Easy. They always went back in time. Nothing is actually being altered because it always happened with them there.
Actually, that wouldn't work with this particular story because it's fanfiction. I want these characters to interact with characters in the past, when they clearly did not do so before.
Easy. They always went back in time. Nothing is actually being altered because it always happened with them there.
Actually, that wouldn't work with this particular story because it's fanfiction. I want these characters to interact with characters in the past, when they clearly did not do so before.
Clearly did not in what sense? That it wasn't documented in history? I could go back in time next week and talk to Julius Caesar and odds are it'll never be documented in history. Even if it were, odds are it wouldn't survive. Unless some Monk stumbled upon some other chronicler who wrote it down and then decided to copy it and some later Monk copied him, it won't have survived to the printing press. Then it would be cheap to copy, but there'd still have to be a reason to do so. All it takes is one fire or flood and all record of my conversation will be lost.
The single universe theory is cleaner than any other. It avoids paradoxes.
Then again, I also reject the butterfly effect. If you go back in time and kill a butterfly, there will be more food available and a different butterfly that would have starved to death is able to live. It's a course correction argument, but, essentially, it's a requirement that the change in history is a big one for there to be a ripple effect.
The single universe theory is cleaner than any other. It avoids paradoxes.
Any suggestions?
Predestination paradox. Everything they did turned out to be what already happened, they just didn't know it. So when they get back to the present, everything is as it was because it never happened any other way.
Or ignore the whole issue and have the characters mess everything up but it's all fine anyway. Wibbly-wobbly and all that. Maybe lampshade it or turn the issue into some kind of running gag.
Edit: Ninjaed!. Damn you, RoJo! *shakes fist*
Beyond Antares said:Well, thanks. But I didn't say that it was going to be anything like Star Trek: First Contact, did I.
Don't sweat it. It's beyond silly to imply the premise of First Contact was in any sense original.
The single universe theory is cleaner than any other. It avoids paradoxes.
Branching theory, as seen in STXI, completely avoids paradoxes. However, it tends to lack a certain degree of popularity when it comes to writing fiction, because the poor time travelers never get back to their original timeline/universe, and the poor denizens of the original timeline/universe never get to see the time travelers again. ( I'm looking at you, Picard. )
They understood it fine. Those things just aren't that important.The single universe theory is cleaner than any other. It avoids paradoxes.
Branching theory, as seen in STXI, completely avoids paradoxes. However, it tends to lack a certain degree of popularity when it comes to writing fiction, because the poor time travelers never get back to their original timeline/universe, and the poor denizens of the original timeline/universe never get to see the time travelers again. ( I'm looking at you, Picard. )
STXI creates its own problems. Where is Kirk's brother? Why is the Enterprise insignia being used for Starfleet? Perhaps not in story problems but as a part in an ongoing series, not having a full understanding of the source material, led to paradoxes with previously established continuity.
That's not what "paradox" means.
Easy. They always went back in time. Nothing is actually being altered because it always happened with them there.
Actually, that wouldn't work with this particular story because it's fanfiction. I want these characters to interact with characters in the past, when they clearly did not do so before.
Clearly did not in what sense? That it wasn't documented in history? I could go back in time next week and talk to Julius Caesar and odds are it'll never be documented in history. Even if it were, odds are it wouldn't survive.
True, on small timescales. On large timescales, you'd wind up altering a large fraction of the human population's genetic makeup, since sperm are not identical and any given fertilization depends on very specific conditions which are easily altered by the most minute impositions. I find it unlikely that this would not wind up significantly altering history within a few generations; even if I concede that the underlying social fabric is more durable, you'd wind up with a planet comprised largely of entirely different human beings.Then again, I also reject the butterfly effect. If you go back in time and kill a butterfly, there will be more food available and a different butterfly that would have starved to death is able to live. It's a course correction argument, but, essentially, it's a requirement that the change in history is a big one for there to be a ripple effect.
Actually, that wouldn't work with this particular story because it's fanfiction. I want these characters to interact with characters in the past, when they clearly did not do so before.
Clearly did not in what sense? That it wasn't documented in history? I could go back in time next week and talk to Julius Caesar and odds are it'll never be documented in history. Even if it were, odds are it wouldn't survive.
Odds are he'd keep going "Que?" until he got frustrated and walked off.
True, on small timescales. On large timescales, you'd wind up altering a large fraction of the human population's genetic makeup, since sperm are not identical and any given fertilization depends on very specific conditions which are easily altered by the most minute impositions. I find it unlikely that this would not wind up significantly altering history within a few generations; even if I concede that the underlying social fabric is more durable, you'd wind up with a planet comprised largely of entirely different human beings.Then again, I also reject the butterfly effect. If you go back in time and kill a butterfly, there will be more food available and a different butterfly that would have starved to death is able to live. It's a course correction argument, but, essentially, it's a requirement that the change in history is a big one for there to be a ripple effect.
I find it unlikely that this would not wind up significantly altering history within a few generations; even if I concede that the underlying social fabric is more durable, you'd wind up with a planet comprised largely of entirely different human beings.
That's a very good point that I hadn't even considered. Not only would you see "great men" born with different constitutions, but often different genitalia--and up until about 1980 having the wrong genitals means no access to power whatsoever.I find it unlikely that this would not wind up significantly altering history within a few generations; even if I concede that the underlying social fabric is more durable, you'd wind up with a planet comprised largely of entirely different human beings.
I agree. Hell, just imagine if Hitler's parents had sex at a slightly different time of day. For all we know, Adolf would have been born a girl with a severe speech impediment and a lazy eye. She would likely develop self-esteem issues, and she certainly wouldn't have been able to rally the Nazis the way the real Hitler did. Just imagine how different the world would be today.
Now do the same with even more people all over the world. Everything would be completely different from how we see it today.
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