ikimasu wrote:what is it called..... well... nm what its called.... basically what it says is that the past is unalterable. and because of this, if you were to go back in time, a blade of grass would be like a razor blade to you, and rain would be like bullets. this is due to your inability to alter the past. Its an odd theory, but valid nontheless.(well, at least as valid as a theory about time travel can be)..... Obviously, this has its problems, but the Alternate Universe is filled with so many philosophical questions.... I dont wanna to touch that one.....
JediSonic wrote:For me, it comes back to the granfather paradox Zedian mentioned:
1) You go back in time
2) You kill your grandfather before your parents were born
3) Your parents are never born
4) You were never born because your parents didnt exist
5) You did not exist to go back in time
6) Your grandfather wasn't killed because you werent there to go back and kill him
7) Your parents are born
8) You are born
1) You go back in time
etc.
AnsemK_R wrote:I just remembered something I read in a science book Hyperspace : A Scientific Odyssey Through Parallel Universes, Time Warps, and the 10th Dimension.
The book claims that there are several dimensions the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd everyone knows about (who hasn't heard the term 3-D?). Some scientists speculate that there could be a fourth-tenth dimension and that one of them maybe time. They even think they know what an "unfolded" 4th dimension would look like. The book explains this much better than I ever could, so I would advise you to take a quick look at it.
"What then is time? If no one asks me, I know what it is. If I wish to explain it to him who asks, I do not know." ~Saint Augustine
Volt wrote:after reviewing what everyone has said, we now all understand that there is a looping problem, as JediSonic has shared, and to explain this looping problem we've resorted to excusing ourselves through an alternate universe, yes?
LF wrote: And I have a feeling that's why time travel backwards won't be discovered because we'll always be in the time frame where our past wasn't altered, because it already happened. Least resistance of change, perhaps.
Ah yes, Asimov has arrived. I would agree with this theory. But my main concern lies more in matter.Doubleshadow wrote: I don't think so. People seem to envision time as a stream, but I think it is a more like a wave. You cannot go back and forth] While I do not think traveling backwards in time is possible. I do not discount traveling forward in time (with no possible return). Since time is relative, sleeping for 300 years would essentially send you to the future.Ashley her self wrote: There's also the idea from Issac Asimov that even stepping on one blade of grass, one bug in the past would drastically alter the future. He wrote a novel on it...something about light and dark, I think...and it had to do with people going on a dinosaur hunt but having to stay on this one path.
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]I remember that one fateful day when Coach took me aside. I knew what was coming. "You don't have to tell me," I said. "I'm off the team, aren't I?" "Well," said Coach, "you never were really ON the team. You made that uniform you're wearing out of rags and towels, and your helmet is a toy space helmet. You show up at practice and then either steal the ball and make us chase you to get it back, or you try to tackle people at inappropriate times." It was all true what he was saying. And yet, I thought something is brewing inside the head of this Coach. He sees something in me, some kind of raw talent that he can mold. But that's when I felt the handcuffs go on.
There's also the idea from Issac Asimov that even stepping on one blade of grass, one bug in the past would drastically alter the future. He wrote a novel on it...something about light and dark, I think...and it had to do with people going on a dinosaur hunt but having to stay on this one path.
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