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I've always pondered this. Can the fact that when one sleeps be equated to time traveling into the future?

If you were to observe someone in a deep state of sleep, would you not think that at that moment of observing them, they are actually awake at a given time in the future?

What I am saying is that, for the observer, looking at the person who is asleep, their time has already fast-fowarded into the future, while, you as an observer, is traveling through time.

Please ask for more details if I am not making myself clear enough.

2006-08-05 16:42:39 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Other - Science

7 answers

In reality - I think not. It's a question whose answer is dependant upon the observer. For instance, the thousands, perhaps millions of years that pased before I was born and all of the history that took place - these events and time did not exist and passed in "no time" as far as I'm concerned - but certainly not as far as the people who lived in these times and wrote the historic events into history were concerned. At any given night, while I sleep, the other half of the world is awake and productive - not to mention all of the workers on the local night shifts - and I have not awakened into the future during this time - I am merely totally unaware of the events taking place until the time has passed and I'm awake and aware once again. Interesting question, thanks.

2006-08-05 16:59:14 · answer #1 · answered by LeAnne 7 · 1 0

Not really. The passage of time is only different because we are asleep. We are still in the same time stream as everybody else, but when we sleep it just seems that we got to 8 hours later faster, or however long you've slept. We don't travel into the future by sleeping.

2006-08-05 16:49:25 · answer #2 · answered by T.J. 2 · 1 1

I simply drove around the nation from Florida to Arizona with my two cats (four days) and was once puzzling over the equal query. I ended up now not giving them some thing and so they adjusted very rapidly. First they meauewed particularly noisily however I simply omitted them and saved using and so they quit and went to sleep within the cat service.

2016-08-28 12:04:54 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I would never think of someone dreaming as being awake in the future. Dreaming is the brain’s way of sorting through various experiences or aspirations. Dreaming can often take place in past events, or cover physically impossible actions (i.e. imaging yourself to fly). Your hypothesis lacks any credible basis.

2006-08-05 16:51:01 · answer #4 · answered by Eric G 2 · 0 2

uh....wha? me not understand.

2006-08-05 16:50:00 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

thanks for making my head blow up.

2006-08-05 16:48:10 · answer #6 · answered by uigstizz 2 · 1 2

yes!!!!!!!

2006-08-05 16:46:47 · answer #7 · answered by Marysol S 2 · 2 0

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