MRM
Prince
Psyringe said:I was talking about people, not about scientific models.Although I'm habitually interested in the topic, I wouldn't claim to be able to evaluate current scientific models. I'm just an amateur who likes to raise strange questions.
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I'am not an time travell expert either, but I was involved in a long discussion about this issue in a german scince fiction forum


But in fact some scientist think that time travel is maybe possible, but as eddie_verdde already said only back to the time the time machine was build ( but this would be enough to tell myself the lotto numbers of next weekend

And there is even a quote from Hawkins that this issue should be researched because even if it turns out that time travel is not possible it would be interessting to know why not ( seems as no one can tell you so far for sure ... )
We have even found an construction plan somewhere in the inet - you only need 200 neutron stars lined up to form a giant cylinder and they must rotate around each other at least with half lightspeed

Isn't this model prone to circular reasoning - like "you cannot kill your father, because the model wouldn't allow you to kill your father (so something has to happen to prevent it)"?
Well the model simply says that you have no free will and all you do is predetermined and the result of your action ( including timetravel ) can not be a successful murder of your grandfather ...
Yes, that's an implication of this model. Or, more precisely: You can know *your* past, but traveling back to it may not be possible, since the past state of the universe may have changed radically (though without its consequences ever reaching *your* present, since your present is also traveling along the timeline).
In this case you cannot be sure that you can return to your time ( as you know it )
I'm not sure whether this model *requires* meta-time as a fifth dimension. May well be - you do have a point with your explanation that any movement requires a dimension in which it can take place. I'm unsure however whether the four dimensions we have may not be sufficient to explain the effects I'm describing. For example, you can still describe any event with coordinates in the four space-time dimensions, even in "my" theory. However, with this theory, you can't be sure whether you actually find the event you expect there because the past may have changed.
Perhaps this theory is just a variant of the "parallel universes" theory, with the twist that instead of parallel universes, you still have *one* universe, but with a timeline you cannot be sure of and that may switch between different realities.
Interesting discussion![]()
My guess is in that case that they don't "switch" but maybe just smoothly but permanent move around ...