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My studies so far have convinced me of the impossibility of faster than light travel. As well as the impossibility of travel into the past.
My initial response would be to ask what, if any, evidence we have that spacetime events are in any way mutable.
Even in “block universe models where the past persists” there are serious problems involved in trying to access that past, much less changing it if you ever got there.
The idea is that you find a way out of the Spacetime block of this universe and re-enter it at a location further back in "time", but to do that without changing the past, your re-entry into it at that point must have happened the first time round too, and as soon as you have a model that accommodates that, it has to tolerate a circularity of causality that is incompatible with real causality.
And this one you need to expand on " and we would also expect that the CMB radiation would be relatively uniform in temperature. " I guess you consider it following from your first statement?
Zer0, I think you lost me somewhere in your last post. I'm still a bit stuck on the apparent circularity of the definition of a second. Hopefully, someone will come up with a simple explanation.
Zer0, I applaud your imagination. What else can one say?
Do you want to tackle these points seriously? If so, we might need a slightly different approach.
But just to clarify the Rules of the Game,
Eventually the smarty scientifically intellectual froggys that we are, we would have managed to live thrice longer than other dumbo frogs n ended up having ten times more fun compared to them
Quote from: yor_on on 13/10/2017 10:16:19And this one you need to expand on " and we would also expect that the CMB radiation would be relatively uniform in temperature. " I guess you consider it following from your first statement?It does not follow from the first statement, it follows from that fact that the speed of light changes.If, in the past, the speed of light were greater than it is today, then we would expect that two objects (or sections of fluid, or whatever) would be able to influence each other from farther away than is possible in a constant-c universe. If the speed of light were great enough, then that would mean that every part of the universe was interacting with every other part of the universe almost instantaneously. You didn't have to wait 20 minutes for infrared waves to travel 20 light-minutes, it was much quicker. This would mean that at that time, the temperature of the entire universe would approach equilibrium much faster in a slowing-c universe than in a constant-c universe.This would mean that the CMB radiation would be more uniform in temperature in a slowing-c universe than it would be in a constant-c universe.The discussion would change from "why is the CMB so uniform?", to "why is the CMB so ununiform?"
Quote from: cowlinator on 29/10/2017 22:04:49Quote from: yor_on on 13/10/2017 10:16:19And this one you need to expand on " and we would also expect that the CMB radiation would be relatively uniform in temperature. " I guess you consider it following from your first statement?It does not follow from the first statement, it follows from that fact that the speed of light changes.If, in the past, the speed of light were greater than it is today, then we would expect that two objects (or sections of fluid, or whatever) would be able to influence each other from farther away than is possible in a constant-c universe. If the speed of light were great enough, then that would mean that every part of the universe was interacting with every other part of the universe almost instantaneously. You didn't have to wait 20 minutes for infrared waves to travel 20 light-minutes, it was much quicker. This would mean that at that time, the temperature of the entire universe would approach equilibrium much faster in a slowing-c universe than in a constant-c universe.This would mean that the CMB radiation would be more uniform in temperature in a slowing-c universe than it would be in a constant-c universe.The discussion would change from "why is the CMB so uniform?", to "why is the CMB so ununiform?"There are several difficulties with that idea Cowlinator. One main come from how a 'Big Bang' is presumed to act. A inflation without a 'center' is not something that need to relate to the geometry we define, and a 'lightspeed' would not be acting the way one might expect there. There is no problem in letting 'c' be 'c' for it to connect 'nodes'. And the 'nodes' making this universe exist is defined by 'c'. You could just as easily imagine a Big Bang to be what creates the connections allowing us a universe to define. It's very hard discussing a 'small universe' inflating unless one step away from how a 'Big Bang' is thought to act in mainstream physics.