mschmitt
mschmitt
mschmitt

The blue guys were not expecting Cassandra Railly to appear in 2043, but I'm wondering if the Army of the Twelve Monkeys were expecting it.

The Tree of Life. The only thing interesting is the Abridged Script.

...it's worth buying for the gorgeous cover by Lee Edwards (accept no substitutions!) that's accurate to the story inside.

Or does this mean that something has just happened to change those events — and Cole no longer tried to kidnap Cassandra in 2013 and scratched her watch? If it's the latter, what's suddenly changed? (And either way, why does this happen at the moment of her death? This is pushing time travel a bit closer to being

...when did Cole get pulled forward two years? I know that the two timelines don't have to match up like they appear to, but we first see Cole stuck in the wreckage, then we see him trying to move the beam, then we see Jones try (and fail) to get him back (and he definitely appears to react to this), and then he's

I thought the show was dropping pretty broad hints about this possibility.

And as other posters have pointed out, "Cole is immune to paradoxes"... What does that mean?

The way I read it is that the one constant between the timelines was that Flynn never applied to be The Librarian, so a) one of the mini-Librarians takes his place, and b) Baird gets killed in his place.

Anyone remember Frederik Pohl's story, The Gold at Starbow's End, later expanded to the novel Starburst?

Not a genre film, but I like it a lot.

AKA "The Salute of the Jugger". 1989, starring Rutger Hauer, Delroy Lindo, Vincent D'Onofrio, and Joan Chen.

I'm thinking that the fact we've never seen the Sorcerer means he (or she) is actually a character we already know.

For step #2, I think it should be "The prisoners only turn on the left lightswitch IF it is the first time they have entered the room with the switch in the down position."

OK, group, can anyone remember this puzzle?

OK, SPOILERS AHEAD...

OK, so the clues are:

Since all gods must answer in the negative to "Are you lying?", then whatever the god answers means No.

A simpler way to determine what Da and Ja mean is to ask any god either, "Are you telling the truth?" or "Are you lying"? (meaning is your answer to this question the truth or lying)

I think this was mentioned in the recap of last season's finale, but it bears repeating: How is it that Emma and Henry know all about the previous fairy tales and characters, but have never seen Frozen? Or heard of the Snow Queen, since they didn't even speculate on what character Elsa is supposed to be.

The inductive solutions (including the Harvard solution) work by starting with 1 dragon, then 2, then 3, then 4 and since that works out, assumes that since N has been demonstrated to be true (for cases 1 to 4), then N+1 is also true, and therefore it scales up to 100.