Even after reading Watching the Clock (which I loved) I’ve been struggling to figure out how a temporal war would actually work in practice, so I thought I’d share the pain and see what people come up with.
I’m reasonably comfortable with the idea of two sides from the same period each trying to change history. Presumably each would have some sort of temporal shielding (cf Year of Hell) to prevent changes wiping them out before they get a chance to respond. So, if Albert wants to prevent Beth’s birth he travels back and prevents her parents meeting. Beth’s shields prevent her disappearing, so she gets an opportunity to go back and change things. This is not far off what we saw in First Contact.
Where I run into trouble is how this works when the protagonists are in two different time zones. Specifically I can’t figure out how it would work (or even start) with Future Guy two centuries ahead of Daniels (let's leave the other factions for the moment). The way its presented is almost like the two are countering (or adapting) each others’ moves in real time, but that can’t be right because Future Guy’s entire life is already over from the point of view of Daniels. If Future Guy travels to the past, makes a change and then comes back, he’s done it before anyone in the future gets a chance to respond. It would be, from our 2015 perspective, like someone from 1975 suddenly travelling back and killing Hitler (which seems to be the standard example for time travel discussions). That can’t happen now, can it? Because 1975s already happened and nobody did that.
But if we look at it from the time traveller’s point of view things get messier still. Say I travel back from 1975 to 1938 with my handy pistol. Now, until I actually fire the shot, there are two possible futures – one where I succeed and one where I don’t. While I’m in the past, the people from the one where I don’t succeed could theoretically travel back to ensure that I don’t, so ensuring the creation of their own timeline. Now theoretically that only holds while I’m in the past. But from the point of view of those who come back to stop me I’ve long left it. My brain hurts.
Any thoughts?
LJ.
I’m reasonably comfortable with the idea of two sides from the same period each trying to change history. Presumably each would have some sort of temporal shielding (cf Year of Hell) to prevent changes wiping them out before they get a chance to respond. So, if Albert wants to prevent Beth’s birth he travels back and prevents her parents meeting. Beth’s shields prevent her disappearing, so she gets an opportunity to go back and change things. This is not far off what we saw in First Contact.
Where I run into trouble is how this works when the protagonists are in two different time zones. Specifically I can’t figure out how it would work (or even start) with Future Guy two centuries ahead of Daniels (let's leave the other factions for the moment). The way its presented is almost like the two are countering (or adapting) each others’ moves in real time, but that can’t be right because Future Guy’s entire life is already over from the point of view of Daniels. If Future Guy travels to the past, makes a change and then comes back, he’s done it before anyone in the future gets a chance to respond. It would be, from our 2015 perspective, like someone from 1975 suddenly travelling back and killing Hitler (which seems to be the standard example for time travel discussions). That can’t happen now, can it? Because 1975s already happened and nobody did that.
But if we look at it from the time traveller’s point of view things get messier still. Say I travel back from 1975 to 1938 with my handy pistol. Now, until I actually fire the shot, there are two possible futures – one where I succeed and one where I don’t. While I’m in the past, the people from the one where I don’t succeed could theoretically travel back to ensure that I don’t, so ensuring the creation of their own timeline. Now theoretically that only holds while I’m in the past. But from the point of view of those who come back to stop me I’ve long left it. My brain hurts.
Any thoughts?
LJ.