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What if Stave's great grandchildren learned that, in the past, Foul kidnapped Jeremiah and kept him prisoner until he died of old age? That means that Linden should not try to rescue him, right?Fist and Faith wrote:"Hmm... But wait. What of Stave's great grandchildren? Somewhere in the future, they exist. Have they heard of it? What if they have not? My bringing it to the present would cause a conflict with their knowledge. The Arch would be threatened. Just as if I had been brought back to the Land 200 years ago and carried through with this plan, Stave of today would see a conflict."
WF, on the one hand, this statement makes me want to nod and say, "Duh, of COURSE that's the way it works!"Wayfriend wrote:...If Linden chooses to go back in time to retrieve the staff and bring it forward, then it follows that this MUST be what the future would know she did. Just like anything else she chooses to do, which is remembered in the future. The future is created in the present.
You can't make things work any other way.
I am sorry, that just doesn't make sense to me. Linden is in the Land's present (except when she goes back). So anything that she does in the Land's present is by definition going to affect that Land's future, just as things she did the last time she was in the Land affected the Land's past (its history).Fist and Faith wrote: "Nobody from the last X years until now has heard of the Staff of Law. So if I go back X years, find it, and bring it to now, nobody between now and then will become confused because of what I did. There will be no paradox. The Arch of Time is safe.
"Hmm... But wait. What of Stave's great grandchildren? Somewhere in the future, they exist. Have they heard of it? What if they have not? My bringing it to the present would cause a conflict with their knowledge. The Arch would be threatened. Just as if I had been brought back to the Land 200 years ago and carried through with this plan, Stave of today would see a conflict."
If she did that, the Theomach could probably get involved, and give an explanation to the Land-dwellers that would fit it all together. So the issue could be dealt with, and SRD could still do what he intends. And it would fit in with my conception of fantasy time-travel.The whole of Time is considered.
So, one possibility is that the Arch can't be shattered, no matter what she does with the Staff at any point in time she takes it to, because she will have only done what everyone from all points in time would have thought happened if she hadn't been thrown into the mix anyway. Even if she tried, she couldn't actually change things. Like the Professor from Gilligan's Island trying to save Lincoln in that episode of The Twilight Zone. Or that part in Deja Vu whenith Denzel Washington sent the note back to himself."The Staff hasn't been used since Anele lost it. It hasn't changed anything. It hasn't done anything. That's what being lost means." Surely the Haruchai, if no one else, would have become aware of it otherwise? "Taking it out of the past and bringing it here won't disrupt what's already happened."
If I've done nothing else in this thread, I've been trying to niggle you into getting your point across.Fist and Faith wrote:I feel unable to get my point across.![]()
Certainly the author has proclaimed over and over again that the Arch is threatened by creating paradoxes. So I think we can rule this possibility out on that basis alone.Fist and Faith wrote:So, one possibility is that the Arch can't be shattered, no matter what she does with the Staff at any point in time she takes it to, because she will have only done what everyone from all points in time would have thought happened if she hadn't been thrown into the mix anyway.
But there IS a significant difference. And I've been trying to explain it.Fist and Faith wrote:I don't see any difference between causing one, say, a hundred years before Stave's time that will be bad in light of what those of Stave's time know, and causing one in Stave's time that will be bad in light of what those a hundred years after Stave's time know.
This pretty much sums up what I was trying to say, too. I still don't understand how you can create a paradox in the future.Wayfriend wrote: The problem lies in the premise that Stave's grandchildren would see Linden doing XYZ. If she didn't do XYZ, why would these grandchildren have a perception of history that she did? That's the problem! You have the cart before the horse, in that what the grandchildren know flows from what she does, not the other way around.
Whatever Stave's grandchildren know about the past, they know it because, one day, in the past, it actually happened that way. If they know of Linden doing XYZ in their past, it must be because she did it!
Therefore, the only way the dilemma in your question can occur is if (1) Linden, in her present, does XYZ (2) years later, Stave's grandchildren know of it; (3) something happens so that what Linden did in her present is changed. Someone, not Linden, travelled back in time and changed what Linden did.
But as long as no one is time travelling and creating paradoxes --- if the timeline is never changed --- then what Stave's grandchildren know MUST BE what she actually did. And the condition that they know she did something different is not possible.
Which makes it entirely different from the other scenario, where Linden travels back in time to retrieve the Staff. Be cause she is, in fact, going back in time and changing what happened.
I really don't see how that can be interpreted as anything other than, "When you do things in this time that will break the Arch, I will fix things so they don't." If he was not there fixing things, her actions in the past would not simply be part of what everybody in the future always thought had happened. The Theomach has learned (And I wonder what the cost was!) what people in Berek's time and after are supposed to know. But Linden does things that would create paradoxes, so he fixes things. For example, he knows that the future calls certain people "Unfettered." (I thought that was interesting, because I just assumed the Unfettered were only around during the time of the New Lords. Interesting that Unfettered were around during Berek-Kevin too.) He also knows that there is no tale of a mysterious, unexplained woman who does some serious healing with a magical staff. So he begins the knowledge of the Unfettered by telling Berek that Linden is one."Here the preservation of the Arch need not trouble you. That burden is mine. At great cost, I have garnered knowledge which you lack, and my knowledge is profound. Be assured that I will watch over you. Indeed, I have already done so. I have set you at a distance which ensured that my theurgy would not be witnessed, but which will not prevent the accomplishment of your intent.
"Where my guidance is needed, I will provide it. And I will accommodate the effects of both your presence and your deeds. You need only trust in yourself - and heed my counsel. In the fullness of time, my aid will deomnstrate its worth."