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Time Travel Discussion
Its impossible to time travel without causing a paradox
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<blockquote data-quote="Cirrus" data-source="post: 175413" data-attributes="member: 10493"><p>I'm not the biggest fan of the test, but there is no "perfect" test. I've also come here on a vacation from the year 3426, so maybe I'm not the best judge. </p><p></p><p>Your test requires the traveler to move along the same timeline while also generating an alternate timeline where the traveler fails your test. The question itself should require something static that will happen within hours or a day of the test. For example, you could ask: "tell me how much rain will fall in Mobile, Alabama tomorrow as reported by Fox10 News." The amount of rainfall is a static event that will be reported by Fox10 News and will likely only vary by a small amount and will not cause the traveler to unwittingly create an alternate timeline. Sure, there are probably timelines in the multiverse where it will not rain because of apocalyptic scenarios, but you have to hope that these are the outliers and will not generate that much flux in the variance. But the basis here is that it will either rain tomorrow in a certain place or it won't rather than "you must fail my test in the future in order to succeed in the past".</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Cirrus, post: 175413, member: 10493"] I'm not the biggest fan of the test, but there is no "perfect" test. I've also come here on a vacation from the year 3426, so maybe I'm not the best judge. Your test requires the traveler to move along the same timeline while also generating an alternate timeline where the traveler fails your test. The question itself should require something static that will happen within hours or a day of the test. For example, you could ask: "tell me how much rain will fall in Mobile, Alabama tomorrow as reported by Fox10 News." The amount of rainfall is a static event that will be reported by Fox10 News and will likely only vary by a small amount and will not cause the traveler to unwittingly create an alternate timeline. Sure, there are probably timelines in the multiverse where it will not rain because of apocalyptic scenarios, but you have to hope that these are the outliers and will not generate that much flux in the variance. But the basis here is that it will either rain tomorrow in a certain place or it won't rather than "you must fail my test in the future in order to succeed in the past". [/QUOTE]
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Its impossible to time travel without causing a paradox
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