How do Time Lords age in Doctor Who?
We've discovered an answer. And we didn't even have to call the Doctor to solve it
Doctor Who has materialised plenty of Timey-wimey no-seriously-how-did-The-Silence-actually-blow-up-the-Tardis type mysteries. Yet there’s one Gallifreyan conundrum that really has our heads scratching: how do Time Lords age?
More specifically: why did Matt Smith’s Doctor look so young on his ‘farewell tour’ (the 200 years he lives through in series 6), but become an old man while defending the town of Christmas on Trenzalore for 300 years in The Time of the Doctor?
Put simply: why did he age like George Clooney in the first case, but Macaulay Culkin in the second?
Well, thanks to a theory posed by Redditor crawlspace_taste, we many finally have an answer…
Time Lords only age when they remain in one time
And conversely, they don’t age while travelling through time thanks to exposure to the time vortex.
The evidence? Well, before pinching his Tardis, the first doctor spent most of his life on Gallifrey, hence his aged appearance. No time machine, no eternally youthful face.
And the 11th Doctor doesn’t appear to age through series 6 because he’s travelling in the Tardis. However he does look way beyond pension age in The Time of the Doctor as he’s without a time machine.
It’s an explanation that not only fits logically, but has plenty of artistic merit. It suits suits the Doctor’s nomadic nature: keep swimming in the vortex of time or die (albeit slowly).
It’s also a theory that explains why The Curator in The Day of the Doctor – the one wearing the face of Tom Baker’s fourth doctor – looks so much older than the scarf-wearing doctor we saw in classic Who: that time lord has retired, stayed on earth and thus aged. A lot.
Fortunately, you've only got to age another month to see the next series of Doctor Who (unless you're reading this from the Tardis, that is).
Authors
Thomas is Digital editor at BBC Science Focus. Writing about everything from cosmology to anthropology, he specialises in the latest psychology, health and neuroscience discoveries. Thomas has a Masters degree (distinction) in Magazine Journalism from the University of Sheffield and has written for Men’s Health, Vice and Radio Times. He has been shortlisted as the New Digital Talent of the Year at the national magazine Professional Publishers Association (PPA) awards. Also working in academia, Thomas has lectured on the topic of journalism to undergraduate and postgraduate students at The University of Sheffield.