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Travel Essay Research Paper Exactly one hundred

Travel Essay, Research Paper


Exactly one hundred years ago, in 1895, H. G. Wells classic story The


Time Machine was first published in book form. As befits the subject


matter, that was the minus tenth anniversary of the first publication,


in 1905, of Albert Einstein’s special theory of relativity. It was


Einstein, as every schoolchild knows, who first described time as “the


fourth dimension” — and every schoolchild is wrong. It was actually


Wells who wrote, in The Time Machine, that “there is no difference


between Time and any of the three dimensions of Space, except that our


consciousness moves along it”.


Since the time of Wells and Einstein, there has been a continuing


literary fascination with time travel, and especially with the paradoxes


that seem to confront any genuine time traveller (something that Wells


neglected to investigate). The classic example is the so- called


“granny paradox”, where a time traveller inadvertantly causes the death


of his granny when she was a small girl, so that the traveller’s


mother, and therefore the traveller himself, were never born. In which


case, he did not go back in time to kill granny . . . and so on.


A less gruesome example was entertainingly provided by the science


fiction writer Robert Heinlein in his story By his bootstraps


(available in several Heinlein anthologies). The protagonist in the


story stumbles on a time travel device brought back to the present by


a visitor from the far future. He steals it and sets up home in a


deserted stretch of time, constantly worrying about being found by the


old man he stole the

time machine from — until one day, many years


later, he realises that he is now the old man, and carefully arranges


for his younger self to “find” and “steal” the time machine. Such a


narcissistic view of time travel is taken to its logical extreme in


David Gerrold’s The Man Who Folded Himself (Random House, 1973).


Few of the writers of Dr Who have had the imagination actually to use


his time machine in this kind of way. It would, after all, make for


rather dull viewing if every time the Doctor had been confronted by a


disaster he popped into the TARDIS, went back in time and warned his


earlier self to steer clear of the looming trouble. But the implications


were thoroughly explored for a wide audience in the Back to the Future


trilogy, ramming home the point that time travel runs completely counter


to common sense. Obviously, time travel must be impossible. Only, common


sense is about as reliable a guide to science as the well known “fact”


that Einstein came up with the idea of time as the fourth dimension is


to history. Sticking with Einstein’s own theories, it is hardly common


sense that objects get both heavier and shorter the faster they move, or


that moving clocks run slow. Yet all of these predictions of relativity


theory have been born out many times in experiments, to an impressive


number of decimal places. And when you look closely at the general


theory of relativity, the best theory of time and space we have, it


turns out that there is nothing in it to forbid time travel. The theory


implies that time travel may be very difficult, to be sure; but not


impossible.

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