Temporal paradox
Time or temporal paradoxes were events arising from means other than the normal flow of cause and effect. Paradoxes vary greatly in terms of origin and severity: at the least-harmful end are fairly benign sorts of paradox, where effect precedes cause, resulting in a confusing-but-tenable event; on the more severe end, are thoroughly impossible paradoxes, such as the descendants of a race travelling back in time to exterminate their predecessors. Perhaps the most destructive form of paradox involves travellers "interfering" with the Web of Time or altering a fixed point in time, an act which could destabilize or destroy the entire space-time continuum.
Overview
Limiters of Paradox
Time-Active Civilisations
The Time Lords
The Time Lords enforced Laws of Time to prevent people from meeting themselves (TV: The Three Doctors) from the present to the past. (TV: The Hand of Fear) Except for the the Doctor and the Master, the Time Lords all died in the Last Great Time War. The Ninth Doctor said that when the Time Lords existed, paradoxes were all but impossible and that any paradoxes that occurred were fixed. (TV: Father's Day) The Time Lords used their stewardship of time travel to prevent "unauthorised" time travel (TV: The Time Warrior) which Dastari of the Third Zone, for example, believed had a selfish, political motivation (TV: The Two Doctors)
Other Civilisations
Before the Last Great Time War, the Seventh Doctor noted to his companion Ace that even the Daleks would not dare to blatantly change history, presumably for the sake of their own self-preservation. (TV: Remembrance of the Daleks)
Blinovitch Limitation Effect
A natural law, the Blinovitch Limitation Effect ensured that the course of time corrected itself and ran smoothly.
- See main article.
Reapers
Reapers acted "neutralising" the consequences of time paradoxes by destroying the people and planets involved, as when Rose Tyler changed history. (TV: Father's Day)
- See main article.
Weeping Angels
Time paradoxes were deadly to the Weeping Angels; if a paradox was created at a location where Weeping Angels were feeding, the paradox would poison and kill the Angels. (TV: The Angels Take Manhattan)
- See main article.
Creators of Paradox
Paradox machine
A temporal paradox could be held in place by a paradox machine such as one created by the Master out of the Doctor's TARDIS (TV: The Sound of Drums/ Last of the Time Lords)
- See main article.
Faction Paradox
Faction Paradox opposed the Time Lords. They practically worshipped the act of a paradox, not just for the idea, but for the power that a paradox evoked. (PROSE: Alien Bodies onwards)
- See main article.
The Trickster
The Trickster and his brigade deliberately changed history to cause destruction. (TV: Whatever Happened to Sarah Jane?, TV: Turn Left, TV: The Temptation of Sarah Jane Smith, TV The Wedding of Sarah Jane Smith, TV: Immortal Sins)
- See The Trickster and Trickster's Brigade.
Examples and outcomes
Creating one's own past or future
When the Seventh Doctor's companion Ace visited 1943 with him, she, in the Doctor's words, created her own future. She rescued her own mother, Audrey, and her grandmother, Kathleen Dudman. (TV: The Curse of Fenric) Another example was when the Doctor's TARDIS took the Tenth Doctor to find the source of his daughter's signal. The TARDIS arrived early, and the Doctor inadvertently created his daughter, causing the signal. (TV: The Doctor's Daughter)
While not technically creating her past, Melody Pond was named after her mother, Amy Pond's childhood friend, who was really a future regeneration of her, making her named after herself. (TV : Let's Kill Hitler)
In some cases, a time traveller had information that came from the act of time travelling, learning it from a future or past version of himself; thus, the information had no real source. An example would be the Doctor's method of saving River Song. Knowing that his future self had given her his sonic screwdriver, the Tenth Doctor was able to preserve her; conversely, his future self gave her sonic screwdriver because he remembered his past self saving her. Neither version truly devised the plan; while the future Doctor remembered the plan, the past Doctor didn't think of it until he deduced what the future Doctor had done (TV: Forest of the Dead) Another example would be how Sally Sparrow received instructions on how to fight the Weeping Angels. Sally created a transcript of the Easter Egg that the Tenth Doctor recorded for her; she then gave this transcript to the past Tenth Doctor, who then read from it to create the Easter Egg, which Sally would later watch. Neither the Doctor nor Sally actually wrote the transcript. (TV: Blink) In another example, a future Doctor left a message for his past self on the planet Heaven (PROSE: Love and War); in yet another, the Fifth Doctor met the Tenth Doctor and saw him cancel out a supernova with a black hole, which meant the Tenth Doctor remembered seeing himself doing it, allowing him to do so. (TV: Time Crash) A prime example of these types of paradoxes occurred when the Tardis appeared inside itself and started sending people who entered the Tardis a short time into the past. The most notable example of a paradox in this instance occurred when the Doctor fixed the problem by waiting for himself to enter the Tardis to tell himself how to solve the problem; to use the Wibbly lever, whereupon the Doctor used the Wibbly lever and entered the Tardis to tell himself this answer. (TV: Time)
Un-creating one's own past or future
When Rose Tyler saved her father, Pete, from his death in 1987, several events occurred at once. Earlier versions of the Ninth Doctor and Rose disappeared and the inside of the Doctor's TARDIS was thrown out of normal space-time, rendering it an empty, police box-shaped shell. There were also anachronisms created. The car which should have killed Pete Tyler kept on disappearing, reappearing and following him to repeat the accident. Reapers appeared to eat up people and landmarks in the vicinity and eventually the world. Pete chose to die, restoring the timeline. (TV: Father's Day)
In a complex example of time "righting itself", Shura, who came from the 22nd century, unintentionally caused World War III by detonating a dalekanium bomb at Auderly House to prevent that very war. The Third Doctor realised the mistake and had the delegates of the World Peace Conference evacuate the house in time to escape so the bomb only killed Daleks and their Ogron slaves. In the new timeline, World War III was averted. (TV: Day of the Daleks)
Other examples existed of similar corrections of the previous timeline. On other occasions, though, the Fourth Doctor explained that the powerful (even more so than the Time Lords) Sutekh could destroy Sarah Jane Smith's future easily. He took her to an alternative 1980 where this had happened. (TV: Pyramids of Mars) The Ninth Doctor said the same about the Gelth, though, by this time the Time Lords had already been destroyed in the Last Great Time War. (TV: The Unquiet Dead)
Some races were only capable of changing the past or future because they existed 'outside' of time, and were therefore not subject to its laws. Examples of this included the Time Lords and the Arboreteans, a race of plant-like aliens who travelled back to their birth at the moment of their deaths and could live their lives over and over, correcting past mistakes. Although they were hunted to extinction by Doctor Kole Paddox in his attempt to copy their 'power' and change his past, they refused to contact past generations to make themselves a warlike people that could have opposed his plans as they did not wish to erase their peaceful society. Although Paddox's plan succeeded in that he was able to send himself into his past self, he was a human who lived 'inside' Time. He was only able to watch his past self's life and was condemned to never change or influence his life as it proceeded along the same path as it had before (PROSE: Festival of Death).
After being sent to 1938 Manhattan by the Weeping Angels, Rory Williams encountered himself as an old man in the Winter Quay and witnessed himself die. This was caused by the Angels throwing him even further back in time to feed off of his temporal energy. The group realized that if they kept Rory from being sent back in time again and this from happening, it would create a paradox and poison the temporal energy the Angels fed off of, killing them. Rory creates the paradox by jumping off the roof of the Quay with his wife Amy Pond. The paradox erases the Quay from existance and kills all but one of the Weeping Angels which is left very weak. However, the Angel flings Rory back in time again to an unknown time and the Doctor tells Amy that creating another paradox won't work this time as it will "rip New York apart" (TV: The Angels Take Manhattan).
Meeting one's self
When the Brigadier's "past" (1976) met his "future" (1983) self, this created a discharge of energy which rendered both of them unconscious and caused amnesia in the 1976 self. The Fifth Doctor cited this as an example of the Blinovitch Limitation Effect. (TV: Mawdryn Undead)
When dug out from beneath Cardiff in 1901, Jack Harkness ordered Alice Guppy to put him in suspended animation, as he knew meeting his younger self working for Torchwood Three at the time had consequences. (TV: Exit Wounds)
When the seventh incarnation of the Doctor met his his earlier self, the "elder" Doctor made sure his younger self would not remember. (PROSE: Cold Fusion) At the same time, on other occasions the Doctor has met himself in a way that influenced the past, creating a past for them both. (TV: Time Crash)
At the Two Streams Facility, Amy Pond was able to meet a version of her future self due to the temporal engines keeping two separate timelines in sync. This didn't interrupt Amy's time differential due to the Amys not coming in physical contact and the eventual negation of the older Amy's timeline. (TV: The Girl Who Waited)
Behind the scenes
- The outcomes of time paradoxes in the Doctor Who universe have varied according to the needs of the story. The Virgin New Adventures version of canon stated that the Time Lords of Gallifrey's evolved before any other sentient being in the universe and lived in the distant past (relative to the timeline). Therefore, they could visit any number of possible futures though they would not affect their own pasts out of fear for undoing that future. (The New Adventures novel Lungbarrow by Marc Platt changed this when it explained that the First Doctor had visited Gallifrey's Dark Times in his personal past.) Fans continue to debate, discuss and theorise as to the nature of time paradox in the Whoniverse.