The Close Possibility of Time Travel
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Fictional Tropes & Worlds
2.1. Fictional Tropes
2.2. Fictional Worlds
3. Close Possibility
3.1. Philosophy of Science Fiction: Analysing ‘Hard Science Fiction’
3.2. Aesthetics: The Value of Close Possibility to Writers
- Exhibit one: The existence of hard science fiction is itself evidence. It is a popular sub-genre, demonstrating that close possibility is prized by authors and audiences alike.
- Exhibit two: Time travel stories are often judged according to whether their laws are chaotic/arbitrary or consistent/well-worked out (i.e., whether they are similar to the actual laws of nature). Damning reviews of films like Timecop 2: The Berlin Decision [43] and A Needle in the Haystack [44] make clear that if the ‘fictional laws’ of time travel are arbitrary, this is thought to be an aesthetic flaw. Similarly, we can take as evidence those authors who stress the importance to narrative tension of ensuring consistent and non-chaotic laws of time travel [45,46,47].
- Exhibit three: I have consulted on multiple occasions for film and television. In each case the brief has been the same: Were time travel real, how would it work? Given the standard Lewis-Stalnaker analysis of counterfactuals, this amounts to asking what the laws concerning time travel are like at the closest possible world to actuality; this brief is very similar to (though, admittedly, not exactly the same as) asking which tropes of time travel are closely possible versus which are not.
3.3. Metaphysics: The Theoretical Sandbox
“What value is there in studying a universe ruled by laws different than our own? […] We can deepen our understanding of many things—whether it’s a human society, a planet’s geology, the chemistry of life, or the most basic laws of physics—by striving to imagine how they might be different.”[60]
4. Deaging/Aging
4.1. Examples of the Trope
4.2. Deaging & Close Possibility
5. Disaster
5.1. Varieties of Disaster
5.2. Logical Explanations for Disasters
5.3. Physical Explanations for Disasters
6. Morphing
6.1. Morphing Time Travelers
6.2. Morphing Non-Time Travelers
7. Other Tropes?
8. Broader Possibility
8.1. Humean Laws of Nature
8.2. Non-Humean Laws of Nature
9. What Might We Mean by ‘Is this Fiction Possible?’
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | |
2 | Experience teaches me that introducing a time travel trope via examples is best accompanied by examples of what does not count as being an example of the trope. To that end, consider cases where a time traveler deages by ‘mentally time travelling’ into a past body that happens to be younger. This is common in ‘time loop fiction’ like Groundhog Day [81], as well as its precursors [82,83] and imitators [84,85,86,87,88]. Likewise, time travelers may come to inhabit either their earlier selves [89,90,91,92] or some other, younger person [93,94,95,96]. These cases are not examples of the ‘deaging’ trope—I have in mind only cases where one’s own physical body is caused to change age via the act of time travel (or via some time travel-related device or process). |
3 | Likewise, if one regresses to a very young age [67], the skull will not fit an adult-sized brain. Such time travelers would suffer incredibly messy deaths. |
4 | Further to footnote 2, we can finesse what does and does not count as an example of the deaging trope. In some fictions, time is sped up, frozen, or reversed in a given spatial region [100,101]. Such cases—which, again, are not dissimilar to the real-world phenomenon of time dilation—are not cases of the deaging/aging trope that I have in mind during the discussion in the main text. |
5 | More exotically: If an organism previously had parts of a type that it does not later have, what happens then? For instance, if the Fictionoid people of Mythtopia have juvenile cardiovascular systems made of exotic matter, which they shed when they undergo metamorphogenesis in becoming adults, what happens when mature Fictionoids time travel? Do they arrive in the past sans cardiovascular systems and then immediately die? If so, that seems weird; if not, that is a problem for LAW4. (Of course, since we never see a ‘Fictionoid’ on-screen, one might reasonably bite the bullet and just accept the weirdness that we never witness.) |
6 | We can also consider non-time travel cases. For instance, in Dogma [116], attempts to make false one of God’s assertions threaten the entirety of reality. |
7 | Again, as per footnote 2, consider what does not fall under this trope. In many fictions, the past is Ludovician (q.v.) and attempts to change the past are thwarted. Whilst most fictions have it that the thwartings are relatively innocuous, some fictions have it that a terrible disaster plays the thwarting role [129,130,131]; indeed, elsewhere, I have argued that such threats are an actual danger, not merely a fictional one [18]. Such ‘Ludovician thwartings’ are not an example of the ‘disaster trope’ discussed in the main text. The disasters of the main text are dissimilar from Ludovician thwartings because their cause is an actually occurring paradox rather than the mere threat of an actually occurring paradox. |
8 | This definition, with its use of ‘immediately hyperprior’, requires hypertime to have a discrete, not a continuous, ordering. Note, then, that elsewhere [4] (p. 19) I have already argued that, if hypertime is to be deployed to help with time travel, hypertime must have a discrete ordering. |
9 | This assumption of determinism is probably dispensable. Ultimately, all I need is that any given hypertime evolves the same as the immediately hyperprior hypertime, except when time travel occurs. Elsewhere, I have discussed how this could be the case without determinism being true [4] (pp. 3–8). |
10 | Again, consider examples of what this trope does not involve. In some fictions, time travelers prevent themselves from being born [182,187,188,189], thus—in some sense—causing themselves to ‘cease to be’. But, as long as the time traveler remains in existence, this is not an example of the trope under consideration in the main text because such time travelers have only caused versions of themselves from hyperlater hypertimes to not exist, rather than (as in the main text) the time traveler themselves. |
11 | One upshot would be that since composite objects change their parts, a composite object can immunise itself from fading away. If Adam2050 and Adam2022 held off from causing ehalt for long enough, then all of the atoms in their body would be replaced by non-time-travelling equivalents. When ehalt then occurs, the atoms that previously composed them will go on to vanish, but that would make no difference to Adam2050 and Adam2022, who would remain in existence. |
12 | We would also need a clear distinction between positive and negative causation since every agent who walks past the tree causes the tree to keep growing insofar as they do not choose to chop it down with an axe. Plausibly, though, Alex is the sole agent who positively (partially) causes it to be there. |
13 | As noted in footnote 2, some fictions allow for consciousness alone to time travel. In at least one short story [214], there is a ban on someone’s consciousness inhabiting a body at the same time as its earlier self. Interestingly, given certain assumptions, this sort of fiction is closely possible! It is common to believe that, by metaphysical necessity, two disjoint things cannot partially occupy the same point at the same time. Given substance dualism, concrete souls would occupy ‘merely temporal’ points [215]; given the ban on co-location, for each soul, there would then have to be a distinct collection of ‘merely’ temporal points, with each collection standing in one-to-one correspondence with the instants of time, forming individual ‘soul streams’ for Cartesian souls to occupy. If all of this were true, we could explain the impossibility of a consciousness returning to a time it previously existed at; for it to return, it would have to occupy a point previously occupied by some soul (namely, itself!) and, since that is impossible, it will transpire that no entity can send its consciousness back to a time that it already exists at. |
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Effingham, N. The Close Possibility of Time Travel. Philosophies 2023, 8, 118. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies8060118
Effingham N. The Close Possibility of Time Travel. Philosophies. 2023; 8(6):118. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies8060118
Chicago/Turabian StyleEffingham, Nikk. 2023. "The Close Possibility of Time Travel" Philosophies 8, no. 6: 118. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies8060118
APA StyleEffingham, N. (2023). The Close Possibility of Time Travel. Philosophies, 8(6), 118. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies8060118