UFOAlienReality.comJan 8, 20191 min readWould Traveling Back In Time Destroy The Universe?There may be a fundamental reason why time travel, backwards, is impossible.We’ve all had the dream of traveling back in time. Whether there’s a wrong we want to right, a mistake we want to undo, a life we want to save, or a horror story we want to prevent, the amount of good we could accomplish seems immeasurable. We haven’t figured out how to do it, and there might be a fundamental reason why time travel to the past is impossible.Could Doc Brown from Back To The Future have been right?Read more…Credit: Ethan Siegel, Medium#UFO #UFOs #UAP #Alien #DisclosureLooking back to great cosmic distances is akin to looking back in time. We are 13.8 billion years since the Big Bang where we are, but the Big Bang also occurred everywhere else we can see. The light-travel-time to those galaxies means we’re seeing those distant regions as they were in the past. And the past, itself, unfolded in one particular way out of the myriad of possibilities to lead to the Universe today. (NASA, ESA, AND A. FEILD (STSCI))
There may be a fundamental reason why time travel, backwards, is impossible.We’ve all had the dream of traveling back in time. Whether there’s a wrong we want to right, a mistake we want to undo, a life we want to save, or a horror story we want to prevent, the amount of good we could accomplish seems immeasurable. We haven’t figured out how to do it, and there might be a fundamental reason why time travel to the past is impossible.Could Doc Brown from Back To The Future have been right?Read more…Credit: Ethan Siegel, Medium#UFO #UFOs #UAP #Alien #DisclosureLooking back to great cosmic distances is akin to looking back in time. We are 13.8 billion years since the Big Bang where we are, but the Big Bang also occurred everywhere else we can see. The light-travel-time to those galaxies means we’re seeing those distant regions as they were in the past. And the past, itself, unfolded in one particular way out of the myriad of possibilities to lead to the Universe today. (NASA, ESA, AND A. FEILD (STSCI))