I was just cleaning out my attic, and found this old time machine, and was wondering which year I should go to. If you could go to any year (or decade) which would it be? And why?
Quote by Loislane
The Elizebethan era (1558–1603) ...the time of William Shakespeare ,Queen Elizabeth....I'd go to her court and just observe the courtiers and her in all their finery or go to the opening of 'Romeo and Juliet' at the Globe theatre or take a barge down the Thames or go to a masked ball...and establish if Queen Elizabeth was really a virgin...
Quote by Blindfolded
I would want to go back to the medieval period so I could be a bounty hunter. Either that or FORWARD in time so I could be an interstellar bounty hunter like Boba Fett lol.
I would never build a time machine with the hopes of actually changing something because that would create a paradox in which that thing would find a way of happening anyway.
I could go into it but peoples heads would explode.
Quote by Lisa
I'm another one who'd go back to medieval times. I see that era with knights and ladies as being romantic, but I'm sure the reality would be some pretty tough living.
Quote by LoislaneQuote by Blindfolded
I would want to go back to the medieval period so I could be a bounty hunter. Either that or FORWARD in time so I could be an interstellar bounty hunter like Boba Fett lol.
I would never build a time machine with the hopes of actually changing something because that would create a paradox in which that thing would find a way of happening anyway.
I could go into it but peoples heads would explode.
whahahahahaha like sci-fi much....no time travel must be done by observing only....I'd like a Tardis so I could fly to other planets and in time and space and shag Dr who(Christopher Eccleston)
Quote by Blindfolded
Okay, seriously you can never ever change anything during time travel.
Think about it. I'll use Wicked's remark about his wife for an example.
Wicked wants to prevent his past self from meeting his ex wife, so he says "Dammit I'm a super awesome engineer/scientist/physicist and surely Time travel can't be that hard. I'll build a time machine and go back and stop myself from going to that party." (All of this said in a hoity toity british accent for some reason.)
So he builds it, goes back and stops himself from going to that party. Mission accomplished right?
Wrong.
He goes out for coffee the next day and meets her, either that or he goes somewhere and meets her because he has to.
In order for his future self to want to build the time machine in order to go back in time and stop his past self from meeting his ex wife he has to meet his ex wife or else there is no motive for his future self to ever conceive the time machine.
God I hope that peoples heads didn't explode. I warned people I did.
Quote by BlindfoldedQuote by Lisa
I'm another one who'd go back to medieval times. I see that era with knights and ladies as being romantic, but I'm sure the reality would be some pretty tough living.
Fear not milady, Chivalry flies on nobel wings,
and I am romances servant.
Quote by DurraschQuote by Blindfolded
Okay, seriously you can never ever change anything during time travel.
Think about it. I'll use Wicked's remark about his wife for an example.
Wicked wants to prevent his past self from meeting his ex wife, so he says "Dammit I'm a super awesome engineer/scientist/physicist and surely Time travel can't be that hard. I'll build a time machine and go back and stop myself from going to that party." (All of this said in a hoity toity british accent for some reason.)
So he builds it, goes back and stops himself from going to that party. Mission accomplished right?
Wrong.
He goes out for coffee the next day and meets her, either that or he goes somewhere and meets her because he has to.
In order for his future self to want to build the time machine in order to go back in time and stop his past self from meeting his ex wife he has to meet his ex wife or else there is no motive for his future self to ever conceive the time machine.
God I hope that peoples heads didn't explode. I warned people I did.
Maybe. That view assumes a sort of fatalist approach, rather than time as a choose-your-own-adventure novel. Another position is that time could play out differently if it happens again. He doesn't meet the bitch. He never builds the time machine because he doesn't need to get away from the bitch. Time take two is completely different from time take one. He doesn't need to stop himself from meeting her again, he already did stop himself from meeting her.
People tend to analogise time as a river that always ends up in the same place. Think, instead, of time as a fishing line. (Warning: Horrible analogy alert.) The line is cast - he meets her. The line is reeled in and recast - he avoids her. The line is NOT going to end up in the same place the second time as it did the first time. No reason to expect that it would. No matter how often you recast that line it will never take the same trajectory.
And I don't even like fishing.
Quote by LisaQuote by BlindfoldedQuote by Lisa
I'm another one who'd go back to medieval times. I see that era with knights and ladies as being romantic, but I'm sure the reality would be some pretty tough living.
Fear not milady, Chivalry flies on nobel wings,
and I am romances servant.
Sir, you are a true gentleman.