Renara Wrote:Your enthusiasm is noted! At the moment though I'm handling programming the v0.3 game engine, really what I could use is a time machine so I can get more done
We will however bring more scripters into the fold once the basics of the engine are a bit more complete, and once it's at a point that more people working on separate features will be beneficial.
What level of expertise do you have in general for programming/scripting? Any academic or otherwise formal courses? Most of what I'm doing and aiming to do isn't hard to pick up, I'm trying to document as I go but that keeps falling by the wayside as it slows me down even more
nebrose Wrote:technically with the proper aspects of a time machine is that you can onlt go forward... unless it a tardis from doctor who, then you can go anywere in time... the reason you can only go forward is because you would be trapped without the machine if you go back because it would cease to exist due to not being invented yet... the tardis is as old as time so it can go anywere XD
Renara Wrote:Easiest way I find to think of it is that a path is traversable, as you can walk either way upon it. A path can also be represented as a distance, however this distance is just a value, it is not in itself traversable.
Renara Wrote:I mean, when it comes down to it, 90% of modern day physics is belief in unseen substances (dark matter/energy), and that seems a tad far-fetched to me
kivipää Wrote:This would lead to energy not being a continuous variable, and all integrating would simply be rough approximations.
kivipää Wrote:If we have a minimum possible for both energy and mass, we have a minimum movement distance possible, making the space itself not continuous.
kivipää Wrote:And though it was hard to find any evidence about that we might actually be on to something, with non-continous variables the calculations about the charge of the core of an electron suddenly make sense.
kivipää Wrote:The whole universe seems to be a colossal, multidimensional movie with rather impressive fps.
MincedPhrase Wrote:1) Do you believe the past can be changed and why?
MincedPhrase Wrote:2) Do you believe the future can be changed and why?
MincedPhrase Wrote:As a side note, I like to think of the universe as a big computer that's running this reality, hence religious rituals could be thought of as cheat codes or bug exploits where you do a certain set of actions to receive a reward (if they work). Speaking of which, does anyone know how to summon Krystal?
Suraru Wrote:Hey smackman, I've decided your a douchebag
Renara Wrote:The concept of time after all evolved from labelling night and day, and yearly cycles, same idea but on a smaller scale, as a result the whole thing is arbitrary as a way for us to measure things like speed and change in a meaningful way; as a measurement it is useful, but I don't believe it's a property of anything that can be changed.
Renara Wrote:...if you were to know everything that there is to know about the universe and everything in it, then you could accurately predict the future with 100% certainty.
Kalypso Wrote:There is no "going back" as of yet, but it is possible to change the makeup of your brain to perceive time in a slower or faster motion. This involves changing the perception of motion that your eyes and ears understand motion and sound.
Smackman Wrote:do the rules of time even apply outside our solar system?
MincedPhrase Wrote:I'm curious, what sort of an experiment or form of proof would be needed for you to believe that time was a real quantity like distance or energy?
MincedPhrase Wrote:You've previously stated that you don't believe in Quantum Mechanics or Relativity. Why is that, and what are your qualms with those theories?
MincedPhrase Wrote:Smackman Wrote:do the rules of time even apply outside our solar system?
That's a pretty big question, and the best answer I can give is: from what we can tell, yes.
Renara Wrote:But the main example we got during that class for the basis of quantum mechanics was the old Schrodinger's cat experiment, where a beam of light is fired into a closed box containing a 50% reflective mirror; the beam has a 50% chance of either triggering a poison to kill the cat, or doing nothing (leaving it alive). But I've never considered that to be truly random, as the way I see it is that the light is reflected based on whether it bounces off-of (or is deflected by I think is more accurate?), or passes between, the atoms of the mirror. As the more reflective a surface is after all is dependent on what proportion of light colliding with it is deflected rather than passing through or being absorbed. But in effect, if you knew the exact spacing of the atoms in the 50% reflective mirror, and could calculate where exactly the beam hits and at what angle, then you could determine with 100% certainty whether it will pass through or reflect, so it doesn't really represent true random chance.
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