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Changed line(s) 3 from:
n
Rather than natter on the main page, I would like to discuss here the issue that there is no reason to expect a Temporal Paradox in this comic. Each decision creates an independent branching world, so for example if Father!Jimmy goes back and prevents Baby!Jimmy from getting his real father\'s memories it isn\'t a paradox, just another parallel world. The same \
to:
Rather than natter on the main page, I would like to discuss here the issue that there is no reason to expect a Temporal Paradox in this comic. Each decision creates an independent branching world, so for example if Father!Jimmy goes back and prevents Baby!Jimmy from getting his real father\\\'s memories it isn\\\'t a paradox, just another parallel world. The same \\\"Man Who Folded Himself\\\" trick allows later versions of Jimmy to come back over and over and keep repopulating the world.

Re: Mundane Utility

Technically, the Killotron doesn\\\'t destroy parallel worlds. It just creates myriads of humanity-free worlds, populated by wild animals and feral pets, with people only left on the handful of worlds where chocolate ice cream (for instance) was spontaneously generated by random quantum fluctuation. Since everyone (but young Jimmy) accepts this as an ordinary fact of life, this is AllTheMyriadWays with a vengeance, even in the \\\"utopia\\\" ending.
Changed line(s) 3 from:
n
Rather than natter on the main page, I would like to discuss here the issue that there is no reason to expect a Temporal Paradox in this comic. Each decision creates an independent branching world, so for example if Father!Jimmy goes back and prevents Baby!Jimmy from getting his real father\'s memories it isn\'t a paradox, just another parallel world. The same \
to:
Rather than natter on the main page, I would like to discuss here the issue that there is no reason to expect a Temporal Paradox in this comic. Each decision creates an independent branching world, so for example if Father!Jimmy goes back and prevents Baby!Jimmy from getting his real father\\\'s memories it isn\\\'t a paradox, just another parallel world. The same \\\"Man Who Folded Himself\\\" trick allows later versions of Jimmy to come back over and over and keep repopulating the world.

Re: Mundane Utility

Technically, the Killotron doesn\\\'t destroy parallel worlds. It just creates myriads of humanity-free worlds, populated by wild animals and feral pets, with people only left on the handful of worlds where chocolate ice cream (for instance) was spontaneously generated by random quantum fluctuation.
Changed line(s) 3 from:
n
Rather than natter on the main page, I would like to discuss here the issue that there is no reason to expect a Temporal Paradox in this comic. Each decision creates an independent branching world, so for example if Father!Timmy goes back and prevents Baby!Timmy from getting his real father\'s memories it isn\'t a paradox, just another parallel world. The same \
to:
Rather than natter on the main page, I would like to discuss here the issue that there is no reason to expect a Temporal Paradox in this comic. Each decision creates an independent branching world, so for example if Father!Jimmy goes back and prevents Baby!Jimmy from getting his real father\\\'s memories it isn\\\'t a paradox, just another parallel world. The same \\\"Man Who Folded Himself\\\" trick allows later versions of Jimmy to come back over and over and keep repopulating the world.
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