Briar King, on 16 October 2013 - 02:41 AM, said:
So since this is his 12 life it's his last right? Have they stated at all if this series will be closing with this Dr after a season or 2?
Time Lords have 12 regenerations, but being born is not a regeneration so they have 13 lives. Assuming no trickey (and it looks like there will be), there should still be one after Capaldi.
Assuming Hurt is a different Doctor altogether (not just an aged version of #8), however, that does raise Capaldi to being the 13th (though still the 12th 'Doctor', as the Hurt incarnation does not count as a 'Doctor', if only semantically). And some fans have pointed out that there's several other incidences (such as the creation of the metacrisis Tenth Doctor, where he diverts his regeneration energy into his severed hand) which could count as using up a life without formally changing appearance, so it's even possible that Smith himself is the last incarnation and this will drive the storyline of either the 50th or the Christmas special (or both).
QuickTidal, on 16 October 2013 - 03:15 AM, said:
The 12 Regeneration limit was not a physical natural limit, but was imposed by the Time Lord High Council of Gallifrey as an enforced rule/law so that Time lords don't live as long. It is easily circumvented, and has been in past. The Master stole another 12 lives at one point in the 25th Anniversary special THE FIVE DOCTORS.
None of that is correct as far as the original series was concerned. The 12 regeneration/13 life limit
was a hardcoded, unavoidable biological restriction. Fan speculation has it that it was deliberately added by Rassilon so that Time Lords would not become corrupt and live forever and ever and become decadent. Rassilon himself did not have the limitation, but instead placed himself in stasis in the Death Zone in Gallifrey to stop others discovering it. Given what happened to him later during the Time War, it would appear that his prediciton was accurate.
As for how we know it is hardcoded: in
The Five Doctors (the
20th anniversary special
) Borusa, the President of the High Council, is on his last life and desperately trying to find out Rassilon's immortality secret. He is able to offer the Master (who is a special case as I will outline below) a new set of regenerations, but cannot do the same for himself, despite his rank and being in charge of handing out sets of regenerations. It's possible he could have 1) stolen a set or 2) enacted some kind of law to give himself another set due to extenuating circumstances (fan speculation is that Borusa had some kind of disease to explain why he regenerated four times in the time it took the Doctor to regenerate once, despite the fact that Borusa was living peacefully as a politician on Gallifrey and wasn't in any physical danger). The only viable conclusion is that any Gallifreyan - or human/humanoid alien - can be given a set of regenerations, but once they have a set and burn through it, that's it. They're screwed. That's the only explanation for why Borusa goes nuts and enacts his crazy plan in
The Five Doctors, and the only explanation for why the Master ran out of regenerations (if it was optional, he'd have just ignored it).
As for how the Master got round it, simple: he didn't. The Roger Delgado Master (the one that appeared in the Jon Pertwee years) was the 13th and final incarnation. He tried to regenerate again and failed, leaving him as a dying, withered husk (in what form he appeared in
The Deadly Assassin and
The Keeper of Traken). After failing to seize more regenerations on Gallifrey (again, if it was an optional thing, he would have simply opted out) he instead possessed the body of Counsellor Tremas of Traken, played by Anthony Ainley. It was in this, non-Gallifreyan body that he appeared in the remainder of the classic series run.
So Borusa was able to offer the Ainley Master a new set of regenerations, but only because he was in another body which had not previously had another set of regenerations in it. This appears to be key. Also note that Borusa
offered the Master another set but didn't follow through on it: Borusa was killed by Rassilon and the Master escaped.
Later on, in the 1996 TV movie, the Daleks exterminate the Ainley Master but the Master survived by transferring his consciousness into a green energy snake thing. This thing transferred the Master's consciousness into a human ambulance driver on Earth, played by Eric Roberts. The Roberts Master was defeated by the Doctor and thrown into the Eye of Harmony via its link within the TARDIS.
During the Time War, the Time Lords recover the Master from the Eye of Harmony and give him a new set of regenerations in return for him fighting the Daleks for them. So the Master never escaped the limitation: Delgado was the final incarnation of his original body, Ainley was an in-between carrier body and Roberts, Jacobi and Simm are the first three incarnation of the Master's newest body, with ten more still to go. No problems there at all.
(There is an alternative theory that the Roberts body was destroyed in the Eye but the Master's conciousness survived and was later extracted and put in a new body, in which case Jacobi and Simm are the first two incarnations of the Master's
fourth body, but it doesn't make much odds.)
Of course, what was the case during the original series isn't necessarily a problem in the new: during the Time War, the Time Lords woke up Rassilon and convinced him to lead them again. Rassilon regenerated into Timothy Dalton, so his immortality scheme seems to be just removing the regeneration limit and nothing more. During the Time War, the Time Lords became more corrupt, colder, more ruthless and so on, so it seems highly probable that Rassilon removed the regeneration limitation from
all the Time Lords (maybe including the Master, depending on when the Master fled to the end of time) so they could keep fighting. The fact that thousands of Time Lords probably died hundreds of times each probably helped drive them collectively insane during the war.
There is a question mark over whether the Doctor would accept such a thing. If he did, or was forced to, there is zero problem: the Doctor is now effectively immortal. In fact, he might have regenerated twenty times during the Time War
If he didn't, that's a more interesting story choice.
There's also the 'River Song giving the Doctor regeneration energy' idea. I don't buy that (though it would provide a good opportunity to cast a female Doctor), but that's the cheapest and easiest way out of the situation.
Quote
There is no way in hell they'll end the show at 12th Doctor. Showrunner Moffat has already said he's trying to get the Doctor to the 100th anniversary.
Absolutely no doubt about this at all.
Doctor Who will keep going after the 13th Doctor (whether that's Smith, Capaldi or whatever). However, the circumstances are what is interesting. Moffat can ignore the previous canon and fans can come up with their own explanations. Or he can mine it by having the Doctor say that he's on his final life and will die after the end of this one, then he regenerates and has to discover why and how he's survived.
This post has been edited by Werthead: 20 October 2013 - 07:58 PM