[SIZE="7"][color="MediumTurquoise"]Cobalt Figure 8[/color][/SIZE]UC Pseudonym wrote:For a while I wasn't sure how to answer this, and then I thought "What would Batman do?" Excuse me while I find a warehouse with a skylight...
Zar wrote:Praise God for all things awesome. Life ROCKS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
kaemmerite wrote:Well...let's think about it.
You invent a time machine. You go back in time. You kill your granddad. Therefore, you cannot be born.
Since you cannot be born, you cannot invent a time machine. Therefore, you cannot go back in time and kill your granddad, since you do not exist. Therefore, you are born.
So since it would result in a never-ending paradoxical loop, I'll have to go ahead and say that something would prevent it from happening, otherwise time would never get anywhere.
(after all time is just like space only that we move forward in it at a constant velocity c!)
[SIZE="7"][color="MediumTurquoise"]Cobalt Figure 8[/color][/SIZE]UC Pseudonym wrote:For a while I wasn't sure how to answer this, and then I thought "What would Batman do?" Excuse me while I find a warehouse with a skylight...
EDIT: Wow, Pascal, that's a bit confusing but I do think I get your point. Frrom the first standpoint, when you went back, there was no future from whence you came, you just simply, as you put it, *popped* into existence. So, you became just another person in that time, only with no existing backround other than that contained within your memories, which are now nothing more than that, memories, now not real at all, but somewhat like figments of your imagination even though they actually did happen to your physical self. Because now they never happened anywhere but your mind.
That is what you were saying, was it not? I want to try and understand this, becuase I did not believe there was actually an answer.
My dad just pointed this out to me after reading your post, Pascal. He said that we do not move forward in time at a constant velocity. There was that one instance in the Bible(not sure where exavtly in the Bible it is, but I do remember the story) where God stopped the progress of time for a while by stopping the movement of the earth. So, according to that, time is not constant, and can be changed. (Although in my opinion this was a supernatural act that could not, except by God's direct intervention, be replicated, and thus does not exactly show that time does not move at a constant velocity when not changed directly by God's hand.)
Yes that is what I meant, however also note another fine detail, there are two reference frames here, and according to yours these memories are results of real things that happened to your physical self, but from the rest of the universes reference frame they are not and are no more than particle orientations in your brain that came along with you.
Not really, he's come to the conclusion to fast. If God really did stop time than noone would have remembered it, after all there would be no time in which the event took place, note that according to Einstein's theory of relativity time goes at the same rate for everyone in their own reference frame even if it can be slowed down outside of their reference frame. Time can only be slowed or stopped for objects outside of your reference frame but it must remain constant for your reference frame. In the situation you are discussing however I believe it is far more likely that time only appeared to be standing still in that things that we normally consider to change with time would be constant (unchanging) but this doesn't mean that time itself stops. As I said, if time actually did stop than no one would be able to realize it except God anyways because all events including perception and thought would cease until it started again. It would set up a very funny situation, (imagines a man challenging God to stop time, God agrees, one second later God replies "there, it is done", the man replies "but nothing happened!", to which God replies "I know". )
[SIZE="7"][color="MediumTurquoise"]Cobalt Figure 8[/color][/SIZE]UC Pseudonym wrote:For a while I wasn't sure how to answer this, and then I thought "What would Batman do?" Excuse me while I find a warehouse with a skylight...
Why would I want to kill my grandfather?
[SIZE="7"][color="MediumTurquoise"]Cobalt Figure 8[/color][/SIZE]UC Pseudonym wrote:For a while I wasn't sure how to answer this, and then I thought "What would Batman do?" Excuse me while I find a warehouse with a skylight...
[SIZE="7"][color="MediumTurquoise"]Cobalt Figure 8[/color][/SIZE]UC Pseudonym wrote:For a while I wasn't sure how to answer this, and then I thought "What would Batman do?" Excuse me while I find a warehouse with a skylight...
Oh, okay, so those memories that to you have that seemed to happen to your physical body, are, according to the universe, just imaginative things that have appeared in you brain, however real they may seem to you?
I see what you're saying, that it only appeared to be standing still. I'd have to go find the verses again to be more certain, but my theory is that God simply stopped the earth from revolving around the sun for however long time seemed to stand still, and while it was stopped (Earth) the rest of the universe and planets and everything continued on their normal paths.
My Dad said something about 'Why do we have leap years?' and that it's because we have to make up lost time. My take on that is that the time was not in fact lost; it was merely unrecorded in our history, adn to avoid a 1/4 of a day each year, we simply record that extra amount of time once every 4 years. He was also saying that even if time did indeed stop, because God was doing the stopping, he could have allowed the people involved with this instance to remember it. I'm assuming that would mean that He stopped time for the universe, but added extra time into the lives of the Israelites adn whoever they were fighting, so that they could continue to move along in time without time itself actually moving. At least, I believe that is what he was trying to say.
kaemmerite wrote:Well...let's think about it.
You invent a time machine. You go back in time. You kill your granddad. Therefore, you cannot be born.
Since you cannot be born, you cannot invent a time machine. Therefore, you cannot go back in time and kill your granddad, since you do not exist. Therefore, you are born.
So since it would result in a never-ending paradoxical loop, I'll have to go ahead and say that something would prevent it from happening, otherwise time would never get anywhere.
Ingemar wrote:You do not consider the possibility that changing the past could produce an alternate timeline, which does not affect your existence. Therefore, yours cannot be the only explanation.
yukinon wrote:What exactly are the verses for the sun-stopping incident?
Yes, but do note that they are real to you, even if they aren't real to the universe, and they aren't real to the universe even if they are real to you. , It's a conflict in timelines but this is common in such things as length contraction and time dilation as seen in special relativity.
Anyway if time travel is ever possible, wouldnt people in the future come to here? I've never met any time travelers, have you?
So what happens if you go back in time and kill yourself?
[SIZE="7"][color="MediumTurquoise"]Cobalt Figure 8[/color][/SIZE]UC Pseudonym wrote:For a while I wasn't sure how to answer this, and then I thought "What would Batman do?" Excuse me while I find a warehouse with a skylight...
I don't think time could be changed. Here's my theory:
We are three-dimensional beings. We exist in three dimensions - length, width, and depth - and we can manipulate those dimensions.
Time is the fourth dimension. We are aware, that is we can perceive, this fourth dimension, but we can not manipulate it. It is an inviolable wall to us. We simply travel along it at its whim.
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