I've been thinking about Dr. Downing...do you remember if you asked him if he knew your father (or any of his compatriots? Perhaps Paul never followed up because he did not consider that part of HIS story,
Pilgrim, sequels will be mandatory!
rose
Re: The Spiritual Implications of Time Travel, Etc.
Postby Trickfox on Wed Dec 10, 2008 9:17 am
"IF" you can time travel then
A- It is impossible to change events because they have already happened and you cant unmake an event
I believe this point of view is purely SUBJECTIVE.....
Objectively, the events can change around you without you being aware. If a conflict arrises which prevents you from participating in the reality of the events then you are the only entity not consciously aware of the events, either because you don't exist,-or have died, or are simply not aware for various purely logical reasons.
This proves Kevins poem reference quite lierally (if, -I understand the poem anyhow )
I have a whole book on this called "Satan, Cantor, and Infinity" by Raymond Smullyan It's chalk full of mind blowing "thought experiments" which revolves around a mysterious Island where Knights and Knaves live and a modern day scientist goes about asking questions to sort out "first order math logic".
It's one of my favorite books because it has no formulas but the "logic" is totally STUNNING and it makes perfect sense.
From Publishers Weekly
In Smullyan's latest challenging collection of logic puzzles, the Sorcerer, a logician who uses logic so cleverly it seems like magic, visits an island where intelligent robots create other robots. King Zorn, Princess Annabelle, truth-telling knights and lying knaves lighten the presentation of puzzles as the Sorcerer explains the pioneering discoveries of mathematician Georg Cantor (1845-1918) who proved that there are different orders of infinity, and as he delves into paradoxes about probability, time and change. Smullyan ( The Lady or the Tiger? ) tosses in metapuzzles (which are solved on the basis of knowing that certain other puzzles can or cannot be solved) and explores self-referentiality, a property crucial to Kurt Godel's famous incompleteness theorem. The Sorcerer closes with a tale of how Satan is outwitted by a student of Cantor's. A mind-stretching entertainment for the serious, dedicated puzzle-solver.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Trickfox
Mikado wrote:PeeTee wrote:Anyhow.... I was talking about this with FM..... earlier this week, along with the Dobbs twins.
Is this humor? or, are you in communication with the Dobbs twins?
Mikado
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