If he pulled the trigger, would he shoot himself in the head?

Quote by PoloLady
If time travel were possible and a man stood infront of a time travel portal, which opened 6 foot behind him and one second in the past. And the man then loaded a pistol and put only his hand and the pistol through the portal, so the gun was pointing towards the back of his head.....
If he pulled the trigger, would he shoot himself in the head?
Quote by PoloLady
If time travel were possible and a man stood infront of a time travel portal, which opened 6 foot behind him and one second in the past. And the man then loaded a pistol and put only his hand and the pistol through the portal, so the gun was pointing towards the back of his head.....
If he pulled the trigger, would he shoot himself in the head?
Quote by PoloLady
If time travel were possible and a man stood infront of a time travel portal, which opened 6 foot behind him and one second in the past. And the man then loaded a pistol and put only his hand and the pistol through the portal, so the gun was pointing towards the back of his head.....
If he pulled the trigger, would he shoot himself in the head?
Quote by JonJon
No, because it's a physical impossibility for his hand and gun to exist simultaneously in two time zones.
We accept no liability for any shootings, accidental, or deliberate, that may occur as a result of this advice. Causing fundamental rifts in the space time continuum may result in injury or death.
Quote by JonJon
No, because it's a physical impossibility for his hand and gun to exist simultaneously in two time zones.
We accept no liability for any shootings, accidental, or deliberate, that may occur as a result of this advice. Causing fundamental rifts in the space time continuum may result in injury or death.
Quote by zootle
Time travel can only be possible if the universe we exist in was just one of an infinite number of parallel universes.
So, the fella pulls the trigger but he himself doesn't die but a fella in a different parallel universe does.
Simple really.
Quote by Ice Pie
I ask merely for information. ;)
Quote by zootle
I ask merely for information. ;)
Quote by wild rose and the stag
you mean there could well be another swinging heaven where all the single guys get hounded to death by hundreds of women, shit!
Quote by zootle
It's implicit in-so-far as travelling backwards in time within the same universe is, in fact, impossible; it would violate causality as the example given would demonstrate.
So there are two options:
1. When travelling backward in time, the universe contrives to stop causailty from being broken.
2. Time travel is also a method of travelling to a different dimension.
Option 1 seems somewhat unsatisfactory in that it seems to bestow some intelligence on the universe itself.
Deduction leaves option 2.
Quote by Ice Pie
Quantum dynamics routinely violates causality without resort to time travel. I refer you to the 'two-slit experiment'.
There is nothing in the laws of physics to prevent a broken cup jumping up off the floor and reassembling itself on the table - it's just very very unlikely.
How is option 2 deduced? It looks like an assumption to me.
Quote by zootle
Quantum dynamics routinely violates causality without resort to time travel. I refer you to the 'two-slit experiment'.
Quote by Ice Pie
There is also the "transactional interpretation" of quantum mechanics, a brief explanation of which is given by John Gribbin in his book Schröedinger's Kittens. In essence, what it says is, if the act of obvservation collapses the wave function as you have outlined (The Copenhagen Interpretation), then a tachyonic exchange must take place because the observation can only be made after the event. This firmly places cause after effect, but doesn't invoke exotic dimensions.
Quote by zootle
There is also the "transactional interpretation" of quantum mechanics, a brief explanation of which is given by John Gribbin in his book Schröedinger's Kittens. In essence, what it says is, if the act of obvservation collapses the wave function as you have outlined (The Copenhagen Interpretation), then a tachyonic exchange must take place because the observation can only be made after the event. This firmly places cause after effect, but doesn't invoke exotic dimensions.
Quote by Ice Pie
The only problem I have with the Many Worlds Interpretation is that it requires the number of universes to be infinite, and I have a really hard time with the concept of a physical infinity. Tachyons, on the other hand, are predicted, or at least allowed, by existing theory, FTL is implied in General Relativity, and I'm a lot more comfortable with that.