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Time Machines & Experiments
Help building a divergence meter?
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<blockquote data-quote="Apri1" data-source="post: 171680" data-attributes="member: 10340"><p>Please do keep in mind that my current goal isn't to build a time machine that can go backwards/forwards, but rather being able to switch between alternate timelines. I'm not sure why figuring out things related to anti-symmetry and the direction of time would help figure out how to switch which probabilistic outcome is actualized.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>You seem insistent that the solution is based in voltage, rather than something else. Could you explain how this works in timelines that diverge less? For example, within a single QM event we end up with two simultaneous results, with one "selected" to be observed. How would voltage differ in this? Why would some specific QM event somehow manage to change universal voltage measurements? I'm not seeing the connection there.</p><p></p><p>From what I see, both are near identical besides that one single event (and later diverge through differences in each, and eventually decohere completely).</p><p></p><p>A difference in voltage <em>should</em> result from universal constants changing, right? Or perhaps how humans managed to measure them (aka things changing/differing back when we discovered voltage). I'm still not really seeing how this ties in whatsoever.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Apri1, post: 171680, member: 10340"] Please do keep in mind that my current goal isn't to build a time machine that can go backwards/forwards, but rather being able to switch between alternate timelines. I'm not sure why figuring out things related to anti-symmetry and the direction of time would help figure out how to switch which probabilistic outcome is actualized. You seem insistent that the solution is based in voltage, rather than something else. Could you explain how this works in timelines that diverge less? For example, within a single QM event we end up with two simultaneous results, with one "selected" to be observed. How would voltage differ in this? Why would some specific QM event somehow manage to change universal voltage measurements? I'm not seeing the connection there. From what I see, both are near identical besides that one single event (and later diverge through differences in each, and eventually decohere completely). A difference in voltage [I]should[/I] result from universal constants changing, right? Or perhaps how humans managed to measure them (aka things changing/differing back when we discovered voltage). I'm still not really seeing how this ties in whatsoever. [/QUOTE]
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Help building a divergence meter?
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