A Conversation for Talking Point: Time Travel
The Good Old Star Trek IV Paradox
The Artist Formerly Known as Nerd42 Started conversation Oct 21, 2003
An interesting paradox in Star Trek IV, if I can remember it correctly was that way in the star trek future on kirk's birthday, spock gives him some antique reading glasses for a present. later in the movie, the whole enterprise crew goes back in time to about the present day (from our perspective) and sells the glasses, supposedly so that they will change hands several times and get back to him for him to give to kirk on his birthday so that he could go back in time and sell them so that they'll change hands several times and then be a present again, and thus they'll keep going around and around, the only thing is, THEY GET OLDER EACH TIME THEY GO AROUND! So they're infinately old immediately?
http://www.mjyoung.net/time/stvoyage.html
Nerd42
The Good Old Star Trek IV Paradox
bomias Posted Oct 21, 2003
Okay. First of all. I have to say that Star Trek IV is the BEST MOVIE EVER! (aging star trek crew goes back in time to 1985 to save humpback whales from extinction! I mean, come on! What's not to love?)
I have to say I love it when this type of thing happens in science fiction. Something that happened in the present-days' past is dependant on present day person(s) going back in time and 'altering' the past, so that the present as they know it will happen. Makes ya think, eh?
Ever read Prisoner of Azkaban? Same sort of time travel deal-y there. Good book too.
As for the glasses, what I'm wondering is if they were ever even made? Because if they are infinitely old, then that means that they have always existed and will always exist. So all they've ever done is travel from the time Kirk sells them to the anitques guy, to the time Dr. McCoy (I think it was McCoy, not Spock) gives them to Kirk for his birthday, and then when Kirk sells them again...and the whole cycle continues. The question is; where did the glasses really come from?
Okay. I think I've thoroughly confused myself and everyone else now.
The Good Old Star Trek IV Paradox
The Artist Formerly Known as Nerd42 Posted Oct 22, 2003
Strange thing about Star Trek, the more illogical scientific messups there are, the more people love the show
Nerd42
The Good Old Star Trek IV Paradox
The Artist Formerly Known as Nerd42 Posted Oct 27, 2003
i dunno. ever read "The Physics of Star Trek" that was a great book.
The Good Old Star Trek IV Paradox
bomias Posted Oct 28, 2003
Nope...never knew the book existed. Sounds something like I would read...considering I've read "The Simpsons and Philosophy: the D'oh of Homer".
Is it about the original series or tng and the others as well?
The Good Old Star Trek IV Paradox
The Artist Formerly Known as Nerd42 Posted Oct 28, 2003
it talks about every system on the Enterprise thought up to the time it was written - i know it talks about tng, not sure about dsn. i myself personally never actually seen any star trek program other than with kirk - well, unless you count christopher pike in the cage
Nerd42
The Good Old Star Trek IV Paradox
bomias Posted Oct 28, 2003
I see.
Personally, I grew up watching Next Generation. I love the original series movies (I find the TNG-based movies a little lacking in...good writing)...but I've never been too into the original show itself. I enjoy the cheesiness of it though...but can never take it seriously.
The Good Old Star Trek IV Paradox
PhysicsMan (11 - 3 + 29 + 5 = 42) Posted Nov 29, 2003
Yes, this was a mess-up. Of course, it's a quite common mess-up, so we really shouldn't feel upset at Star Trek for doing it. For those more interested, the reason it's a mess-up is that as the glasses move forwards in time, their entropy increases (thanks to the Second Law of Thermodynamics), but if they infintely loop through time, they end up with infinite entropy. The only way they could loop and survive would be if they never acquired entropy, which would violate the Second Law.
The Good Old Star Trek IV Paradox
bomias Posted Nov 29, 2003
Yes, one would assume that eventually they would break or be damaged...
Speaking of entropy: there is a song by Moxy Fruvous about entropy that I feel the need to share with anyone who actually knows what entropy is.
Entropy By Moxy Fruvous
http://www.fruvous.com/b-lyr.html#entropy
enjoy!
The Good Old Star Trek IV Paradox
The Artist Formerly Known as Nerd42 Posted Dec 2, 2003
I recently watched that first pilot episode thing, you know, before Kirk there was capt christopher pike for one episode? that was so incredibally cheesy I had to laugh.
Nerd42
The Good Old Star Trek IV Paradox
bomias Posted Dec 3, 2003
I think I've only ever seen bits of that ep.
Today I caught part of a first season TNG episode ("Ugly bags of mostly water"), and it seemed so campy and cheesy compared to the later stuff. I guess back then they were trying to imitate the original series' vibe.
On a side note: an exerpt from the script of "Trouble with Tribbles" episode was in my grade 9 english text book.
The Good Old Star Trek IV Paradox
The Artist Formerly Known as Nerd42 Posted Dec 8, 2003
TOS. didn't know TNG had an episode by that name....
I came up with a playing card game based on the game made up by kirk in that episode.
Nerd42
The Good Old Star Trek IV Paradox
bomias Posted Dec 8, 2003
I don't think it does have an episode entitled that...I just wasn't sure what series you were talking about. (I'm better with episode titles from the Simpsons, than Star Trek
Really? What is the game like?
The Good Old Star Trek IV Paradox
bomias Posted Dec 19, 2003
Aha. War.
That's such a fun game. But it's quite silly in that it can be never-ending.
I just realized that that smiley is in fact holding a towel. All this time I thought it was a diploma! Which doesn't make any sense at all, really.
The Good Old Star Trek IV Paradox
The Artist Formerly Known as Nerd42 Posted Jan 6, 2004
I consider phisbin to be rather better to War in that respect, because it is possible simply to tie, but at that point the game stops, and it's a tie, so that's it.
Nerd42
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The Good Old Star Trek IV Paradox
- 1: The Artist Formerly Known as Nerd42 (Oct 21, 2003)
- 2: bomias (Oct 21, 2003)
- 3: The Artist Formerly Known as Nerd42 (Oct 22, 2003)
- 4: bomias (Oct 23, 2003)
- 5: The Artist Formerly Known as Nerd42 (Oct 27, 2003)
- 6: bomias (Oct 28, 2003)
- 7: The Artist Formerly Known as Nerd42 (Oct 28, 2003)
- 8: bomias (Oct 28, 2003)
- 9: PhysicsMan (11 - 3 + 29 + 5 = 42) (Nov 29, 2003)
- 10: bomias (Nov 29, 2003)
- 11: The Artist Formerly Known as Nerd42 (Dec 2, 2003)
- 12: bomias (Dec 3, 2003)
- 13: The Artist Formerly Known as Nerd42 (Dec 5, 2003)
- 14: bomias (Dec 7, 2003)
- 15: The Artist Formerly Known as Nerd42 (Dec 8, 2003)
- 16: bomias (Dec 8, 2003)
- 17: The Artist Formerly Known as Nerd42 (Dec 15, 2003)
- 18: bomias (Dec 19, 2003)
- 19: The Artist Formerly Known as Nerd42 (Jan 6, 2004)
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