字幕表 動画を再生する 英語字幕をプリント This video is sponsored by the YouTube Red Sci-Fi Series "Lifeline". For ages I've been wanting to make a video analyzing time travel in fiction – not the magical or physical mechanisms by which the time travel is supposedly achieved , but rather, the different ways time travel can influence causality (and thus the plot) within the universe of each story. Needless to say, there are spoilers ahead! Let's start with Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card – time travel in this book is actually 100% realistic: the characters experience slower passage of time when they travel close to light speed, allowing just a few days or months to pass for those traveling while years pass on earth or other planets. It's traveling forward through time like we normally do, but at different rates. This kind of time travel doesn't "change the past" or allow characters to make different decisions than the ones they already did – it's all one consistent historical trajectory. The original Planet of the Apes film is similar, where astronauts experience extreme time dilation and then crash land on a strange ape-ruled planet that (major spoiler) turns out to just be earth in the distant future. But what about actual time-travel time travel? Well, I would say there are two big distinguishing features between different types of time travel in fiction. The first is whether or not the time traveler is there when history happens the "first time around" – that is, is there a kind of "self-consistency" where, since time travel takes you to the past, when the past happened the first time, the time-traveling version of you was always there to begin with? Or does the very act of time traveling to the past change what happened and force the universe onto a different trajectory of history from the one you experienced prior to traveling? And the second distinguishing feature is: who has free will when somebody is time traveling. Like, whose actions are allowed to move history onto a different trajectory, and whose aren't? One of the simplest time travels is "do-over" time travel, where you essentially get to re-play history starting exactly as it was at a certain point, with the only caveat being you remember your experiences from already having tried various possible future timelines (while no one else does). It's essentially like playing a video game where you can start a level over with the foresight of what you did wrong the first time. For example, in Groundhog Day Bill Murray's character relives the same day over and over again, and though he can make different choices each time, he always starts back at the same point (except with new memories of his previous choices). That is, until he figures out the one exact set of choices that frees him from the loop. I consider "A Christmas Carol" to be in this vein, too, even though it may not seem like time travel. But because Scrooge gets to visit the future of his current timeline, even though he has no ability to affect the timeline directly while "visiting", he can still change his actions in the present based on what he learns, essentially getting a “do-over.” The video game Braid is built on the idea of “do-overs”, where you get to rewind a few seconds and try something different (though there are some things that are immune to going back in time and don't "rewind", which is what makes the game interesting). Braid also has another kind of time travel, where you go back to your past as a separate individual, and the past version of you is there with no free will, just doing exactly what you did the first time around, while "time-traveling you" can change the course of history. This is also how the video "Clock Blockers" by the Corridor Digital youtube channel works. And then there's time travel where the very act of going to the past or future creates a fully new trajectory of history because time-traveling you weren't there the first time around, and now you are. This includes the typical "anything goes" time travel movies like Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure, Back to the Future, Star Trek First Contact, and so on, where you can kind of instantly jump back and forth to any point in time you want, potentially resulting in multiple versions of yourself. From a causality perspective, anything you do in the past (and even just the act of going back in time) redirects the course of history onto a new timeline – in Back to the Future, Marty's interference with his parents falling in love results in the timeline of history being redirected towards a version of the future where he doesn't exist and so he starts to disappear from photos and real life. And even after correcting that major deviation, his interactions with his parents while he's in the past result in them being very different people when he returns to his present time; he accidentally caused history to progress in a slightly different direction. The movie ”Looper" is similar, but there's a little more circularity because when you jump to the past, you cause history to branch onto on a trajectory where, in the future, the younger you also goes back in time the same way you just did. Both you and your past self still have enough free will to change that forward course of history, though, which results in weirdness like you getting new memories when your past self does things you yourself didn't do, or if they lose a body part, suddenly you'll lose it too, replaced by an old scar on your own body. So, changes to the present affect not just future timelines, but also future timelines that wrap back around to the present! The indie film Primer is in the same vein, except that it takes the plot device of time travel to the extreme, with time travel within time travel within time travel, time-traveling characters interacting with other time-traveling versions of themselves, bringing time machines with them to the past inside other time machines, and so on. But beyond the complexity, there are two things that make Primer stand out: first, time travel to the past isn't an instantaneous jump, but actually takes time: to go back 6 hours, you sit in the time machine for what feels like 6 hours. And time travel can't take you back to a time before a given time machine was initially activated, since of course, the machine can only be taking you back in time inside it if it's turned on, so the first time it was turned on is the farthest back in time you can go. There's a nice logic to it. Which brings us to perhaps my all time favorite of all fictional time travel: Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban. It's an "instantly jump back in time" kind of time travel that doesn't actually generate any new timelines. It manages that because in this universe, while you were experiencing your initial, pre-time-travel passage through a particular point in history, your "time-traveling clone" was also already there, doing everything you'll eventually do when you time travel yourself. For example, Harry and friends are saved from dying by their time-traveling selves, the first time through that timeline. It makes so much sense – if you go back in time, you really and truly were present at that point in time all along! This also means that during the period of overlap, the time-traveling you has no actual free will, since everything you do has in some sense already been done, which Harry comprehends when he realizes he has to save his past self because he was already saved by his future self when he was in the past. I think I love this kind of time travel because it manages to be logically consistent: it's time travel to the past where you can't change the past, because the past already happened. And there's only one timeline – the one in which time travelers arrive from the future, do stuff, and at some later date, leave to go to the past. Logical consistency is a primary thing that, you may have noticed, I think lays the foundation for good time travel stories – not because logical consistency is important in an of itself, but because, most of the time, in order to care about the characters in a story, we have to believe that actions have consequences. If everything is just a meaningless series of events, then we almost don't have a story. So it's really helpful if there are rules by which the universe of the story functions, whatever those rules may be. Speaking of actions with consequences, I finally got the kick in the pants I needed to make this video from my friends at the Corridor Digital YouTube channel. They've asked me to help promote their new YouTube Red Original Series, "Lifeline”, which, minor spoilers ahead... is a sci fi action thriller with time travel in it. What kind of time travel, you ask? Essentially, if somebody dies in the future, that sends a message back to the present, which allows people to jump forward to just before the time the person dies and change the trajectory of history from that point onwards, averting their death. But as you might imagine, things eventually go awry. Anyway, you can check out the first episode of Lifeline for free on the Corridor Digital channel or by following the links onscreen or in the description . And fun facts: I actually know the Corridor guys from back before MinutePhysics, when I was doing special effects for the "freddiew" channel. We also all grew up in neighboring towns in Minnesota and even competed against each other in high school sports , though we didn't know each other at the time. But enough trivia – go check out their show!
B1 中級 フィクションのタイムトラベル (Time Travel in Fiction Rundown) 49 3 張凱鈞 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日 シェア シェア 保存 報告 動画の中の単語