The Rules of Time Travel: And Why They Never Agree
Time travel may be the most deceptively simple idea in science fiction. Go back. Change something. Come home. It sounds straightforward—almost intuitive. And yet, the moment you start looking closely, the idea begins to fracture. Not because it is impossible, but because every story seems to follow a different set of rules. In some, the past is fixed. In others, it splinters into branching timelines. In a few, the very act of trying to change time is what causes the events you were trying to avoid in the first place. There is no shared framework, no underlying agreement—only competing interpretations of how causality might work if we were allowed to step outside of it. Time That Cannot Be Changed The Anubis Gates by Tim Powers All You Zombies— by Robert A Heinlein Predestination (film adaptation) Some time travel stories eliminate paradoxes entirely—not by resolving them,...