Monday, 4 July 2022

Temporal Boundaries

A socially defined place, like a single city or an entire country, is limited in space, surrounded by a boundary or a border. It is also limited in time because it has a beginning and an end. We live through only a very small fraction of the history of a city. However, a regime within a city can have a very short duration. The Paris Commune of 1871 lasted for 72 days, just over 10 weeks. 

A Time Patrol historian can:

travel to any moment of that 72-day period;

live through the entire period several times in different disguises both within and outside of Paris;

study, in person, the entire build-up to and outcome from the Commune.

Thus, with time travel, it would be possible to spend many years in intensive study of a single event, its consequences and significance. 

3 comments:

S.M. Stirling said...

Cities don't -necessarily- have ends.

Eg., Jericho has been inhabited since 9000 BCE -- more than 11,000 years -- and still is now.

When Jericho was first inhabited, you could still walk across "Doggerland" to get to what's now Britain -- and could for another 2,500 years before it flooded.

Jericho was 6,500 years old when the Pyramid of Cheops was built.

paulshackley2017@gmail.com said...

That is amazing but Jericho will eventually have an end.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

But possibly not for a very long time.

Ad astra! Sean