I am...........
2007-12-04 17:09:20
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answer #1
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answered by BaBaBooey 3
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Yes. Every living and non-living thing is a traveler in both time and space. But, I believe that we cannot go backward in time.
2007-12-04 17:29:48
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answer #2
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answered by jan28 1
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Of course. I travel through time and space every day. I been everywhere girl!
2007-12-04 17:09:14
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answer #3
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answered by Elle 3
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TO BE WHERE
I'VE BEEN...
Yes. I am a traveler...
In time (Yes) because it takes time to travel. At the very
minimum, it takes time to walk from this room into
that room (say a couple of minutes).
In space (Yes) because when I walk out of the room
that is this space (from here to over there) into
another room (which extends from right here to way
over there) I have moved into a different space.
In the larger sense of the word "space" we are all
travelers in space. We are aboard a large rocky
planet which is hurtling around our star, the Sun, at
a tremendous rate of speed following an eliptical
orbit that averages roughly 93,000,000 Miles in
radius. Our flight around this star takes us 365 1/4
days to accomplish, and then continues on around again
endlessly. I calculated the speed of our flight a while
back and I seem to recall that it was something like
66,000 Miles Per Hour that we are moving at as we
orbit the Sun.
Wow... That is faster than all of the space probes I have
read about. I don't think very many of them went any
faster than 50,000 Miles Per Hour, which is much less
than the 66,000 Miles Per Hour mentioned above.
Visualize the passengers on a great big jet airplane.
When the airplane is traveling at normal speed (say 500
MPH) the passengers may get up and walk about with
freedom. They do not have a sense of moving at a high
rate of speed with their cheeks pulled back and hair
flying in the blistering wind. But, they are moving very fast.
The only time they get any sensation of speed is when the
airplane slows down or speeds up (and gains or looses
altitude - tilting motion). And in a similar fashion, we on
Earth have no sense of moving at 66,000 Miles Per Hour
around the Sun. Weirdest of all is the idea that gravity
holds our atmosphere close to the surface of the Earth, and
the air moves with us at 66,000 Miles Per Hour. Imagine
walking to the grocery store in a wind storm where winds
reached 10,000 Miles Per Hour or something like that...
I don't think many would survive those kinds of winds...makes you think about the way things work in a practical sense.
2007-12-04 17:39:09
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answer #4
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answered by zahbudar 6
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MATTER: The Other Name for Illusion
What is explained in this book is an important truth, which has surprised many and changed their perspectives on life. This truth can be summarized as follows: "All events and objects that we encounter in real life-buildings, people, cities, cars, places-in fact, everything we see, hold, touch, smell, taste and hear-come into existence as visions and feelings in our brains".
We are taught to think that these images and feelings are caused by a solid world outside of our brains, where material things exist. However, in reality we never see real existing materials and we never touch real materials. In other words, every material entity which we believe exists in our lives, is, in fact, only a vision which is created in our brains.
This is not a philosophical speculation. It is an empirical fact that has been proven by modern science. Today, any scientist who is a specialist in medicine, biology, neurology or any other field related to brain research would say, when asked how and where we see the world, that we see the whole world in the vision center located in our brains.
This fact has been scientifically proven in the twentieth century, and although it may seem surprising, it necessarily implies answers to two questions; "If our lives are visions created in our brains, then who is it that creates these visions? And who is it that sees these visions in our brains without having eyes and enjoys them, gets excited and happy?" You will find the answers to these two important questions in this book.
Time is a Perception Too
At this point in the book it has been explained that matter, thought to be an absolute existent, is actually nothing but a perception-an image experienced by every person in his brain. And it has been shown how important this reality has been for the increase of fear and love toward God, the spread of spirituality and good morals and the collapse of materialism.
There is another concept similar to matter that materialists have considered eternal and absolute-time. But like matter, time is also a perception and is not eternal; there is a moment when it was created. This fact, which has now been established by scientific proofs, was revealed in several verses of the Koran.
2007-12-04 17:21:18
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Time is an illusion. It has existed for all eternity. Step back and look at it all at once. Time does not exist. Time is a man made concept to help order our tiny little lives. I see you are paraphrasing "Kashmir" by Led Zeppelin. Awesome song.
2007-12-04 17:09:57
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answer #6
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answered by Joe 5
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Only space.
2007-12-04 17:09:55
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answer #7
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answered by Amirul Ahsan Panna 2
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to be the place I easily have been to take a seat down with elders of the graceful race, this international has seldom considered They talk of days for which they take a seat and wait, all would be printed talk and track from tongues of lilting grace, sounds caress my ear yet no longer a observe I heard ought to I relay, the story replaced into particularly sparkling Ohh
2016-09-30 21:45:32
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answer #8
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answered by ? 4
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When going from one point in space to another it takes time, hence the phrase 'spacetime.'
2007-12-04 17:12:48
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answer #9
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answered by Chug-a-Lug 7
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yes of course I am an epileptic and have experienced Dejas vue (literally I have seen before) which is closer to time travel than most other contributors have experienced
2007-12-04 17:53:26
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answer #10
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answered by Stephen B 3
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yes I've been through wormholes several times. Its fun.
2007-12-05 04:09:09
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answer #11
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answered by FUSE 2
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