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"I wrote many novels which … contained the element of the projected collective unconscious, which made them simply incomprehensible to anyone who read them, because they required the reader to accept my premise that each of us lives in a unique world."
- Philip K. Dick

Time Line  
  The sequence of events leading up to, and past, this moment.  

First use of this idea, as far as I know.

A Wittenberg disrupter tears atoms apart. The free electrons are shunted off into accumulators, where we get power for lighting, cooking, heating and so forth. The protons go into the proton analyzer, where the gravitons are ripped out of them and stored in a special type of spherical field. When we want to move the ship, the gravitons are released. They spread through the ship and everything in the ship. The natural place for a graviton is a proton. The gravitons rush for the protons–which are already saturated with 1846 gravitons. Gravitons are unable to remain free in three-dimensional space. They escape along the time line, into the past.
Technovelgy from Time Wants A Skeleton, by Ross Rocklynne.
Published by Astounding Science Fiction in 1941
Additional resources -

Compare to the the Dutch clock from The Clock That Went Backward (1881) by Edward Page Mitchell, the Anachronopete from El Anachronopete (1887) by Enrique Gaspar, precogs from The Minority Report (1956) by Philip K. Dick, the chronoscope from Legion of Time (1938) by Jack Williamson, and the time-telespectroscope from The Exile of Time (1931) by Ray Cummings.

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Additional resources:
  More Ideas and Technology from Time Wants A Skeleton
  More Ideas and Technology by Ross Rocklynne
  Tech news articles related to Time Wants A Skeleton
  Tech news articles related to works by Ross Rocklynne

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