Time viewer
A time viewer is a fictional device that can display events occurring in another time, either the past or (less commonly) the future.[1]
In his short story "The Dead Past" (1956), Isaac Asimov called a similar device a chronoscope, but this is also the name that the Victorian-era scientist Charles Wheatstone gave to his invention for measuring small intervals of time.
Father François Brune, a French Catholic priest and author, related in his book Le nouveau mystère du Vatican (2002) that an Italian priest supposedly invented a time viewer in the 20th century. He called the machine the chronovisor.[2]
Science fiction
T. L. Sherred
In the 1947 novella E for Effort, T. L. Sherred describes a time viewer built by a poor genius who cannot get people to take him seriously. The genius uses his invention to create historical movies which he then shows in his decrepit theater. He is discovered by a Hollywood producer, who is able to exploit the viewer to create first movies, then historical reconstructions, and finally political documentaries. The last part is his undoing, as he exposes every crime committed in the name of patriotism and ideology by world leaders, resulting in the collapse of government, followed by nuclear war.
Lewis Padgett
For the short story "Private Eye" (1949), Henry Kuttner and C.L. Moore (writing together as Lewis Padgett) envision a society in which time-viewing makes it virtually impossible to commit a murder undetected, but which allows pleas of temporary insanity and right of self-defense. The protagonist schemes to provoke an attack by his victim, and then kill the man in (ostensible) self-defense. The murder weapon is an antique scalpel used as a letter opener, whose presence between them is carefully orchestrated by the murderer. The story was dramatized for BBC1 as The Eye, an episode of the science fiction anthology series Out of the Unknown.
Philip K. Dick
In Philip K. Dick's short story "Paycheck" (1953), Rethrick Construction recruits an electronic engineer to build a machine that can view the future. After the job is done, the man's memory is erased, and he finds that he is pursued by secret police. It was adapted as the film of the same title in 2003.
Isaac Asimov
"The Dead Past" (1956) by Isaac Asimov concerns the clandestine invention of a time viewer after research into the subject is suppressed. The reason for this is revealed in the story's conclusion: Visual monitoring with a time viewer deprives others of privacy. A similar outcome features in Arthur C. Clarke and Stephen Baxter's "The Light of Other Days" (2000).
Damon Knight
Damon Knight's 1976 short story "I See You" describes an invention that allows its operator to view anyone at any point in time.
John Varley
For his 1983 novel Millennium, John Varley conceived a time viewer operated by time travellers. The viewer disallows its operators from viewing places where they have been or will be. When the viewer screens a temporal paradox, the image blurs as alternate futures overlap.
Adrienne Gormley
Adrienne Gormley's 2003 short story "Custer's Angel" features the "Time Tap" that the protagonist uses to study stories concerning General Custer's killer.
José Carlos Somoza
The novel Zig Zag (2006) by José Carlos Somoza describes a string theory-based technology that makes it possible to produce still images of past events.
Other stories
Time viewers have a relatively minor part in the following novels and short stories:
- Childhood's End (1953) by Arthur C. Clarke
- The End of Eternity (1955) by Isaac Asimov
- Pastwatch: The Redemption of Christopher Columbus (1996) by Orson Scott Card
- Cowl (2004) by Neal Asher
- The Brightonomicon (2005) by Robert Rankin (where the time viewer is called the Chronovision)
In movies
- Masters of the Universe (1987). Evil-Lyn (played by Meg Foster) used a handheld time viewer to view a fight between He-Man and her warriors.
- Guardians of the Galaxy (2014). Peter Quill (played by Chris Pratt) used a handheld time viewer on Planet Morag to assist him in finding an ancient orb.
References
- ↑ "Themes : Time Viewer : SFE : Science Fiction Encyclopedia". Sf-encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2015-11-30.
- ↑ Brune, François (2002). Le nouveau mystère du Vatican. A. Michel. ISBN 978-2-226-13070-9.