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- From: peters@physics.ubc.ca (Dan Peters)
- Subject: Re: Fossil Paradox (was: Structure of Time)
- Message-ID: <peters.713736435@physics.ubc.ca>
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- Organization: University of British Columbia, Vancouver, B.C., Canada
- References: <1992Aug11.135716.1@tnclus.tele.nokia.fi> <1992Aug11.235257.21903@nosc.mil> <ARI.HUTTUNEN.92Aug13031214@silver-surfer.hut.fi>
- Date: Thu, 13 Aug 1992 20:07:15 GMT
- Lines: 19
-
- Ari.Huttunen@hut.fi (Ari Juhani Huttunen) writes:
-
- >The answer to that problem is simple. A basic law that has not yet been
- >stated is the law of _causality_. You could travel backwards in time but
- >you would end up so far away from 'here' that when you traveled back
- >with the speed of light, it would at best be the present time.
-
- Not good enough. All you're saying is that you cannot jump to a point in
- your past light-cone, while you may be able to jump to a point which is
- "elsewhere" (i.e. spacelike separated from your starting point). But suppose
- you make such a jump *twice*? You start from point A, jump to point B
- (spacelike separated from A), then jump to point C (spacelike separated from
- B) - what's to stop you from landing in the past light-cone of A? Perhaps you
- can get around it by saying your time machine has to "remember" somehow
- where/when you started from, and dictate a bunch of arbitrary-sounding rules,
- but this gets really fishy, fast.
-
- Drin
-
-