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Time Travel Discussion
Stop using the phrase 'time travel'. Use 'movement travel' instead.
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<blockquote data-quote="Harte" data-source="post: 160075" data-attributes="member: 443"><p>"Movement travel" is redundant.</p><p>Because nobody has explained time dilation to you, that doesn't mean it hasn't been explained.</p><p>The gist is, our experience of time depends on the relative velocities (and accelerations) of the observer vas. the observed.</p><p></p><p>In other words, time is relative, fluid, and depends on the circumstances under which it is measured.</p><p></p><p>Your example of time at an event horizon, for example. Time doesn't stop for anyone or anything at an event horizon. Such a person or thing's time stops for us, as the observer, but flows on completely normally to the thing at the event horizon.</p><p></p><p>Harte</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Harte, post: 160075, member: 443"] "Movement travel" is redundant. Because nobody has explained time dilation to you, that doesn't mean it hasn't been explained. The gist is, our experience of time depends on the relative velocities (and accelerations) of the observer vas. the observed. In other words, time is relative, fluid, and depends on the circumstances under which it is measured. Your example of time at an event horizon, for example. Time doesn't stop for anyone or anything at an event horizon. Such a person or thing's time stops for us, as the observer, but flows on completely normally to the thing at the event horizon. Harte [/QUOTE]
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Stop using the phrase 'time travel'. Use 'movement travel' instead.
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