The Time Machine is by H G Wells. Perhaps you're thinking of Journey to the Centre of the Earth?
Apparently, Jules Verne predicted the invention of the computer and the Internet!!!
The Time Machine is by H G Wells. Perhaps you're thinking of Journey to the Centre of the Earth?
Yes.The Time Machine is by H G Wells. Perhaps you're thinking of Journey to the Centre of the Earth?
But what if you had cavorite on a slide moving around and around a circular track just pushing itself along?
What are you getting at?
Well @Asbo Zaprudder was saying you can't use the fictional element cavorite for perpetual motion, well I was thinking if you put it on a slide mounted on a circular rail it would propel itself on that round and round endlessly so it would be perpetual motion wouldn't it?
Well, maybe but I was thinking the way they use it to go to the moon definitely qualifies. Going to the moon normally requires an enormous amount of energy but thanks to the cavorite, they can do it almost effortlessly.
That's true as well..... Plus constant acceleration wouldn't that mean a ship with Cavorite would reach sublight and beyond eventually?
Who is to say what its properties are? It's fictional after all and H G Wells died a long time ago so we can't ask him.
I'd expect The Shape of Things to Come to suddenly become a lot more accurate.Hey imagine the fun if future humans invent a time machine and then visit H G Wells.. The look on his face.
I suspect that most people if they had a time travel device would go back two millennia to see how accurate the story of Jesus really is and maybe to get an autograph or something, that's got to be worth a lot!!!
If he existed at all, which I doubt, he certainly wouldn't sign his name Jesus Christ or even recognise that as his name - assuming he could understand you at all or you could tell which putative messiah of the many claimants to that role was him. Jesus is our version of the given name Yeshua (Joshua), which was the most common Jewish male name of the period. Christ is just the Greek translation of messiah or anointed one. He'd have likely spoken Aramaic or Hebrew, perhaps with some knowledge of contemporary Greek and Latin. (The letter J was proposed in its modern usage by Gian Giorgio Trissino in 1524. Early Roman Christians would have difficulty recognising the written name Jesus, whose name they would have written as Iesus.)
It'd be no use trying to communicate in the English language that wouldn't exist in anything like its modern form until well over a thousand years in the future. Better brush up on the ancient languages of the period before making the trip unless your time machine has some magical device like the TARDIS does for performing instantaneous translation.
If Jesus were that smart, he wouldn't have got himself crucified. He would have created a laser blaster out of nothing and defeated the Roman Empire single handed.Again if Jesus is also God then translation would not be an issue, he'd know who and what you are and that you violated physics to pay a visit![]()
If Jesus were that smart, he wouldn't have got himself crucified. He would have created a laser blaster out of nothing and defeated the Roman Empire single handed.
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