Yer another time traveling claim

Re: Yet another time traveling claim

>>I did memorize the Powerball numbers for Florida on a specific date in 2010- that will be my gift to you all for your participation in the end.<<

So now you're trying to buy us off, eh? Didn't you say before that you can't predict random outcomes- that if you went back in time over and over again to witness the same coin toss that it would still be a 50/50? Then how can you tell us Powerball numbers from three years from now? And which Powerball jackpot?
 
Re: Yet another time traveling claim

Science abandons string theory when they realize it's nothing but numbers on paper- that it's nothing more than a sufficiently elaborate math formula that's equal because it's large enough to be equal but has no practical application apart from a good reason to learn Latin- it's junk math.

If that's the case, why did you post your equation (C=mE^2) in the first place? That was you, wasn't it, and not some other Titorian - correct? And wasn't ait also you who admitted to having only a very basic high school understanding of arithmatic (no algebra, geometry, trig, calc, etc.)...but you somehow conclude "junk math"?


It's time to bring out the good old...


John Baez Crackpot Index (Dr. John Baez, PhD, U.C. Riverside)

A simple method for rating potentially revolutionary contributions to physics:

1. A -5 point starting credit.

2. 1 point for every statement that is widely agreed on to be false.

3. 2 points for every statement that is clearly vacuous.

4. 3 points for every statement that is logically inconsistent.

5. 5 points for each such statement that is adhered to despite careful correction.

6. 5 points for using a thought experiment that contradicts the results of a widely accepted real experiment.

7. 5 points for each word in all capital letters (except for those with defective keyboards).

8. 5 points for each mention of "Einstien", "Hawkins" or "Feynmann".

9. 10 points for each claim that quantum mechanics is fundamentally misguided (without good evidence).

10. 10 points for pointing out that you have gone to school, as if this were evidence of sanity.

11. 10 points for beginning the description of your theory by saying how long you have been working on it.

12. 10 points for mailing your theory to someone you don't know personally and asking them not to tell anyone else about it, for fear that your ideas will be stolen.

13. 10 points for offering prize money to anyone who proves and/or finds any flaws in your theory.

14. 10 points for each new term you invent and use without properly defining it.

15. 10 points for each statement along the lines of "I'm not good at math, but my theory is conceptually right, so all I need is for someone to express it in terms of equations".

16. 10 points for arguing that a current well-established theory is "only a theory", as if this were somehow a point against it.

17. 10 points for arguing that while a current well-established theory predicts phenomena correctly, it doesn't explain "why" they occur, or fails to provide a "mechanism".

18. 10 points for each favorable comparison of yourself to Einstein, or claim that special or general relativity are fundamentally misguided (without good evidence).

19. 10 points for claiming that your work is on the cutting edge of a "paradigm shift".

20. 20 points for emailing me and complaining about the crackpot index. (E.g., saying that it "suppresses original thinkers" or saying that I misspelled "Einstein" in item 8.)

21. 20 points for suggesting that you deserve a Nobel prize.

22. 20 points for each favorable comparison of yourself to Newton or claim that classical mechanics is fundamentally misguided (without good evidence).

23. 20 points for every use of science fiction works or myths as if they were fact.

24. 20 points for defending yourself by bringing up (real or imagined) ridicule accorded to your past theories.

25. 20 points for naming something after yourself. (E.g., talking about the "The Evans Field Equation" when your name happens to be Evans.)

26. 20 points for talking about how great your theory is, but never actually explaining it.

27. 20 points for each use of the phrase "hidebound reactionary".

28. 20 points for each use of the phrase "self-appointed defender of the orthodoxy".

29. 30 points for suggesting that a famous figure secretly disbelieved in a theory which he or she publicly supported. (E.g., that Feynman was a closet opponent of special relativity, as deduced by reading between the lines in his freshman physics textbooks.)

30. 30 points for suggesting that Einstein, in his later years, was groping his way towards the ideas you now advocate.

31. 30 points for claiming that your theories were developed by an extraterrestrial civilization (without good evidence).

32. 30 points for allusions to a delay in your work while you spent time in an asylum, or references to the psychiatrist who tried to talk you out of your theory.

33. 40 points for comparing those who argue against your ideas to Nazis, stormtroopers, or brownshirts.

34. 40 points for claiming that the "scientific establishment" is engaged in a "conspiracy" to prevent your work from gaining its well-deserved fame, or suchlike.

35. 40 points for comparing yourself to Galileo, suggesting that a modern-day Inquisition is hard at work on your case, and so on.

36. 40 points for claiming that when your theory is finally appreciated, present-day science will be seen for the sham it truly is. (30 more points for fantasizing about show trials in which scientists who mocked your theories will be forced to recant.)

37. 50 points for claiming you have a revolutionary theory but giving no concrete testable predictions.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
© 1998 John Baez
[email protected]
 
Re: Yet another time traveling claim

Titorian Wrote:
"Weirder still, a quantum particle's quirkiest talent may be its ability to be intimately linked, or entangled, with another. Even when two entangled particles are far apart, a change to one always affects the other."

hmmm... that`s the way that explain when you are shifted from one alternative reality to the next...back and forth, again and again...but i prefer the Scalar aproach...

quote from:
http://cheniere.org/time/index.html

"There can be some things which are physically effective which are not physical. I can give you an illustration, a very recondite one, but there is the zero-point energy of the vacuum. The vacuum is defined in quantum physics as space devoid of radiation or matter -- no energy, no matter. Yet there is an inherent energy in there which can be measured -- this is one of the great triumphs of modern physics -- and that is physically effective."

--
Regards

5,6. The Moral Law causes the people to be in complete
accord with their ruler, so that they will follow him
regardless of their lives, undismayed by any danger.
SUN TZU ON THE ART OF WAR
 
Hello. I'm not saying that I believe you, but could you give me an account of what happens with the situation in North Korea? Seeing as how you gave us a Japanese name earlier, I would also like to know how Japan and South Korea are doing in your time. Are there any names, or at least initials, of famous East Asian people that you can remember? Thanks.
 
Re: Yet another time traveling claim

To anonymous:

Here are some links of us talking about it.

This one is the most detailed probably.
http://communities.anomalies.net/forum/ubbthreads.php/ubb/showflat/Number/28841/page/2#Post28841


http://communities.anomalies.net/forum/ubbthreads.php/ubb/showflat/Number/16076/page/67#Post16076


http://communities.anomalies.net/forum/ubbthreads.php/ubb/showflat/Number/12583/page/130/fpart/1


I know the guy making the movie wanted to know and I sent him these links as well.
Its just too much for me to go over all that again. It was just very bizzare at the time.
 
Re: Yet another time traveling claim

Titorian,

What about the ripple effect?
Each time you interact with us you are causing little changes that could equal up to really big changes ...eventually.
For example.. perhaps I will log on and ask a few question before I go to the store.
Even a small thing like this can ripple out to a billion different changes and interactions.
Not just with me but with everyone I come into contact with or anything I have interacted with
after that. A slight delay to going to the store means different traffic patterns, different clerk waiting on you. different people in your way, different conversations heard or not heard.
Even my parking space. Perhaps I got a closer parking space and took someone elses who then had to walk further and remembered or forgotten something he was suppose to buy because of it.
Or perhaps it was a couple who suddenly started fighting and ended up not having sex that night which caused someone not to be born or be born into this world?
It may sound extreme but no one person is an island what we do every day effects everyone else.
Thats why it makes no sense for me to see you post that you will only say certain things or do certain things. You cannot possibly know the outcomes of possibilities or probabilities of every
single ripple. It may be good ..may be bad. who knows. If you are going to interact then we may as well have a good time with it! /ttiforum/images/graemlins/smile.gif

I have a question that is kind of funny...Does Darby play a physicsist in these Titor movies or something? LOL

You better darn well hope your right when you say nothing happens to us when you pop out of existance.
Because I am NOT about to go through that "altervue" situation again. Once was enough.
If that happens I will find your younger self and kick his butt all the way out of this time! /ttiforum/images/graemlins/smile.gif

Can you go into further detail about CERN's discovery. What do you mean by "extra" energy
when the machine is turned on? I want to know more about that and you didnt really go into it that well.

You talk about entanglement. That particles can be far apart and still interact. Why does this not happen to you now with your other self? Why would "distance" away from him matter at all??

Thats it for now...have to go to the store and ripple a few new waves out. /ttiforum/images/graemlins/smile.gif
 
Re: Yet another time traveling claim

Hey Pam, ok now I see what you mean. This is very intriguing. I too have had experiences like this over the years! I never conversed with John Titor, I didn't even find out about the JT story until 2003. Funny thing is, I had a week of alter-vu/deja-vu experiences back in december of 2000. I remember it well because it was really strange, I averaged 2-3 experiences/day for like a week, it was very weird. I've always had deja-vu's fairly consistently through out my life on several occasions. I had a huge one back in 1998 that I'll never forget due to the extremely bizzare circumstances! WOW, I thought I was the only one!
 
Re: Yet another time traveling claim

I have a question although you havent answered my original ones but no worries, I understand you are fairly busy /ttiforum/images/graemlins/smile.gif. First of all I find you really reliable and trustworthy, but we will see how this continues.

Anyways, is your future better than ours? In two ways: techonlogy and spiritualism?

Like are there less deaths, less fear, less wars? Is the economy better? Less poor people? Etc.

Any technological gadgets you could talk about? Are all the cellphones like the "iphone" or maybe even better?

I wish you luck in your journey, hopefully you will fix it.

Cheers,
Jose
 
Re: Yet another time traveling claim

You absolutely make no sense.

A) You cannot solve the problem of atomic displacement in your nonsense. Did your atoms temporally move? That would mean that this point in time in the universe has more matter and energy than a future point in time in the universe. This is impossible, and means that matter and energy have indeed been created and destroyed in linear time, which defies Einsteinian physics.

B) The "great granddaddy" of time travel shows would have to be Doctor Who, which started in 1963. It's not like Time Travel was popularized by John Titor - H.G. Welles was writing time travel fiction in the 1890s. John Titor the entertainer and story teller was no pioneer. Star Trek also is quite famous even into the 2030s for its fanciful depictions of time travel. A brief look at the internet reveals "Time Cops" - a television show about police who manage time crimes, similar to some obscure show called "Seven Days" about a time ship that can travel exactly seven days into the past. Isaac Asimov wrote a series of novels called The Norby Series about a robot who can travel through time and space with his human owner and dragon friends. Probably the oldest story of time travel would be Karl Katz by the Brothers Grimm - later the inspiration for Rip Van Winkle. So don't go trying to claim Titor popularized the notion of moving in time.
 
Re: Yet another time traveling claim

In response to: So don't go trying to claim Titor popularized the notion of moving in time.



I told you! Most of these people think that. The whole thing was a scam. The movie that I'm sure most of these guys have is the result of it. And if you come here saying your from the future and talk nothing like John, you get attacked!
 
Re: Yet another time traveling claim

Jimmy Earth,

That would mean that this point in time in the universe has more matter and energy than a future point in time in the universe. This is impossible, and means that matter and energy have indeed been created and destroyed in linear time, which defies Einsteinian physics.

You have to be a bit more circumspect with this assertion. In general relativity energy-momentum is locally conserved because on a small scale spacetime is flat (though "local" in these terms is rather huge by human standards). But on much larger scales - across many millions of cubic light years - spacetime curvature becomes apparent...and the question of energy-momentum conservation gets a bit more ambiguous.

Going the other direction, into the quantum realm of scales, the same applies to sufficiently short periods of time. Vacuum solutions for the zero-point energy fluctuations tells us that virtual parrticle-antiparticle pairs are continuously created - which explains Hawking radiation where the virtual particles can become real. In the end conservation is satisfied but only when given sufficient time. But for those infinitesimals of time (d/dt) conservation is "violated".
 
Re: Yet another time traveling claim

Stephen Hawking was a genius, but like many geniuses could be wrong. Galileo thought objects fell to the ground because they WANTED to. And the "virtual" particles you spout on about are going to be defunct by 2016 thanks to William Harms, who will publish the single greatest book ever to hit the scientific world, completely changing the nature of the scientific method. The fact is that "The Universe Is Absolute" - name of the book, and utter fact. I really don't know enough of the philosophy of science to explain it extremely well to you but... well, I suppose you can always email Bill.

http://www.billharms.com

Very interesting man, highly intelligent. Won't start formulating his major ideas until he starts reading some of the works of Carlson Fleck, Amanda Harret, and Tsun Takeshi - which won't be published until 2011. But still, the current Bill Harms is an amazing man.
 
Re: Yet another time traveling claim

Jimmy Earth,

Stephen Hawking was a genius, but like many geniuses could be wrong.

I think that you misunderstood the post. There is plenty of experimental evidence to support vacuum fluctuation virtual pair creation. Hawking Radiation only comes into play when the pairs happen to be created at the limb of an event horizon. That latter idea is theoretical. The former isn't.

In any case, the real point was that absolute energy conservaton can be violated given the proper scales of space and time.

BTW: Your real geniuses on this particular subject were Dirac and Feynman (who had decidedly different ideas about antiparticles). Feynman's theory ultimately prevailed but Dirac made the original theoretical discovery of antiparticles.
 
Re: Yet another time traveling claim

Ok, Time Traveler Jimmy, the Fearsome Stephen Hawking, when visited CERN:

http://info.web.cern.ch/Press/PressReleases/Releases2006/PR13.06E.html

Prof. Hawking’s visit reinforces the exciting anticipation of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), due to start up in 2007, and the importance of CERN as a central meeting place for the best minds in physics.

His lectures are available at the following web links:

‘Exceptional CERN Colloquium - The Origin of the Universe’ (for a general audience)

http://agenda.cern.ch/fullAgenda.php?ida=a063382

# ‘The Semi-Classical birth of the Universe’ (for a specialist audience)

http://agenda.cern.ch/fullAgenda.php?ida=a063459

and Please Jimmy, tell Us:

Why you are confined to the past?

Are you too dangerous to 2030 reality, Alien Agenda¿?

http://www.timetravelinstitute.com/ttiforum/showflat.php?Cat=&Board=ttclaims&Number=45455&page=0&view=collapsed&sb=5&o=&fpart=1

There is any hope?

a video of yours Friends or Foes?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n6xM6EbgEGQ

and the Hives performance
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tu4XawBelwg

Please Enlight Us!!! LOL
--
Regards

5,6. The Moral Law causes the people to be in complete
accord with their ruler, so that they will follow him
regardless of their lives, undismayed by any danger.
SUN TZU ON THE ART OF WAR
 
Re: Yet another time traveling claim

Hi Jim, are you a time traveller as well? If so, I'de be interested to know what your answers to my questions are! I posted some questions to Titorian earlier, but feel free to answer them as well if you want to. I find all this stuff very interesting. Thanks.
 
Re: Yet another time traveling claim

I have no idea what your point is about CERN and Stephen Hawking.

I am confined to the past because the Lu'Pan sent me back in time without any capacity for time travel. No gravimetric bomb, no chronoton cannon, and most importantly no ship. I'm not exactly complaining, what do I have to worry about? This is now my future, even if it was once my past. I've got a place of my own, a good paying job, I'm planning on going back to school, and I've even got a prospective girlfriend. So whatever, I don't care about getting back to "my" time.

I'm not PART of an Alien Agenda if that's what you mean. I could probably take down a real Alien Agenda if that's what you're asking, but I don't see any real aliens around.

Is there hope? Yeah, sure.

No, that's just a glowing orange ball. The Yoorach and Hij'kule are the only aliens in the region who would possibly visit Earth. The Yoorach shields would glow pink in atmosphere, not orange. And you'd KNOW if you saw a Hij'kule ship in atmosphere. They have matter-energy transporters, so they would just sit in orbit and transport its men down. If their landing ship entered atmosphere, everyone would panic. But their interstellar ships can cloak, so no human technology would pick them up. That glowing ball is probably a jet or something. I dunno.

And as for that Hives performance, I've seen that video, I had it on my player in 2024. But Pelle Almqvist still had brown hair, and Nicholas Arson had longer hair. Same video, different hair. I swear that's the only difference. Weird.
 
Re: Yet another time traveling claim

could you please state in as much detail as possible the mechanics of/and way your time machine works to the best of your knowledge?
There are no "time machines" where you press a dial and magically appear. You need to fire a chronoton beam at a gravimetric field. This causes an explosion, which opens a hole in time and space, a portal to the Time Vortex. You have to fly a ship into the Time Vortex, and you have to know where you're going because once you're in the vortex, you'll keep moving in the direction you were headed in. You also have to know where you're going to stop so you can launch a gravimetric bomb and fire your chronoton beam at it to cause another explosion, and exit through the wound. Whenever you do this, it causes a wound in time and space, but the universe can heal itself. However this massive scarring in areas of time that have already been traveled to will mean it's harder for other travelers to get there, and too much travel at all will cause massive temporal damage. Time travel is not for leisure, it's for war. See my original post: http://www.timetravelinstitute.com/ttiforum/showflat.php?Cat=&Board=ttclaims&Number=45455&page=0&view=collapsed&sb=5&o=&fpart=all&vc=1


Also, what is the state of cryonics (human cryopreservation) in the 2040's? Has anyone been revived yet? Is Alcor and/or the Cryonics Institute still in existence? What if any advances in the science of cryonics, such as vitrification or cellular cryoprotectants, can you tell me? Any information on suspended animation (not as it pertains to space travel but instead cryonics)?

Human preservation through reduction in temperature was nothing more than amateurish and silly. The damage done by deep freezing human tissue is never going to be reparable. In 2026 it was the big news story that three generations after someone had been frozen, the families of people in cryostasis simply refused to pay anymore. Anti-cryonics activist Luke Wahlberg called the cryonics facilities a big scam, saying they were extorting money from hard working families when they showed almost no effort to find a way to cure them. When the companies contended that they were non-profit, and they were only providing the service to preserve them and not to cure any diseases, Wahlberg and his followers uncovered evidence that heads of the corporation were embezzling money by living outside of their means. They also contended in a legal court that it was their legal responsibility to invest money in cures if they were going to continue to damage the deceased tissue through freezing. The court ordered the companies to pay back all the money they had ever charged due to false pretense, and that sent the companies into bankruptcy, and the company heads into poverty. By 2030 Enron and Alcor are synonymous with economic fraud.

What of nanotechnology/molecular biology/cryobiology, how far have these sciences come by your time (the 2040's)?

I actually grew up in the 2020s and left in 2030. Nanotechnology? Well the Michael Crichton novel "Prey" is still fantasy. No one has little robots swimming around in their bloodstream, but during surgery they do have these little robots about the size of aphids to keep a wound sterile. They also have slightly larger ones used for exploratory surgery. I watched a story about it on the news.
 
Re: Yet another time traveling claim

What you said about the aliens isn't exactly right but could be right. What you all call aliens are many and yet the same things. For example the greys as you call them are nothing more then clones or robots. They are very real. The Nordic type aliens as you call them are Star People or some of you may call them fallen angles. Some of them are from Andromeda and some are from Orion. The human race has been, and always shall be watched. The bases on the dark side of the moon is proof of this. The lights in Arkansas flying through the air were real. They were not A-10's, but a type of probe that they use to explore certain area's. All of the info will come out about the Aliens in the 2040's. This year will be the year of a big UFO event. The Air Force that stated they had A-10's flying that night, had to do so because the story was getting too big. The event I spoke of will be a very big UFO event this year 2007!
 
Re: Yet another time traveling claim

I was happily enjoying "Jimmy Eat World's" tale of adventure and intrigue. Quaint and well-informed, to say the least. That's entertainment. But when this post from watcher hit, I laughed until I puked.

"What you said about the aliens isn't exactly right but could be right. What you all call aliens are many and yet the same things."

Wow. Thanks for going on record on that score. Now I know exactly where you stand on these things. /ttiforum/images/graemlins/confused.gif

"The lights in Arkansas flying through the air were real. "

Well, I am also sure they were real... lights that is. But you've added nothing new to their reality by telling us this, right? And your posts read an awful lot like Qronos16, the mathematically challenged. You "predict" but you give no details. That is about as deep into yawnsville as I care to go.
 
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