Because if it is, the series won't last much longer. The current Doctor is number 11 - that only leaves two more, right?
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Here's what is supposedly the official word. From Doctor Who is now immortal, reveals the BBC: Edict that Time Lords can regenerate only 12 times before they die has been quietly ditched:
Recently (always considering that in the Whoniverse the word "recently" is very flexible), Moffat stated he had a plan to skirt the regeneration issue. |
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It has come up from time to time that the 12 regeneration limit may be some artificial, Time Lord Council imposed thing. eg. In the Five Doctors, the council convinces the Master to help them out by offering to grant him a few more lives. From the wikipedia article:
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This is Doctor Who we're talking about. These are the retcon experts. Asking Doctor Who to be internally consistent is equivalent to expecting Douglas Adams to be logical. Literally in some cases, since Douglas Adams wrote for Doctor Who for a while. Believe me, if they wish to continue past Doctor 13, they will find a way. And it will make some sort of absurd, twisted sense. Or not, depending on the mood of the writer at the time. |
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There have actually been three official canon answers: Season 6 (1969), "The War Games": Indefinitely, "barring accidents". |
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That rule comes from one story (if I recall correctly "The Deadly Assassin"). But it looks like the writers will change it if needed: http://www.radiotimes.com/blogs/1062-doctor-who-regenerate-immortal-12-times-13-lives/ |
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The average Time Lord can only regenerate 12 times - this has been pretty clearly stipulated in stories such as The Deadly Assassin and Mawdryn Undead, from the 70s and the 80s... no matter what the Doctor may flippantly say in, e.g., Death of the Doctor. However, there are certainly precedents for cheating death beyond the 12th regeneration. The Master, in The Keeper of Traken, was in his final regeneration and resembled a decomposing corpse, but managed to steal the body of Nyssa's father Tremas and use a power called "the Source" to enter into a new cycle of regenerations. A few decades on, he's still going strong, in several new bodies. It seems clearly that if the Doctor Who franchise is still going strong while the 13th actor is in the lead role, they will find some way of giving our hero his own new cycle of regenerations. It's Doctor Who - anything can, and usually does, happen! |
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Based on the recent episode "Let's Kill Hitler", we see River Song giving her remaining regeneration energy to save the Doctor's life, so that may have prolonged the regeneration limit. That's very plausible, considering in "Silence in the Libray"/"Forest of the Dead", River Song physically died. We now know that she can regenerate, but she didn't/wasn't able to. I believe, IMHO, she couldn't have regenerated because she gave it to the Doctor. |
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Originally, the doctor has only 12 regenerations, but in the episode let's kill hitler, melody, who has already regenerated twice, gives the the doctor her 10 remaining regenerations, leving him with 22. He then gives her one when she breaks her arm, leaving him with 21 regenerations, 22 lives, and 11 more Doctors. That means we're only half way done with the doctor. At this rate, the show will end in 2063 at least, and by that time we may have ourselves a real doctor! |
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The 12 regenerations is an artificial limitation probably created by elder Time Lord hierarchies, who knows how long ago. Just watch The Five Doctors, in this story the Time Lords offer The Master a new set of regenerations. Also, if he could only have 13 incarnations the Doctor would more than likely dire a very young man. The Time Lord lifespan is around 7000 years. The Doctor as far as we know is only around 1,100 years old, because of his lifestyle he's running through his regenerations at an astronomical pace. This always makes me wonder why in the world would NuWho Doctors always claim to be so old. Yes, to humans and most aliens he's old, but to his own people and what he sees as normal for Time Lords, he's a young'un. |
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No one's mentioned Trial of a Time Lord, where the Master says that somewhere |
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I was always under the impression that The Doctor would have 12 regenerations. Like the hours on a clock. Hence *time*lord. |
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River did give him the rest of her regeneration energy because she's going to the library anyway but not just that he told clyde that he has unlimited the show is so poplar they'll keep him going the doctor is a little energizer bunny he'll keep on going. |
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In the latest series episode 'Let's kill Hitler', River poisoned him and he went into the Tardis and it said 'regeneration disabled'. I presumed that meant that he ran out of regenerations. And when River was in the hospital, I thought Amy said that she had used up ALL remaining regenerations to save him, not just the last of her energy. So I was under the impression that both River and the Doctor have no more regenerations left. But I'm probably wrong. |
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According to the official Doctor Who Magazine, which I bought right after they announced Matt Smith, Timelords can only surpass the 12 regenerations if they do the time lord council a favor, and since the tenth doctor killed them all, he's out of luck. They probably will pull the "River gave up her regenerations" thing, but she did so to counter the poison. |
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It is 13 regenerations. I got a book for Christmas, as I am completely obsessed. It says there can only be 13 but it is possible one can be forged through artificial means. However, these artificial means are most likely only found on guess which destroyed planet. I'm sure Moffat will come up with something, though, he always does. By the way, the fact of regeneration was not even there until Hartnell couldn't do the show anymore, by then the show was way too popular to cancel, they didn't think much of it when it first started, but then regeneration was an option. They made the 13 rule because anyone saying that the show would last 50 years would be put in a madhouse. |
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In the audiobook "Ring Of Steel," the Doctor makes a comment about only being young twelve times. |
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I'm not a massive Whovian, I've only seen season 2 and a little bit of season 4, (the new one) but knowing Moffat and Gatiss, they will find a way where the Doctor can regenerate past his 12th. They will make some sort of twist or storyline to make sure he keeps going into a 13th/14th Doctor. Knowing the huge amount of positive feedback about nearly every season, I doubt they will end it with the 12th Doctor. |
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Yes The Doctor has 12 Regenerations. However TV shows at their heart are about making money. They will make a way around it and they will keep making more doctor who episodes. With endless amounts of regenerations until they stop making enough money to keep the show on the Air. So it is pointless to talk about how many regenerations the doctor has because in the TV world he has an infinite amount of them. |
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Since the Doctor only has twelve regenerations, and hence thirteen lives per the statements in 1976, one could deduce that the next Doctor would be the last, except in the episode Let's Kill Hitler, after Mel regenerates into River Song, River Song gives the rest of her regenerations to the Doctor. The Doctor could not regenerate at that time so he is minus one regeneration meaning that the 11th Doctor is the last Doctor, but River now gives all of her regenerations to the 11th Doctor. How many regenerations did River have and how many has River used? Let’s suppose as a genetically altered Time Lord she only gets half, or say six regenerations, and we know that she had to use at least one to become Mel and one to become River. That leaves four regenerations, meaning the Doctor has three additional regenerations. If River had the full thirteen, then the Doctor has ten regenerations left. I unfortunately cannot regenerate and if the average Doctor has three seasons per regeneration that is nine more years. If it is ten regenerations it's 30 more years. That means that the show has almost a decade to figure out how to give the Doctor more lives in the long run. I don’t think I’ll be here for the explanation so I will leave that for the future ages. |
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The answer can be found in the events of season 6:
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protected by Beofett Apr 29 at 13:22
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