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A time loop or temporal loop is a common plot device in science fiction (especially in universes where time travel is commonplace) in which time runs normally for a set period (usually a day or a few hours) but then skips back like a broken record. When the time loop "resets", the memories of most characters are reset (i.e. they forget all that happened). The plot is advanced by having one or more central characters retain their memory or become aware of the loop through déjà vu.

One well-known example of this is in the 1993 film Groundhog Day, in which the main character is the only one aware of the time loop. Stories with time loops commonly center on correcting past mistakes or on getting a character to recognize some key truth; escape from the loop may then follow.

Malcolm Edwards and Brian Stableford, who conjointly authored the essay on time paradoxes in The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, wrote,

The closed loop in time, in which an event becomes its own cause, is the simplest narrative form of the time-paradox story, seized upon by several of the contestants invited by the editor of Amazing Stories to find a clever ending for Ralph Milne Farley's "The Time-Wise Guy" (1940). More notable examples include Ross Rocklynne's "Time Wants a Skeleton" (1941), Bester's "The Push of a Finger" (1942), P. Schuyler Miller's "As Never Was" (1952) and Mack Reynolds's " Compounded Interest" (1956). Greater ingenuity is exercised when these loops become more complicated, forming convoluted sealed knots. Two classic exercises in this vein were written by Robert A. Heinlein, "By His Bootstraps" (1941) as Anson MacDonald and "—All You Zombies—" (1959), the latter being a story whose central character moves back and forth in time and undergoes a sex-change in order to become his own mother and father.[1]


Types of Time Loops

Physical Time Loop

In a physical time loop (rarely seen in the media), the spacetime loops around to form several closed timelike curves. Since the time in that region is looped, a person could escape it only by leaving the affected area. Also, there would be an infinite number of copies of any matter in the area, unless an object left the loop. In that case, there would only be as many copies of that object as many times it completed the loop. This type of time loop cannot be ended or destroyed.

Conscious Time Loop

In a conscious time loop, everyone's consciousness loops through time. In such a time loop, causality could easily be violated.

This article may contain excessive or irrelevant examples. Please help improve the article by adding descriptive text and removing less pertinent examples. (November 2012)

Television

The following television series featured time loops as a main theme or at least fairly frequently:

Time loops have been featured in individual episodes of many TV series, including: Angel ("Time Bomb"), The Angry Beavers, Blood Ties, Buffy the Vampire Slayer ("Life Serial"), Cardcaptor Sakura, Charmed, Crime Traveller, Family Guy, Farscape, Fringe ("White Tulip"), Futurama, Haven ("Audrey Parker's Day Off"), Justice League Unlimited, Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman, Lost ("Flashes Before Your Eyes"), My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic, The Outer Limits ("Déjà Vu", "The Refuge"), Phineas and Ferb ("Phineas and Ferb's Quantum Boogaloo"), Red Dwarf ("White Hole"), Silver Surfer, Smallville, South Park ("Cancelled"), Star Trek: Enterprise ("Future Tense"), Star Trek: The Next Generation ("Cause and Effect", "Time Squared"), Star Trek: Voyager ("Coda"), The Suite Life on Deck, Supernatural, The Twilight Zone ("Shadow Play"), The Twilight Zone (2002 TV series), and The X-Files ("Monday").

Film

Literature

See also

References

  1. ^ Edwards, Malcolm; Stableford, Brian (1995). "Time Paradoxes". In John Clute, Peter Nicholls (ed.). The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (Updated ed.). New York: St Martin's Griffin. pp. 1225–1226. ISBN 0-312-09618-6.
  2. ^ DeLillo, Don (1987). The Day Room. New York: Knopf.
  3. ^ Peter Stockwell. The poetics of science fiction. p. 143. ISBN 0-582-36993-2, 9780582369931. ((cite book)): |access-date= requires |url= (help); Check |isbn= value: invalid character (help)