Time Travel

Because you're misunderstand what they're saying and taking it mean something else. I'm in total agreement with them because I know the math that they're doing, it's your interpretation of what they're saying that I'm disagreeing with. CTCs are a consequence of GR in specific circumstances. None of these circumstances exist.

No, you're disagreeing with them. You're stating that backwards time travel is imposible:

It absolutely violates the law of physics.

NASA don't think so:

Time travel to the past is more difficult. We do not understand the science as well.
http://spaceplace.nasa.gov/review/dr-marc-space/time-travel.html

NASA say backwards time travel is "more difficult" than forward time travel. You say backward time time travel is "impossible". I don't see an agreement there.
 
It's on NASA's site. Are NASA in the habit of posting false information on their kid's section?

They're in the habit of posting vast simplifications and will refrain wherever possible to call something "impossible" yes. In fact I seem to recall that it's part of their guidelines (the not calling something impossible thing) in terms of outreach.
 
They're in the habit of posting vast simplifications and will refrain wherever possible to call something "impossible" yes. In fact I seem to recall that it's part of their guidelines (the not calling something impossible thing) in terms of outreach.
I have a lot of respect for you and your intelligence on these matters, however, there is something that says your views are exactly the same as those that called Gallieo an idiot.
 
I have a lot of respect for you and your intelligence on these matters, however, there is something that says your views are exactly the same as those that called Gallieo an idiot.

This is a pretty simple thing actually. One of the MAJOR issues in astrophysics specifically is how "pop-sci" says things that people want to hear rather than the full reality in context. I know that Jim thinks he's correct and I know why he thinks he's correct. Hell, if I were him I'd think I was correct too.

The problem is that what they're talking about are hypotheses built on top of presumptions and often built on top of thought experiments. Godel solved some field equations in GR on the presumption that all matter rotates, but that is not the Universe that we live within. Others make varying assumptions on string theory, on Minkowski space and the ability to "bend" something called a light cone, or just on the nature of causality itself.

This is all fine but it's not science, it's speculation. Either they're changing other laws or they're presuming things work a certain way that nobody has any evidence that they work that way.

Until people make real studies that prove these assumptions work in the way that they are assumed for these ideas to be true then it remains in the realm of the impossible.
 
This is a pretty simple thing actually. One of the MAJOR issues in astrophysics specifically is how "pop-sci" says things that people want to hear rather than the full reality in context. I know that Jim thinks he's correct and I know why he thinks he's correct. Hell, if I were him I'd think I was correct too.

The problem is that what they're talking about are hypotheses built on top of presumptions and often built on top of thought experiments. Godel solved some field equations in GR on the presumption that all matter rotates, but that is not the Universe that we live within. Others make varying assumptions on string theory, on Minkowski space and the ability to "bend" something called a light cone, or just on the nature of causality itself.

This is all fine but it's not science, it's speculation. Either they're changing other laws or they're presuming things work a certain way that nobody has any evidence that they work that way.

Until people make real studies that prove these assumptions work in the way that they are assumed for these ideas to be true then it remains in the realm of the impossible.
Only an idiot could believe that science requires martyrdom – that may be necessary in religion, but in time a scientific result will establish itself?
 
It cannot be possible.

If it was possible we'd already know because time travelers would be amongst us or there would be 800 billion people at the Sermon on the Mount.

Also, it violates pretty much every known law of physics.

Those cavaets out of the way, yeah why not?

My own little sci fi theory is that little gray aliens are infact evolved humans from the future come back to study us, I'm thinking of writing a fiction book about it.

As for laws of physics, that maybe true based on what we know now, but what we discover in the next 100/1000/million years who knows? We are barely scratching the surface of scientific discovery.
 
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Backwards time travel is theoretically possible by several different methods using general relativity. However, each of these methods has its own peculiar problems that could destroy the time machine before it has a chance to operate


... COULD destroy the time machine...

"Could", not "would".Big difference. So how does that prove your point? Clearly, it doesn't. If backwards time travel "absolutely violates the law of physics" as you claim, they wouldn't use "could".

And you conveniently left out this part of the quote:

Perhaps we can find one time machine among the lot which holds the most promise of taking us to the past.

;)
 
No matter what time we are in, you will always be a ****, that is a scientific fact.

Sadly, it's an undeniable fact. I just logged onto fb and saw a picture of my ginger nephew staring into a rock pool. Luckily I deleted what I wrote before I posted it. "Poseidon hates gingers so much he refuses to allow their reflection to pollute the water"
 

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