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Tag: randomosity

Philosophical Ramblings on the Subject of Time Travel

Time travel. It messes with my brain, but I love it.

What happens when you go back in time and change an event? Do the memories of the people in the present suddenly change to reflect the new past? Or were their memories always of that ‘new past’ because in effect, the old version of the past never happened? Except it did, because you obviously went back to it and changed it.



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And when you change the past–in a big or small way–that change has a ripple effect. So when you return to the present, it could very well be vastly different than it was when you left it. But would you even remember how it used to be? It never was that way, after all. And yet it was, because present-you travelled back in time, did something, and that something rippled forward to the present and made it something else.

If that wasn’t enough to contort the brain, try this:

One slight change in the past could mean the deaths of thousands–if not millions–of people. Because maybe you got in the way of Mr. A and Miss B meeting each other, and so they never got married, never had children, and a whole string of people were never even born. So you could come back to the present and find out that your best friend just never existed, because she was a descendant of A and B who never met. (Or, you know, what if you ended up killing your own ancestors before their children were conceived? Have you erased your own self?! And if you don’t exist, you couldn’t have gone back in time to kill anyone. This is apparently called the “grandfather paradox.”)

Then again, since Mr. A never met Miss B, maybe he meets Miss X instead, and they marry and have children . . . and so you come back to the present and discover a whole whackload of brand new people who were never there before.

Or what about all those time travel stories where characters want to prevent the disasters of the past? Stop the Holocaust or keep the Titanic from sinking? That’s all well and good, very commendable, I say. Except what if, by diverting one disaster, you give rise to a new disaster that’s just as bad? Or worse? What if one of the Titanic’s passengers you rescued turns out to be a murderous psychopath who goes on to decimate a whole city?

(And then of course you have multiple cases of generations not existing anymore. And all of the Titanic’s descendants living.)

Forget people living and dying, though. What if you go tell Thomas Edison how to make a lightbulb before he’s even tried it five times? Then maybe he turns his attention to other inventions, and winds up giving the world something that wasn’t supposed to exist for another couple of decades. What then? With one lightbulb, you just accelerated the world’s technology. Of course, if you want to be malicious, you could also go do something like keep Galileo from discovering that the earth revolves around the sun. And then where would we be? Or maybe you decide to impart some other knowledge to the people of history, like the importance of hygiene? (I think the world would be a much fuller place now. A lot less people would have died.)

Okay, so what if you decide it’s too messy to deal with the past, and instead you travel to the future? (ACK, MY POOR BRAIN.) Let’s say you jump twenty years ahead to see where you’ll be. You see yourself living in Metropolis (hello, Superman), working a Nice Job, married to a Great Person, etc. You also happen to notice that you’re suffering the after-effects of an Old Hamburger the future-you ate a week ago.

So you return to the present and go on with life as usual. But when you meet Great Person, you already know you’re going to marry them. What if that blinds you to that other Even Better Person in your life? And when it comes time to move, you pack up and head right to Metropolis, because that’s where you’re supposed to be. But is it really? And then you’re offered a Nice Job, but what you don’t know is that if you wait another week, someone’s going to offer you a Stellar Job.

And thus what you saw in the future becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. It could’ve been different. It could’ve been better. It could’ve been worse. (Or could it? Is that future you saw inevitable? Or just one of millions of possible outcomes?)

Of course, because you know your future, you’re smart enough to avoid that Old Hamburger twenty years from now, so you don’t get sick. But you also don’t take that sick-day and read that life-changing blog post whilst sprawled on the couch.

And how about the bigger picture? When you go to the future, you see their technology, their government, the future of the world. You see how they solved world hunger, or how sexism warped the opposite way and now men are discriminated against instead of women, or how football evolved into a Roman coliseum type of thing!

Knowing all this, you could fix world hunger right now.

Knowing all this, you could try to eradicate sexism entirely and help the world respect and value both genders.

Knowing all this, you could ban football.

But then that future changes. Good things happens sooner, but new problems also arise.

All this to say: aren’t you glad we can’t actually mess with time? And, more importantly, this mind-bending topic makes me realize that we all make a difference. The smallest things go on to change the world.

What say you? Do you like time travel in fiction/movies? Does it hurt your brain? If you could witness–but not actually be in–a certain historical event, what would it be? (Because obviously inserting yourself into that situation could be very bad, so we’ll just stick to watching it from a nebulous room outside of time. That’s totally a thing.)

Wikipedia has an article on time travel that talks about things I didn’t even think of, like tourism in time.

miscellany

There are a handful of knick-knacks I wanted to share with you that are too small to merit an entire post, and too random to be grafted into any other topic. So I’ve cobbled them together and now dump it on the table for your perusal.

Blog updates

I’ve been meaning to pretty up this little corner of the internet for a couple months now. Nothing massive, no huge overhaul. Just a few little odds and ends to make this place a bit more solid and a bit nicer to look at. I can’t say when I’ll get around to it (one thing in particular is a proper about me page, and a proper about me page needs a proper photo . . . so I’m waiting for an opportune time to snag the skills of a photographer friend), but it is coming. Just so you know.

Canadian winter

Some of you who read my Christmas tag mentioned snow (and how you hadn’t had any for five years or were jealous of the bit you could see through my window), and Emily in particular wanted to see what a Canadian winter looks like. So while this season still has us wrapped in its icy clutches, I thought I’d show you my backyard.

I accidentally left my flash on and look! I captured snowflakes!

Randomness (because I am acutely feeling the leanness of this post and want to throw some stuff at you)

-A few months ago, an online friend introduced me to a YouTube channel called Studio C, and now I am addicted. They have tons of clean comedy sketches, like this one. (Watch it, and there is no going back. If you spend an hour of your time clicking on video after video and laughing maniacally at your screen, I refuse to apologize.)

-This week, I suddenly remembered the movie Mr. Magorium’s Wonder Emporium, and now very badly want to watch it again.

-I am in the midst of reading an atrocious book. I can’t reach the final page fast enough. More later, in this month’s Subplots and Storylines.

-My brother is reading Hamlet for school, which led to him reading quotable lines to me, which led to us looking up Shakespeare quotes online, which led to a weird desire to pick up a Shakespeare play and . . . actually read it?

Posts I’m loving lately

There have been so many wonderful blog posts recently, so I’m spreading the love.

  • What if? – Annie lists some thought-provoking questions daring to ask, “What would life look like if I was brave?”
  • 7 Reasons Why Every Aspiring Writer Should Work in a Bookstore – Cassia makes me intrigued (and maybe jealous) about the valuable experience of working in a bookstore. I would love a job like that.
  • One Day at a Time – Sarah offers a great perspective on worrying less while still reaching for your goals.
  • //coffee and connections – Mirriam presents the staggeringly simple power of just connecting with people.
  • Dear You – Christine basically wrote a hug personified in her post reminding us of our beauty and worth.
  • Writing vs. Editing: The Different Mindsets – Tori compares the drafting to the gruelling process of editing, and explains how one must take a different approach to the different stages of writing.
  • The Nature of Goodness – Mary just started a blog! Eeep! In this post she writes about the goodness of God . . . how needed, and how very great, it is.

Stay tuned . . .

Because of today’s brevity, I aim to join a link-up this week, a rather new one that looks like scrumptious fun. (Figuratively scrumptious, I mean. Nothing to do with food. Everything to do with Words and Story, but some of us devour those very much the way we scarf down strawberry cheesecake, am I right?)

P.S. I apologize for the lateness-in-the-day of this post. I meant to have it up by mid-afternoon, and then my shift got extended. At least it’s still Saturday! Or it is in my part of the world, anyway.