I think time travel involves going to a parallel universe. Perhaps extremely difficult to distinguish as different, but different nonetheless.
You, as a time traveler, can affect the history of a timeline in any universe except the one that you originated from.
From your perspective, you may be able to achieve your desired results, for all practical purposes, but not in your original universe.
I think time travel involves going to a parallel universe. Perhaps extremely difficult to distinguish as different, but different nonetheless.
You, as a time traveler, can affect the history of a timeline in any universe except the one that you originated from.
From your perspective, you may be able to achieve your desired results, for all practical purposes, but not in your original universe.
Interesting post.
When I was a kid, the superpower I wanted most was the ability to time travel. Star Trek and movies like Back to the Future fueled that childhood fantasy. I always enjoy a good romp-through-time story.
I suppose to answer the OP's question, you have to ask whether the situation requires time travel in order to resolve the problem. And whether the consequences of not time traveling outweigh the risks and are deemed acceptable. For example, in Star Trek IV The Voyage Home, time travel was required to resolve the problem, so it was definitely worth the risk when the alternative was Earth being destroyed.
Have they perchance determined that time travel is impossible?We could try asking the Vulcan Science Council...![]()
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