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John Titor's Legacy
John Titor's claims and The Time Derivative
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<blockquote data-quote="Deebokonon" data-source="post: 8171" data-attributes="member: 82"><p><strong>John Titor's claims and The Time Derivative</strong></p><p></p><p>Yes</p><p></p><p>This will be a bit scientific but I think you can follow it. However, your comments have guided me to include a few more posts than I had originally planned. If they are not interesting and outright fun let me know and I will become more brief.</p><p></p><p>First, lets eliminate conceptual limitations for correctly understanding ?time Travel?.</p><p></p><p>The first limitation of ?time Travel? is time itself. Clock, day, month, year, and etc times are applied abstracts for what we call ?time?. Physical events are summarily bound within the physical constants in the processes of their occurrences. We measure these sequences of events with arbitrarily set increments.</p><p></p><p>Here is a neat experiment that will help you understand this aspect of time. Choose a series of events from your near past. Choose a trip, a party, a project, some events on which you can attach a beginning and an end. Keep in mind how much abstract time the original sequence of events consumed.</p><p></p><p>Use a stopwatch or sit before a clock with a sweep hand. Register a beginning time, close your eyes and re-live in your mind the sequence of events that you have chosen. Remember as many details of the events as you possibly can. At the end register the real time lapse.</p><p></p><p>Then start again and close your eyes while you pass through the experience remembering more detail. If you repeat this over and over remembering more and more detail you will find that the more detail that you remember the shorter the time lapse will be. When you become really good at remembering details in the events you will be surprised at how drastically real time slows down.</p><p></p><p>Try it!</p><p></p><p>Life is a dance we all do separately together in the great ballroom of intertwined time.</p><p></p><p>Deebokonon</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Deebokonon, post: 8171, member: 82"] [b]John Titor's claims and The Time Derivative[/b] Yes This will be a bit scientific but I think you can follow it. However, your comments have guided me to include a few more posts than I had originally planned. If they are not interesting and outright fun let me know and I will become more brief. First, lets eliminate conceptual limitations for correctly understanding ?time Travel?. The first limitation of ?time Travel? is time itself. Clock, day, month, year, and etc times are applied abstracts for what we call ?time?. Physical events are summarily bound within the physical constants in the processes of their occurrences. We measure these sequences of events with arbitrarily set increments. Here is a neat experiment that will help you understand this aspect of time. Choose a series of events from your near past. Choose a trip, a party, a project, some events on which you can attach a beginning and an end. Keep in mind how much abstract time the original sequence of events consumed. Use a stopwatch or sit before a clock with a sweep hand. Register a beginning time, close your eyes and re-live in your mind the sequence of events that you have chosen. Remember as many details of the events as you possibly can. At the end register the real time lapse. Then start again and close your eyes while you pass through the experience remembering more detail. If you repeat this over and over remembering more and more detail you will find that the more detail that you remember the shorter the time lapse will be. When you become really good at remembering details in the events you will be surprised at how drastically real time slows down. Try it! Life is a dance we all do separately together in the great ballroom of intertwined time. Deebokonon [/QUOTE]
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John Titor's claims and The Time Derivative
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