Oh my gooodddd it actually boggles my mind how you can equate potentially saving his people to killing them outright. They are completely different things. If you can't see that then I honestly have no more words.
Did you seriously just ignore LITERALLY the next thing I wrote after that, where I explain that the intent is different - which is addressed in DotD, but the immediate consequences are the same, and the long-term potential is different? Sure it seems like I'm being unreasonable if you're cherry picking quotes and cutting them off to make it look like I'm saying something different than I really am.
Dude I have absolutely no idea where you're getting all this from. It was made very clear in DotD that no, Gallifrey most definitely did not burn. The Moment did what it did based on the idea of it burning, not on it actually happening.
*sigh*
See, this is why I explained how Time Travel works in Doctor Who previously...
The Moment says, "Do you want to see who you become if you burn Gallifrey?" (paraphrase). If you're a trans-temporal entity - it's not an IDEA, it's a reality. She brought him to see the reality of who he became as a result of that action. Up until he actually rewrites his timeline by passing through his own timestream, Gallifrey burned by his hand. His timeline doesn't have a burned Gallifrey in it anymore, because he changed those events with his future selves, BECAUSE of who he became by burning it. Again, "no more" NOT "never."
But it works on all three of them?? I mean Eleven might have been the first to step away but both Ten and the War Doctor were just as quick to follow. It's not like one of them was like NO I REFUSE and pushed the button anyways because they lacked those 400 years of character development.
No, but they were influenced by Eleven's 400 years of character development. He's the one who pulls back and shuts down The Moment. The other key point is that there are three of them there, and not one of them - thus making it different from the previous scenario.
Gallifrey was originally nothing but spacedust with no chance of ever being un-spacedusted. The Doctor says it himself in End of the World. That is very much a different thing from being in stasis.
Yes, because 1) This is what he would have knowledge of because in DotD he's not moving parallel to his own timestream, and thus only the latest version of himself retains the knowledge of altering his own past and 2) depending on if you're looking at the progression of the events in the NuWho Series as being the Doctor's
timestream, rather than his
timeline - it's still true.
Example: In Clara's
timestream, she entered the Heart of the TARDIS. In Clara's
timeline, she never entered the Heart of the TARDIS. Saying Gallifrey never burned because of DotD is like saying that Clara never died in the Heart of the TARDIS, because she prevented it with her intervention.
Both events happened.
Gallifrey was zapped into a static pocket universe, essentially, using the same technology the Zygons used to transport themselves into the paintings. For some reason the Doctor doesn't actually know where this pocket universe is, but Gallifrey can be found and saved via outside intervention.
Yes, this is the entire point of DotD.
@Aaron: I'm pretty sure the Time War is still time-locked - all that changed was that when the Moment zapped Gallifrey away it freed Gallifrey from that time-lock. The time-lock was already in place, after all, before the Doctors did their group magic trick.
Yes, it's still stated as being a time-locked event in DotD. If it weren't, some of the Time Lords & Daleks would've just Ctrl+Z'd out of the event with their time machines. The Moment is the only reason any of the non-War Doctors were able to enter that event.
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