English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

2006-07-21 11:05:55 · 38 answers · asked by mattheweamer 1 in Social Science Anthropology

38 answers

Yes! I have done it.

The other night I was lying in my bed and it was definatly about 11pm. The next thing I knew it was 8 in the morning and I was late for work....

Now I might have been abducted by aliens, but I don't believe in all that, so my only conclusion is that I travelled 9 hours into the future. What was strange was that my bed hadn't moved an inch throughout the whole ordeal.

2006-07-21 11:13:30 · answer #1 · answered by stickyricky 3 · 3 3

So good dilemma.
As I know there's not a time machine... yet, Einstein theories say that it could be possible if you get into light speed, and he demonstrate it by using a couple of atomic clocks going on airplane travel to opposites directions of the Terra sphere, when these airships meet again in the otherside of the world one of them was just a little so little bit behind in time respect the other one. This because of the rotation movement of the earth, that meant to him a gravity intervention.
He also said that reaching enough speed the material starts to grow in mole so begins to lose speed, the point is that Albert guesses that it is not possible to get enough energy to get the light speed cause this energy becomes in matery. At the same time he tell us that it is possible with some special ambiance, I mean under controlled variants.
Otherwise is that human mind is capable to remind old things even when these memories happened before this mind was alive (unbelievable right?), many persons all over the world have had experiences that overpass the expectations of anyone. There's a movie that shows a small possibility about the auto suggestion. If a mind is able to command "eyes closed" and then imagine you are traveling on distance and make it so real seeing things that exists in reality. So why should we doubt the mind can travel trough the next dimmension? (time)
I recommend to you the next book:
"Caballo de Troya" (Troy's Horse) by J.J. Benítez
This book is not going to answer your deep question but it's going to make you get really involved in the topic and it will take you further of thoughts.
We human are incredible beings for everything we mean.
Perhaps there are things that seem to be far away.
Humans never give up.
So...
Let's dream.

2006-07-21 11:33:32 · answer #2 · answered by Hekman 2 · 0 0

It's theoretically possible to time travel into the future - but as yet, there's no known way of travelling into the past.

2006-07-21 11:11:47 · answer #3 · answered by Hello Dave 6 · 0 0

Although it is a fun idea to think about, no.
We would be crushed going through a worm hole or black hole.
Now if you go fast enough you will slow down time and you can return further into to time than what it seems to you. The only problem with that is it would take a good chucnk of the energy of the universe to get you going that fast. No warp drive.
Sorry to disappoint you.

2006-07-21 11:12:58 · answer #4 · answered by Dennis Fargo 5 · 0 0

What people dont think about is that we do have the possible chance to travel time. Its very logical, when you travel to another country your either putting your clock/watch forward or backward to the countries timezone, surely this IS time travel.

2006-07-21 11:10:22 · answer #5 · answered by lonely as a cloud 6 · 0 0

Yes, theoretically and phenomenologically.

A chronometer travelling on a jet or a rocket around the world will record time different by microseconds than a stationary clock.

So, leave a friend standing at the airport and fly around the world, and when you get back to your friend and compare times, according to your chronometer,you'll be a few micromilliseconds younger than your friend.

Woo-ooo-ooo-ooo....:)

2006-07-21 11:20:03 · answer #6 · answered by Bender 6 · 0 0

Yes, when I travel from east to west by air I pass the time.

2006-07-21 11:12:44 · answer #7 · answered by Henry 4 · 0 0

Yes! It takes me 35 minutes to travel to work by car.

2006-07-21 11:34:57 · answer #8 · answered by chris_mcburney 3 · 0 0

If you assume the multi-verse theory is true, and assuming faster than light travel is possible ( acknowledging the possibility of worm-holes and the straight through theory ), then absolutely.

2006-07-21 11:12:17 · answer #9 · answered by Jennifer G 2 · 0 0

Yes, get in a jet and fly around the world a couple times and you will be a few billionths of a second in the future.

2006-07-21 11:07:59 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers