Regeneration

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The Fifth Doctor regenerates in "The Caves of Androzani."

Regeneration is the process by which the Doctor and other Time Lords maintain their centuries-long lifespans. It is generally described as a "genetic reshuffling" which a Time Lord may go through if his body is worn out by age or has suffered some life-threatening injury or infection. Time Lords may even regenerate at will.

Control over Regeneration

While the Doctor apparently has never had much choice in what the finished product looks like, others, like Romana, seem adept enough at the process to custom design their new appearances, as demonstrated in the opening scene of "Destiny of the Daleks," when she went through several bodies before finally deciding on a copy of Princess Astra. This is most likely because all the Doctor's regenerations have to date been involuntary, the result of mortal injuries or, in one case, having a regeneration forced upon him by the Time Lords prior to his exile on Earth at the end of "The War Games."

Personality

After each regeneration there is a marked change in a Time Lord's personality. This is caused by the fact that regeneration is an all or nothing cellular regeneration. Simply put, a Time Lord can only regenerate every cell in their body at the same time.

The process isn't perfect, however, and the genetic equivalent of 'bit errors' appear in the regenerated cells. This is what causes the appearance of the Time Lord to change. However, because even the cells of the brain regenerate as well, their brain chemistry and organization will change. Although the aspects of their personality caused by "nurture" will not change, the "nature" contribution to their personality may change.

So a regenerated Time Lord will share the same core moral values as they did pre-regeneration but may be, for example, more likely to lose their temper (or vise versa), or more depressive (or vise versa) or more energetic (or vise versa) depending on the new balance of hormones and neural arrangements in their brain.

Regenerations can also cause psychological "break" points where the regenerated Time Lord assimilates their past experiences and evolves from it in a sudden jump rather than gradualy.

For example: The Second Doctor's primary attribute is excitability and youthful enthusiasum -- possibly a reaction to being trapped in a fading and sore body for the previous couple of centuries. The Fourth Doctor seems to dismiss vanity and arrogance from his life -- possibly because those were the character flaws that ultimately killed his previous incarnation. The Sixth Doctor seems much more controlling and resentful of his companion -- possibly because he, at some level, sees his previous "death" as her fault.

Development of the Concept

Regeneration was first introduced when the First Doctor (William Hartnell) changed into the Second Doctor (Patrick Troughton) in the closing moments of "The Tenth Planet." Tradition has it that Hartnell himself thought up the idea of the Doctor being able to change into a new body as a means of keeping the series going after his departure. In "Power of the Daleks" (the first story featuring the Second Doctor), the Doctor described himself as having been "renewed", and also said that the change was "part of the TARDIS."

The process was not actually referred to as "regeneration" until the end of "Planet of the Spiders," when the Third Doctor (Jon Pertwee) changed into the Fourth (Tom Baker). Prior to this, the Doctor was simply described as having "changed his appearance."


The Doctor's Regenerations

Following is a list of how each Doctor has regenerated, thus far. With three exceptions (Patrick Troughton to Jon Pertwee, Colin Baker to Sylvester McCoy and Paul McGann to Christopher Eccleston) it has been traditional for the previous Doctor to be seen regenerating into the next in a symbolic handing over of the role.

  1. First Doctor: apparently succumbs to old age, steadily growing weaker throughout The Tenth Planet and collapsing at the serial's end.
  2. Second Doctor: a forced regeneration and exile to Earth by the Time Lords in the closing moments of The War Games.
  3. Third Doctor: radiation posioning from the Great One's cave of crystals on Metebelis III at the end of Planet of the Spiders.
  4. Fourth Doctor: falls from the Pharos Project radio telescope in Logopolis.
  5. Fifth Doctor: spectrox toxaemia, contracted near the start of The Caves of Androzani.
  6. Sixth Doctor: injured as The Rani attacks the TARDIS at the start of Time and the Rani.
  7. Seventh Doctor: dies on the operating table while undergoing surgery for gunshot wounds.
  8. Eighth Doctor: unknown as of yet, but presumably as a result of the Time War.
  9. Ninth Doctor: cellular degeneration caused by absorbing the energies of the TARDIS time vortex from Rose, which she in turn had absorbed from the heart of the TARDIS.

The Eighth Doctor unofficially regenerated into the Shalka Doctor, also presumably due to injuries caused by the Time War.

Limitations

It was established in "The Deadly Assassin" that a Time Lord can regenerate twelve times before permanently dying, though as with most such "rules" there were occasionally exceptions. For more on this see the Time Lord article.

In "The Brain of Morbius" (produced shortly before Assassin), it was implied through visual images displayed during a mental battle between the Doctor and Morbius that the Doctor had at least eight incarnations prior to the First Doctor. However, multiple dialogue references throughout the series (particularly in The Three Doctors and The Five Doctors) contradict this, as well as the fact that the Doctor has regenerated five times since Peter Davison's tenure. Explanations by fans have included theories that the images were of Morbius's previous incarnations or that they were false images induced by the Doctor. Yet another possibility, suggested by the Virgin New Adventure novel, "Lungbarrow," is that these were the Doctor's incarnations during his previous existence on Gallifrey as "the Other."

In some circumstances, a Time Lord may be unable to regenerate, despite having an ample number of lives still available. The Elixir of Life, distilled by the Sisterhood of Karn from their Sacred Flame, can help in these situations.

The Doctor's arch-enemy the Master found his own remedy for the end of his regenerative cycle. He first attempted and failed to use the Eye of Harmony on Gallifrey to renew himself, though he was able to absorb enough energy from it to extend his life for a time ("The Deadly Assassin"). He was finally able to gain access to the Source on Traken, and used some its powers to steal the body of Nyssa's father Tremas ("The Keeper of Traken"). When this body was finally destroyed by the Daleks on Skaro, the Master's essence entered that of a human on Earth, and in this body the renegade Time Lord tried to use the powers of the Eye of Harmony's dimensional link on the Doctor's TARDIS to steal the Doctor's remaining lives ("Doctor Who: The TV Movie").

It is possible that the twelve-regeneration limit is maintained by convention, but can be extended in exceptional circumstances. In The Five Doctors, the Master is offered "Regeneration: a whole new life cycle" as an incentive to rescue the four Doctors from the Death Zone.

Rassilon is said to have achieved a cycle of perpetual regeneration, becoming immortal. It was for this secret that Lord President Borusa sent four of the Doctor's incarnations and their companions into the Death Zone, where Rassilon lay in eternal sleep in the Dark Tower ("The Five Doctors"). It may also have been this particular method of perpetual regeneration which Mawdryn and his team of scientists attempted to steal from the Time Lords, with the result that they became undying creatures who continually aged and regenerated until the Doctor was able to finally help them die ("Mawdryn Undead"). Legends mentioned in the Virgin Missing Adventure novel "Goth Opera" suggest that Rassilon became immortal when he was turned into a vampire by the Great Vampire himself.