There are alot of theories about time travel. This is a theory about time travel. If that thought bores you then stop here.
We can all agree there are some novels/movies that handle time travel intelligently and with great nuance enhancing a story, then there are others that exploit time travel to hide a lack of plot coherency or sloppy writing. The first time I read one of the latter books, I set out to form 'my' theory of time travel, of course when reading a good book you put your theory to the side for a time, but I like having a sensible baseline.
Okay, so I'm pretty sure this will have already been thought of by someone else, but here is a theory about the mechanics of time travel that eliminates all those pesky paradoxes (I'm looking at you grandfather paradox) and other annoying confusing elements of time travel, simplifying it into a form that can consistently follow its own rules.
Here's the rundown, the theory comes from a small set of assumptions, the mechanics of how time travel would play out are inferred from those assumptions.
(Diagrams coming)
Assumption:
1: Time travel is easy/feasible non-deadly etc
2: Time travel is instantaneous (There will never be more than one time traveling event at any point, you won't 'run into' anything)
3: The Timeline instantly and completely rewrites itself when time travel occurs (Sometimes called time lag or waves, there is no of this)
4: There is no absolute timeless identity. (If YOU meet YOU from another time, you are both separate entities, able to interact as any other people would with no special rules)
5: Fate/Destiny does not exist, all time and events within it can be changed.
Okay, here is a terrible picture.
Blue Bar = Timeline
Gold Star = You with your time machine.
Arrows/Moving Star = Time Travel event
Faded Blue bars = Destroyed/Erased Future.
Green Bar = New part of timeline.
First event is a time travel backwards, Second event is a time travel forwards.
The red line indicates a period in time in which you did not appear at all on the timeline, you vanished thereby changing the future, then reappeared at the end of the red line.
Now as far as I can tell, this is a pretty air tight way to work things, if you think about something the answer as to what would happen is obvious and singular.
(I deliberately thought up some complex time events and the way they played out seemed pretty straight forward, for the sake of simplicity I'll leave them out for now)
Input? Comments? Random Gibberish? "Oh my gosh Slyvena, you helped me so much, here let me give you lots of money"?
We can all agree there are some novels/movies that handle time travel intelligently and with great nuance enhancing a story, then there are others that exploit time travel to hide a lack of plot coherency or sloppy writing. The first time I read one of the latter books, I set out to form 'my' theory of time travel, of course when reading a good book you put your theory to the side for a time, but I like having a sensible baseline.
Okay, so I'm pretty sure this will have already been thought of by someone else, but here is a theory about the mechanics of time travel that eliminates all those pesky paradoxes (I'm looking at you grandfather paradox) and other annoying confusing elements of time travel, simplifying it into a form that can consistently follow its own rules.
Here's the rundown, the theory comes from a small set of assumptions, the mechanics of how time travel would play out are inferred from those assumptions.
(Diagrams coming)
Assumption:
1: Time travel is easy/feasible non-deadly etc
2: Time travel is instantaneous (There will never be more than one time traveling event at any point, you won't 'run into' anything)
3: The Timeline instantly and completely rewrites itself when time travel occurs (Sometimes called time lag or waves, there is no of this)
4: There is no absolute timeless identity. (If YOU meet YOU from another time, you are both separate entities, able to interact as any other people would with no special rules)
5: Fate/Destiny does not exist, all time and events within it can be changed.
Okay, here is a terrible picture.
Blue Bar = Timeline
Gold Star = You with your time machine.
Arrows/Moving Star = Time Travel event
Faded Blue bars = Destroyed/Erased Future.
Green Bar = New part of timeline.
First event is a time travel backwards, Second event is a time travel forwards.
The red line indicates a period in time in which you did not appear at all on the timeline, you vanished thereby changing the future, then reappeared at the end of the red line.

Now as far as I can tell, this is a pretty air tight way to work things, if you think about something the answer as to what would happen is obvious and singular.
(I deliberately thought up some complex time events and the way they played out seemed pretty straight forward, for the sake of simplicity I'll leave them out for now)
Input? Comments? Random Gibberish? "Oh my gosh Slyvena, you helped me so much, here let me give you lots of money"?