TIME TRAVEL
Jules Verne hypothesized,
"Anything
one man can imagine, other men can make real."
and observed no doubt,
"Reality provides
us with facts so romantic that imagination itself could add nothing to them."
and to offer a final quote from this French author, accidental
to our purpose perhaps.
"With time and thought one can do a good job."
Einstein wrote, as a result of his mathematical calculations
that an object whilst not actually doing so, would appear to the naked eye to zigzag very fast on the spot just before it
transported to another time.
I have seen this very phenomenon. A spaceship doing just
that. It was the classic "cigar" type.
Time holes exist on the earth in various places and at
various times where some of the earths energy lines intersect. Amazing things happen as a result - beyond our control
and understanding. A different time will emerge in that place with the physical features associated with that time and none
of the present, unless there has been no noticeable change to the environment in that time.
This to date is anecdotal and not tested in the field by
scientific research.** This may happen provided, we hope, the intentions of the scientific research are good and honourable,
therefore perhaps best not to occur at this particular time in our history!
Now we come, if we accept the possibility at least, of
time travel, to a startling conclusion. There is no past, no future anymore in the sense that we have become accustomed
to understanding it. There is only a continuum similar to the continuum of space and we can traverse it similarly, with the
right technology if we want to. No doubt many may not.
Modern technology is an exponential curve over a say 200
year period say, of development.
Who is to say this 200 year curve and more, much more,
has not arisen, before recorded history, ie. existent records which survived the ravages of man and time?
It is easy to imagine this possibility. Indeed there is
nothing to contradict it and we have physical evidence still surviving of a more advanced technology than our own.
Because of this 200 year exponential development of technology
in our own time we can even hypothesise, indeed we must, that a longer time curve of technological development could easily
have occurred in a past epoch, lost to us through natural and/or man-made catastrophe(s), (there is no need to assume just
one), of worldwide breadth and depth.
Therefore it is not unfeasible or even unreasonable that
a development way beyond our own level of technology has taken place in the past of which we have some surviving glimpses.
The question is: how far did this development go and did
it include time travel?
One might be tempted to suggest that if they developed
to such an advanced level it seems highly unlikely that they would not have had the technology to prevent such man made or
even natural catastrophes.
But is not the record of our own technological development
coincidental also with our own environmental destruction? Yes. So this hypothesis can be dismissed out of hand.
But we may surmise, if I may entertain the possibility,
that their technology allowed them to predict a coming catastrophe.
And this is where time travel, if it exists, may have played
an important part in attempts to counter the destruction. We know that they failed.
What we do not know is
1. the size of the worldwide population which was
destroyed - and the evidence shows that it was worldwide.
2. the lifespan of the individuals
3. to what extent they deployed time travel, if at
all, and for what period of time before the catastrophe(s) occurred.
From the latter we have a very good, hypothetical at least,
explanation for the current rash of flying saucer, ufo sightings and this explanation is NOT at variance with the level of
technology exhibited even by the fleeting remains of a past civilization(s) which still exist, scattered across the globe,
including at the bottom of the sea, much of which we must assume also, remains to be discovered.
**Time travel
may have consequences for the physical body and this could act as the brake on its use which one would expect in an
ordered universe, since
time is a part of the physical universe, though not always
perceived as such.