Gallifrey Falls No More: Doctor Who’s Ontology of Time

Gallifrey Falls No More

Doctor Who’s Ontology of Time

Kevin S Decker

Eastern Washington University

Abstract

Despite being time-travel adventure series, both classic Doctor Who (1963-1989, 1996) and its reboot (2005-present) have not seen the development of a coherent ontology of time for their fictional universe. As such, it is extremely difficult to review established theories of the nature of time in an attempt to shoe-horn Doctor Who into an existing framework. Difficulties include the evolution of the views of the central character, the alien “Doctor,” from a position that insists “time can’t be rewritten” to its opposite as well as a curious anthropomorphizing of the temporal through show concepts like “fixed points in time.” I argue that one way to draw a coherent philosophy of time from the program is to treat the Time Lords as establishing not only the possibility of time travel but also the universe’s timeline itself. This leads to an examination of four-dimensional realism as characterizing the ontology of Doctor Who’s fictive timeline.

Author Biography

Decker is Chertok Professor of Philosophy at Eastern Washington University, where he teaches the history of western philosophy, American philosophy, ethics and philosophy and popular culture. He has edited or co-edited ten books on philosophy and popular culture artifacts, such as “Star Wars,” “Star Trek,” “Breaking Bad,” and “South Park.” He is the author of Who is Who? The Philosophy of Doctor Who (2013) from I.B. Tauris.

Published: 2019-07-01

Issue: Vol 2 (2019): Dystopian Caves and Galactic Empires: Social and Political Philosophy in SF Stories

Section: General Articles

Copyright (c) 2019 Kevin S. Decker

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