Hello to all. I was thinking this over the other day and a few things kept bugging me. I'm sure there's a workaround for the more likely problems,
but if time travel ever becomes a reality for the everyday man, it seems it would be a lot more trouble than it's worth. Some examples:
Language Barriers
Forget foreign languages. It's difficult enough to understand each other when we speak the same language in the same century. Years ago I read
"Trainspotting", a 244-page novel written almost entirely in Scottish dialect, and I honestly had an easier time learning Swedish than getting
through it. A hundred years ago a high percentage of the words we use today in English didn't even exist, much like many of the words from that
period have fallen out of use. Go back 400 years and you'd be hard pressed to identify a single phrase in a written document. Remember
The Faerie Queene? Apparently people spoke like that in their
everyday life. Imagine trying to imitate it when you step out of your time travel booth and some curious onlooker wants to know exactly what you
think you're doing falling out of empty air like that. Try explaining it to the authorities.
And what about words and phrases that change meaning over time?
Some examples:
Artificial - This originally meant ‘full of artistic or technical skill’. Now its meaning has a very different slant.
Nice - This comes from the Latin ‘not to know’. Originally a ‘nice person’ was someone who was ignorant or unaware.
Awful - This meant ‘full of awe’ i.e. something wonderful, delightful, amazing. However, over time it has evolved to mean exactly the opposite.
Brave - This once was used to signify cowardice. Indeed, its old meaning lives on in the word ‘bravado’.
Counterfeit - This once meant a perfect copy. Now it means anything but.
Source
The problem gets even worse if we venture into the future. We have no way of knowing that "Hello there!" 50 years from now won't be a recognized
declaration of war.
Curious Cuisine
Ever travel to a foreign country and find yourself scanning the local menu for something you can identify? Something that won't offend your delicate
palate? In the Seychelles it's perfectly normal to eat bat,
if you're used to it, as one travel writer learned the hard way:
I had never eaten bat, but I figured that since bats eat fruit, it couldn’t be that bad. I ordered mine grilled. I can honestly say it was the
single worst thing I have ever eaten in my entire life. The wings have more bones than any piece of fish on the planet. I’m lucky I didn’t choke.
But choking may have been preferable to spitting out bat stubble, which I had to do since the bat wasn’t cleaned all that well before cooking. The
meat, all one-half ounce of it, was nasty. The only way I knew I could get the taste out of my mouth was by drinking some tequila. There wasn’t any.
In fact, there was no liquor at all.
Several other restaurant patrons and I took a ferry to get to another island. I got sick, so did most everyone else who ate bat. It was like a horror
movie. I’m still trying to get the image out of my head of bat flying out of my mouth. On the other hand, the ant larvae taco I had in Mexico was
great. If you put on enough hot sauce, most anything is good.
Source
So obviously making the right culinary choice is crucial. But in time travel it would be less a matter of comfort and more a matter of actually
surviving a meal. Think about it for a second. In modern times, sanitation and food purification are pretty well advanced in developed countries.
What our ancestors ate without a flinch would likely cause our wimpy modern-day stomachs to contort and possibly implode. Their bodies were used to
it and knew nothing else. The same goes for drinking water. The only solution I can see for the dedicated time traveler is to either fast for the
duration of the trip and hope not to get stuck, or hope that science perfects a wonder pill capable of killing all imaginable microbes and bacteria,
past and present. Even then it's still a dice toss.
The Ever Shifting Landscape
One of the things that always worried be about randomly jumping through time was the fear that I'd find myself embedded in a building. Or a tree.
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How can we know for sure that (a) we'll wind up exactly where we plot our coordinates, and (b) that if we're randomly traveling we won't become a
semi-permanent part of the landscape? The future is the bigger gamble, naturally. That nice open field of today could well be the mega-mall of
tomorrow, and if you take plate tectonics and continental drift into account, on a long enough timeline you might as well just throw out all existing
maps and put your faith in a good luck charm.
Appearance
Traveling into the future could be terrifying for the first man, at least. Who's to say that one particular race wouldn't be especially persecuted
at some point along the timeline? And if we traveled far enough back beyond where there is a verifiable record of mankind's interactions, it's
another blind leap. Blue eyes could be a sign to the locals that you're possessed by demons. Dark skin could mean you *are* a demon. With so many
drop-off points along the curve, there's no real way of knowing until you get there.
These are just a few points that have always nagged at me. Any ideas on feasible solutions or other potential problems that aren't often addressed?