Never Go Back
As his first experiment in time travel, Arthur Meissner visits his own childhood in 1933
with the hope of saving a friend who drowned in the local swimming hole. He seems to aver
the friend’s disaster, but he himself no longer exists in 1933, and moreover, he no
longer seems to exist even when he returns to his adult time.
By the way, this is
another example of a time traveler who arrives naked. I wonder who first penned that now
clichéd mode of arrival. Also, the story expresses an early version of the Chronology
Protection Principle.
You see, you yourself are the object in this particular instance, and by going back into
time you—the same object—would be occupying two separate units of space at the same
time, which is axiomatically impossible. Therefore, nature made its adjustment; the same
as it would if an irresible force hit a so-called immovable object. It eliminates one of
them.