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  • That's correct. But if you've figured out how to travel through time, traveling through space should be easy.

    Also, be sure to wear a hazard suit so you don't die from any ancient/future diseases your body has no protection from.

  • You're obviously the main character in this simulation so it's much more likely that all other coordinates are derived from your position in the simulation engine.

    • Also plot armor should take care of any disasters along the way. No worries. Just press the button and let’s go!

  • What if it works by reversing/fastforwarding time outside while preserving things within the time machine? Then as long as the time machine is grounded to the earth it would move with it

    • So, Primer, then? Where you can't return to a point in time before the time machine was constructed?

  • Forget the orbit... remember the song...

    https://genius.com/Monty-python-the-galaxy-song-lyrics

    "Just remember that you're standing on a planet that's evolving
    And revolving
    at 900 miles an hour.
    It's orbiting at 19 miles a second,
    so it's reckoned,
    The sun that is the source of all our power.
    Now the sun, and you and me,
    and all the stars that we can see,
    Are moving at a million miles a day,
    In the outer spiral arm,
    at 40,000 miles an hour,
    Of a galaxy we call the Milky Way."

  • All my childhood i was scared about being stuck in a building that was there back then. If i knew that was my smallest problem i would have scratched that idea long ago.

  • Well, it depends. I mean the original story "The Time machine" I think very deliberately had a machine that was on the ground. I guess if you're "travelling" through time then you could follow your local location in the same way you do when it is moving forward at the normal rate.

    The argument is more true for time machines that instantly move through time, like back to the future. Since yes it would need some way to account for planetary movement.

68 comments