OK. So, in other words, you cannot formulate a proof; you just believe it really, really hard. You might want to soften your language, then. I mean, the Axiom of Choice is not provable, either. Almost everyone believes in it, but people don't go around saying that it is not possible for the Axiom of Choice to NOT be true. By claiming that something is not "logically possible," you are implying that your claim has a basis in mathematical logic. Your claim may-- but your following statement makes clear that you are unaware of one.d123456 wrote:Time travel is not possible. Time is something that keeps on going. Time has nothing to do with speed. I know about the tests with planes flying around the world and the clock showing some differences. I just don´t believe in that. Those tests are flawed.Limewater wrote:can you formulate a proof showing that time travel is not logically possible?
The next minute is really the next minute.
Even if the entire galalxy would be frozen for 1 hour that would not mean that time was stopped. it would simply mean that the galaxy was frozen for 1 hour.
No, you are incorrect when you say that traveling backwards or forwards in time would mean that matter or energy would have to disappear. I don't personally have a problem with the idea of breaking the first law of Thermodynamics, but in this case it is unnecessary.Formulating proof against the possibilty of time travel is ludicrous. I know it is not possible.
why is not possible you ask? Simple.
Matter/energy can not dissappear. traveling into or back into the future would mean matter/energie would dissappear. That´s impossible.
I do find it amusing, however, that you spend the first half of your post claiming to not believe in a good chunk of modern Physics, but you then continue to justify your position by appealing to the First Law of Thermodynamics. I have my own personal skepticisms as well, which is why I attempt to add disclaimers such as "according to current theory" and stuff to my direct comments.
But there are a couple of reasons to disagree with you. If you accept that the passage of time is linked to space (or the first derivative of space), then travel through time requires a displacement in space. Time travel becomes a mere spatial displacement of matter. Nothing has to cease to exist.
Alternatively, and the following may be crap, since I'm to the point of extrapolating on my own and I'm pretty rusty on my serious study, one could also view a framework of stationary time travel not violating the first law of thermodynamics. The first law applies to a closed system. It was written under the assumption that our universe is a closed system. A temporal shift does not necessarily mean that matter has been created or destroyed. It just exists at a different time within the closed system. The second law of thermodynamics is regularly "violated" by a local decrease in entropy. This is offset, however, by the increase in entropy (energy expenditure) required to decrease the entropy in that locality. This would be the same thing, but with the first law of thermodynamics and locality in time rather than space.