I don't think that would work in COTEOF, because Scotty's team has nothing to do. Their job is to stand and wait. So going back to them in the middle of things, for some gab, would stop the plot. It risks coming across as pointless filler that frustrates and bores the audience.
How long would they wait anyway? The guardian did say "then you would be returned. It would be as if none of you had gone."
So really, like 5 minutes before Scotty asks the guardian?
As I see it, the premise is that McCoy, having without warning entered the time-stream then being displayed by the Guardian, acted to disrupt That Which Was. Kirk and Spock were forced to act to prevent / undo the damage to the time-stream caused by McCoy's presence and to retrieve him.
I don't think there's a contradiction.
1. Time-stream exists
2. Out-of-place element introduced to time-stream, disrupting it.
3. Heroes enter time-stream in advance of the disruption and prevent it from occurring, restoring time-stream to The Way It Should Be.
4. Time-stream continues to exist.
A number of Star Trek stories followed a similar formula.
We can only assume that in the first version of the timeline Edith crossed the street (it doesn't matter why) and was killed in a car accident.
When McCoy went back in time he must have done something to prevent her from being hit by the car (like distracting her from entering the street or rushing in to push her out the way).
When Kirk and Spock go back in time they prevent McCoy from saving Edith although it would appear their presence caused Edith to cross the street.
So Edith crossing the street at that key point in time (regardless of the reason) determined the fate of the timeline.
Predestination. They were always meant to be the reason for her demise. Spock even says he read that her death was some kind of traffic accident before the paper changed.
How do you know there even was an original time stream in which Kirk, Spock, and McCoy did not travel back in time?The crucial question is: How did Edith Keeler die in the original time stream, when no one from 23rd century interfered?
Yeah, it's in essence an upside-down "butterfly effect" story.The strong inference in the final version of CotEoF is that in the original, unaltered timeline, Keeler goes to the movie, returns, walks across the street, and is hit by the truck. In the McCoy-altered timeline, she goes to the movie, returns, crosses the street, McCoy exits the mission and sees her about to be hit and McCoy pushes her out of the way. In the Kirk, Spock, and McCoy-altered timeline, she and Kirk go to the movie, return, Kirk crosses the street when he hears McCoy is inside the mission, he intercepts McCoy as he exits the mission and prevents him from saving Keeler as she crosses and is hit by that same truck.
In the view of the storytellers, Kirk has “restored the timeline” ie, gotten Keeler hit by that truck again. But even they reveal that the exact event is not the point. It is the result. Spock tells Kirk when he saves Keeler from falling down the steps that she might have died right there, and in his view, that presumably would have been fine. Her death at approximately this time is the “focal point” in history, not the exact way it happens.
It is a very linear view of history which is fine and consistent. It is literary however, but not realistic. History reflects the workings of a complex system not always best described by linear forces.
The TOS episode "The City on the Edge of Forever" is often considered as one of the best - if not the single best - Star Trek episode. However, I find a crucial element of the episode not convincing and am wondering whether it is simply a contradiction that should not be there.
Throughout the episode, it is quite clearly suggested that Edith Keeler was "supposed" to die before World War II -- i.e., that she would die before WWII if no one from the 23rd century did intervene -- and that McCoy saved her, which lead to a disaster in WWII. Therefore, Kirk and Spock had to prevent him from doing so. But what actually happens then is that the car accident that kills Edith Keeler apparently only happens because of the presence of Kirk, Spock, and McCoy (Keeler crosses the street again only because she sees them). Therefore, without the presence of anyone from the 23rd century, she would probably not have died in that accident. This apparently contradicts what had been suggested throughout the previous course of the episode.
Is there any convincing solution that is in line with the story of the episode?
Yeah, right, at about 32 minutes of the episode, Spock says that she died from a car accident in that same year (1930).
Keeler dies in a car accident. She doesn't die breaking her neck while climbing stairs.
Excellent points, especially on that statement by the GOF! Whatever the author's original intentions might have been, the episode eventually produced comes across to me as a classic predestination paradox. In fact I suspect that the GOF is itself the result of such temporal shenanigans, which it seems to confirm with this statement to Kirk:How do you know there even was an original time stream in which Kirk, Spock, and McCoy did not travel back in time?
This is a time-travel episode. There is a time machine in it. Maybe no timeline is free from interference by its usage.
And the end, the Guardian says, "All is as it was before." If one takes that literally, then it means that in the original timeline they were to interfere in the past, just as they did.
Such powers are not necessary - the GOF was just trying to manipulate Kirk & Spock into following McCoy into the past (to complete the time loop) so all it had to do to was spout a few poetic lines to the landing party and block off their communications to the Enterprise. Humanoids are such easy marks!It doesn't seem like the Guardian is capable of swapping or moving between timelines on its own. If it was capable of doing so then McCoy jumping into the timestream would've resulted in McCoy going into an alternate timeline. The timeline that Kirk and co would be unchanged as the past has already happened.
We could have had the crew left behind on the Guardian planet philosophizing about their existential crisis, debating whether/where to jump into the time stream. Did any Treklit ever portray that?
From the crew that was left behind their point of view was that Kirk and Spock disappeared for just a moment.
Right before Kirk and Spock leaves...
KIRK: Scotty, when you think you've waited long enough, each of you will have to try it. Even if you fail, at least you'll be alive in some past world somewhere.Kirk and Spock step into the Guardian. Moments later, Kirk and Spock step out of the Guardian.
SCOTT: What happened, sir? You only left a moment ago.
Now I’m imagining Uhura driving a truck and mowing down Edith Keeler…There was a short story in one of the Strange New Worlds collections (Volume II, "Triptych") which supposes that, in actuality, Kirk whiffed it and Keeler lived, so Scotty led a second team through, they met up with Kirk and also failed, and finally Uhura went back with the remainder of the landing party, and it was all three groups (two of them off-screen) that contributed to the ending as we saw it.
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