Past-self advice
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Past-self advice
http://www.smbc-comics.com/index.php?id=4070
Is it me, or is the pink character needlessly assuming we're talking about single-thread time travel, rather than multiple-universes one? She justifies it by saying it follows from "it [being her] giving advice to past [her]", but I don't see how it does.
Is she saying it's pointless to give an alternativeUniverse!self advice because thisUniverse!you won't benefit? Seeing as how she is genetically identical to past her, it has the most basic of benefits- spreading your genes through increased life success.
What am I missing?
Is it me, or is the pink character needlessly assuming we're talking about single-thread time travel, rather than multiple-universes one? She justifies it by saying it follows from "it [being her] giving advice to past [her]", but I don't see how it does.
Is she saying it's pointless to give an alternativeUniverse!self advice because thisUniverse!you won't benefit? Seeing as how she is genetically identical to past her, it has the most basic of benefits- spreading your genes through increased life success.
What am I missing?
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Re: Past-self advice
Alternate universes are parallel ones. Travelling between them doesn't require time travel and there is no indication that time travel can land you in an alternate universe or reality. They are theoretical fictional ideas to begin with.
Multiple universes (or sub-universes) "can" exist and within the same time scale. They are separated by space but the distance in between is expanding at an accelerated rate making it impossible to move between one and another unless you are accelerating at an even faster rate. Note that the distance between galaxies in the same universe expands much slower than the distance between that particular universe and other ones. This is how we group a universe. Also multiple universes don't necessarily resemble each other and there is no guarantee that they are inhabited by living beings.
Multiple universes (or sub-universes) "can" exist and within the same time scale. They are separated by space but the distance in between is expanding at an accelerated rate making it impossible to move between one and another unless you are accelerating at an even faster rate. Note that the distance between galaxies in the same universe expands much slower than the distance between that particular universe and other ones. This is how we group a universe. Also multiple universes don't necessarily resemble each other and there is no guarantee that they are inhabited by living beings.
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Re: Past-self advice
This might actually be irrelevant, since by the time you learn to travel between universes, you're moving at super-relativistic speeds and can time travel (probably. That or die horribly when physics give out.)hussam wrote:Alternate universes are parallel ones.
However that's not what I mean. There are generally 2 interpretations of time travel:
Stable time loop (a.k.a "immutable time-line"): You can travel to the past (and "affect" it) but you can't actually change it, since your present is already the result of you going back in time. This vaguely contradicts causality.
Multiple universes: You can't go to your own past, however you can travel to (or create) a universe identical to yours, but for the fact that you time traveled there. This resolves causality but raises a lot of practical questions (as you pointed out)
While physics-wise the first model is more likely (though itself a distant second to the "time travel is impossible" theory,) both appear equally often in fiction.
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Re: Past-self advice
Causality isn't a problem if you told yourself to tell younger you when they reach your age.
As for my past advice, I wish I had some sort of sports almanac to quote to my younger self...
As for my past advice, I wish I had some sort of sports almanac to quote to my younger self...
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Re: Past-self advice
Causality says that effect must happen after cause (and in fact at least d/c seconds after, where d is distance between where the cause and effect happen, and c is the speed of light) that means that time travel violates it, in any cases that matter.Jigglypuff wrote:Causality isn't a problem if you told yourself to tell younger you when they reach your age.
(If finding out your grandfather was a monster in 2010, leads you to travelling from 2020 to 2000 in order to kill him, that would mean an event in 2010 caused an effect in 2000. That's a contradiction, some would say, so time travel doesn't exist, QED.)
Of course it's possible that causality is only mostly true, unless you're studying a very unusual case. (the same way that Newtonian mechanics are mostly true, unless you want to deal with nano-second-precise measurements, circumluminal speeds, or stellar-scale distances)
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Re: Past-self advice
Another thing I thought of is: A tree fell on me in 2010 and broke my leg thus ruining my basketball career. I invent a time machine in 2020, go back in time, cut down the tree a day in advance. This means my leg never broke and I never had to invent a time machine.a1s wrote:While physics-wise the first model is more likely (though itself a distant second to the "time travel is impossible" theory,) both appear equally often in fiction.
This could be the multithreaded time notion mentioned in the original post.
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Re: Past-self advice
But if you went and then told yourself "By the way, I know he's already dead, but in 2020 you have to travel to 2000 and kill your grandfather", then you've created a new cause for the same effect.a1s wrote:(If finding out your grandfather was a monster in 2010, leads you to travelling from 2020 to 2000 in order to kill him, that would mean an event in 2010 caused an effect in 2000. That's a contradiction, some would say, so time travel doesn't exist, QED.)
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Re: Past-self advice
Well, yes. However it's not your responsibility to fix causality (have you been playing C°ntinuum by any chance?) rather it's supposed to be physically impossible to violate.Jigglypuff wrote:But if you went and then told yourself "By the way, I know he's already dead, but in 2020 you have to travel to 2000 and kill your grandfather", then you've created a new cause for the same effect.a1s wrote:(If finding out your grandfather was a monster in 2010, leads you to travelling from 2020 to 2000 in order to kill him, that would mean an event in 2010 caused an effect in 2000. That's a contradiction, some would say, so time travel doesn't exist, QED.)
The next argument however could be that the root cause of the event wasn't in 2010 when you found out, but in 1990s when he was abusive. Which, obvi, is before 2000.
You have stumbled upon what is known as the grandfather paradox. (Good job, no irony intended, on coming up with it all by yourself)hussam wrote:Another thing I thought of is: A tree fell on me in 2010 and broke my leg thus ruining my basketball career. I invent a time machine in 2020, go back in time, cut down the tree a day in advance. This means my leg never broke and I never had to invent a time machine.a1s wrote:While physics-wise the first model is more likely (though itself a distant second to the "time travel is impossible" theory,) both appear equally often in fiction.
This could be the multithreaded time notion mentioned in the original post.
Re: Past-self advice
Closed timelike curves may be capable of existing in our universe, or not, but I see nothing inherently contradictory with them. The whole point is that they are stable, so they contain no possibility of a contradiction.a1s wrote: Stable time loop (a.k.a "immutable time-line"): You can travel to the past (and "affect" it) but you can't actually change it, since your present is already the result of you going back in time. This vaguely contradicts causality.
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Re: Past-self advice
I didn't say they were exactly contradictory, I don't know enough about general relativity to say one or the other. That being said, from a layman's point of view going back in time (to affect it in any way. Again note how affect⊃change) seems to violate the basic rule of causality which is "stuff happens after the stuff that made it happen happened"Guest wrote:Closed timelike curves may be capable of existing in our universe, or not, but I see nothing inherently contradictory with them. The whole point is that they are stable, so they contain no possibility of a contradiction.a1s wrote: Stable time loop (a.k.a "immutable time-line"): You can travel to the past (and "affect" it) but you can't actually change it, since your present is already the result of you going back in time. This vaguely contradicts causality.
Note that in the above example you killed your grandfather, after he was an abusive asshole (perhaps this was a navigation mistake on your part, or perhaps this is one of those weird Novikovian effects)a1s wrote:Causality says that effect must happen after cause (and in fact at least d/c seconds after, where d is distance between where the cause and effect happen, and c is the speed of light) that means that time travel violates it, in any cases that matter.
(If finding out your grandfather was a monster in 2010, leads you to travelling from 2020 to 2000 in order to kill him, that would mean an event in 2010 caused an effect in 2000. That's a contradiction, some would say, so time travel doesn't exist, QED.)
Edit: Novikov claimed that time travel (in a stable timeline) would be inherently surrounded by improbability, because the things that make the most sense from a personal-narrative point of view (such as killing grandpa before he caused harm, which was the whole point of the trip) are statistically eliminated as impossible due to "causing" a paradox)