09-05-2008, 05:21 PM | #41 (permalink) |
Devoted
Donor
Location: New England
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Spider Robinson also dealt with this issue in one of his later Callahan's novels (I intentionally won't mention which one), but it is a different time-traveler than the one Ratbastid mentioned.
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09-07-2008, 09:41 AM | #42 (permalink) |
pow!
Location: NorCal
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The only safe way to write about time travel is to have some totally alien / mystic mechanism for it, and don't try to explain it. Make sure the characters don't understand it, so they don't need to explain it either.
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09-07-2008, 01:09 PM | #43 (permalink) |
Upright
Location: Cornwall, UK
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My theory is this: Time travel is possible, but at the occurrence of the "event" as in the past, the added extra mass (that previously had not existed in that space/time) would destabilise the universe, as the universe only has a finite amount of mass. To get around this I made a story about the shifting of consciousness, which has no relativistic mass, back and forth through time.
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09-07-2008, 02:47 PM | #44 (permalink) |
Psycho
Location: Above you
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I like H. P. Lovecraft's take on time travel (The Shadow Out of Time). You don't send your physical self through time but instead your mind "switch places" with another sentient who lives during that time. You get his or her body while they get yours.
Though the added complexity of narrating what happens in the past and the future at the same time can be a bit too much. Maybe you send your mind and temporarily take over another persons body, placing their mind in some sort of hibernation?
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09-08-2008, 06:56 AM | #45 (permalink) | ||||
Crazy
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09-08-2008, 07:55 AM | #46 (permalink) |
But You'll Never Prove It.
Location: under your bed
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How about a hand held device where you can enter the date you want and go? Possible everything within a 5 foot radius would go with you, so a bad guy could end up going with you to your next destination. Whether you want to automatically end up in the same place, or enter a destination in the hand held device, up to the writer. You could lose the device sometime, and have to go looking for it. Did you drop it when you saw your former self and had to duck quickly? Did he find it and you have to get it back before he figures out how to activate it? You could set yourself up to be able to do series. I think figuring out unsolved crimes/mysteries would be fun.
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. . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Ok, no more truth-or-dare until somebody returns my underwear" ~ George Lopez I bake cookies just so I can lick the bowl. ~ ItWasMe |
09-08-2008, 01:36 PM | #48 (permalink) |
Upright
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I would theorize that the actual jump through time would be caused by a bending of space-time with a chronoton field with a chronoton representing the physical nature of time. Personally, I think the mass displacement would be an interesting subject to broach. To compensate for it, I would make it sort of Quantum Leap style, in that every time a person jumps back, or forward, in time, someone the person that jumped knew or is related to distantly either switches places or dies to compensate for the mass shift.
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09-08-2008, 07:05 PM | #49 (permalink) | ||||||
Banned
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35 years ago, I spent a number of months intensely contemplating the concept of reality and by extension, the meaning of life. This process of discovery, as a rite of passage, seems to have fallen out of favor, but it seemed the most important pursuit, back then. Some I knew were influenced by these inquiries to become deeply religious, but I ended up with an impatience driven curiousity...... I'll throw out a few things to consider..... I don't think you have to physically travel to experience the past or the future, I suspect it coexists in "our world". I don't know if any of this will help with a plot for a story, but I have been impressed with what has come from the Edgar Cayce trance state transcripts, and I visited the Cayce research center in Virginia Beach, 3 years ago. One of my greatest frustrations is that, in our society, we don't even examine or contemplate our true potential, let alone attempt to "live up to it"...... Maybe this new CERN LHC, slated to come online, this week, will offer up more clues.... Quote:
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09-09-2008, 10:38 PM | #51 (permalink) | |||
Location: Waterloo, Ontario
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I don't mean to hijack this thread but... I... must stop... the spread of... misinformation...
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Also, I don't think that StarTrek warp drives use "gravity" to warp space, as such. They just do so, arbitrarily (something mass doesn't do via gravity), by some unspecified mechanism... Quote:
There is no such thing as "instantaneous transfer of information." Indeed, simultaneity is relative so one must wonder in what reference frame said information was instantaneously transfered in. There are quantum interactions that may appear to someone with a naive understanding of physics to transfer information instantaneously. Perhaps this is what you're thinking? As I said before, anything traveling faster than light, even information, is necessarily traveling back in time relative to some reference frame. Quote:
Having negative mass would allow you to travel faster than light and, hence, back in time. In fact, having negative mass would necessitate you traveling faster than light because it's impossible for negative mass to travel slower than light. Interesting, eh? Maybe this is what you were thinking? |
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09-10-2008, 01:52 AM | #52 (permalink) |
Upright
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I actually like post #2 in this topic, posted by TheJazz. I've often envisioned time travel going to "the same location" as the same physical point in space. That is, if you were on the earth in New York, there's no guarantee that you'd even end up near earth after time traveling. I think there's some room for creative exploration here--if the time traveler uses some space craft or at least a space-hardy machine, adventures could ensue with the nearby planets, asteroids, or whatever else may be at that point in time.
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09-10-2008, 03:43 AM | #53 (permalink) |
Riding the Ocean Spray
Location: S.E. PA in U Sofa
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While I like to imagine all sorts of interesting scenarios about going back in time, I think we'll find out, or we already know, that time marches on, the arrow of time only points in one direction, the nature of the beast is that it only goes one way. So no matter what kind of worm hole or warp we ever accomplish, we will be able to go forward but never backwards. Even the mundane examples we have of time dilation due to higher relative velocity, such as astronauts when they were in space, or traveling near or at or over the speed of light, when you slow down and compare to a reference that was not doing that, you will have gone forward but you can't go back again. But for interesting stories sake, I like to fantasize about the impossible. At least this is what I think about time travel now.
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time, travel |
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