- 33,405
- 8,416
Okay, this is something that has been on my mind for the longest.
Odd Rules?
Our rules for Acausality are weird. To quote the page
"Acausality is defined as the ability to exist outside of causality, or the natural flow of manipulation defined by cause and effect.
An entity that is acausal has no true beginning or end, and is thus essentially immune to offensive causality manipulation and time travel. Even if you go back in time and kill an acausal being in the past or prevent him/her/it from being born/created, it will still exist in the present and other timelines. Often, even if an acausal being is killed in the present, it can still survive by appearing from another timeline. Thus, acausal beings are very difficult to permanently destroy, often requiring the use of high-level reality warping."
Seems sound right? But this issue is, what about characters who are specifically stated to revive themselves throughout space and time. Of course we've also split the immunity to Time Paradox into its own thing. Should we do so with this timeline resurrection?
3-D and 4-D Acausality
Now my question is, what is the difference. How does one qualify for 3-D acausality or 4-D acausality? What even is this? Could some explain this for me? I don't think fiction has actually ever distinguished between 3-Dimensional or 4-Dimensional acausality.
What are our CURRENT Requirements?
As of right now, what does one need to do in order to have acausality? What is the exact requirement?
Is it too Complicated?
Personally I feel that we've made this too complicated, however, I don't have a way of simplifying it. However, our current terms are very confusing as is. So how can we simplify this?
That is all.
Odd Rules?
Our rules for Acausality are weird. To quote the page
"Acausality is defined as the ability to exist outside of causality, or the natural flow of manipulation defined by cause and effect.
An entity that is acausal has no true beginning or end, and is thus essentially immune to offensive causality manipulation and time travel. Even if you go back in time and kill an acausal being in the past or prevent him/her/it from being born/created, it will still exist in the present and other timelines. Often, even if an acausal being is killed in the present, it can still survive by appearing from another timeline. Thus, acausal beings are very difficult to permanently destroy, often requiring the use of high-level reality warping."
Seems sound right? But this issue is, what about characters who are specifically stated to revive themselves throughout space and time. Of course we've also split the immunity to Time Paradox into its own thing. Should we do so with this timeline resurrection?
3-D and 4-D Acausality
Now my question is, what is the difference. How does one qualify for 3-D acausality or 4-D acausality? What even is this? Could some explain this for me? I don't think fiction has actually ever distinguished between 3-Dimensional or 4-Dimensional acausality.
What are our CURRENT Requirements?
As of right now, what does one need to do in order to have acausality? What is the exact requirement?
Is it too Complicated?
Personally I feel that we've made this too complicated, however, I don't have a way of simplifying it. However, our current terms are very confusing as is. So how can we simplify this?
That is all.