The Past Is The Future
What we live in is actually an amalgamation of the past and futrue.
1. We can time-travel, in the sense that we can jump onto different world lines, as in the Multiverse. Closer world lines (dimensions) are similar to ours, as not much has had a chance to change.
The method of this time travel is to use 'closed timelink curves'.
Remember, everything that can happen 'IS HAPPENING' (if we accept 'time' /HAS HAPPENED. The past and future is all happening at once.
2. All fermions (particles that make up matter; e.g. up, down quark) relative to their temporal dimension, 'the observer', can be regarded as termions. At the micro- or macro-scopic level, the termions don't give a damn about 'time' or 'space' thus all events are instantaneously created at once. (Appologies to anyone who is not familiar with the quantum physics!)
3. This would entail that the future is set. Not so. In stark contrast, it is determined by what we do, but what ever we do will be regarded as 'right'. This seems to contradict that everything has happened, thus we cannot change it. But it happpends even before you create it. Even though you are the one who creates that event. You created it in that parallel, higher dimension. Mmmm... confusing?
Travelling to another dimension exact to your own, only five munites in the 'past', you could avoid that car that that knocked you over and broke your leg.
You would have left your own dimension and entered a new one; so alike that it is irrelevant and inconvenient to travel back to the one you have lived in all of your life; the one where you were hit by the car.
You could do this every time you make a mistake in life. Very convenient, no?
Defying time travel by saying "You cant go to the past because it doesn't exist" and "You cant go the future because it hasn't happened" is wrong. Once something has happened it will always exist, as everything exists anyway. But remember that an event that happens in our dimension, it has already happened in a higher, future dimension (refer to 3.).
If anyone has any questions or comments then feel free to e-mail me.
Peter J. Attwood
13:13 GMT, 10 March 1999