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Edited on Mon Jan-26-04 05:06 AM by kgfnally
the 'butterfly effect' (the idea that a butterfly flapping its wings in Africa can cause a hurricane which ravages the Gulf of Mexico, not the movie itself) is very plausible. The problem is, none of us save the person who is doing the traveling would ever know the difference.
Traveling through time and altering events is very much like trying to fix a piece of badly-laid wallpaper. As soon as you push one bubble down, another pops up in its place. (my thanks to Douglas Adams)
The intersting part is that events would fix themselves. Let's suppose that Person A travels through time and alters something that affects the fundamentals of the English language. Person B is in his 'present'; Person A is in Person B's past.
Person A affects the past of Person B, in this case B's language, and in so doing, affects Person B's present. Now, Person B would never know that any changes had taken place, as all past events would resolve into one continuous stream of cause-effect relationships, regardless of the changes made. Thus, Person B would have no knowledge that Person A altered his language, because his 'new' past would be just as valid to him as his 'old' past, going so far as to supplant it, even though Person B would thereafter not remember his 'true' past (the chain of events that was in place before the prior alterations occurred).
I don't think there's such a thing as a 'causality violation', as events would align themselves to fit their own causes. Therefore, no person would ever know that their own past had been changed- but the person doing the changes would retain the knowledge of both timelines.
There was an Outer Limits (new version) episode that concerned this. A female researcher discovered that, if she were to sacrifice an unborn child to the research, she could use that child's lack of involvement in events to travel through time. The child was never and is not involved in the causality chain, and so is able (with the help of machinery) to facilitate time travel.
She went insane because she remembered too many pasts for an identical period of time. She quite literally lost knowledge of what, for her, was the 'true' path of events.
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