Menu
Forums
New posts
Search forums
What's new
New posts
New profile posts
Latest activity
Vault
Time Travel Schematics
T.E.C. Time Archive
The Why Files
Have You Seen...?
Chronovisor
TimeTravelForum.tk
TimeTravelForum.net
ParanormalNetwork.net
Paranormalis.com
ConspiracyCafe.net
Streams
Live streams
Featured streams
Multi-Viewer
Members
Current visitors
New profile posts
Search profile posts
Log in
Register
What's new
Search
Search
Search titles only
By:
New posts
Search forums
Menu
Log in
Register
Navigation
Install the app
Install
More options
Contact us
Close Menu
Forums
Time Travel Forum
Time Travel Discussion
Is there any current confirmed TIME TRAVELERS ON HERE NOW???
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Reply to thread
Message
<blockquote data-quote="Pix3l_P0w3r" data-source="post: 164833" data-attributes="member: 9968"><p>If anyone does travel through time there are a few possible explanations. Mostly time travel claims are going to come down to speculation, common sense, and answers that can't be 100% verified. Ultimately, the discussion will never really end until you yourself experience time travel in some form other than the way you experience it now. </p><p></p><p>Linear time travel. This is experienced right now on Earth. You can warp the experience with gravity displacement. For example, if you orbited close to a black hole's event horizon without being sucked in or crushed by gravitational forces, your time would slow exponentially to the point that when you get back to Earth, everyone you know would probably be dead, while you haven't aged. In Earth's perspective, you've travelled to the future. In your perspective, you spent a year or two orbiting a black hole. This can also be applied through speed. As an object gains speed it gains kinetic energy. As it gains energy it will gain mass. As the mass reaches the speed of light, it will become infinite and collapse in on itself. Since it has a relationship to gravity, you are essentially displacing your time, or slowing it down as you gain speed. This was proven with the infamous nuclear clock experiments, where the clocks that were flown in planes were fractions of a millisecond slower than the ones that were stationary on Earth. The only problem with linear time travel is that it's a one way trip into the future. You can't travel into the past, but you can see your future worldline. Could that be applied to a device that could "view" the future? No. Why? Once you observe a quantum state, it can change the outcome. The very act of viewing the future, would change the future, because in the future you are viewing, the "you" did not see the future or have knowledge of it, so that future is what would happen if you didn't look into the future. Kind of ruins it, doesn't it? Possible uses of this scenario: Traveling away from the shitty year 2000 and going to the year 3000 and making best friends with a robot named Bender Bending Rodriguez. </p><p></p><p>Quantum time travel. This is essentially when you travel to the past or future, but on a different worldline. This is best explained by the purported time traveler John Titor from the years 2000-2001 before disappearing. </p><p></p><p>"The grandfather paradox is impossible. In fact, all paradox is impossible. The Everett-Wheeler-Graham or multiple world theory is correct. All possible quantum states, events, possibilities and outcomes are real, eventual and occurring. The chances of everything happening someplace at sometime in the superverse is 100%. (For all you scientists out there, if Schrodinger’s cat had a time machine, he might not be in the box at all.)</p><p></p><p>Therefore, there is a worldline where you are alive and another worldline where you have gone back in time to kill your relative and the you on the new worldline won’t be born but “you” the killer is still running around there. Differences between worldlines are measured from the perspective of the time traveler in terms of divergence percentage. The higher the divergence, the more “un-like” your destination worldline looks like compared to your worldline of origin."</p><p></p><p>Essentially this means you can never go back in time on your current worldline. This also means the type of machine being used could have computational errors since it's dealing with quantum calculations, meaning you may be able to time travel, but never hit the same worldline twice. Also, infinity is pretty big. That leaves so many possibilities that it's somewhat unlikely you will see yourself suddenly "appear" out of thin air from an alternate reality in your current worldline. It's about as likely as a car appearing inside the LHC at CERN when they convert energy to mass. That also begs the question, that people who claim to be time traveling through some type of telepathic or spiritual means, could be either classified as somehow spiritually connecting to alternate dimensional worldlines, or they are just lying or crazy. But referring to the linear time travel above, and the act of viewing the future, you wouldn't be able to really "change" the future of this worldline by viewing it. Really I'd only see the practical use of time travel, to be to gather information from other worldlines to guide our own worldline path. However, going to other worldlines and our actions there could cause them issues, and you're essentially causing those issues for yourself. </p><p></p><p>Basically the superverse is in a balance of good and evil, chaos and order. Everything that's happened and can happen has already happened somewhere which is why you can't change your direct past. Think of yourself as a static observer of a linear function in a quantum state. There's a universe where you do time travel, but it might not turn out so well. The most common misconception of time travel comes from the fact that us humans have only experienced time in a specific fashion and so our rational thinking tends to bend towards that as proof for our own validation.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Pix3l_P0w3r, post: 164833, member: 9968"] If anyone does travel through time there are a few possible explanations. Mostly time travel claims are going to come down to speculation, common sense, and answers that can't be 100% verified. Ultimately, the discussion will never really end until you yourself experience time travel in some form other than the way you experience it now. Linear time travel. This is experienced right now on Earth. You can warp the experience with gravity displacement. For example, if you orbited close to a black hole's event horizon without being sucked in or crushed by gravitational forces, your time would slow exponentially to the point that when you get back to Earth, everyone you know would probably be dead, while you haven't aged. In Earth's perspective, you've travelled to the future. In your perspective, you spent a year or two orbiting a black hole. This can also be applied through speed. As an object gains speed it gains kinetic energy. As it gains energy it will gain mass. As the mass reaches the speed of light, it will become infinite and collapse in on itself. Since it has a relationship to gravity, you are essentially displacing your time, or slowing it down as you gain speed. This was proven with the infamous nuclear clock experiments, where the clocks that were flown in planes were fractions of a millisecond slower than the ones that were stationary on Earth. The only problem with linear time travel is that it's a one way trip into the future. You can't travel into the past, but you can see your future worldline. Could that be applied to a device that could "view" the future? No. Why? Once you observe a quantum state, it can change the outcome. The very act of viewing the future, would change the future, because in the future you are viewing, the "you" did not see the future or have knowledge of it, so that future is what would happen if you didn't look into the future. Kind of ruins it, doesn't it? Possible uses of this scenario: Traveling away from the shitty year 2000 and going to the year 3000 and making best friends with a robot named Bender Bending Rodriguez. Quantum time travel. This is essentially when you travel to the past or future, but on a different worldline. This is best explained by the purported time traveler John Titor from the years 2000-2001 before disappearing. "The grandfather paradox is impossible. In fact, all paradox is impossible. The Everett-Wheeler-Graham or multiple world theory is correct. All possible quantum states, events, possibilities and outcomes are real, eventual and occurring. The chances of everything happening someplace at sometime in the superverse is 100%. (For all you scientists out there, if Schrodinger’s cat had a time machine, he might not be in the box at all.) Therefore, there is a worldline where you are alive and another worldline where you have gone back in time to kill your relative and the you on the new worldline won’t be born but “you” the killer is still running around there. Differences between worldlines are measured from the perspective of the time traveler in terms of divergence percentage. The higher the divergence, the more “un-like” your destination worldline looks like compared to your worldline of origin." Essentially this means you can never go back in time on your current worldline. This also means the type of machine being used could have computational errors since it's dealing with quantum calculations, meaning you may be able to time travel, but never hit the same worldline twice. Also, infinity is pretty big. That leaves so many possibilities that it's somewhat unlikely you will see yourself suddenly "appear" out of thin air from an alternate reality in your current worldline. It's about as likely as a car appearing inside the LHC at CERN when they convert energy to mass. That also begs the question, that people who claim to be time traveling through some type of telepathic or spiritual means, could be either classified as somehow spiritually connecting to alternate dimensional worldlines, or they are just lying or crazy. But referring to the linear time travel above, and the act of viewing the future, you wouldn't be able to really "change" the future of this worldline by viewing it. Really I'd only see the practical use of time travel, to be to gather information from other worldlines to guide our own worldline path. However, going to other worldlines and our actions there could cause them issues, and you're essentially causing those issues for yourself. Basically the superverse is in a balance of good and evil, chaos and order. Everything that's happened and can happen has already happened somewhere which is why you can't change your direct past. Think of yourself as a static observer of a linear function in a quantum state. There's a universe where you do time travel, but it might not turn out so well. The most common misconception of time travel comes from the fact that us humans have only experienced time in a specific fashion and so our rational thinking tends to bend towards that as proof for our own validation. [/QUOTE]
Insert quotes…
Verification
Post reply
Forums
Time Travel Forum
Time Travel Discussion
Is there any current confirmed TIME TRAVELERS ON HERE NOW???
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.
Accept
Learn more…
Top