How To Time Travel…Really?

This video is from a theoretical and philosophical examination of time travel possibilities.  Here is an intro on it and the gentleman who narrates the discussion:

After struggling for years Dr. Ronald Mallett has a scientific epiphany. In this episode, Dr. Mallett presents his unique theory of time travel, the limitations involved, and life lessons he’s gleaned.

EPIPHANY is a daily series that invites impassioned thought leaders across all disciplines to reveal the innovative, the improbable, and the unexpected of their worlds.

Does he say anything new or pose a groundbreaking point of view that may effect this area of study going forward?

Let’s find out more on his epiphany in the video on page 2

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10 Comments

  1. Eric Myers said:

    Time is fluid so what he suggests is impossible. Time runs different around higher gravity planets,stars,etc. he’s not taking in account all the m$#%&!@* and gravity that will affect his device. It sounds plausible, but calculations need to be taken it to account. His device would need a sustained power source and would need to be stationary. Problem is the earth rotates around a sun that falls around a galaxy. I think quantum vibrations are the key to time travel. You need to know what the frequency is and how many cycles it has vibrated since the Big Bang. Pretty much impossible with current understanding of physics

  2. Matthew Crowder said:

    All you need is specifically heated water mixed with nitrotrinadium and you get the elements for time travel.

    @[1753403362:2048:David Brown]

  3. Paul Cox said:

    I like to think of space as kinda rubber if you finger out a way to bend it who knows that could happen

  4. Eric Myers said:

    I really don’t know if fluid is s correct term. I would say it’s thicker or slower where gravity is heavier. Like traveling through mol$#%&!@*es. I would $#%&!@*ume time moves faster at a small scale , like deep space there’s not a lot of resistance from gravity. If Einstein says that as you approach the speed of light, your m$#%&!@* increase and time slows. So time and space seem like fluid. There is a resistance. It’s only my hypothesis. But it would seem the boson is the field that gives m$#%&!@* is like fluid, thicker and thinner in different places.

    As for the lasers twisting gravity. I would $#%&!@*ume if he drops a particle through it, it would get pushed out of the tunnel by the gravitational wake of hi m$#%&!@* objects in the area.

  5. Xavier Schultze said:

    Fermi paradox works for time travel too.

    If there’s theoretically infinite futures, and an infinite fraction of them have time travelers, why haven’t we seen any?

    Maybe they’re hiding.

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