Subject: Interesting. (Title: Everyone thinks doctorlit insane now.)
Author:
Posted on: 2014-05-30 20:05:00 UTC

I've been imagining the physical aspect of things very similarly to some of your graphs, particularly the fanfic "worlds" being bubbles attached to the main worlds. I don't see them as separate worlds, but rather as a more direct attachment to the original world, directly affecting the real contents. (I know the argument has been made in the past that the fics happen separately from the main fic, mostly to explain why three thousand Sues and five hundred agents aren't all crowding around the Council of Elrond at once; personally, I think this is avoided by a fail-safe on the Sues' end. The last thing the average most-special person wants is another most-special person getting all up in their glitter.) When agents do the typical mission thing, what they're doing in the end is popping that added bubble and making it take all the bad stuff away from the actual world as it disappears.

I also agree with the final Multiple Multiverse Theory, in the sense that there are simply lots and lots of different versions of the same stuff floating around out there. I'll get into that a bit more later.

The one place where my personal views contradict what you're presented here (which I know doesn't really count for anything) is the idea that the "Word Worlds" are created from World One. I believe that all worlds exist, and have always existed since they were Created, independent of one another. The reason that some worlds have stories about the events of other worlds is because, despite the separation between our homes, everyone everywhere is still basically a "person" at heart; most of us are far more similar than we are different, regardless of whether we're human or Vulcan or centaur, or whatever. This allows "authors" (including writers, producers, actors, game designers, whatever) to catch tidbits of information through little connections with the people of other worlds. You can see similarities between authors and parts of their stories everywhere: J.K. Rowling said Hermione is similar to herself as a young girl; Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was personally acquainted with Dr. Joseph Bell, who is very similar to Sherlock Holmes; many PPC authors in our world write about an agent who is extremely similar to them.

And yes, that's another part of my belief in the system: the version of Earth that we live on is not deserving of the title "real world," not because it isn't real, but because every world is equally real. We've already seen missions involving the real world written in the real world (and my Sherlock Holmes mission, where the "Sue" turned out to be a fan author from the modern period of Holmes's world). Even though we, as a community, no longer write real person missions, I'm sure the actual PPC still does them, as they have no reason from their perspective to treat it any differently than any other world. Additionally, this means that other worlds have stories written about ours, which seem as fictional to them as theirs do to us.

Anyway . . . this probably doesn't help you at all. Sorry. I just wanted to share my feelings on the topic.

Yes, this is what doctorlit actually believes about reality. Please don't judge him too harshly for it, as he gets bored VERY easily.

P.S. What was that Protectors of the Plot Discontinuum? I don't remember hearing about that anywhere else.

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