tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3619267610230382993.post8680446376919716149..comments2017-03-26T02:50:24.853-04:00Comments on Nick Marino: Thoughts on Time TravelAnonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16940496855754297188noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3619267610230382993.post-32319401383136767522007-09-13T20:41:00.000-04:002007-09-13T20:41:00.000-04:00I agree that you can't change the present, but i s...I agree that you can't change the present, but i still stand by the fact that you can't change the future. Since the future is always here, and changing the present is impossible, then changing the future is always impossible.<BR/><BR/>in simpler terms -<BR/><BR/>every new second on the clock is the future, and while that second is happening the instant the clock hits it, it turns into the present then the past all in that instant.<BR/><BR/>So we are constantly living in the present and future. I think i stated in my original theory that the past is more accessible than the future, since the distant future is very uncertain and hasn't been written, then it is impossible (in my own opinion) to venture to a point that doesn't exist.<BR/><BR/>None of this i can say with any true feeling though, because we haven't even discovered a fourth dimension. (i.e., finding a parallel line on a graph parallel to the three existing already: the y axis, x axis, & z axis.) So my speculation is that the accepted past, as you put it, wont change the future or the present or the past for that matter, because if we travel to that point as of right now, it would have already happened back then and nothing would be changed. Even if something changed though, I think our minds would switch to the new present and past and the future after that in accepting it as reality the instant it happens. <BR/><BR/>Thus, bringing in another supernatural force, maybe another dimension we have yet to discover on our lives.Derkky =)https://www.blogger.com/profile/12902573965348355447noreply@blogger.com