Time Paradoxes by Jacen
Time Paradoxes
“I never worry about the future. It comes soon enough.” - Albert Einstein. Some people thought that was such a beautiful thing. To wait for time and let it work out the way it always does. But others didn’t want to waste their time sitting around waiting for time. That’s how a lot of time travel stories start which in many cases, is completely, and quite frankly, unoriginal. However, the stories get exponentially more interesting when the big problem occurs because problems always occur with time travel. No matter what you do they happen because there’s nothing you can do when continuity and simple yet sophisticated logic comes into play.
These problems are called Time Paradoxes. Now the word paradox means, “a statement or proposition that, despite sound (or apparently sound) reasoning from acceptable premises, leads to a conclusion that seems senseless, logically unacceptable, or self-contradictory.” Thanks, Google. Now some examples of these paradoxes are things like the Grandfather Paradox or the Predestination Paradox. These paradoxes, however, are a lot more complicated than they sound. They could take hours to discuss. Sometimes even entire college courses to debate their possible solutions. Maybe even entire articles dedicated to them on your local school blog. And that’s exactly what I’m going to do. Inform the young on what should be taught in schools across America. Even though the information on these paradoxes may be completely unnecessary, at least you’ll be able to know it. So in the great words of Albert Einstein, “I never worry about the future. It comes soon enough.” So in other words, don’t worry if you never learn about the different time paradoxes cause I might never tell you.
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