• ThePowerOfGeek
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      3 days ago

      No, it’s the one where you fuck your grandmother because the man you thought was your grandfather was an in-the-closet homosexual. Then you produce your father, who then produces you. But you’ve got to travel 1,000 years into the future and hook up with a hot but socially awkward cyclops mutant before you can do any of that.

  • @Krudler
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    153 days ago

    This is bullshit.

    • Tedesche
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      -83 days ago

      Says the random person on the internet in response to the quantum physics professor who says otherwise.

      • @Krudler
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        63 days ago

        I take it you did not read the article.

        • Tedesche
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          03 days ago

          I did, actually. So, what makes it “bullshit?”

          • @Dasus
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            32 days ago

            Dude.

            First off, it’s purely a hypothetical model. You can plop in negative time to equations and have them make sense, this doesn’t mean that negative time is possible.

            However disregarding that. The abstract of the study:

            We study the internal dynamics of a hypothetical spaceship traveling on a close timelike curve in an axially symmetric Universe. We choose the curve so that the generator of evolution in proper time is the angular momentum. Using Wigner’s theorem, we prove that the energy levels internal to the spaceship must undergo spontaneous discretization. The level separation turns out to be finely tuned so that, after completing a roundtrip of the curve, all systems are back to their initial state. This implies, for example, that the memories of an observer inside the spaceship are necessarily erased by the end of the journey. More in general, if there is an increase in entropy, a Poincaré cycle will eventually reverse it by the end of the loop, forcing entropy to decrease back to its initial value. We show that such decrease in entropy is in agreement with the eigenstate thermalization hypothesis. The non-existence of time-travel paradoxes follows as a rigorous corollary of our analysis.

            So the study the article is based on concludes that time-travel paradoxes are impossible. Thus you can not kill your own grandfather because it’d create a paradox. What they’re saying is that you could be in a CTC (closed time-like curve) where in which time goes back and forth from your grandparents to you and back again, but the time going back would reduced entropy ie reverse things.

            So you couldn’t “go back” because that’d mean your entropy ie your arrow of time, was still pointing forwards and not backwards.

            This isn’t a case of some random Lemming against a professor saying otherwise. It’s Lemmings telling you you’ve bought into pop-science sensationalism.

            The article does actually communicate what I explained there, but really almost hides it with the language, so I’m not surprised your either didn’t read it, missed it, or didn’t internalise it:

            Circling back to a spry young grandfather courting your grandmother the first time, the time loop could make his untimely death reversible; your memory of why you ever wanted to murder him in the first place may be erasable. In other words, all bets are off in a closed loop where quantum physics smoothes out any intrusive entropy.

            Ie nothing here is breaking the Novikov self-consistency principle

      • @eran_morad
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        23 days ago

        You violate causality, you better bring more than some popsci bullshit to the table.

        • Tedesche
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          23 days ago

          And you’re the arbiter of what constitutes “popsci bullshit” rather than the quantum physics professor? Such hubris.

            • Tedesche
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              43 days ago

              In my experience, people with rational reasons for rejecting claims can articulate said reasons, rather than simply calling them bullshit and telling other people to fuck off. I’m not convinced of the article’s claims, but I’m also not convinced you know what you’re talking about either. The difference is that the article admits its claims are speculative and hypothetical, while you’re just slinging insults.

              • @eran_morad
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                3 days ago

                Rejecting causality IS the rational reason. It is you who is irrational. When one scientist brings forth a claim that breaks ALL of physics, with ZERO empirical evidence support such an astounding theory, it is not the ones who doubt that are likely to be wrong.

                • Tedesche
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                  03 days ago

                  It read to me like they provided a reason for denying causality though: that the associative breakdown in entropic state suggests causality can be violated. I don’t have the expertise to evaluate that claim, but if you do, why don’t you just explain to me why it’s wrong? Or is that demanding too much of a random person on the internet?

  • @[email protected]
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    3 days ago

    By reasoning, and through use of quantum statistical mechanics, Gavassino shows the time tourist’s own entropy can’t continue to grow as they ‘go back’, with quantum fuzziness effectively canceling expected disorder to create a parallel entropic timeline that begins and ends at the same points.

    closed time loop diagram

    Entropic arrow of time (gray arrows) flipping between entry and exit points of a closed timelike circuit. (Gavassino, Classical and Quantum Gravity, 2024)

    What would that look like for the contents of the temporally looped spaceship? Processes that we might expect to be linked to entropy would necessarily change, potentially reversing.

    Circling back to a spry young grandfather courting your grandmother the first time, the time loop could make his untimely death reversible; your memory of why you ever wanted to murder him in the first place may be erasable. In other words, all bets are off in a closed loop where quantum physics smoothes out any intrusive entropy

      • @iceonfire1
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        42 days ago

        Translation: following time travel, everything resets to exactly as it was before time travel.

        Not exactly groundbreaking, considering this is assumed by the premise of a closed timeline curve.

    • @HeyThisIsntTheYMCA
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      63 days ago

      I don’t remember murdering my grandfather. Trust me, if you’d known him, it would have been on your bucket list too.

    • @ProjectPatatoe
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      43 days ago

      A quick skim of what you copied makes me think of Steins;Gate lol

  • teft
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    83 days ago

  • @Reality_Suit
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    73 days ago

    I thought there was an understanding of infinite timelines already. You can never change your past. As soon as you do, it is no longer “your” past. It is now another you’s past. That’s why time travel is useless unless it’s not you changing your past.

    • Tedesche
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      53 days ago

      That hasn’t been proven yet. All of this shit is still theoretical. AFAIK, time travel into the past isn’t possible in our current understanding of physics.

    • @QuarterSwede
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      43 days ago

      Or it’s a recording and we can view it but not interact.

  • SnausagesinaBlanket
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    3 days ago

    Smoke a joint of Purple Haze and it’ll do the same thing.

    • @over_clox
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      53 days ago

      Thanks for the reminder, I got some green, yay!