ChatterBank0 min ago
Time Travel
If it became possible , would it be more probable to travel back in time because it has already happened , as opposed to travel to the future , which has not yet happened
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Honestly I'm surprised birdie, I thought you'd be less willing to rule it out. I wasn't going to post in this because, although I believe time travel in the sense it's usually meant is and always will be impossible, I didn't really think it was a decidable question, scientifically. Eg one plausible means of travelling through time (and space) would be a wormhole, which is kind of theoretically sort of possible, maybe, in Relativity? Or locally near rotating black holes there is an effect which is similar enough to count as time travel.
If another regular AB commentator hadn't exiled herself from AB's science board then Naomi would have been along to say something along the lines of her not knowing and nor does anybody else, and I wouldn't really be able to disagree with that. We've made a lot of progress in understanding the nature of time in the last century or so, but not enough, I would suggest, to make any kind of definitive statement that time travel must be impossible. Implausible and unlikely, certainly.
If another regular AB commentator hadn't exiled herself from AB's science board then Naomi would have been along to say something along the lines of her not knowing and nor does anybody else, and I wouldn't really be able to disagree with that. We've made a lot of progress in understanding the nature of time in the last century or so, but not enough, I would suggest, to make any kind of definitive statement that time travel must be impossible. Implausible and unlikely, certainly.
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Heisenberg's*, although I'm not sure that it quite applies in the way you mean. No argument that arbitrary time travel is impossible as you describe it, though: the possible work-arounds that have been proposed tend to be exotic or extreme in ways that don't undermine the main point you're making.
It's nice to find something on which we more or less agree for a change, though.
It's nice to find something on which we more or less agree for a change, though.
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The problem with "time" travel is that if you simply travel back through time from your current location, then you would end up stranded and of course dead, somewhere in deep space.
The reason for this is that, for example, if you travelled back in time to last week, earth was millions and millions of miles from its current position.
Therefore to make time travel to a certain time and place work, you would need to travel through both time and space, plotting the course of earth through the vast void of interstellar space.
One wrong calculation and you wind up dead.
The reason for this is that, for example, if you travelled back in time to last week, earth was millions and millions of miles from its current position.
Therefore to make time travel to a certain time and place work, you would need to travel through both time and space, plotting the course of earth through the vast void of interstellar space.
One wrong calculation and you wind up dead.