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Time Travel Discussion
The River and Honey Theories
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<blockquote data-quote="Ralan" data-source="post: 9184" data-attributes="member: 35"><p><strong>The River and Honey Theories</strong></p><p></p><p><u><strong>The River Theory</strong></u></p><p></p><p>Time is a river, flowing from the point of creation towards the distant infinity, or destruction, whatever you believe. It moves itself, and drags us along through the course we define by the way we move through it.</p><p></p><p><strong>Time Travel:</strong></p><p></p><p><u>Future:</u> </p><p>Just like in the honey theory, you should be able to jump forwards and land back in the river later on in time (although there could be a pretty big splash, whatever that would mean). So time travel into the future should definately be possible.</p><p></p><p></p><p><u>Past:</u> </p><p>This is the difference with the honey theory. Say you're flowing along with time normally, but you make yourself a stick. This might be a time machine or mental process or whatever. You ram the stick down into the river bed. Suddenly time is flowing past you, blurring around you, so fast that you can't see it, and it can't detect you. You pull the stick out. And you have travelled back in time, back to a previous point in the course of the river. This is possible because of the main difference between the two theories: Of course, you change the course of the river at least slightly by your actions, but this doesn't affect the future, because that future has already carried on down this river through on its own course. You split the river, and take it off down a new path.</p><p></p><p>The final point in the river theory is that, if it is correct, there would be many divisions of the river since its starting point. However, just like you would jump along the course of one, why wouldn't you be able to jump between divisions?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ralan, post: 9184, member: 35"] [b]The River and Honey Theories[/b] [u][b]The River Theory[/b][/u] Time is a river, flowing from the point of creation towards the distant infinity, or destruction, whatever you believe. It moves itself, and drags us along through the course we define by the way we move through it. [b]Time Travel:[/b] [u]Future:[/u] Just like in the honey theory, you should be able to jump forwards and land back in the river later on in time (although there could be a pretty big splash, whatever that would mean). So time travel into the future should definately be possible. [u]Past:[/u] This is the difference with the honey theory. Say you're flowing along with time normally, but you make yourself a stick. This might be a time machine or mental process or whatever. You ram the stick down into the river bed. Suddenly time is flowing past you, blurring around you, so fast that you can't see it, and it can't detect you. You pull the stick out. And you have travelled back in time, back to a previous point in the course of the river. This is possible because of the main difference between the two theories: Of course, you change the course of the river at least slightly by your actions, but this doesn't affect the future, because that future has already carried on down this river through on its own course. You split the river, and take it off down a new path. The final point in the river theory is that, if it is correct, there would be many divisions of the river since its starting point. However, just like you would jump along the course of one, why wouldn't you be able to jump between divisions? [/QUOTE]
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