How would merely viewing the timeline invoke Spock's death unless its a special Guardian rule of course?
Time has resumed its shape. All is as it was before. Many such journeys are possible. Let me be your gateway.
Technobabble hadn't been invented until the 24th century so I'm rejecting your suggestionSee my post above. Maybe you missed it.
And mine. The monster of the plains got him, no techno-babble needed!
Who knows what the GOF is really up to - after all, it seemed to do a pretty lousy job of fulfilling its own job description (guarding time) at all: In its first appearance, it let a crazy man leap through the portal and (seemingly) alter all of known history! After this apparent debacle is resolved, the malfunctioning mechanical monstrosity straight up invites Kirk and pals to take another stab at mangling the timeline:
Time has resumed its shape. All is as it was before. Many such journeys are possible. Let me be your gateway.
To be fair to the GOF thought, that is only how it seems at a first glance. Rather than haphazardly creating and narrowly resolving crisis in historical turning points, I think what the GOF actually "guards" are these predestination paradoxes that are essential to the makeup of this particular timeline.
For example, we know (or are told by the GOF broadcast) that if Edith Keeler lived then Star Trek's history would have been radically altered. We also know that she was killed, crossing the street to see the joyful reunion of McCoy with his friends and distracted by the thought and sight of her beau. Specifically, it is only due to Kirk's presence in the 1930s in the first place that his own history is able to unfold in the way it does; a predestination paradox, seen here, in the TAS episode Yesteryear and TNG's Time's Arrow.
Time trundles along from the 1930s until the 23rd century, when Crazy McCoy leaps into the past. The is the moment the GOF has been waiting for; the "appointed time" when Kirk, Spock & McCoy must play their part for history to unfold as it should. However, since only McCoy has gone through then history itself is in a sort of limbo - hence why they lose contact with the Enterprise. Of course, it might also be that the GOF is forcing them to perceive reality in a certain way, or bumping them into a neighbouring timestream, or doing whatever it takes to encourage Kirk and Spock to follow the good Doctor into the 1930s. The GOF knows that it MUST happen.
The cryptic invite at the end of TCOTEOF might be to view certain "safe" areas of known history (like Orion at the dawn of its civilisation) , or else to fulfil certain other predestination paradoxes. After all, Spock is standing right there and still has a part to play in his own history. But the GOF is patient and can wait until the next "appointed time"...
I'd guess they'd be more likely to meet their alternates in an event like the Whale Probe Humpback Rescue[tm]. In "City" they only went backwards initially because Prime McCoy went bonkers and went back on his own to mess things up. The odds of McCoy-Secundo doing the same thing would be exceedingly low.
Harlan is 80. The possibilities could free up soon.
Harlan is 80. The possibilities could free up soon.
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