http://carter-i-am.livejournal.com/ ([identity profile] carter-i-am.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] fandomhigh2008-11-10 07:26 am
Entry tags:

Physics, Monday, Class #10, Period 4

"Afternoon, everyone," Sam greeted the students as they entered, "and please consider this your official reminder that the end of the semester is coming up, and I'll be expecting to see your pumpkin chuckers and to hear about the theory and math behind your design, unless you'd prefer not to have to defend it out loud and choose to write a paper and show me your work that way instead."

"Today, we're going to be discussing time travel. Which, considering a good number of you are from the future, may seem a bit unnecessary. As I've been reminded, however, even if you're looking at this area of physics in an 'isn't that cute,' historical way--which, by the way, I appreciate you keeping that particular sentiment to yourself--it still gives you a point of reference for why it takes the human race so long to get there."

"One of the biggest problems with time travel, of course, is the creation of paradoxes, particularly the ever popular grandfather paradox. But is it really a problem? Several physicists have theorized that time travel through a wormhole," and here she may have smiled a little, "won't lead to a paradox. Another way around the paradox is the discovery that you're not actually traveling within your own universe, but are instead within a parallel timeline, meaning that you're having an effect on someone else's universe, not your own."

"However, if you're ever in an alternate universe with another version of yourself, I can tell you now that entropic cascade failure is a very painful reality. Obviously Fandom is the exception to this rule, as it is to so many others. Anyway, I digress. Stephen Hawking has a theory that the fact that we haven't seen tourists from the future means that Fermi's paradox exists and that time travel hasn't been discovered. However, isn't it just as likely that it's used cautiously? I'd like you to discuss the implications of time travel with each other. Also, would you travel in time, if you could? Why or why not? Do you honestly think it's possible?"
withoutverona: (Default)

Re: During the Lecture

[personal profile] withoutverona 2008-11-10 01:45 pm (UTC)(link)
Romeo listened closely this week. His own experiences in 1899 France had left him especially interested in time travel.

Re: During the Lecture

[identity profile] missed-the-gate.livejournal.com 2008-11-10 02:14 pm (UTC)(link)
John listened to the lecture in a bit of a daze. It wasn't like this would ever apply to anything he'd do.

Re: During the Lecture

[identity profile] sarcasm-guy.livejournal.com 2008-11-10 05:49 pm (UTC)(link)
Sokka listened carefully and took lots of notes. He WAS planning on eventually going to the future of a different universe, after all.

Re: During the Lecture

[identity profile] senor-chado.livejournal.com 2008-11-10 07:21 pm (UTC)(link)
Chad was actually surprised to find that he felt he actually understood this lecture. He supposed that was one of the benefits of living here for as long as he had.

Re: During the Lecture

[identity profile] techno-tosh.livejournal.com 2008-11-10 07:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Tosh listened intently to the lecture and took notes. She knew a little about time travel considering she was from sixteen years in the past.

Re: During the Lecture

[identity profile] ktarian-wildman.livejournal.com 2008-11-10 11:07 pm (UTC)(link)
Naomi listened carefully to the lecture and took down notes.
the_merriest: (thinking hard or hardly thinking)

Re: During the Lecture

[personal profile] the_merriest 2008-11-11 01:39 am (UTC)(link)
Rikku's head hurt. Okay. Trying to think about this logically, instead of arguing the parallels and paradoxes.
carsexual: (Oh f**k me)

Re: During the Lecture

[personal profile] carsexual 2008-11-11 05:18 pm (UTC)(link)
Sam's brain hurt.