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TIME TRAVEL  

spunkycumfun 63M/69F
29519 posts
11/26/2013 9:24 am
TIME TRAVEL



Doctor Who has now been on the television screen for 50 years. The Doctor is a Time Lord who travels the universe and through time in the TARDIS (Time And Relative Dimension In Space) time-machine, which looks like a police box that were common in the early 1960s in Britain but, unlike a police box, the TARDIS is much bigger on the inside than it looks from the outside.

Time travel features prominently in science fiction, but the potential of time travel is scientifically possible if Einstein’s theory of relativity holds true. Time travel could hypothetically take place in wormholes, warped space/time phenomena. But the problem is that Einstein’s theory of quantum mechanics does not support his theory of relativity, hence the scientific search for a theory of quantum gravity to create a unified theory of relativity and quantum mechanics - in other words, a theory of everything. Another prominent scientist, Stephen Hawking, takes a more grounded view against the prospects of time travel by arguing that the absence of tourists from the future proves that time travel is not possible. But another scientist, Carl Sagan, suggested these tourists from the future have disguised themselves or don’t know they are time-travellers.

If I could time-travel, I would travel back to the past because I know how it ends! I would be a flapper girl in the 1920s, the so-called Roaring Twenties. Flappers broke away from the confines of traditional womanhood and had a good time – listening to jazz music, travelling, driving motor cars, wearing lots of make-up, dressing up, smoking, getting drunk, attending ‘petting parties’ and having sex. I would be very happy to be Daisy Buchanan portrayed in F Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby book.

If you could time-travel, would you go backward or forward in time?
If backward in time, what period of time, where and who?
If forward in time, what will you find?
Do you enjoy Doctor Who? If so, who is your favourite Doctor?


I’ve never really enjoyed Doctor Who, but I’m pleased it’s still around as it is a constant from my childhood (a bit like Match of the Day). I think the next Doctor, Peter Capaldi, will be the best Time Lord. I hope he brings Malcolm Tucker swearing vocabulary from The Thick Of It to Doctor Who!

sweet_VM 65F
81699 posts
11/26/2013 9:57 am

I loved that show. I use to watch it when I was a kid. I would travel back to 1940 or 1950. I like that period of time. A lot more simpler way of life. John Hurt as the War Doctor. hugs V

Become a blog watcher sweet_vm


pal334 69M  
45821 posts
11/26/2013 10:31 am

I would travel back in time, to be With Teddy Roosevelt at San Juan Hill. He has always fascinated me.

[image]

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warmandsexy52 71M
13158 posts
11/27/2013 4:05 am

Old Doctor Who's always intrigue me because they portray the future as perceived then, so you get one of the best impressions of the zeitgeist of the era. In the past I would have loved to joined the Anglo-Irish explorer Sir Richard Burton on one of his exotic oriental sexual adventures - I'm sure there would have been plenty of girls to go round! Seeing the future might have unfortunate effects on how I see the present so I'll give that a miss.

All the Doctors seem to reflect their production eras well. Tom Baker had a slightly off this planet air to him but I did like David Tennant's version - he's such a great actor. John Hurt was a very convincing Doc in the 50th anniversary special.

warm xx


spunkycumfun 63M/69F
41171 posts
11/30/2013 1:28 am

    Quoting sweet_VM:
    I loved that show. I use to watch it when I was a kid. I would travel back to 1940 or 1950. I like that period of time. A lot more simpler way of life. John Hurt as the War Doctor. hugs V
Strangely, I've watched Doctor Who more as an adult than when I was a child.


spunkycumfun 63M/69F
41171 posts
11/30/2013 1:30 am

    Quoting pal334:
    I would travel back in time, to be With Teddy Roosevelt at San Juan Hill. He has always fascinated me.

    [image]
Theodore Roosevelt's presidency was a very interesting presidency in American politics.


spunkycumfun 63M/69F
41171 posts
11/30/2013 1:40 am

    Quoting AmeliaCox:
    You'd make a fascinating flapper, spunky... How are you at doing the Charlston?

    I have always enjoyed the study of string theory. If I could time travel, I'd want to do both past and future. Past to the 1600-1700s in both France and England, then for nostalgic purposes, the 1980s and 1990s, although the technology was primitive by today's standards, there was so many things I liked, eg: bilateral record players, early model microwave ovens...

    In the forwards travel, I would hope to see much better mobile phone technology, better virtual reality for games like Dungeons and Dragons (holographic avatars controlled by the player's thought processes via a helmet of some sort)... I would be surprised to see skycars and I would hope that medical procedures became more failproof, more painless and a lot quicker... I'm hoping that in many ways, architecture will go retro (18th and 19th century) and would love to see a more inclusive and agreeable humanity.
I'm frantically practising my Charleston dance in readibness for my time travels.
Going back to France or England in the 1600s and 1700s would be very interesting. I would have to go back as a rich person, because the lives of poor people look miserable.


spunkycumfun 63M/69F
41171 posts
11/30/2013 1:43 am

    Quoting AmeliaCox:
    My favourite doctor would have been Jon Pertwee, he looked old enough to be convincing as a timelord.
I liked Jon Pertwee, probably because he was the Doctor when I first watched the show. I also liked David Tennant as the Doctor more recently.


spunkycumfun 63M/69F
41171 posts
11/30/2013 1:44 am

    Quoting Tantricorgasms3:
    I started watching Dr Who in the 1960's.

    In researching physics for a book I wrote about a theory of everything, I came to the conclusion that reverse time travel is impossible, due to the expansion of the universe. In order to travel backwards in time, you'd have to compress the entire multiverse, among other things. I've read recently that some physicists have come to the same conclusion.

    The good news is that we are ALL time travelers! We are moving forward in time right now! It may also be possible to jump further forward in time, though the energy would be enormous. You could also travel "sideways" into alternate universes.

    The 1920's would be a good time, though. Before corporations were considered people and government was very small.
Very true, we are all time travellers.


spunkycumfun 63M/69F
41171 posts
11/30/2013 1:48 am

    Quoting  :

It's the 50th anniversary of Doctor Who, though the show disappeared from the television screens between 1989 and 1996. In recent years, it's gaining a following in America.
Your time travels remind me of the Minority Report film.


spunkycumfun 63M/69F
41171 posts
11/30/2013 1:49 am

    Quoting warmandsexy52:
    Old Doctor Who's always intrigue me because they portray the future as perceived then, so you get one of the best impressions of the zeitgeist of the era. In the past I would have loved to joined the Anglo-Irish explorer Sir Richard Burton on one of his exotic oriental sexual adventures - I'm sure there would have been plenty of girls to go round! Seeing the future might have unfortunate effects on how I see the present so I'll give that a miss.

    All the Doctors seem to reflect their production eras well. Tom Baker had a slightly off this planet air to him but I did like David Tennant's version - he's such a great actor. John Hurt was a very convincing Doc in the 50th anniversary special.

    warm xx
I've not come across Sir Richard Burton. I'm going to check out his adventures; thanks for the tip-off.


spunkycumfun 63M/69F
41171 posts
11/30/2013 1:52 am

    Quoting grayblue1:
    ..backwards..i do believe....to the time of no electronics,,,

    Blue
An age with no electronics - bliss! I still fondly remember life before the mobile phone.


spunkycumfun 63M/69F
41171 posts
11/30/2013 10:49 am

    Quoting AmeliaCox:
    David Tennant is my favourite of all the recent doctors... He's an amazing actor.
We think alike ... again.


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