06-29-2013, 02:48 PM
|
#5
|
The Landlord
Join Date: Jan 2013
Posts: 5,822
Battle Record: 12-10
Rep Power: 10493983
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mael
I visit philosophical/science forums, and this question appears quite often. Many physicists argue that time travel is impossible, mainly because it would violate certain laws of physics. Stephen Hawking said that a lack of visitors from the future was evidence enough that time-travel will never happen. Time-travel would also question the boundaries of ethics and morality; i.e. having people relive their suffering. Mathematically, time-travel is somewhat symmetrically incoherent in an axiomatic set - if your going back in 'x' (time), you'd have to do this in 'x', but that defeats the purpose of going back in 'x', i.e. how can you go back in time, in time? (It suggests there are an infinite subset of "times").
It's not possible, mate. But it's worth the curiosity and speculation.
|
There is alot of people who would argue that tbh
|
|
|