Now here is the question. How old is the key? Think about it for a moment or two.
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That's actually irrelevant. He received the key from the future and thus for those twenty years, has always had it until he sent it back to himself.Spanky The Dolphin wrote:When was the key made?
But how can it be? It was twenty years old when he first received it, so when he sends it back, it would be forty. But if it's forty years old when he sent it back... et cetera.Spanky The Dolphin wrote:Assuming that this isn't an alternate timeline/parallel travel method, it is twenty years old, but it causes a paradox loop.
No he wouldn't, because he sent himself back the key to open the safe before he first encountered it.Drewcifer wrote:Maybe this is a nitpick, but wouldn't the man have to gain access to the safe to build the time machine in the first place? I mean the key can't travel back until he builds the machine, and he can't build the machine without the document in the safe, and he would have to have access the safe to start this whole paradox rolling, right?
:makes sounds by clapping one hand:Spanky The Dolphin wrote:This is actually a trick question, because there is no answer. This is because the situation is an impossibility.
But he can't the first time, because he doesn't have the key yet. And he never can (as long 4d spacetime is singular linear expressionGil Hamilton wrote:No he wouldn't, because he sent himself back the key to open the safe before he first encountered it.Drewcifer wrote: Maybe this is a nitpick....he would have to have access the safe to start this whole paradox rolling, right?
But he can, because the he sent the key backwards in time to before he encountered the safe, thus allowing him to open it, and thus built the time machine, ergo he can send the key back in time. This is a time loop, and as such, there is no first time.Drewcifer wrote:But he can't the first time, because he doesn't have the key yet. And he never can (as long 4d spacetime is singular linear expression)
That's actually a corruption of a Zen Buddhist Koan ("riddle"). The correct form is as follows:Drewcifer wrote::makes sounds by clapping one hand:
But he can't send the key back, because he can't build the time machine without it.Gil wrote:But he can, because the he sent the key backwards in time to before he encountered the safe, thus allowing him to open it, and thus built the time machine, ergo he can send the key back in time. This is a time loop, and as such, there is no first time.
Because it's unessecary. Because of the nature of causality, in this particular situation, at no point during the process does he not have the key. This is a counter-intuitive idea, but that's time travel logic for you.Drewcifer wrote:But he can't send the key back, because he can't build the time machine without it.
What would fix it for me would be if he at a later date gained access to the safe anyhow, and then built the time machine to send the key back to start the whole loop. Does that make sense?
My thinking is that before he sends the key back, he doesn't have the key, and therefore can never have the key.Gil Hamilton wrote:Because it's unessecary. Because of the nature of causality, in this particular situation, at no point during the process does he not have the key. This is a counter-intuitive idea, but that's time travel logic for you.
The point that I think we are confused on is that in my head I'm picturing the problem as the effect causing itself in a big circle. If that is the case, there isn't a first cause. The key always existed in that span of twenty years and he always possessed it.Drewcifer wrote:My thinking is that before he sends the key back, he doesn't have the key, and therefore can never have the key.
I guess I need to refresh myself on casuality loops
I guess that's why these are paradoxes: he always has the key, yet never does. Like that german cat in the box that always lives and always dies.Gil Hamilton wrote:The point that I think we are confused on is that in my head I'm picturing the problem as the effect causing itself in a big circle. If that is the case, there isn't a first cause. The key always existed in that span of twenty years and he always possessed it.
That occured to me to. Fascinating, isn't it?The Third Man wrote:Thinking about the age of the key is interesting. It leads me to suggest that you can't set up a paradox loop as described: it's a closed loop, ie we can say that it has an end, it doesn't go on indefinitely. The end comes about because of the fact that a key wears. Since its specified that the same key is sent back, each time it's used, a microscopic amount of wear occurs. Eventually the cumulative wear means that the key won't lift the levers/tumblers of the lock and at that point no time machine can be created and the loop is closed. I'd suggest that this means the whole thing falls, and that at no point is a time machine ever created.