Why trust any elephant that much?
The Elephant never forgets, of course.
Especially a FICTIONAL one?
If being fictional is the worst thing he's done, well, then he's a better entity than most of us, and therefore far more trustworthy.
Why trust any elephant that much?
Especially a FICTIONAL one?
They say they are only certain to a 1 in 10 tredecillion (1043) or 14-sigma level of certainty, but they're getting their info from BaBar. Why trust any elephant that much? Especially a FICTIONAL one?
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Perhaps very pertinent?
Perhaps very pertinent? http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/11/121119094627.htm
To answer this question without reference to elephants...
Um, maybe?
Here's the thing - this is quantum mechanical result. The only real entrances we have into time travel are through General Relativity.
Note how no theory to unite gravity and quantum mechanics has gotten very far? We don't know how much that result bears on our only current path to an answer for the question.
So there's really nothing about going back in time; it's about whether two reverse processes happen at the same speed going forward in time.
To answer this question without reference to elephants...
Um, maybe?
Here's the thing - this is quantum mechanical result. The only real entrances we have into time travel are through General Relativity.
Note how no theory to unite gravity and quantum mechanics has gotten very far? We don't know how much that result bears on our only current path to an answer for the question.
To answer this question without reference to elephants...
Um, maybe?
Here's the thing - this is quantum mechanical result. The only real entrances we have into time travel are through General Relativity.
Note how no theory to unite gravity and quantum mechanics has gotten very far? We don't know how much that result bears on our only current path to an answer for the question.
True enough, and the media doesn't usually help. In this case, even the press release from SLAC, the lab that hosts the BaBar experiment, makes a big error just for the sake of getting a splashier headline (see the link I posted above).And that's where "the public perception" of physics can sometimes get out of sync with what can really be concluded from experiments.
Another point to make is that there is actually always (mathematically proven) a way to reverse a process and get the same speed.
That's a pretty good stab at it!Yah. This is a case where natural language and physics language differ. You gave a nice link, but maybe I can take a really short stab at it...
What he's talking about is not a physical process you can enact in the real world. When you say "reverse a process" in natural language, it means actually reversing it - Bruce Banner turns into the Hulk, the Hulk turns into Bruce Banner. Reversible.
When we talk about this in natural language with respect to time, and the arrow of time, we are usually talking about things on the line of "we stir sugar into water, and it dissolves". This is not reversible - we cannot stir the other way and have all that sugar come out of solution and reform crystals.
Freyar is talking about a form of mathematical reversal - kind of like saying that if you flip *all* the numbers to be their negatives, the thing runs the same way. This is not equivalent to stirring the water the other way - it includes reversals that we cannot enact in the real world (yet?).