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#11 |
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FFR Player
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All of this is, for the most part, just an idea because we wouldnt be able to test it out. However ill pose the question again, why does it matter what would happen? It would not be worth all of this effort to 'fly through space going super fast and look back' only to see earth at an earlier state (assuming it worked) unless you could watch life as it starts and develops. Even getting to this impossible point where we got past the old light to tack on the ability to have a telescope that could see microscopic cells and organisms grow would be too much. Even seeing pangea would give us what, very little information at most? The information that we would be able to learn would be not very usefull especially if you figure that once we get this technology we would have advanced to the point where we could figure it out without such a process anyway. Sorry if it seems like im ranting, but i just realized the pointlessness of it all.
Anyway, 'time travel' in the traditional media sense would suggest being able to do or see something in the past/future we didnt already know. This would then bring the point of if you did/saw something remarkable, would it alter anything or would everything stay the same because it was 'supposed' to happen. The biggest problem i have with time travel in the media sense is that if someone years in the future found out how to achieve something like this and the 'butterfly effect' came into to play then from the moment the technology was discovered until the end of time there would be infinite chances for something to go wrong. The worst of which being a catastrophy that ends the world for which all of us now would see as it unfolds thus making 'our' ability to get this technology unavailable or at the very least useless. |
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