T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
551.1 | THE Paradox | LABC::FRIEDMAN | | Wed Nov 04 1987 14:45 | 11 |
| What if a person goes back into time and kills his 10-year-old
great-great-great-grandfather? Then his great-great-grandfather,
great-grandfather, grandfather, father and he himself would never
have been born yet the killer does exist. This paradoxical situation
seems to argue against the possibility of time travel into the past.
According to the theory of relativity, you could travel into the future
by traveling at speeds near that of light, where 5 minutes on your
watch would go by while hundreds of years would go by for the people
you left on earth (and their descendants).
earth.
|
551.2 | | PROSE::WAJENBERG | Tis the voice of the lobster. | Wed Nov 04 1987 14:56 | 8 |
| Re .1
This is known in the literature as "the Grandfather Paradox." One
could allow time travel by proposing that circumstance always prevents
the time traveler from destroying causes that have already had an
effect on him.
Earl Wajenberg
|
551.3 | | AKOV11::FRETTS | believe in who you are... | Wed Nov 04 1987 15:04 | 11 |
|
re: .1 and .2
Or maybe the time traveler would disappear as his great, great,
great grandfather took his last breath....and so would anyone
else in the g,g,gg's future bloodline. The possibilities are
endless!
Carole
|
551.4 | Three Ways to Slice It | PROSE::WAJENBERG | Tis the voice of the lobster. | Wed Nov 04 1987 16:02 | 22 |
| If the time traveler and his intermediate ancestors disappeared
(and by this I presume you mean "never existed,") then there would
have been no one to murder this particular ancestor. That's the
way a paradox works -- by throwing you back and forth from one horn
of a dilemma to the other.
I've heard of three consistent ways of dealing with time travel:
1) It can't happen.
2) It can happen but the past is unchangable. Any actions you take
in the past have already had their consequences in the version of
the present you left from. There is only one version of any period
of time.
3) Time has more than one dimension. If you change the past, this
is no longer the original version of the past, but a later version,
"later" being measured along a second dimension of time.
Time travel is also discussed in MTV::SF and DSSDEV::PHILOSOPHY.
Earl Wajenberg
|
551.5 | RE 551.4 | DICKNS::KLAES | I grow weary of the chase! | Wed Nov 04 1987 16:08 | 4 |
| The SF Conference is now located at NAC::SF.
Larry
|
551.6 | No loose ends... | AOXOA::STANLEY | You can't let go, you can't hold on... | Wed Nov 04 1987 16:12 | 11 |
| I believe that time/space is a neat package. By that I mean if you went
back in time, then you'd always been back there. Whatever you do, you've
always done. If you tried to do something like kill one of your relatives,
circumstances would prevent it. I've always been intrigued with the
ramifications of going back in time. This is the scenario that sits the best
with me.
I love hearing what other people feel would happen. Occaisionally there
is a good movie on this subject.
Dave
|
551.7 | | BUMBLE::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Wed Nov 04 1987 16:30 | 5 |
| What if time isn't linear? We always assume it is but what if it
is more like layers of all possible times. Then couldn't you go
back and change something that might steer the course of that
particular time flow off in a different direction without changing
the history of the time you flow you are in?
|
551.8 | Another way | CLUE::PAINTER | Trying to reside in n+1 space | Wed Nov 04 1987 18:02 | 4 |
|
We could all *wrinkle*!
Cindy
|
551.9 | Books | SALES::RFI86 | | Thu Nov 05 1987 13:05 | 6 |
| re: -1 a great set of books, huh:-).
Also kind of along the same lines of the layered time instead of
linear time are the Chronicles Of Amber by Roger Zelazny. Check
it out.
Geoff
|
551.10 | | PLDVAX::ZARLENGA | Billy's Back! ... Yankees in 1988 | Fri Nov 06 1987 13:22 | 7 |
| Time travel IS possible. We do it all the time.
Time travel into the past is impossible. Even far fetched
theories usually have some foundation in scientific research.
This is one that has none.
-mike z
|
551.11 | Some Foundation | PROSE::WAJENBERG | Tis the voice of the lobster. | Fri Nov 06 1987 15:23 | 26 |
| Re .10
If you accept the evidences presented for precognition, then there
is at least some scientific foundation for the belief that information
can move backward through time.
Even if you do not accept those evidences, the matter is not so
closed. According to general relativity, it is possible to travel
into the past by taking the proper route through a sufficiently
warped piece of spacetime, such as that surrounding a massive, rapidly
rotating neutron star. (Perhaps a black hole would be required
instead.)
According to special relativity, if a thing can move faster than
light, then there are slower-than-light reference frames in which
it is moving backward in time. And recent experiments into some
of the stranger quantum effects suggest that some currently unknown
physical influences may, in fact, move faster than light. This
is not a universal interpretation of the evidence, but the alternative
interpretation is even stranger (in my opinion), though it does
not involve time travel; this is the notion that physical systems
may have no definite state until observed. (We are presently
discussing these oddities in the PHILOSOPHY file, if you are
interested.)
Earl Wajenberg
|
551.12 | Let's try to stir up the topic | HPSCAD::DDOUCETTE | Common Sense Rules! | Fri Nov 06 1987 16:37 | 17 |
| I'd like to throw up another issue in regards to Time....
Reincarnation.
Go back and time and meet yourself in a previous life,
Travel into the future and see yourself in a future life.
Mystics now say that you can have "past lives" in the "future" since
the afterlife is not in this dimension. Does that mean that you
can have a "past life", or "present life" *RIGHT NOW*. Maybe the
term "soul mate" is actually the same soul traveling through another
dimension.
Does any of this make sense?
Dave
|
551.13 | My last lifetime was in 2525... | AOXOA::STANLEY | I need a miracle every day... | Fri Nov 06 1987 17:17 | 16 |
| re:< Note 551.12 by HPSCAD::DDOUCETTE "Common Sense Rules!" >
> Go back and time and meet yourself in a previous life,
>
> Travel into the future and see yourself in a future life.
I'm really glad you brought this up. I almost put something into the wild
theories note about this. Not about travelling in time really, but about
reincarnating into past, present and future times. I think that if
reincarnation exists, then anytime would be possible for a lifetime depending
on what the needs of soul are. This would be interesting since we would
be able to reincarnate into *this* lifetime as well.
Sorry to diverge a little.
Dave
|
551.14 | maybe (:-)) | PSI::CONNELLY | I think he broke the President, man! | Sat Nov 07 1987 22:36 | 12 |
| re: .12
> Does that mean that you
> can have a "past life", or "present life" *RIGHT NOW*. Maybe the
> term "soul mate" is actually the same soul traveling through another
> dimension.
>
> Does any of this make sense?
Dave, maybe there's only one soul that is experiencing all of our
lives (similar to the "one electron" time travel theory in physics).
Does THAT seem to make any sense?
paul c.
|
551.15 | Who Knows Where the Time Goes? | GRECO::MISTOVICH | | Tue Nov 10 1987 12:44 | 15 |
551.16 | ??time?? | WITNES::DONAHUE | | Tue Nov 10 1987 16:11 | 14 |
| Bodily time travel or soul time travel?
I think physical time travel is not available to us but that soul
travel is. The soul travels through time and in each "lifetime"
holds onto bits and pieces of past and previous lifetimes, hence
"premonitions" and recollections of former lives. As the soul dreams,
astrotravels, etc. it can travel past and future, holding on to
these "memories".
I don't think that physical, bodily travel is available for the
reasons stated previously, an example, killing off your family chain.
I am wandering. After three weeks on vacation, I have a lot of
catching up to do. You guys [and girls :^)] have been quite busy!
|
551.17 | Doesn't really matter. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Tue Nov 10 1987 17:03 | 16 |
| Soul time-travel into the future (i.e., time-travel in which
information is gathered though no influence is made) has the same
trouble that "physical" time travel to the past has -- where have
you "been" if what you learn causes you to act in such a way as
to prevent what you learned from being so.
The only logically consistent answers are that "soul" time travel
to the future cannot take place, or that time has a multi-dimensional
structure.
I find the evidence for precognition very convincing (although "soul
travel" to the future is no more necessary for precognition than it is
logically necessary to travel to a distant star to see it), and
so I believe time is not linear in structure.
Topher
|
551.18 | A hesitant entry | MIST::IVERSON | a Brubeck beat in a Sousa world | Thu Nov 19 1987 10:43 | 54 |
| An off the wall source of theory follows (skeptics hit
Next Unseen) :-)(also symbol for neck on chopping
block)
Time travel and its parodoxes has always intrigued
me, and being an avid SF reader I have heard a
multitude of theories.
Background: I have recently been given a "Star
Seed" crystal and I have had some very intense
dreams coincident with it residing on the bedside
table. (I don't put a lot of weight in their
"commercially" pushed origins but they are intrigueing
and it did find me.)
A couple of nights ago I had a *very* intense dream
dealing with time travel. The dream brought up
a couple of possibilities I don't remember seeing
elsewhere.
1) Is it possible to "mess up" *future* time when
time traveling? (Possibly a spinoff of the "all
time existing at once" theory).
2) Our "inner self" will keep us from doing anything
that could significantly alter events when we are
traveling outside our "current" time frame.
Salient points of dream proof ;-) follow:
I was time travelling with two other people in
the distant future. Details of clothing and
architecture were exceptionally vivid. We had a
guide from that time era showing us about.
At one point one person in the group had sense
of urgency to leave area. It was intuitively known
that this was to avoid seeing someone or causing
some event that would leave evidence of our being
there. At another point, us time travelers were
going to sign the guest book at the U.N. as a lark.
The first person zipped out their signature and
we realized that when we looked at it closely,
it was gibberish. I then tried to carefully write
out my signature and found I had an "inner" block
that would not let me leave evidence of my time
travel.
Was this a "message from beyond";-) - who knows?
I hesistate to even enter this, but it was a very
powerful dream that left a strong impression and
it does, at least, bring up a couple of interesting
theoretical points.
Thom
|
551.19 | Interesting thought. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Thu Nov 19 1987 12:29 | 53 |
| RE: .18
Some interesting thoughts.
On "altering the future". If you travel to the future, and can
affect it in any way (e.g., not just see it) than you alter it.
But this wouldn't result in a paradox (when you "got back" to the
past, however, and applied what you had learned in the future --
that could easily generate paradox).
Your theory about subconsciously avoiding creating paradox:
1) The first problem has to do with what "significant" means.
We tend to view history as being about human afairs. As
long as the history books come out right, our gut feeling
is that paradox has been avoided. In reality a single pebble
scuffed from its place, never having any further effect on
a single human life (or any life at all even) can still be
part of a paradox.
2) The second problem is much more subtle. I had a long argument
with Steven Braud a philosopher who concerns himself heavily
with parapsychological issues. He made the same error, so
you shouldn't feel like you were being dumb.
The scientific (or even non-scientific rationalist) view
is that the Universe works by meaningful, consistent rules
(or rather that we can describe how the Universe operates
this way). One of those rules is *NOT* that the Universe
tries to avoid paradox. Rather, when we are trying to figure
out what those rules are, if we find a paradox, then we know
that we have made an error somewhere in our figuring. (We
do this everyday -- if I say "Sam must of come in from outside.
No wait a minute, its raining out, and Sam didn't have a
raincoat, so if he came in from outside, he would be wet.
But he is not wet. So he must not have come in from outside."
then I have used a paradox (Sam must be wet/Sam is not wet)
to reveal a flaw in my logic).
What is needed is not a rule of the form "We don't do anything
that causes a paradox." There is no force which "desires"
a lack of paradoxes and thus does whatever is needed to prevent
it. Rather we need a specific mechanism which explains *why*
a paradoxical situation would never arise. Why we would
be, for example, inhibited from doing anything which would
set up a causal-loop. The only mechanisms I know of are
1) No time-travel/precognition/retro-PK, and 2) More than
linearly structured time.
Good thinking though -- if I hadn't had that discussion with Steven
Braude, I would not have had a response ready at hand.
Topher
|
551.20 | a theory... | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Aslan | Thu Nov 19 1987 12:38 | 46 |
|
I have a theory that time travel (or at least exchange
of information through time) is possible. When paradoxes
result from it, the universe splits into two tracks, that
rejoin when the paradox is resolved.
For example: (this example is made up, but is based on some *real*
dream observations I have made...)
1) In May I search my *entire* yard with a metal detector, and
find nothing.
2) In June, I have a dream in which I telepathically
influence my April self to bury a coin in the yard.
3) In July I find and dig up the coin.
After event 2, my memory of the May search becomes confused. Two
time tracks exist from the time I buried the coin, till the time
I had the dream. (note this dream is actually *two* dreams, one
which I had in April, one in June.) By July, only one track remains,
where I remember burying the coin and digging it up. Two selves
existed in May, one who remembers burying the coin, and then *not*
searching as thoroughly for it in May. The other self had no
memory of burying the coin, and searched every corner of the yard
and found nothing. The final result; there was a coin there,
and the memory of May is distorted.
In general my theory states that the act of time travel, or
exchange of information through time, will cause a second "time
track" to exist, through the span of time over which the travel
or exchange occurred. The area of time between becomes confused,
and two sets of memories and events are only resolved *after* the
whole period of time had passed. The resolution joins the two
sets of memories, but some events are forgotten or confused.
This type of thing may explain differing accounts of events;
In the Bible, for example, two Gospels have slight differences
in the genealogy of Christ. Perhaps both are correct, but
happened in two different versions of the past that were rejoined
before the Bible was compiled.
This is similar to the "many universes" theory, except that
I believe that the split off universes eventually rejoin, also
the "split" is a very local effect, and not a split in the
*entire* universe.
Alan.
|
551.21 | Trying to be helpful.... | WEFXIT::PAINTER | Trying to reside in n+1 space | Thu Nov 19 1987 12:59 | 10 |
|
Re.20 - Alan
You might have had a faulty metal detector in May which would account
for you not locating the coin in the yard.
Cindy
|
551.22 | | WAGON::DONHAM | Born again! And again, and again... | Thu Nov 19 1987 14:26 | 49 |
| This seems as good a place as any to describe the way I see
reality.
I believe that there are an infinity of time streams branching
down from the first instant of our current universe:
0 Universe begins
| |
/ \ \ ^
| | | |
/ \ \ \ first few uS of
| | | | Universe
Each stream is related to but slightly different from those close
to it...in the very early stages of creation streams split based
upon whether a subatomic particle split or not; I think that this
still occurs, but the infinite number of these nearly-identical
time streams bundle together into "macrostreams."
Macrostreams are influenced by macroscopic events (macroscopic
when referenced to the world we perceive). To illustrate, when
you cut your finger chopping veggies, a universe is generated
where you just put a nick in the chopping board.
Now the fun part. Macrostreams also bundle, into metastreams.
Within a metastream, some macrostreams lie close together, and
it's easy to get from one to another. I believe that just
*imagining* a macrostream is enough to bring it into existence;
if it's close enough to the current reality, you can simply slip
into it.
Two examples. I was in an arcade and wondered what it would be
like if the power failed. The power failed. Travelling down a
country road in New Ipswich a few nights ago I imagined that that
road would be a really rotten place for my car to break down
(it's only a year old and has no history of failure). The timing
belt snapped.
The closer analternate reality is to our current reality, the
easier it is to get there. Some people (we call them enlightened)
have trained themselves to slip significantly far away from
current reality. We do this all of the time, when we create
parking places, when we practice magic, etc.
This has some holes in it, of course, but maybe I'll just slip to
a stream where it's been worked out...
Tananda
|
551.23 | | WAGON::DONHAM | Born again! And again, and again... | Thu Nov 19 1987 14:32 | 8 |
|
re: -about 2
Hmm...I like Alan's idea of local splits that rejoin the main stream.
I'll have to work that into my model.
Tananda
|
551.24 | Thanks! | BARAKA::BLAZEK | A new moon, a warm sun... | Thu Nov 19 1987 14:35 | 6 |
| re: -.2
I like how you presented that, Tananda.
Carla
|
551.25 | | SPIDER::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Thu Nov 19 1987 14:56 | 10 |
| Our "will" could be the rudder which steers our course through the
time stream. Just as the atom becomes positive or negative when
observed, ... the time stream we ride may open up to us at a critical
choice moment. Our history may be a series of "critical choices"
or "key events" (for example, the birth of a child) directing us
through the flow. What we remember may be merely "key events",
few people can remember everything they have experienced
on a daily basis since childhood.
Thom, what is a star seed crystal? (and where can I get one_:-)
|
551.26 | Beats the hell out of playing in a sandbox! | PUZZLE::GUEST_TMP | HOME, in spite of my ego! | Thu Nov 19 1987 17:10 | 66 |
| (If this had been solely my thoughts, I'd own up to
them...unfortunately, they are some concepts that have come
from Lazaris, so I must therefore acknowledge that.):
Herewith some thoughts:
All possibilities exist. There are infinite possibilites.
There is a constant contraction/expansion (simultaneously) of
awareness (similar to the contraction/expansion which our universe
in constantly in--remember, this is *not* necessarily my own thinking.)
Next point: Which events happen? All of them. Which are
relevant? Those which you wish to be. Can past lives change
(as future lives "obviously" can?) Yes. How? By focusing on a
different POSSIBILITY (which therefore becomes PROBABLE.) What
happens to the former probability? It becomes one of the infinite
possibilities. What's going on here? It's called changing your
reality. How? By thought. By thinking differently than you did
before. By not "buying in" to the concepts held by your current
beliefs (which include the concepts of the consensus reality.)
How do you change thoughts or beliefs? By choice. What creates
the choices? You do. You make the decision to do so. But don't
you then become "warped" or "neurotic" or somehow different from
everyone else (and are viewed that way by them) if you do? That's
precisely the point. If you want a different reality, one of the
possibilities is that others will see you differently. On the other
hand, a reality EXISTS wherein not only you will be different, but
others, too. Therefore you will make others *like* you. How does
this tie in to time and time travel? Because it requires a recognition
that all time is simultaneous and that indeed paradoxes can and
do exist and that change not only *can* exist but is a certainty.
Do we need to figure out how these paradoxes can come about? NO.
We are limited beings who are incapable of figuring out many of
the aspects that reach into other aspects of God/Goddess/All-That-IS.
The point is, yes, it is an interesting question/thought.
I believe that the Information you "received" is but a hint or
an insight, if you will, into that which can occur.
This "train of thought" leads very handily into the idea of
transcendence. Now *there's* a scary thought for many! Imagine
for a moment only (so that you don't get too scared) the possibility
of leaving this body and this reality (by WILLING it) and suddenly
finding yourself as a farmer or basket-weaver in the South Pacific.
Would you have any memory of this life? Not likely. Would you
have a "past" attached to that life? Of course, just like we do
now. Where did that past come from? From the realm of possibility.
When? Now!
Far fetched? No, I don't think so, not any more anyway. Can
we transcend this reality? I believe so. What does it require?
Impeccable thought. Why don't we do it? I believe some do. For
me it is a matter of fear. I wish to "know" where I'm going to
go before I choose to "check out" of this reality. Besides, I'm
not displeased with this reality nor am I "ready" to leave it.
When I am, however, I wish to make the choice to leave it and go
to a new reality where there are new things to learn (after all,
if I've *evolved* to the point of transcending my reality by choice,
consciously, then I believe I will have succeeded in having dominion
over the physical plane and have therefore no "need" to stay within
it.)
*Remember*, if you will, that TIME is one of the TOOLS of the
physical plane, along with SPACE, the FUTURE, the PAST and the
EGO which serves up our reality to us. Once you have mastered the
use of the tool, you create new tools.
Frederick
|
551.27 | [ Yes | No | Maybe ] | CSC32::KACHELMYER | David L. Kachelmyer, VMS-SPACE | Thu Nov 19 1987 23:28 | 45 |
| From a number of different sources (who probably heard it from the same
one :-)) I've heard tell that time doesn't exist outside of the
physical plane (or reality system). That it exists here as a
[ synchronization | boundary | dimension | limit ] to make the physical
plane work well. After all, if you go back in time and kill your body,
you shouldn't have a body to come back to in what was your 'present'
time. Just think, somebody would have to:
o Go back to your present time and get rid of your body
o Go back and forth in time and get everyone else there to
agree to forget about you.
That's no way to run a reality-system.
Additionally, if the idea about parallel times is correct, then there
would probably need to be multiple reality-systems about, running
different time segments, so that you could have parallel times.
So, it seems that on the highest level, time travel wouldn't be
possible 'cause there is no time outside of a reality-system.
Additionally, time travel probably wouldn't be possible WITHIN a
reality-system either, 'cause that wouldn't work within the limits
of the reality system (if you tried it, they'd probably make you
go play somewhere else ;-)).
However, you might be able to synthesize time-travel by switching
between reality systems. However, I'm not all that sure that you'd be
[ able | allowed ] to take a reality-system body with you.
If you tried to beat the rap be moving to a reality-system that
didn't have time, you couldn't time travel 'cause there wouldn't
be any! :-)
So, what you'd probably need, to be able to time-travel, is a
reality-system with time as something relatively unimportant, so that
you could bop back-and-forth and do stuff without breaking the
reality-system. Alternately, you'd need a system where time was
important, but you would be allowed to travel only as long as you (or
your higher self) agreed not to do anything that messed things up.
So, I guess the answer to 'Is Time Travel Possible?' would be
[ yes | no | maybe ], depending on what reality-system you were
hanging around in at the time. ;-)
Kak
|
551.28 | The Folks You Leave Behind | PROSE::WAJENBERG | Just a trick of the light. | Mon Nov 23 1987 14:20 | 6 |
| If one makes an event happen by switching to the time track containing
that event, what does that look like to people back in the previous
time track? Did you vanish? Were you replaced by a near-identical
twin swapping in from another time track?
Earl Wajenberg
|
551.29 | | SPIDER::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Tue Nov 24 1987 09:43 | 20 |
| Earl,
What happened to the kid who sat behind you in the 5th grade?
Our reality is composed of a certain number of "real" people who
we know and interact with on a daily basis. The people all of us
have left behind... (the kids who sat behind us in the 5th grade
for example), do not exist for us anymore, ..most of us can't
remember their names, what they looked like, or how and where they are.
Those who have been close to us all of our lives must be in the
same time track. Those thousands of people we experienced some
of life with (our school bus driver) could be anywhere right now
and we wouldn't know the difference nor does he know or care where
we are. So it would be events that take us away, our absence would
be logically explainable and the people in the previous time track
would'nt even think about us unless they choose to switch time streams
by a (key choice) event and come and "find" us.
Mary
|
551.30 | | SPIDER::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Tue Nov 24 1987 09:46 | 3 |
| To clarify, I don't think one makes an event happen by switching
to the time track containing that event, rather I think one switches to
another time track by choosing to participate in a key event.
|
551.31 | More time bundles | WAGON::DONHAM | Born again! And again, and again... | Tue Nov 24 1987 11:10 | 24 |
|
Yes, Mary, I agree to an extent. But my point is that you CAN choose
to modify your reality by moving into a time stream that contains
that reality. The ones that are *very* close to our current reality
are easy to get to...they contain all of the folks we interact with
on a daily basis, for example, but may contain a parking place that
*didn't* exist in the previous reality. Time streams that are *very*
far away, say one in which the person sitting next to you was never
born, are *extremely* difficult to get to.
Another thing that I have to assume in this hypothesis is that there
is no future, only past and present (Ok, smartass, just pop into
a reality where there IS a future |^P ) Allowing a future bringgs
up the question of predestination, a question which I don't want
to deal with yet.
Although I like the idea of time strands separating for a brief
period and coming back together, I can't accept it. It would require
too much synchronicity to get the two streams back into the same
time frame...it's much more likely that the two branches simply
run parallel.
Tananda
|
551.32 | | SPIDER::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Wed Nov 25 1987 09:39 | 14 |
| I disagree Tananda. If one views time not as a hard material substance
but as a flowing energy field (like the currents in a stream) then
time could indeed ebb and flow in and out of different currents.
Also, if there is a past than there must be a future (or if there
are a myriad of "possible" pasts then there must be a myriad of
"possible" futures. The decay rate of the kaon (?) particle indicates
the specific time "current" perhaps?
If time is an illusion, just as a current is not the true nature
of water but merely the stream *reacting* to forces pushing it in
a specific direction, then WHERE one goes in time,... in one's life,
is a result of other determining factors. Lets see if we can figure
out what those factors are.
Mary
|
551.33 | Realization Time | CHARON::PAGE | Cal Page | Mon Dec 14 1987 12:55 | 44 |
| Has anyone ever been in a theater watching a who-done-it, and someone
yells out the answer?
I can remember such an instance that happened to me once. There
was about an hour left in the movie, and someone shouts out
the answer. Once enlightened, the movie became booring and slow.
It had lost its magic.
It was as if time itself had been changed. Instead of having
to wade through the movie for the remaining hour, it had
already ended. My realization of the conclusion had preceeded
the movie by the hour remaining.
Another example of this time-shift occurs when you recognize
and become cognesent of a pattern in behavior. For example,
those taught to handle customer complaints recognize certain
scripts or tells, and are taught to manipulate the outcome. Or
salesmen are trained to understand the "sales process". Or
poker players, or mystics?
A second effect noticed in the theater was that the entire
audience seemed to go through three phases of awareness;
disbelief, acceptance/anger, and finally admiration.
Disbelief:
At first, the new facts had to be fit into the frame of the
picture.
Acceptance/anger:
Once the facts jived, the conclusion was accepted. The anger
came from not wanting to accept that the movie was over.
Admiration:
And finally, we all admired someone who could 'see' the ending
so early in the movie.
These three phases seem to apply to mystics too. Those that predict
the future are not necessarly beleived or rejected. Once time
plays out a bit, and the facts can be fit into place, we then
accept the prediction as being true. If we don't like any eventual
outcome, we become angry. And finally, we admire folks that posess
these special tallents.
|
551.34 | An aside... | DECWET::MITCHELL | Value me--I'm different! | Wed Dec 16 1987 21:00 | 8 |
| RE: .33
I don't know about you, Cal, but I think the person who shouted out to
everyone whodunnit was a rude A-hole. What was his motive but to
ruin the film for everybody else? He certainly wouldn't have gotten
my admiration or acceptance!
John M.
|
551.35 | | FSLENG::JOLLIMORE | For the greatest good... | Thu Dec 17 1987 10:33 | 83 |
| .34 Going further down a rathole... speaking of theatre etiquite, and for
those who don't read HYDRA::DAVE_BARRY...
================================================================================
368.0 16-DEC-1987
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rudeness Epidemic Takes Total Toll at Mall Movies
By Dave Barry
We're at the movies. We're in one of those modern shopping mall
"cinema complexes" where each individual theater is the size of a Pez
dispenser, which means it is very difficult to avoid sitting near the
Loud People. They're always there. One theory is that they actually
live in the cinema complex, bearing live offspring and feeding
themselves by hacking off chunks of the inch-thick layer of old
Raisinets coating the floor.
As soon as we sit down, a herd of Loud People lumbers up behind us and
begins to discuss the incredibly complex problem of where everybody
will sit. This keeps them busy all the way through the opening Short
Feature, which years ago consisted of Heckle and Jeckle engaging in
comical stunts but now consists of a public-service announcement
wherein Clint Eastwood tells us, in a stern voice, not to use crack
cocaine. (Easy for him to say. He's not sitting in front of the Loud
People.)
We know from experience what will happen next. What will happen is
that we will experience each scene from the movie twice: once when it
appears on the actual screen, and once whn the Loud People, whose
brains operate on a 10-second tape delay, comprehend it. If, for ex-
ample, the villain, in a shocking and dramatic moment, suddenly pulls
out a knife, and the camera moves in for a close-up, so that the entire
screen is filled with a knife the size of a 1967 Buick, there will be a
10-second pause, and then one of the Loud People will say: "He has a
knife." Or maybe: "What is that? A knife?"
So we decide to move to seats that are closer to the screen, which
turns out to be foolish because it puts us near the Teen-agers, who, in
terms of their grasp of basic theater etiquette, make the Loud People
look like the royal family. It is not their fault. Due to raging hor-
monal imbalances over which they have no control, their entire social
hierarchy undergoes a complete transformation every four minutes, re-
quiring all 137 of them to change seats immediately. We occasionally
catch glimpses of the screen in between the teenage bodies lurching
back and forth, sometimes getting stuck in the Raisinets.
And now, rising above the din, is a new sound, coming from a person who
is standing near the screen and carrying on a lengthy and friendly
conversation with people, who, to judge from this person's voice level,
must be in Nova Scotia. We strain to see, between Teen-agers, who this
person is; imagine our suprise when we realize that it is: the usher.
It is a chilling moment, similar to the moment experienced by the her-
oine in "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" when she discovers that every-
body, even Donald Sutherland, has been taken over by the pod creatures.
Suddenly we see that we are not in a situation where a majority of bas-
ically polite people are being inconvenienced by a few louts; we are
in a situation where, as far as we can tell, everybody else in the
theater is rude.
This kind of thing is happening more and more as a result of the
International Rudeness Epidemic, which scientists now believe started
in France, and which has been worsening rapidly. I myself have tracked
its growth via the simple research technique of holding doors open for
people walking behind me. Years ago, almost everybody would say,
"Thank you" and I would say, "You're welcome." Then a lot of people
stopped saying "Thank you," and I compensated by saying "You're
welcome" anyway, in a loud and brutally polite voice, which would cause
some of them to become sheepish and say, "Thank you." Then they stopped
becoming sheepish and started making obscene gestures. Now many of
them don't even bother to do that. We have reached the point, in the
International Rudeness Epidemic, where people have gotten too rude even
to give you the finger.
So we find ourselves hunched down in our theater seats, trapped in the
middle of Expo JerkFest '87. We are, quite frankly, terrified. We
decide to try to make a break for it. Our plan is to walk brazenly up
the aisle, laughing and burping real loud so nobody will notice us,
then sprint for the car. We're just about to make our move when the
theater doors burst open. Our eyes are momentarily blinded by a
tasteful flash of light, and then, standing in front of the screen, we
see: Miss Manners. She reaches into her purse, which is of course
exactly the color of her shoes, and pulls out: Clint Eastwood's gun.
"What is that?" says one of the Loud People. "A knife?"
|
551.36 | Good laughs for the day! | CLUE::PAINTER | Yep, John sure is different! (;^) | Thu Dec 17 1987 10:54 | 6 |
|
Re.35
Jay, why is it that I'm not surprised to see that you are a DB fan?!?
Cindy
|
551.37 | | FSLENG::JOLLIMORE | For the greatest good... | Thu Dec 17 1987 11:07 | 2 |
| Cindy; DB fanatic! I have every article ever posted on HYDRA:: Some are
better than others, but they're all worth reading.
|
551.38 | Another DB fan | CLUE::PAINTER | Imagine all the people..... | Thu Dec 17 1987 11:23 | 8 |
|
Yes, he is great! I've been reading his stuff even before his books
started coming out. His 'baby' book is my favorite.
*Sigh*, if I only had the TIME to spend going through the conference
on HYDRA....
Cindy
|
551.39 | Hollywood and time. | MCIS2::SHURSKY | | Fri Apr 15 1988 17:38 | 18 |
| WARNING....Bumpy road, serious memory loss ahead....
Since we are on the subject of movies (note 703) and I was reading
this note earlier, I am reminded of a movie. About 5 years ago
there was a movie (forgot the title) starring Christopher Reeve
and some woman (memory failure). Anyway Chris wants to go back
in time to meet said woman. He is convinced upon investigation
that this can be done and does it. Adventures ensue and he is
returned to his own time upon discovery of a modern penny in his
suit pocket which collapses his belief bubble.
The only thing I really remember about this movie, was there was
a serious time/existence problem. It was the watch. If you catch
the movie on late TV or cable ask yourself "Where did the watch
originate?" It exists only in a closed (recursive) loop in time
in which it was not created.
Stan
|
551.40 | | EVE::GERTZ | BuTRflysRFree | Tue Apr 19 1988 11:39 | 5 |
| Re: 39
Believe the movie title is "Somewhere In Time."
Charlene
|
551.42 | | DECWET::MITCHELL | Let's call 'em sea monkeys! | Thu Apr 21 1988 03:00 | 6 |
| RE: .41
Uh.... thanks for giving away the ending.
John M.
|
551.44 | Thanks! | CSC32::KACHELMYER | Dave, CSC/CS VMS-SPACE | Thu Apr 21 1988 21:58 | 16 |
|
On the other hand, I'm afraid that I'd quite forgotten the ending
to the movie and I pour forth copious thanks to le monsieur for
refreshing my memory. ;-)
Re: .42
Besides, you won't know if that's *really* the ending until you
actually see the movie! ;-)
Re: 'bortaS blr...'
Which PC said that? :-)
Kak
|
551.45 | | EVE::GERTZ | BuTRflysRFree | Fri Apr 22 1988 09:13 | 4 |
| The movie can be found in most video stores...
Charlene
|
551.46 | did someone answer and I missed it? | COOKIE::CABANYA | | Wed Jun 22 1988 16:50 | 4 |
| whats a seed crystal??
mary
|
551.47 | it could be an agricultural healing object, too ... ;-) | INK::KALLIS | Don't confuse `want' and `need.' | Wed Jun 22 1988 17:27 | 11 |
| Re .46 (Mary):
>whats a seed crystal??
Well, in conventional technology, it's a small crystal that's used
as a point for a larger crystal to grow from. If you have a saturated
solution of sugar, for instance, and then lower (suspend) a small crystal
of sugar into the solution, it'll be the "seed crystal" for the
rock candy you can grow through evaporation.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
551.48 | A practical use. | SCOMAN::RUDMAN | Overeat,v. To dine. | Thu Aug 11 1988 15:02 | 6 |
| 2nd e.g. Seed crystals are used to grow a silicon ingot of specific
crystal orientation (and dopant level) in the manufacture
of silicon substrates used by Dec Hudson to manufacture
integrated circuits for Digital (who else?) computers.
Don
|