clarke outline) The Light of Other Days to this subgenre about time-viewers, along with the Denzel Washington film Deja Vu (though it's no spoiler to say that by the midpoint of that film it's revealed that what was previously thought to only be a 72-hour window into viewing the past for post-crime/terrorism investigation can actually send Denzel-sized objects back through time as well).This was basically the setup of a short story (I think... pretty sure it wasn't a full novel) I read once.
A device had been invented, just as you described, that allowed one to view any period in the past. They didn't travel or interact, just view, but they could see anywhere, inside buildings, whatever. (I think it was done with wormholes, but I only really remember the broad strokes.) The technology was very tightly controlled by the government, and they allowed academics to use it on a limited basis for historical research. It was like booking time on the observatory's telescope, but much more difficult.
The main character was trying to study a particular ancient society (Carthage, IIRC), and he had kept putting submissions in to use the time viewer, but kept getting declined or bumped or whatever, to his increased frustration. Well, through the machinations of the plot, he managed to discover that the technology behind the top secret time viewer was actually just components that were already commercially available to the general public. After being blocked by the government from using the time viewer for so long, he felt that everyone should have access to the technology, and ended up releasing the plans to the time viewer out to the general public.
The government caught up to him to late to stop him; the plans were already out there. The agent/official/whatever was horrified, and asked him if he realized what he'd just done. He pointed out that the device could be used to view any time in the past... including up to just milliseconds ago. Because of human nature, people would realize this, and start using the device to start spying on others in almost real-time, and there was no way to even know you were being watched. The dawning horror started to sink in for the main character, as he realized from that point forward, no one could ever assume to be unobserved again... privacy as a concept was effectively dead.
My description probably doesn't do it justice, and obviously I forgot a lot of the details of the plot, but that ending certainly stayed with me years later.
The Light of Other Days does a good job of exploring the social, government, religious, historical, legal, sexual, economic and other ramifications of the complete end of secrecy and privacy when the technology to mass produce an inexpensive wormhole time viewer becomes publicly available tech and people have to come to terms with the fact that they could be unknowingly observed anywhere at any time past or present by anyone.
The idea is you can never get back to your own timeline…
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