It is true that apparent illogicality sometimes turns out to be a futuristic projection. Before the Wright Brothers invented the first aero plane, nobody could have dared to believe that man could fly. Before Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone, it would have been impossible to believe in long-distance talks happening in the real-time interface. Moreover, there are examples of inventions, like that of inventing a modern-day sewing machine with a needle that has hole on its wrong end, which were conceived in dreams but now are part of our everyday reality.
All this emphasizes that fantasies of one point of time that seem illogical may turn out to be revolutionary things that change the future of the mankind. Similarly, it would not be farfetched to think about railway stations fitted with time-machine devices that would make travel from one era to another just a matter of time.
What is the Planning Process?