Bakustra wrote:See, my theory relies on the fact that a number of plots rely on the ability to affect the past, so attacking it with the paradox argument runs into the direct evidence that time-travel doesn't work that way.
At least you admit your entire argument rests on nothing more than writer's intent. In the context of this thread (How would time travel affect a war between SW and ST?) you should just point out that the Federation would win without even needing time travel,
becuase they're the good guys. Because that's how writer's intent works. You wouldn't even need to say how they would do it, just like you're not even attempting to explain the lack of paradox-
somehow!
Bakustra wrote:See, the second half of science fiction refers to fiction- that which is not necessarily true.
And the first half refers to science- sci-fi explains why things which are not necessarily true
could be possible, which is what seperates it from fantasy, where things can be handwaved as magic.
Examples include:
Bakustra wrote:We don't need to know the exact method any more than we need to define the exact means by which hyperdrive, the Force, or warp drive work.
Hyperdrive works by generating a field around a ship, allowing it to enter another dimension (known as hyperspace), where the normal laws of physics don't apply and ships are able to easily travel at insane FTL speeds.
The Force works because of the ability to sense and interact with Midichlorians, which are concentrated in (but not neccesarily limited to) living things, and generate an energy field that, when manipulated, can give the user apparent abilities like telekinesis, telepathy, and many more.
Warp drive works by funneling highly energised plasma through injectors into a series of coils composed of verterium cortenide, which produces a subspace bubble around the ship, and allows the local space-time continuum to be distorted, moving the ship forward at FTL speeds.
These are highly simplified explanations, but should give you the idea that within science fiction (even sci-fi as allegedly fantasy-based as Star Wars) things are not merely handwaved as 'it just works that way'. Sci fi gives explanations. Even if they are in absolutely nonsense technobabble.
Bakustra wrote:But you certainly wouldn't demand any of those, because you've been hopefully conditioned (since Elbereth knows that you couldn't figure it out on your own) to realize how stupid that would be.
We wouldn't have to demand explanations for those things, because the writers offered them to us. It's something sci-fi writers often like to do (see distinction between sci-fi and fantasy).
Nowhere in Star Trek has any explanation been given as to why time travellers would be protected from changes to the timeline. The only way to rectify the observed lack of Grandfather Paradox is alternate realities- which are
a known and proven fact within Star Trek.
Every possible course of action is played out in an alternate reality. You can bitch all you want about the philosophical ramifications of it, but unless you can convince Brannon and Braga to decanonise 'Parallels' (and every other episode involving alternate timelines), it still stands as a fact within the Trekverse. One which no amount of putting your fingers in your ears and screaming "writer's intent!" will make go away.
Just to clear something up, I'm not opposed to time travel. I am, however, opposed to 'magical bullshit' time travel. In Doctor Who, the Paradox Machine had to be built to allow an entire race to wipe out their ancestors. In Back to the Future, Marty McFly had to make sure he didn't erase himself from history by causing a paradox. Even Bill and Ted experienced recurring loops and 'predestined' events
caused by their own time travel.
I don't see why Star Trek should be exempt from explanation when the writers love making up technobabble explanations for everything else they can say "quantum" at.
Many worlds isn't a theory within Trek, it's an observed and known fact. Your counter-theory is nothing more than arsepulling based on writer's intent.
Many worlds and magic time travel are both shitty writing in their own ways (noone ever said the writing in Star Trek was perfect). The difference is, one has actually been written by Star Trek writers.