doomdragon6
Staff member
I'm taking over a certain project, which is going fine except for one thing: time travel is involved. And it's time travel that as far as I can tell doesn't make any sense at all.
It's all a bit convoluted, so I'm going to give as few relevant details as possible:
1) Character A is killed in the course of the story's events.
2) Characters B and C are sad, and want A back, so they team up with Character D to create a time machine.
3) B, C, and D try to test the time machine by sending a mop back in time, but it catches fire, so they know it's wrong and start making tweaks.
4) Later on, B, C, and D, having learned from their mistakes, believe they have completed the time machine properly. So, this time they test it by sending a note back in time to earlier in the evening, that says, "Do not try to send the mop back in time. It will ust catch fire."
5) They send the note back in time, the time machine flashes and emites a "wave", and the mop pops back into existence, leaning on the wall.
6) C notes that this is impossible, because they wouldn't have been able to fix the time machine if they hadn't sent the mop back in time first.
7) D says that the time machine avoids paradoxes by emitting the wave that it does. He says that they are NOT in an alternate universe, and they are NOT in an aternate timeline, because that is impossible. He says, "We're not in an alternate universe. The time machine has emitted a wave that reconfigures 'our' time to reflect the changes made by the time machine in the past. We're not creating a new timeline here. That is impossible. We're attempting to FIX our time, and the realignment wave helps us do that."
8) The characters note that they have memories of burning the mop, but no memories of receiving a note or -not- burning the mop. So their original memories are intact.
Unfortunately, no more questions are asked and no more explanations given, and I have to figure out how the hell this thing works.
To me, it sounds completely implausible (as implausible as time machines get, anyway), and I can't figure out how it could work.
They're selectively changing the past-- not burning the mop made it reappear, but not burning it did not make any changes. So they changed event 1, but did not change event 2.
And this doesn't help with CHARACTERS going back in time at all. There's no telling how a cognitive person going back in time, actively changing things, and existing, would affect the "present". Could he waltz back up to the time machine "camp" and meet himself? One side of the argument says yes, because they sent a note back and interacted with the world, but the other side says no, because they don't have memories of the event and thus never met him, and all that "could" happen is a copy of the character could pop into existence. BUT, then at what point does time "catch up"? At what point does the machine say, "this is a change" and reflect it in the "present"?
I can't wrap my head around it, but I know there are plenty of complicated time travel mechanics out there, so surely someone can think of something.
Also, inb4 Futurama doomed copies and paradox-correcting time machine, etc.
It's all a bit convoluted, so I'm going to give as few relevant details as possible:
1) Character A is killed in the course of the story's events.
2) Characters B and C are sad, and want A back, so they team up with Character D to create a time machine.
3) B, C, and D try to test the time machine by sending a mop back in time, but it catches fire, so they know it's wrong and start making tweaks.
4) Later on, B, C, and D, having learned from their mistakes, believe they have completed the time machine properly. So, this time they test it by sending a note back in time to earlier in the evening, that says, "Do not try to send the mop back in time. It will ust catch fire."
5) They send the note back in time, the time machine flashes and emites a "wave", and the mop pops back into existence, leaning on the wall.
6) C notes that this is impossible, because they wouldn't have been able to fix the time machine if they hadn't sent the mop back in time first.
7) D says that the time machine avoids paradoxes by emitting the wave that it does. He says that they are NOT in an alternate universe, and they are NOT in an aternate timeline, because that is impossible. He says, "We're not in an alternate universe. The time machine has emitted a wave that reconfigures 'our' time to reflect the changes made by the time machine in the past. We're not creating a new timeline here. That is impossible. We're attempting to FIX our time, and the realignment wave helps us do that."
8) The characters note that they have memories of burning the mop, but no memories of receiving a note or -not- burning the mop. So their original memories are intact.
Unfortunately, no more questions are asked and no more explanations given, and I have to figure out how the hell this thing works.
To me, it sounds completely implausible (as implausible as time machines get, anyway), and I can't figure out how it could work.
They're selectively changing the past-- not burning the mop made it reappear, but not burning it did not make any changes. So they changed event 1, but did not change event 2.
And this doesn't help with CHARACTERS going back in time at all. There's no telling how a cognitive person going back in time, actively changing things, and existing, would affect the "present". Could he waltz back up to the time machine "camp" and meet himself? One side of the argument says yes, because they sent a note back and interacted with the world, but the other side says no, because they don't have memories of the event and thus never met him, and all that "could" happen is a copy of the character could pop into existence. BUT, then at what point does time "catch up"? At what point does the machine say, "this is a change" and reflect it in the "present"?
I can't wrap my head around it, but I know there are plenty of complicated time travel mechanics out there, so surely someone can think of something.
Also, inb4 Futurama doomed copies and paradox-correcting time machine, etc.