Glynis' posts with tag: timetravel
They have to go and try to spoil everything and declare that time travel is more than likely impossible. "There are a handful of scenarios that theorists have suggested for how one might travel to the past, said Brian Greene, author of the bestseller, The Elegant Universe and a physicist at Columbia University. “And almost all of them, if you look at them closely, brush up right at the edge of physics as we understand it. Most of us think that almost all of them can be ruled out.”" Lest a dream be lost - I think that next to last sentence is the key here: "brush up right at the edge of physics AS WE UNDERSTAND IT." Our minds are so infintesimally small compared to the Universe and the Mighty God who created it. The fact that we can conceptualize a tesseract now, at this time in our feeble mental development, should give us hope in the future of somehow understanding ways to use that concept. Imagination is the key to exploration - as long as we can imagine that there are possibilities too big for our little minds to grasp - and yet reach beyond limitation anyway - we may find that the impossible turns out not to be so impossible after all.  (Einstein was so far ahead of his time with his unified field theory - believing that the two forces he understood at that time, Magnetism and Gravity, were not separate at all but part of a grander underlying principle - that he felt lonely and isolated from his colleagues. And yet, whose concepts does String Theory substantiate decades later? Einstein's, of course). Until them, we can continue to dream, can't we? My favorite time travel books are: The Doomsday Book by Connie Willis, Outlander & Dragonfly in Amber by Dianna Gabaldon (the rest of the books in the series suck), Time's Last Gift by Philip Jose Farmer, Timeline by Michael Crichton, Enchantment by Orson Scott Card (love this because it is also an updated fairy tale), and of course, Mark Twain's A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court. Just for fun: Who wouldn't love to have a "time turner" like Hermione uses in one of the Harry Potter books? Think of everything we could get done by being in two places at the same time! I could lump The Chronicles of Narnia in the list above because the children *are* able to pass into another world where time is traveling at a different rate than it does in our own world. Perhaps via a tesseract? Nah, Aslan doesn't have to explain anything with science - after all He's not a tame lion. As far as books about passing into another world where time is traveling at a different pace than our own: The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant by Stephen R. Donaldson are INCREDIBLE. Six books in the first two chronicles, another one in a third chronicle written and one being published in October. Donaldson's Mordant's Need is also great - two books The Mirror of Her Dreams and A Man Rides Through. The Song of Albion triology by Stephen R. Lawhead is wonderful, I read it again and again and again. Regardless - today is today and it has enough troubles of its own. To quote a great line from Star Trek: TNG
"Seize the time, Meribor. Live now; make now always the most precious time. Now will never come again" -- Picard (The Inner Light) I'm sort of seizing the time, aside from what I've squandered now writing this! Workout for the day: 60 minutes of cardio on the Octane and stationary bike, HR 144 (about 81% max). 25 minutes of core work with the stability ball and an 8 lb medicine ball. That NOVA program on String Theory is fascinating. Here's the opener - the rest (all three hours worth) can be viewed here.
In particular, look for Amos Ori at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa and plant a wet one on his cheek. Back on the 13th of March I wrote in "Drat! Those Darn Physicists! " how a Brian Greene, author of the Elegant Universe, took all the fun out of the one-day hope of time travel. Wincing at the idea of a guy with a pocket-protector harpooning that dream and slaughtering it, I thought, "Oh well... at least there is still Dickens!" and included a list of some of my favorite time travel books.
While I don't have the mind of a scientist, merely that of a dreamer, I had a very hard time accepting he and his cronies were correct. On that day I wrote, "Lest a dream be lost - I think that next to last sentence is the key here: "brush up right at the edge of physics AS WE UNDERSTAND IT." Our minds are so infinitesimally small compared to the Universe and the Mighty God who created it. The fact that we can conceptualize a tesseract now, at this time in our feeble mental development, should give us hope in the future of somehow understanding ways to use that concept. Imagination is the key to exploration - as long as we can imagine that there are possibilities too big for our little minds to grasp - and yet reach beyond limitation anyway - we may find that the impossible turns out not to be so impossible after all."
Apparently some physicists ARE still dreamers... and Amos Ori believes he has found a cosmic loop hole. Our understanding is so very small, but growing all the time. I'm glad that someone "saw" that time travel doesn't necessarily require some exotic matter as an ingredient. According to LiveScience's review of Ori's article for the prestigious Physical Review:
Ori's latest research suggests time machines are possible without exotic matter, eliminating a barrier to time travel. His work begins with a donut-shaped hole enveloped within a sphere of normal matter.
"We're talking about these closed loops of time, and the simplest kind of closed loops are circles, which is why we have this ring-shaped hole," Ori explained. Inside this donut-shaped vacuum, space-time could get bent upon itself using focused gravitational fields to form a closed time-like curve. To go back in time, a traveler would race around inside the donut, going further back into the past with each lap.
"The machine is space-time itself," Ori said. "If we were to create an area with a warp like this in space that would enable time lines to close on themselves, it might enable future generations to return to visit our time." For an interesting little read, check out this article entitled, "A Guide to The Realm Of Temporal Physics" By Alastair Roberts. It's from a site, Fluid Link, that is based on UK's Dr. Who. :) Don't you just love sci-fi?
Albert Einstein said, "Imagination is more important than knowledge..." and in some ways he is right. Imagination stretches us, imagination is what leads to progress and enthuses us to work toward creating that which we have dreamed up.
George Bernard Shaw in his wisdom declared, "Imagination is the beginning of creation. You imagine what you desire, you will what you imagine and at last you create what you will." He also said this, which I particularly like, ""You see things; and you say, "Why?" But I dream things that never were; and I say, "Why not?""
In honor of physicists with imagination... "Star Trek - Time Warp"
And later, I will toast Ori with a glass of non-alcoholic White Zinfandel for not letting dreams die. :)
~o~
Today's workout:
45 minutes HIIT on the Cybex. 45 minutes circuit training. 10 minutes treadmill, 4.0 mph, 8.2% incline.
The Circuit barbell squat 12/100 prone pullup 5 oblique pull 24/90 REPEAT for total of three sets --1 min sprint on Sci-fit, 5.6% incline leg extension 15/100 dumbbell pullover on stability ball 20/35 xertube shoulder press on stability ball, 12/blue tubing REPEAT for total of three sets --1 min sprint on Sci-fit, 5.6% incline side lunge 20/20 scorpion pushups 20/20 burpies 8 static lunge with lat raise 20/20 REPEAT for total of two sets --1 min sprint on Sci-fit, 5.6% incline hanging ab raise 12 reverse crunch w/medicine ball 25/8 weighted stability ball crunch 25/25 reverse plank, hold 30 seconds REPEAT for a total of three sets
 In particular, look for Amos Ori at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa and plant a wet one on his cheek. Back on the 13th of March I wrote in "Drat! Those Darn Physicists! " how a Brian Greene, author of the Elegant Universe, took all the fun out of the one-day hope of time travel. Wincing at the idea of a guy with a pocket-protector harpooning that dream and slaughtering it, I thought, "Oh well... at least there is still Dickens!" and included a list of some of my favorite time travel books.
While I don't have the mind of a scientist, merely that of a dreamer, I had a very hard time accepting he and his cronies were correct. On that day I wrote, "Lest a dream be lost - I think that next to last sentence is the key here: "brush up right at the edge of physics AS WE UNDERSTAND IT." Our minds are so infinitesimally small compared to the Universe and the Mighty God who created it. The fact that we can conceptualize a tesseract now, at this time in our feeble mental development, should give us hope in the future of somehow understanding ways to use that concept. Imagination is the key to exploration - as long as we can imagine that there are possibilities too big for our little minds to grasp - and yet reach beyond limitation anyway - we may find that the impossible turns out not to be so impossible after all."
Apparently some physicists ARE still dreamers... and Amos Ori believes he has found a cosmic loop hole. Our understanding is so very small, but growing all the time. I'm glad that someone "saw" that time travel doesn't necessarily require some exotic matter as an ingredient. According to LiveScience's review of Ori's article for the prestigious Physical Review:
Ori's latest research suggests time machines are possible without exotic matter, eliminating a barrier to time travel. His work begins with a donut-shaped hole enveloped within a sphere of normal matter.
"We're talking about these closed loops of time, and the simplest kind of closed loops are circles, which is why we have this ring-shaped hole," Ori explained. Inside this donut-shaped vacuum, space-time could get bent upon itself using focused gravitational fields to form a closed time-like curve. To go back in time, a traveler would race around inside the donut, going further back into the past with each lap.
"The machine is space-time itself," Ori said. "If we were to create an area with a warp like this in space that would enable time lines to close on themselves, it might enable future generations to return to visit our time." For an interesting little read, check out this article entitled, "A Guide to The Realm Of Temporal Physics" By Alastair Roberts. It's from a site, Fluid Link, that is based on UK's Dr. Who. :) Don't you just love sci-fi?
Albert Einstein said, "Imagination is more important than knowledge..." and in some ways he is right. Imagination stretches us, imagination is what leads to progress and enthuses us to work toward creating that which we have dreamed up.
George Bernard Shaw in his wisdom declared, "Imagination is the beginning of creation. You imagine what you desire, you will what you imagine and at last you create what you will." He also said this, which I particularly like, ""You see things; and you say, "Why?" But I dream things that never were; and I say, "Why not?""
In honor of physicists with imagination... "Star Trek - Time Warp"
And later, I will toast Ori with a glass of non-alcoholic White Zinfandel for not letting dreams die. :)
~o~
Today's workout:
45 minutes HIIT on the Cybex. 45 minutes circuit training. 10 minutes treadmill, 4.0 mph, 8.2% incline.
The Circuit barbell squat 12/100 prone pullup 5 oblique pull 24/90 REPEAT for total of three sets --1 min sprint on Sci-fit, 5.6% incline leg extension 15/100 dumbbell pullover on stability ball 20/35 xertube shoulder press on stability ball, 12/blue tubing REPEAT for total of three sets --1 min sprint on Sci-fit, 5.6% incline side lunge 20/20 scorpion pushups 20/20 burpies 8 static lunge with lat raise 20/20 REPEAT for total of two sets --1 min sprint on Sci-fit, 5.6% incline hanging ab raise 12 reverse crunch w/medicine ball 25/8 weighted stability ball crunch 25/25 reverse plank, hold 30 seconds REPEAT for a total of three sets
 They have to go and try to spoil everything and declare that time travel is more than likely impossible. "There are a handful of scenarios that theorists have suggested for how one might travel to the past, said Brian Greene, author of the bestseller, The Elegant Universe and a physicist at Columbia University. âÂÂAnd almost all of them, if you look at them closely, brush up right at the edge of physics as we understand it. Most of us think that almost all of them can be ruled out.âÂÂ" Lest a dream be lost - I think that next to last sentence is the key here: "brush up right at the edge of physics AS WE UNDERSTAND IT." Our minds are so infintesimally small compared to the Universe and the Mighty God who created it. The fact that we can conceptualize a tesseract now, at this time in our feeble mental development, should give us hope in the future of somehow understanding ways to use that concept. Imagination is the key to exploration - as long as we can imagine that there are possibilities too big for our little minds to grasp - and yet reach beyond limitation anyway - we may find that the impossible turns out not to be so impossible after all.  (Einstein was so far ahead of his time with his unified field theory - believing that the two forces he understood at that time, Magnetism and Gravity, were not separate at all but part of a grander underlying principle - that he felt lonely and isolated from his colleagues. And yet, whose concepts does String Theory substantiate decades later? Einstein's, of course). Until them, we can continue to dream, can't we? My favorite time travel books are: The Doomsday Book by Connie Willis, Outlander & Dragonfly in Amber by Dianna Gabaldon (the rest of the books in the series suck), Time's Last Gift by Philip Jose Farmer, Timeline by Michael Crichton, Enchantment by Orson Scott Card (love this because it is also an updated fairy tale), and of course, Mark Twain's A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court. Just for fun: Who wouldn't love to have a "time turner" like Hermione uses in one of the Harry Potter books? Think of everything we could get done by being in two places at the same time! I could lump The Chronicles of Narnia in the list above because the children *are* able to pass into another world where time is traveling at a different rate than it does in our own world. Perhaps via a tesseract? Nah, Aslan doesn't have to explain anything with science - after all He's not a tame lion. As far as books about passing into another world where time is traveling at a different pace than our own: The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant by Stephen R. Donaldson are INCREDIBLE. Six books in the first two chronicles, another one in a third chronicle written and one being published in October. Donaldson's Mordant's Need is also great - two books The Mirror of Her Dreams and A Man Rides Through. The Song of Albion triology by Stephen R. Lawhead is wonderful, I read it again and again and again. Regardless - today is today and it has enough troubles of its own. To quote a great line from Star Trek: TNG
"Seize the time, Meribor. Live now; make now always the most precious time. Now will never come again" -- Picard (The Inner Light) I'm sort of seizing the time, aside from what I've squandered now writing this! Workout for the day: 60 minutes of cardio on the Octane and stationary bike, HR 144 (about 81% max). 25 minutes of core work with the stability ball and an 8 lb medicine ball. That NOVA program on String Theory is fascinating. Here's the opener - the rest (all three hours worth) can be viewed here.
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