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Originally posted by Cyberbian
I do not see the need to complicate the transition from now to then with some slipstream HooDoo. It is merely a literary device to avoid the obvious negative outcome of real time travel.
What is the nature of this "slipstream", just a literary construct.
Originally posted by Xeven
If you traveled to the future then and never came back then you would not be there in the future since you left the past behind. If you travel back to when you left the past the first time then you would be there for you to meet yourself in the future.
If you travel back and kill your dad before you are born then return to your departure date, your past will not have happened to anyone else but you. No one will know who you are when you return to the future. You could effectively erase your past and still exist.
Originally posted by nanoha
Originally posted by Xeven
If you traveled to the future then and never came back then you would not be there in the future since you left the past behind. If you travel back to when you left the past the first time then you would be there for you to meet yourself in the future.
If you travel back and kill your dad before you are born then return to your departure date, your past will not have happened to anyone else but you. No one will know who you are when you return to the future. You could effectively erase your past and still exist.
I think i have a different point.Yes,you may travel back and intend to murder your father before you are born,but I trust you will never succeed(May be there is always a cop or someone who would stop you).No contradictory is allowed to exist in the timeline.
[edit on 5-3-2008 by nanoha]
Originally posted by Myrdyn
We already travel through time. We travel towards the future at an incredible speed. You try and view the present and quick as a flash, it’s gone! However, this is simply a result of how we perceive time – past, present and future. We use this perception to survive in our physical world.
For example, a frog will lash out it’s tongue towards certain co-ordinates in space so that it meets a fly at a specific time in the future.
In reality, the past, present (doesn’t really exist) and future stay as they are. It is us (or any other matter) that changes it’s co-ordinates (or position) through space-time. As we grow older, the atomic and sub-atomic particles of our body are gathering and moving to different locations (very simplified).
Effectively, you could ‘travel forward’ in time simply by slowing down the movement of your body relative to everything else. It would have to be something like cryogenic suspension or digitital analysis of the body for exact reproduction (human faxing – current black R&D). Delay the fax copy by 1,000 years and you have instantly travelled forward in time.
Meeting yourself in the future is entirely illogical because you left your current time to go travelling.
Space-time and gravity are effects of matter. If there were no matter, there would be no space or time – and matter is simply a concentrated localisation of energy. A single lump of matter will cause a space-time field around itself that alters the nearer it is to the centre of mass. Time slows as it gets further away and space distorts to form a steep gravity ‘well’ that increases in intensity as it gets closer.
Travelling towards the ‘past’ is an entirely different thing. However, who is to say which is the past and which is the future. We could be moving towards events that have already occurred and we just don’t know it yet.
[edit on 5/3/08 by Myrdyn]
Originally posted by ayame2008
there is another thread that is quite similar to this that i have posted a reply on. it is called, 'the problem with time travel (as i see it)'
i hope this may help some of you.
now, i'm a little bit of a scientist (and i mean a little bit). but my offering to why time travel simply isn't possible, i believe has a certain validity.
as for multi verses. well, i dont buy it for a second.
to suggest that splits happen all the time, and new universe is created to accomodate it is a hard pill to swallow.and here's why
1. for a new 'universe' to be born, it would have to go through a big bang, and then rapidly age to our current 'time', then slow its growth rate down to match ours.
2. if for every split a different descision/outcome is accomodated, is it possible that dinosaurs didnt die out, and are actually roaming free in another universe somewhere, or did this splitting only occur when we humans thought of it?
3.a. where are these multiverses? the visible universe is about 13 billion lightyears from us, so they must be really far away, with zero chance of being able to explore them
3.b. if you argue that they coexist with us, here, then surely space can only accomodate so much matter. hence, for what appears to be an infinite amount of time splits, unmovable objects such as houses would surely have an infinte mass by now, and what effect would that have on our universe?
so in conclusion. i think it would be wiser to try and understand this universe, without wondering about the improbability of multiverses.