The only bad logic I am willing to concede in "Counter-Clock Incident" is that Kirk and crew, when in the alternate universe, seemed to 'adjust' to flow along with it - they could talk to its inhabitants, and experienced the same flow of time they did. OTOH, Karla Five, when she was in the "normal" universe, spoke backwards relative to it. Kirk et al. didn't do so when they were in her universe.
That is the ONLY point I am willing to grant as to why the logic of this episode supposedly doesn't work.
As for the universe itself: Again, it is its own universe. There are an infinite number of universes, with corresponding infinite possibilities in each. *We* might think that this universe's logic, physics, etc. don't work, but they would not. What might seem silly to us would be second nature to them. In an infinite multiverse, anything is possible. In the most literal sense.
As for Counter-Clock World (the PKD novel): I read that book awhile ago and loved it. However: It was only recently that I realized exactly what "sogum" is supposed to be. (If you haven't read that novel yet: Don't ask.)
That is the ONLY point I am willing to grant as to why the logic of this episode supposedly doesn't work.
As for the universe itself: Again, it is its own universe. There are an infinite number of universes, with corresponding infinite possibilities in each. *We* might think that this universe's logic, physics, etc. don't work, but they would not. What might seem silly to us would be second nature to them. In an infinite multiverse, anything is possible. In the most literal sense.
As for Counter-Clock World (the PKD novel): I read that book awhile ago and loved it. However: It was only recently that I realized exactly what "sogum" is supposed to be. (If you haven't read that novel yet: Don't ask.)
