The
grandfather paradox is a proposed
paradox of
time travel which results in an inconsistency through changing the past. The paradox was described as early as 1931, and even then it was described as "the age-old argument of preventing your birth by killing your grandparents". Early
science fiction stories dealing with the paradox are the short story
Ancestral Voices by
Nathaniel Schachner, published in 1933, and the 1943 book by
René Barjavel Future Times Three. The paradox is described as follows: the time traveller goes back in time and kills his grandfather before his grandfather meets his grandmother. As a result, the time traveller is never born. But, if he was never born, then he is unable to travel through time and kill his grandfather, which means the traveller would then be born after all, and so on.