General Relativity and Time Dilation
Scientists / Papers
John Archibald Wheeler
Theories Citing This Reference (11)
Alien Time Dilation Disparity
Advanced alien civilizations likely experience time at different rates due to their mass/gravity, making interaction with humans difficult and potentially dangerous due to temporal dissonance.
Causality via Spacelike Trajectories
The assertion that superluminal travel or teleportation is possible without violating causality as long as the trajectory remains spacelike and does not form closed timelike curves.
Chronology Protection / Retrocausality Prohibition
The idea that while wormholes allow for time dilation and could theoretically function as time machines, nature prevents paradoxes (like the grandfather paradox) by destroying the mechanism or canceling the signals, ensuring teleportation is possible but breaking the time stream is not.
General Relativity Failure Due to Three-Body Instability
General Relativity is fundamentally flawed because it cannot mathematically support stable long-term orbits for three or more bodies, necessitating the invention of dark matter to patch the theory.
Planck Ether Unification
Discrete Planck-scale ether unifies quantum mechanics and relativity while preventing singularities and time travel
Relativistic Wormhole Travel
Utilizing time dilation to create a spacetime link where a wormhole mouth launched at near light speed connects a distant star to Earth in drastically shorter timeframe.
Relativity and Portals
The breakdown of relativity allows for the possibility of portals and wormholes by exploiting relativistic effects.
Triarchy of Sentience
Concept that involves computational power, algorithmic power, and the integration of AI with vector databases.
Vibration Exploitation
Exploiting the vibration of particles moving at different speeds to create teleportation effects.
Wormhole Time Travel
Using wormholes to travel to distant stars quickly by connecting different points in spacetime.
Wormholes
Hypothetical tunnels in spacetime connecting two different points.