Year of Hell time ship vs the empire

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Post by Darth Wong »

Eframepilot wrote:Sorry. I tried to treat time travel, and the paradoxes resulting thereof, as a suspension of disbelief issue. I suggest that we take time travel as it appears and not fanwank it into avoiding what we call paradoxes.
And we aren't? We aren't saying it doesn't happen as shown onscreen; we are merely trying to find the best interpretation for those events.
There's that word again. Paradox. But what is the grandfather paradox? Consider: Joe Bob travels back 50 years to kill his grandfather, Billy Bob, before his father's conception. Joe Bob succeeds, apparently negating his own existence. How did he travel back in the first place.

Both of our theories avoid the paradox. According to you, Joe Bob's travel creates a new timeline where his grandpatricide occurs; he will continue to live his life there. According to me, Joe Bob's travel and subsequent actions erase his own timeline and replace it with a new one. A historian in the "new" timeline both of our theories would note that Joe Bob seemingly appeared out of nowhere.
Correct, except that in your case, Joe Bob could not have existed in the first place because he was never born. You simply shrug this off as some magical immunity to the effects of erasing his own timeline, but you have no real explanation for it. I, on the other hand, don't need to explain it since the paradox does not occur.
The end result is that my theory requires Joe Bob to "appear out of nowhere" and your theory requires an entire universe to appear for Joe Bob to land in. Clearly my theory is simpler.
No, your theory requires a magical immunity field to protect Bob from the effect of never having been born in the first place. My theory requires parallel, barely divergent timelines WHICH WE HAVE OBSERVED ON THE SHOW.
My theory agrees with the judgements of every character in Trek familiar with time travel. Your theory is circumstantially supported by "Parallels", which shows that universes do "appear out of nowhere", but in a process unrelated to time travel.
Your theory cannot explain the existence of those parallel but almost perfectly identical universes. Mine can. Or are you seriously suggesting that hundreds of thousands of parallel universes would just happen to be so similar that they all have Enterprises with same-named character onboard? I find it amazing that you can so shamelessly ignore and dismiss such a huge piece of evidence.
Your theory also requires every character in Trek to be idiot savants who can master temporal physics beyond anything our current science predicts and yet totally miss the ramifications.
That is also observed. Their ability to think about the ramifications of their hare-brained interpretations has been proven to be contemptibly poor time and time again. Do you really want to challenge this?
All things considered, both theories are whacked, but mine describes what we see better.
Actually, yours ignores a large piece of evidence and makes no attempt whatsoever to explain the grandfather paradox. In fact, it cannot even make predictions, since it describes and explains pretty much nothing.
If you really find it so irritating that Captain Kirk could defeat the the Empire by slingshotting around Naboo's sun (assuming he could get there in the first place! :P ) and blasting Theed from orbit years before Palpatine is elected Supreme Chancellor, just declare time travel to be a cheap, stupid cop-out that is forbidden by the Temporal Prime Directive anyway and ignore it a la superbeing intervention.
"Appeal to motive" fallacy again. This grows tiresome.
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Post by Eframepilot »

Darth Wong wrote:Correct, except that in your case, Joe Bob could not have existed in the first place because he was never born. You simply shrug this off as some magical immunity to the effects of erasing his own timeline, but you have no real explanation for it. I, on the other hand, don't need to explain it since the paradox does not occur.
My theory requires a magical immunity for Joe Bob. Your theory requires a magical generation of an entire universe via time travel, which we haven't observed.
No, your theory requires a magical immunity field to protect Bob from the effect of never having been born in the first place. My theory requires parallel, barely divergent timelines WHICH WE HAVE OBSERVED ON THE SHOW.
Those parallel, "barely divergent" timelines don't have a damned thing to do with time travel. Consider the divergences. Initially Worf jumps between universes with such small differences as Geordi deciding to attend Worf's birthday party and Worf placing differently in a martial arts contest. How could time travel possibly cause such small changes?
Your theory cannot explain the existence of those parallel but almost perfectly identical universes. Mine can. Or are you seriously suggesting that hundreds of thousands of parallel universes would just happen to be so similar that they all have Enterprises with same-named character onboard? I find it amazing that you can so shamelessly ignore and dismiss such a huge piece of evidence.
Are you seriously suggesting that hundreds of thousands of parallel universes have been generated by unknown time travelers AND include many with divergences so small as to be almost unnoticable? Where is the causal connection? Why, and how, does time travel generate entire universes? Your theory raises far more problems than it solves. Why not just accept the separate universes as diverging a la the Many Worlds theory of quantum mechanics (every decision splits the universe in two yadda yadda yadda...)? It's bullshit in real physics (IMO) but explains "Parallels" perfectly. No time travel need apply.
Your theory also requires every character in Trek to be idiot savants who can master temporal physics beyond anything our current science predicts and yet totally miss the ramifications.
That is also observed. Their ability to think about the ramifications of their hare-brained interpretations has been proven to be contemptibly poor time and time again. Do you really want to challenge this?
I'd prefer to write off all Plot Induced Stupidity under suspension of disbelief. Is Mr. Spock a fool who believes a gram of antimatter will blow off a planet's atmosphere (according to sensors, it did!)? Are Universal Translators magical devices that make 98% of all aliens speak perfect English?
Actually, yours ignores a large piece of evidence and makes no attempt whatsoever to explain the grandfather paradox. In fact, it cannot even make predictions, since it describes and explains pretty much nothing.
Your theory confuses the Many Worlds theory with time travel and gives any guy with a time machine the ability to generate universes. My theory predicts exactly what will happen if you change time: your home timeline will vanish but you will be fine. Your theory is "better" only in that it mistakenly attributes an entirely separate phenomenon to time travel.
"Appeal to motive" fallacy again. This grows tiresome.
That wasn't a logical argument, it was a suggestion on how to concede the debate.
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Post by Darth Wong »

Eframepilot wrote:My theory requires a magical immunity for Joe Bob. Your theory requires a magical generation of an entire universe via time travel, which we haven't observed.
In other words, you admit that yours requires something you can't even begin to explain while mine only requires the existence of parallel timelines, which HAVE been observed despite your protests.
Those parallel, "barely divergent" timelines don't have a damned thing to do with time travel. Consider the divergences. Initially Worf jumps between universes with such small differences as Geordi deciding to attend Worf's birthday party and Worf placing differently in a martial arts contest. How could time travel possibly cause such small changes?
How could anything BUT time travel possibly cause such small changes? Are you totally dense? Let's suppose we have a hundred thousand paralle universes that develop separately. Do you have any IDEA of the ridiculous probabilities against them developing identically through sheer coincidence, until some tiny divergence which happens to occur very close to the point of intersection?

Time travel explains it quite neatly; the universes do not diverge until a particular point of intrusion, hence their similarity. Your theory, on the other hand, simply chalks it up to astounding coincidence :roll:
Are you seriously suggesting that hundreds of thousands of parallel universes have been generated by unknown time travelers AND include many with divergences so small as to be almost unnoticable? Where is the causal connection? Why, and how, does time travel generate entire universes? Your theory raises far more problems than it solves.
No worse than the paradox. The difference is that mine is buttressed by observation. Any real-science objection to the parallel-universe idea is not applicable in light of the fact that we've SEEN these parallel universes.
Why not just accept the separate universes as diverging a la the Many Worlds theory of quantum mechanics (every decision splits the universe in two yadda yadda yadda...)? It's bullshit in real physics (IMO) but explains "Parallels" perfectly. No time travel need apply.
The "many worlds" theory is a misinterpretation of quantum physics, remember? And even if it wasn't, since it is based on the "many possible paths to the same outcome" theory, it could hardly be used to justify the notion of manipulating the outcome of an event through time travel (it would be more like those sci-fi stories where someone tries to change history and finds to his horror that he actually causes it, just as he remembered).
I'd prefer to write off all Plot Induced Stupidity under suspension of disbelief. Is Mr. Spock a fool who believes a gram of antimatter will blow off a planet's atmosphere (according to sensors, it did!)? Are Universal Translators magical devices that make 98% of all aliens speak perfect English?
Suspension of disbelief does not necessitate suspension of intelligence.
Your theory confuses the Many Worlds theory with time travel and gives any guy with a time machine the ability to generate universes.
And that's worse than giving any guy the ability to generate universes with a mere thought or action, as per YOUR interpretation? Every single case where you try to demolish my theory only damages your theory worse.
My theory predicts exactly what will happen if you change time: your home timeline will vanish but you will be fine.
That is not a theory; that is a preferred outcome. You have not explained why this happens, therefore you have no theory at all.
Your theory is "better" only in that it mistakenly attributes an entirely separate phenomenon to time travel.
My theory explains something. Yours doesn't. Worse yet, it relies on the laughable excuse of a gigantic coincidence in order to explain countless marginally divergent parallel universes, such is your desperation to avoid dealing with an uncomfortable piece of evidence.
"Appeal to motive" fallacy again. This grows tiresome.
That wasn't a logical argument, it was a suggestion on how to concede the debate.
Trying to cajole your opponent into conceding is an even more pathetic tactic.
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Post by Isolder74 »

This guy sounds familer
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Post by Darth Garden Gnome »

Isolder74 wrote:This guy sounds familer
Any names come ot mind?

Anyways, this is the debate thus far:

Wong:"Parallels" shows us alternate universes exist when time travelling. Annorax's ship time travels. That's how it works.

Eframepilot: Or maybe we could create a string of endless paradoxes, ie- the grandfather paradox, while simultaneously ignoring CANON evidence of alternate universes in Trek time-travel.

Yeah, thats about it.
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Post by Darth Servo »

Sci-fi fanatics will do anything to avoid relenquishing their cherished interpretations of the show, but Trek fans seem by far the worst.

I don't see why all this is such a big deal since the Kremin (sp?) ship erased itself from exsitance at the end of the episode.
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Post by Isolder74 »

Darth Garden Gnome wrote:
Isolder74 wrote:This guy sounds familer
Any names come ot mind?

Anyways, this is the debate thus far:

Wong:"Parallels" shows us alternate universes exist when time travelling. Annorax's ship time travels. That's how it works.

Eframepilot: Or maybe we could create a string of endless paradoxes, ie- the grandfather paradox, while simultaneously ignoring CANON evidence of alternate universes in Trek time-travel.

Yeah, thats about it.
I figured you could fill in the blank
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Post by Eframepilot »

Darth Wong wrote:In other words, you admit that yours requires something you can't even begin to explain while mine only requires the existence of parallel timelines, which HAVE been observed despite your protests.
Theories don't have to explain every "Why?" The Standard Model is the most precise theory ever developed, yet it makes no attempt to explain "why" it is true. It just describes what actually happens.
How could anything BUT time travel possibly cause such small changes? Are you totally dense? Let's suppose we have a hundred thousand paralle universes that develop separately. Do you have any IDEA of the ridiculous probabilities against them developing identically through sheer coincidence, until some tiny divergence which happens to occur very close to the point of intersection?
That isn't what causes them to diverge. According to Many Worlds, there are two ways to look at it. 1. Every divergence where a wavefunction collapses causes separate universes to appear, each with one possible end state of the wavefunction. "Nearby" universes would have split off recently and contain many common elements (crew, relationships). This is where Worf jumps to. 2. If you don't like universes spontaneously appearing, we could assume that a near-infinite number of universes started out at the beginning of time and develop from there. Worf jumps to the nearby ones, which have diverge the least.
Time travel explains it quite neatly; the universes do not diverge until a particular point of intrusion, hence their similarity.
Oh really? Then why didn't they diverge before the intrusion, huh? Even assuming a gazillion identical universes just waiting to be jumped to and altered, time travel fails completely to explain the similarities. Consider: On every Enterprise Worf jumps to, he is examining the Argolis Array or something near Cardassian space. Near the end, he jumps and bam! the Cardassian Empire is replaced by the Bajoran Empire. Yet even after this HUGE historical change, Worf is still on the Enterprise, checking the same sensor array, and as in the previous reality, still married to Counselor Troi! What the fuck?! A much better theory is that there are a near-infinite number of universes and Worf just visits (and contacts via the weird rift at the end) the "nearby" ones, where he is in a similar situation.

And while we're examining diverging universes, let's look at the Mirror Universe. After diverging who knows how far back, the Mirror Universe contains evil doubles of nearly everyone on Kirk's Enterprise. What a coincidence! And 100 years later, after Kirk's interference changed things even more, there are STILL completely identical people in the Mirror Universe! Tell me, how in HELL does your theory explain this?
No worse than the paradox. The difference is that mine is buttressed by observation. Any real-science objection to the parallel-universe idea is not applicable in light of the fact that we've SEEN these parallel universes.
These parallel universes have nothing to do with time travel. They're just there. In fact, outside of "Parallels", which could be just a delusion of Worf caused by technobabble, there is only the Mirror Universe. And we know how fucked up that is.
The "many worlds" theory is a misinterpretation of quantum physics, remember? And even if it wasn't, since it is based on the "many possible paths to the same outcome" theory, it could hardly be used to justify the notion of manipulating the outcome of an event through time travel (it would be more like those sci-fi stories where someone tries to change history and finds to his horror that he actually causes it, just as he remembered).
The "many worlds" theory has nothing to do with my theory. It just explains "Parallels". Time travel is a separate phenomenon.
Suspension of disbelief does not necessitate suspension of intelligence.
It does, alas, in Star Trek. Or else your brain will explode. You still haven't answered how you explain the Universal Translator.
And that's worse than giving any guy the ability to generate universes with a mere thought or action, as per YOUR interpretation? Every single case where you try to demolish my theory only damages your theory worse.
Welcome to logical hell. Thoughts and actions are relevant. We see predestination paradoxes occur. Sometimes people break out of them by taking specific actions. ("Time and Again","Future's End") Your theory does not allow predestination paradoxes to plausibly occur; each "cycle" through would involve a jump to a new universe where the SAME DAMN THING HAPPENS. Infinitely many times. Data's head ends up blown off and lying under San Francisco for 500 years infinitely many times.
That is not a theory; that is a preferred outcome. You have not explained why this happens, therefore you have no theory at all.
Theories cannot answer the "whys". But perhaps you are right. I have at least developed a model that describes what happens, while your theory includes the nonsensical parallel universes in contradiction to all characters' evaluations of time travel.
My theory explains something. Yours doesn't. Worse yet, it relies on the laughable excuse of a gigantic coincidence in order to explain countless marginally divergent parallel universes, such is your desperation to avoid dealing with an uncomfortable piece of evidence.
The oh so wacky "many worlds" theory relies on no coincidences at all. Your theory fails to explain why Worf's universes should be so similar, especially the final Bajoran Empire one.
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Post by nightmare »

In fact, outside of "Parallels", which could be just a delusion of Worf caused by technobabble, there is only the Mirror Universe.

Well, let's see... we have the mirror universe in TOS, we have a mirror universe in DS9, we have at least three TNG episodes with multiple siumultaneous timelines and Enterprises, we have the Voyager episode, whatever its name was, and these are just the ones I recall. I don't pay much attention to time travel out of personal preference, but I would call the existance of parallell unverses canon in Star Trek. It's probably all due to abuse of the reset button.
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Post by Darth Servo »

nightmare wrote:In fact, outside of "Parallels", which could be just a delusion of Worf caused by technobabble, there is only the Mirror Universe.

Well, let's see... we have the mirror universe in TOS, we have a mirror universe in DS9, we have at least three TNG episodes with multiple siumultaneous timelines and Enterprises, we have the Voyager episode, whatever its name was, and these are just the ones I recall. I don't pay much attention to time travel out of personal preference, but I would call the existance of parallell unverses canon in Star Trek. It's probably all due to abuse of the reset button.
How about the three different time lines from "Yesterday's Enterprise"?
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Post by Eframepilot »

Darth Servo wrote:
nightmare wrote:In fact, outside of "Parallels", which could be just a delusion of Worf caused by technobabble, there is only the Mirror Universe.

Well, let's see... we have the mirror universe in TOS, we have a mirror universe in DS9, we have at least three TNG episodes with multiple siumultaneous timelines and Enterprises, we have the Voyager episode, whatever its name was, and these are just the ones I recall. I don't pay much attention to time travel out of personal preference, but I would call the existance of parallell unverses canon in Star Trek. It's probably all due to abuse of the reset button.
How about the three different time lines from "Yesterday's Enterprise"?
The thing about those is, we didn't see them exist simultaneously. So by my theory, and what the all-knowing Guinan thought, sending the Enterprise-C changed time back to what it was, er, "before."

There aren't any other examples of different timelines shown as existing simultaneously, except "All Good Things..." which had Q's mysterious intervention and could have been a vision in Picard's brain and the Mirror Universe which has nothing to do with time travel. "All Good Things" had separate timelines but the anti-time anomaly was in all of 'em!
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Post by Eframepilot »

Darth Servo wrote:Sci-fi fanatics will do anything to avoid relenquishing their cherished interpretations of the show, but Trek fans seem by far the worst.
That's a rather subjective interpretation. :?
I don't see why all this is such a big deal since the Kremin (sp?) ship erased itself from exsitance at the end of the episode.
It's the principle of the matter! The principle! :twisted: Plus there's always the Future Feds.
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Post by Darth Wong »

Eframepilot wrote:Theories don't have to explain every "Why?" The Standard Model is the most precise theory ever developed, yet it makes no attempt to explain "why" it is true. It just describes what actually happens.
Which you don't do. Instead, you propose an explanation which doesn't work and dismiss its problems by simply saying that it WILL work.
That isn't what causes them to diverge. According to Many Worlds, there are two ways to look at it. 1. Every divergence where a wavefunction collapses causes separate universes to appear, each with one possible end state of the wavefunction. "Nearby" universes would have split off recently and contain many common elements (crew, relationships). This is where Worf jumps to. 2. If you don't like universes spontaneously appearing, we could assume that a near-infinite number of universes started out at the beginning of time and develop from there. Worf jumps to the nearby ones, which have diverge the least.
And this is more realistic than parallel timelines ... how? Particularly since "Many Worlds" is based on a MISINTERPRETATION of QM? Why are the divergences not much larger? Why aren't they running into universes which bear no resemblance whatsoever to their own? What kind of coincidence is required to accidentally jump into the universes that happen to be almost identical to their own?

It's easy to explain with time-travel; after all, they've been polluting the timeframe around their period in history with time travel for some time, hence most of the diversions seem to occur within a few centuries of the development of time travel. But under your theory, we must again resort to MASSIVE COINCIDENCE :roll:
Oh really? Then why didn't they diverge before the intrusion, huh? Even assuming a gazillion identical universes just waiting to be jumped to and altered, time travel fails completely to explain the similarities. Consider: On every Enterprise Worf jumps to, he is examining the Argolis Array or something near Cardassian space. Near the end, he jumps and bam! the Cardassian Empire is replaced by the Bajoran Empire. Yet even after this HUGE historical change, Worf is still on the Enterprise, checking the same sensor array, and as in the previous reality, still married to Counselor Troi! What the fuck?! A much better theory is that there are a near-infinite number of universes and Worf just visits (and contacts via the weird rift at the end) the "nearby" ones, where he is in a similar situation.
Oh, so timeline similarity is like geographic proximity now? Don't be ridiculous; now you're adding yet another magical mystery element in order to avoid the most obvious explanation.
And while we're examining diverging universes, let's look at the Mirror Universe. After diverging who knows how far back, the Mirror Universe contains evil doubles of nearly everyone on Kirk's Enterprise. What a coincidence! And 100 years later, after Kirk's interference changed things even more, there are STILL completely identical people in the Mirror Universe! Tell me, how in HELL does your theory explain this?
How does yours? You can't explain the marginally divergent universes with anything but giant coincidence or even more laughably, your assumption that accidents are somehow deterministically driven to go to similar timelines out of near-infinite possibilities. So you look for something which neither of us can explain and act as though it supports your theory by default. Have you been studying the Darkstar playbook?
These parallel universes have nothing to do with time travel. They're just there. In fact, outside of "Parallels", which could be just a delusion of Worf caused by technobabble, there is only the Mirror Universe. And we know how fucked up that is.
Ah, so now it's just a delusion of Worf, eh? In other words, you're trying to simply dismiss the whole thing. Concession accepted.

BTW, I love the way you mock when we point out that the entire Krenim timeship plot technically didn't happen (at least, not in the timeline they're in now), but then you turn around and dismiss "Parallels" as a delusion of Worf. At least someone's walking about with a memory of it. That's one up on the Krenim timeship already.
The "many worlds" theory has nothing to do with my theory. It just explains "Parallels". Time travel is a separate phenomenon.
Since the "many worlds" theory doesn't work, you have just conceded that you cannot explain "Parallels" at all. You lose.
Suspension of disbelief does not necessitate suspension of intelligence.
It does, alas, in Star Trek. Or else your brain will explode. You still haven't answered how you explain the Universal Translator.
The same way I explain Chang speaking English in ST6 even though he's supposedly speaking Klingon and Kirk is listening to his UT. It's translated for our benefit. If you want to suspend disbelief, just say that it's a smooth dubbing job with the lips CGI'd to fit the words. You may prefer to suspend your brain (which would explain many of your arguments in this thread), but don't project that attitude onto the rest of us.
Welcome to logical hell. Thoughts and actions are relevant. We see predestination paradoxes occur. Sometimes people break out of them by taking specific actions. ("Time and Again","Future's End") Your theory does not allow predestination paradoxes to plausibly occur; each "cycle" through would involve a jump to a new universe where the SAME DAMN THING HAPPENS. Infinitely many times. Data's head ends up blown off and lying under San Francisco for 500 years infinitely many times.
Explain why my theory necessarily forces itself into an endless loop. You seem bound and determined to act as though my theory generates all manner of bad predictions without showing why or how. Why would the same thing necessarily happen in a new timeline, as opposed to leaping around in the existing one and ignoring paradoxes?

Indeed, the predestination paradox is NOT a paradox in my theory. The predestination paradox is that you must take an action in the future in order to set up the situation that will cause you to take that action. A good example is Kyle in "The Terminator" (not ST, but this is a thought experiment). In your scheme, he goes back in time to set up the chain of events which make it possible for him to go back in time. It is a closed loop, and a predestination paradox. In my scheme, he jumps back in time to set up a chain of events which lead to some slightly different outcome. In his own universe, John Connor was fathered by someone else. But in the new timeline, he is the father of John Connor, who naturally doesn't grow up to look like the John Connor he remembered from his own native timeline. No paradox.

In short, you are stuck with all manner of paradoxes, I'm not. Yet you insist your theory is superior ... why?
Theories cannot answer the "whys". But perhaps you are right. I have at least developed a model that describes what happens, while your theory includes the nonsensical parallel universes in contradiction to all characters' evaluations of time travel.
Neat rhetorical trick, acting as though a theory need not explain how things happen by pointing out that it need not explain why things happen. There's a difference; theories DO, in fact, have to explain how things happen, or they're no damned good. Your theory explains nothing; it simply states that you have a preferred interpretation of events and that's it. Paradoxes and unsolvable problems are dismissed with a wave of the hand, and an alternate theory is dismissed as "nonsensical parallel universes" even though we've SEEN these fucking "nonsensical parallel universes" on the show.
The oh so wacky "many worlds" theory relies on no coincidences at all. Your theory fails to explain why Worf's universes should be so similar, especially the final Bajoran Empire one.
Bullshit. A divergent timeline from a recent point of intrusion explains the very marginally divergent timelines. Random infinite universes with random points of divergence do not.

This is exactly like debating Darkstar; you're basically declaring that your theory explains everything even though you can't explain how, and you get upset when I ask you to explain how. Then you look for things that neither theory can explain easily and act as though they destroy my theory but not yours. Pathetic.
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Post by Eframepilot »

Darth Garden Gnome wrote:
Isolder74 wrote:This guy sounds familer
Any names come ot mind?
I am right here, you know. Rather rude of you. :wink: I've been here before, under this account, debating this same subject, racking up enough posts to be a Youngling. Plus I'm really DarkStar, TOWNMNBS, and that fucktard Arminius at the same damn time.
Anyways, this is the debate thus far:

Wong:"Parallels" shows us alternate universes exist when time travelling. Annorax's ship time travels. That's how it works.

Eframepilot: Or maybe we could create a string of endless paradoxes, ie- the grandfather paradox, while simultaneously ignoring CANON evidence of alternate universes in Trek time-travel.

Yeah, thats about it.
Yes, that's a perfect Strawman of my argument.
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Post by Darth Wong »

Yadda yadda yadda. You've never really addressed any points; your entire last post was simply you basically saying "my theory explains what we see" without showing how and "your theory doesn't", without showing why not. I expect a repeat performance in your next post, but I don't plan on being awake for it.
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Post by Darth Servo »

Eframepilot wrote:
Darth Servo wrote:I don't see why all this is such a big deal since the Kremin (sp?) ship erased itself from exsitance at the end of the episode.
It's the principle of the matter! The principle! :twisted: Plus there's always the Future Feds.
Why? They don't have the Krenim time ship, which was what this thread was about.
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Post by nightmare »

Eframepilot wrote:
Darth Servo wrote:
nightmare wrote:In fact, outside of "Parallels", which could be just a delusion of Worf caused by technobabble, there is only the Mirror Universe.

Well, let's see... we have the mirror universe in TOS, we have a mirror universe in DS9, we have at least three TNG episodes with multiple siumultaneous timelines and Enterprises, we have the Voyager episode, whatever its name was, and these are just the ones I recall. I don't pay much attention to time travel out of personal preference, but I would call the existance of parallell unverses canon in Star Trek. It's probably all due to abuse of the reset button.
How about the three different time lines from "Yesterday's Enterprise"?
The thing about those is, we didn't see them exist simultaneously. So by my theory, and what the all-knowing Guinan thought, sending the Enterprise-C changed time back to what it was, er, "before."

There aren't any other examples of different timelines shown as existing simultaneously, except "All Good Things..." which had Q's mysterious intervention and could have been a vision in Picard's brain and the Mirror Universe which has nothing to do with time travel. "All Good Things" had separate timelines but the anti-time anomaly was in all of 'em!
"PICARD: In fact, they could conceivably create a third time line."

(courtesy of the canon database to support my faltering memory)

What is this? A second and a third time line? Which had nothing to do with the one this Picard was in? Sorry pal, but you don't have any pants on, and I don't even give a damn about the timeship or its theorectical capabilities. Your theory doesn't measure up. Besides.. we could always drag out the EU stasis-field generators if it ever came to a fight 8)
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Post by Darth Servo »

Eframepilot wrote:The thing about those is, we didn't see them exist simultaneously. So by my theory, and what the all-knowing Guinan thought, sending the Enterprise-C changed time back to what it was, er, "before."
Its impossible for Tasha's daughter to exist in the original time line. She was dead before the E-C came to the future. THAT is why your theory is junk.
There aren't any other examples of different timelines shown as existing simultaneously, except "All Good Things..." which had Q's mysterious intervention and could have been a vision in Picard's brain and the Mirror Universe which has nothing to do with time travel. "All Good Things" had separate timelines but the anti-time anomaly was in all of 'em!
So why does "All Good Things" and "Parallels" get to be a delusion but the Kremin time ship doesn't? At least one person remembers the Events of each of those two episodes while NO ONE (except the fans) has any record of the events from "Year of Hell".
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Post by Eframepilot »

Darth Wong wrote:Which you don't do. Instead, you propose an explanation which doesn't work and dismiss its problems by simply saying that it WILL work.
Alternatively, I'm describing what actually happens and you are creating a problem where none exists. Einstein did the same thing with quantum mechanics. He refused to accept a description of reality with apparent paradoxes. He failed to present any working alternate theory as well, just as you have failed.

I see you didn't address this defect in your theory at all:
Oh really? Then why didn't they diverge before the intrusion, huh? Even assuming a gazillion identical universes just waiting to be jumped to and altered, time travel fails completely to explain the similarities.
You presume the existence of umpteen bazillion identical universes that proceed identically to each other until some lucky time traveler pops in.
Oh, so timeline similarity is like geographic proximity now? Don't be ridiculous; now you're adding yet another magical mystery element in order to avoid the most obvious explanation.
So tell me: why have all the timeline pollutions into these previously identical universes resulted so, so many universes with Worf on the Enterprise, on the same exact damn mission, but with massive other changes like marriage to Counselor Troi and a Bajoran Empire? Sounds like a MASSIVE COINCIDENCE.
How does yours? You can't explain the marginally divergent universes with anything but giant coincidence or even more laughably, your assumption that accidents are somehow deterministically driven to go to similar timelines out of near-infinite possibilities. So you look for something which neither of us can explain and act as though it supports your theory by default. Have you been studying the Darkstar playbook?
My theory, about time travel, doesn't even try to explain the Mirror Universe. Neither does it try to explain why Picard is still bald with 24th century medicine available. It's not relevant. YOUR theory OTOH claims to resolve massive coincidences in parallel universes by claiming they are created by time travel. I point out the Mirror Universe as a massive coincidence which, as a parallel universe, should be explainable by your theory, but really isn't. Your theory is flawed, mine couldn't care less. Get it?
Ah, so now it's just a delusion of Worf, eh? In other words, you're trying to simply dismiss the whole thing. Concession accepted.
Nah, I'm just stealing a page out of your playbook. Point withdrawn.
BTW, I love the way you mock when we point out that the entire Krenim timeship plot technically didn't happen (at least, not in the timeline they're in now), but then you turn around and dismiss "Parallels" as a delusion of Worf. At least someone's walking about with a memory of it. That's one up on the Krenim timeship already.
BTW, I could care less about whether the Krenim timeship ever actually existed, whatever that means. :P This is a hypothetical debate about something that would never happen anyway. Kinda like the entire webpage.
Since the "many worlds" theory doesn't work, you have just conceded that you cannot explain "Parallels" at all. You lose.
Oh? And why doesn't it work? Respected quantum computing researcher David Deutsch seems to believe it. *I* don't, but then I don't believe we'll ever have FTL travel or transporter beams. Suspension of disbelief.
The same way I explain Chang speaking English in ST6 even though he's supposedly speaking Klingon and Kirk is listening to his UT. It's translated for our benefit. If you want to suspend disbelief, just say that it's a smooth dubbing job with the lips CGI'd to fit the words. You may prefer to suspend your brain (which would explain many of your arguments in this thread), but don't project that attitude onto the rest of us.
You just don't get suspension of disbelief. It doesn't mean that we accept everything we see as an actual occurence. Otherwise we're left with 25,000 km Birds-of-Prey and Star Wars posters in the Tantive IV. If time travel is possible, why not accept paradoxes can happen? Why reject everything stated by the characters? We are not watching the same Star Trek.
Explain why my theory necessarily forces itself into an endless loop. You seem bound and determined to act as though my theory generates all manner of bad predictions without showing why or how. Why would the same thing necessarily happen in a new timeline, as opposed to leaping around in the existing one and ignoring paradoxes?
All right then. You're Captain Janeway. :shock: NO! Put... the phaser... DOWN! Anyway, in "Time and Again" Janeway is trapped in a predestination loop. On one iteration, she stops the loop and breaks out of it. The entire chain of events vanishes in a flash. The episode ends with Voyager passing by the planet in question and never visiting it. Only Kes remembers anything, proving that it, uh, "happened." Sorta.

In your theory, Janeway, in a single timeline where she always does the same thing, did something different. That should be impossible. Plus, her action, taken in the past, caused the whole chain of events to implode. Also impossible. Your theory completely fails. While mine, which accepts that paradoxes can happen, works fine.
Indeed, the predestination paradox is NOT a paradox in my theory. The predestination paradox is that you must take an action in the future in order to set up the situation that will cause you to take that action. A good example is Kyle in "The Terminator" (not ST, but this is a thought experiment). In your scheme, he goes back in time to set up the chain of events which make it possible for him to go back in time. It is a closed loop, and a predestination paradox. In my scheme, he jumps back in time to set up a chain of events which lead to some slightly different outcome. In his own universe, John Connor was fathered by someone else. But in the new timeline, he is the father of John Connor, who naturally doesn't grow up to look like the John Connor he remembered from his own native timeline. No paradox.
Actually, that example works in mine as well, except Kyle's original timeline doesn't exist anymore. No (predestination) paradox.
Neat rhetorical trick, acting as though a theory need not explain how things happen by pointing out that it need not explain why things happen. There's a difference; theories DO, in fact, have to explain how things happen, or they're no damned good. Your theory explains nothing; it simply states that you have a preferred interpretation of events and that's it. Paradoxes and unsolvable problems are dismissed with a wave of the hand, and an alternate theory is dismissed as "nonsensical parallel universes" even though we've SEEN these fucking "nonsensical parallel universes" on the show.
The oh so wacky "many worlds" theory relies on no coincidences at all. Your theory fails to explain why Worf's universes should be so similar, especially the final Bajoran Empire one.
Bullshit. A divergent timeline from a recent point of intrusion explains the very marginally divergent timelines. Random infinite universes with random points of divergence do not.
Your theory, though it claims to resolve the "paradoxes" in mine, does not explain "Parallels" at all. You suggest that infinite identical universes to whichever universe is the "current" one exist, and that time travelers who manage to change time are shuffled into them. Where the hell do these infinite universes come from? (and there must be infinitely many of them to accomodate all possible time travelers) Do they exist before the time traveler journeys to them? How do they not diverge due to random events? If they do not naturally diverge then why does a random point of intrusion by hypothetical time travelers we never see make Geordi show up at Worf's party, and no other visible changes? According to chaos theory any intrusion should have vast unpredictable effects, not tiny isolated ones! How does all of this happen?!

Your theory is needlessly complex. It claims to explain Worf's journeys but does not. My theory does not address "Parallels"; the explanation is separate from time travel.
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Post by Eframepilot »

Darth Wong wrote:Yadda yadda yadda. You've never really addressed any points; your entire last post was simply you basically saying "my theory explains what we see" without showing how and "your theory doesn't", without showing why not. I expect a repeat performance in your next post, but I don't plan on being awake for it.
Hah! :D You predicted my argument almost exactly. Congratulations. I expect your next post will compare me further to Darkstar and restate your argument, while making slights about my character and/or intelligence. But that's OK. I deserve it for wasting so much time here. We've reached an impasse. Nothing we say will sway our personal opinions or anyone else's here. Quite frankly I don't think Star Trek or Wars should be scientifically analyzed when neither are, well, REAL, let alone internally consistent. (shades of Gothmog?) So, by the rules of debate on which this site is built, your theory wins. :evil: :evil: :evil: :)

I am curious on how you might answer my remarks about the "many worlds" theory being valid in Trek or the list of nitpicks I came up with in the last paragraph. Apart from debate, I don't believe any theory of time travel can really make sense. Constructing one is an interesting exercise, though, and I may have a better grasp of scientific theory than before.

::end suck-up concession::
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Post by Eframepilot »

nightmare wrote: "PICARD: In fact, they could conceivably create a third time line."

(courtesy of the canon database to support my faltering memory)

What is this? A second and a third time line? Which had nothing to do with the one this Picard was in? Sorry pal, but you don't have any pants on, and I don't even give a damn about the timeship or its theorectical capabilities. Your theory doesn't measure up. Besides.. we could always drag out the EU stasis-field generators if it ever came to a fight 8)
Weeeelll ya see...

Picard was speculating on sending the Ent-C back to "restore" the timeline. He meant that the "third" timeline created would overwrite their own "second" timeline. This is the only interpretation of his words that makes sense, as he obviously thinks time will be changed. But, it's a moot point anyway, since he's apparently not an authority on time travel. Conceded.
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Post by Eframepilot »

Darth Servo wrote:Its impossible for Tasha's daughter to exist in the original time line. She was dead before the E-C came to the future. THAT is why your theory is junk.
Tasha's daughter exists in the 3rd timeline in Mike's "theory" and in my ex-theory. The question was, do the 1st and 2nd timelines still exist?
So why does "All Good Things" and "Parallels" get to be a delusion but the Kremin time ship doesn't? At least one person remembers the Events of each of those two episodes while NO ONE (except the fans) has any record of the events from "Year of Hell".
<twisted logic>Well, if no one has any record of the events but us, then it can't be a delusion of a character. So what was it? Our delusion? Well I'm not delusional. And you're not delusional. So it's actually more likely to have happened.</twisted logic>
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Post by Darth Wong »

Eframepilot wrote:Alternatively, I'm describing what actually happens and you are creating a problem where none exists. Einstein did the same thing with quantum mechanics. He refused to accept a description of reality with apparent paradoxes. He failed to present any working alternate theory as well, just as you have failed.
Fine, declare self-victory. Yet again, you fail to show HOW it's failed, or HOW your theory works despite its paradoxes. You just crow that you're winning.
So tell me: why have all the timeline pollutions into these previously identical universes resulted so, so many universes with Worf on the Enterprise, on the same exact damn mission, but with massive other changes like marriage to Counselor Troi and a Bajoran Empire? Sounds like a MASSIVE COINCIDENCE.
For the second time, explain it with your theory.
My theory, about time travel, doesn't even try to explain the Mirror Universe.
Precisely. So don't give me this bullshit about how my theory is garbage if it can't explain it either.
Since the "many worlds" theory doesn't work, you have just conceded that you cannot explain "Parallels" at all. You lose.
Oh? And why doesn't it work? Respected quantum computing researcher David Deutsch seems to believe it. *I* don't, but then I don't believe we'll ever have FTL travel or transporter beams. Suspension of disbelief.
Appealing to authority now, eh? Good for you :roll: The fact that it treats the entire universe as a single quantum particle SHOULD clue you in, shouldn't it?
You just don't get suspension of disbelief. It doesn't mean that we accept everything we see as an actual occurence. Otherwise we're left with 25,000 km Birds-of-Prey and Star Wars posters in the Tantive IV. If time travel is possible, why not accept paradoxes can happen?
Because it's not necessary to do so. It is ONLY necessary if you insist on hanging onto a particular theory. Given any set of facts, the reasonable person chooses the explanation that makes the most sense and produces the fewest problems. You simply state that your theory is "what we see", ie- you confuse your interpretation of events with the events themselves, and then declare that you're right and any other interpretation is shit.
Anyway, in "Time and Again" Janeway is trapped in a predestination loop. On one iteration, she stops the loop and breaks out of it. The entire chain of events vanishes in a flash. The episode ends with Voyager passing by the planet in question and never visiting it. Only Kes remembers anything, proving that it, uh, "happened." Sorta.

In your theory, Janeway, in a single timeline where she always does the same thing, did something different. That should be impossible.
My theory is not a single timeline, idiot.
Plus, her action, taken in the past, caused the whole chain of events to implode. Also impossible.
Wrong; it can mess up events in one timeline without affecting them in another. The existence of parallel timelines solves this problem neatly. Your insistence upon a unified timeline does not.
Your theory completely fails. While mine, which accepts that paradoxes can happen, works fine.
In other words, your theory deals with its impossibilities by simply saying that impossibilities are not impossible :roll:
Actually, that example works in mine as well, except Kyle's original timeline doesn't exist anymore. No (predestination) paradox.
Wrong, dumb-ass. If the original timeline doesn't exist any more, then where did Kyle come from? He wasn't born, and never lived. THAT is the paradox! Have you even THOUGHT about this at all?
Your theory is needlessly complex. It claims to explain Worf's journeys but does not. My theory does not address "Parallels"; the explanation is separate from time travel.
Your theory cannot explain "Parallels". It cannot explain mirror universes. It cannot resolve its own paradoxes. Your only defense is to claim that the mirror universes are uncomfortably similar, which still fits my theory better than yours. Yet you continue to claim that yours is superior, because it's apparently "needlessly complex" to introduce parallel timelines just to, oh, say, explain episodes like "Parallels" which you would rather dismiss! :roll:
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Post by Darth Servo »

Eframepilot wrote:
Darth Servo wrote:Its impossible for Tasha's daughter to exist in the original time line. She was dead before the E-C came to the future. THAT is why your theory is junk.
Tasha's daughter exists in the 3rd timeline in Mike's "theory" and in my ex-theory. The question was, do the 1st and 2nd timelines still exist?
This is precisely WHY the parallel time line theory works better. What happened to those time lines in your theory? Vanish into thin air apparently.
So why does "All Good Things" and "Parallels" get to be a delusion but the Kremin time ship doesn't? At least one person remembers the Events of each of those two episodes while NO ONE (except the fans) has any record of the events from "Year of Hell".
<twisted logic>Well, if no one has any record of the events but us, then it can't be a delusion of a character. So what was it? Our delusion? Well I'm not delusional. And you're not delusional. So it's actually more likely to have happened.</twisted logic>
Why does lack of memory mean it can't just be delusion of character? Do you remember all of your dreams in real life? If at least one person remembers it, then there is that ONE piece of evidence that it exists. If NO ONE remembers it and their records contain no mention of it, then there is ZERO evidence supporting it.

Get it yet? One is greater than zero. "Parallels" has infinity times more evidence of its actual occurance than "Year of Hell" does.

Fan memory is NOT evidence (in this particular case) since we don't exist in that universe. The fans also remember the events of "Parallels" so claiming "fan memory" for "Year of Hell" doesn't solve your problem. The fans also remember the events "Shades of Grey". That doesn't change the fact that we were seeing nothing but Riker's memories. IOW, a mental image of something that was NOT happening at the time, IOW, the same kind of thing we would be viewing if we were viewing a character's dream/delusion. The fans also remember seeing all the events of "Frame of Mind" but that doesn't change the fact that we WERE viewing Riker's delusion.

Off topic, Riker seems like quite a delusional character, almost as bad as Barkley.
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Post by Eframepilot »

Darth Wong wrote:Appealing to authority now, eh? Good for you :roll: The fact that it treats the entire universe as a single quantum particle SHOULD clue you in, shouldn't it?
It's still a matter of debate among quantum theorists. Supposedly quantum computing's ability to make vast numbers of invisible calculations supports it. Dismissing it really requires more explanation than your common-sense statement above (which btw I agree with).
In other words, your theory deals with its impossibilities by simply saying that impossibilities are not impossible :roll:
Yup. That's pretty much it. I accept, via suspension of disbelief, that things can be "protected" from changes in the timeline. You think that's bullshit and have found an alternate explanation.

I mean, from the images we are presented with in "Year of Hell", it sure looks like timelines are being erased. We have to use our imaginations to fill in that we are actually changing perspective between timelines along the "shockwave", and that Voy's technobabble shields cause them to be sucked into another timeline instead of being "protected" as the episode appears to show.

BTW, how does your theory answer the other questions I raised? It would seem that every timeline has at least one identical timeline for a time traveler to jump to. But the CHANGED timeline he now influences has another timeline identical to IT which another time traveler can jump to. And THAT timeline has an identical twin with the influence of BOTH time travelers.

Also, where did the time travelers come from in the subsequent timelines? Consider. The first time traveler ("1") goes back in time and kills his granddad. He is now in a new timeline. In the new timeline, another traveler ("2") also goes back and kills his grandfather.. He is now in a third timeline. BUT! In the third timeline, there is now a second version of time traveler 1. Which timeline did he arrive from? He does not have any point of origin. Is this another paradox? And how do the timelines keep duplicating themselves?
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