Popular Posts

Saturday, July 18, 2020

Liked on YouTube: ये पैराडॉक्स आपको सोचने पर मजबूर कर देगा | Predestination paradox explained | Time travel in Hindi

ये पैराडॉक्स आपको सोचने पर मजबूर कर देगा | Predestination paradox explained | Time travel in Hindi
Predestination paradox explained in hindi This is SHYAM TOMAR and welcomes to Tech & Myths Time Travel & the Predestination Paradox Explained A Predestination Paradox refers to a phenomenon in which a person traveling back in time become part of past events, and may even have caused the initial event that caused that person to travel back in time in the first place. In this theoretical paradox of time travel, history is presented as being unalterable and predestined, with any attempts to change past events merely resulting in that event being fulfilled. Science-fiction provides fertile ground for exploring this “Effect before Cause” concept, and over the years has provided much entertainment in the form of countless books and movies on the subject. “Predestination”: The word ‘predestination’ derives from the Greek word “proorizo” with “pro” meaning “before” and the verb “orizo” meaning to “determine”. It has been in use since classical times, with the Greek physician Hippocrates (460-370 BC) using it to describe an intended result following the administration of medication. It is mentioned four times in the Bible, or more specifically in the Epistles of Paul, and over time in theology has come to represent God having immutably determined all event throughout eternity . In Predestination (2014), an intersex temporal agent who has undergone reassignment surgery travels back in time to save his younger female self from falling in love and becoming pregnant by a mysterious male lover, who then disappears, completely ruining her life. Upon meeting his younger, female self, the time traveller subsequently falls in love and impregnates her, thus becoming the very stranger who caused all the heartache he traveled back in time to prevent. As well as an example of a predestination paradox, the act of self-creation in which the time traveler is his own mother and father is an example of a bootstrap paradox, or a self-created entity (object, data, person) with no discernible point of origin. A simpler predestination example involves a person traveling back in time to prevent a fire that broke out at a famous museum a century earlier resulting in the destruction of many valuable pieces of art, only to accidentally cause a kerosene lamp to fall, therefore creating the very fire that later motivated them to travel back in the first place. Likewise, a person traveling back in time to save a loved one from suffering a tragic death will be unable to save them from their fate as the event has already been determined. In the 2002 remake of the The Time Machine, for instance, the scientist Alex Hartdegen witnesses his girlfriend Emma being killed by a mugger looking to steal her engagement ring, after which Hartdegen devotes his life to building a time machine in order to change the past. Once completed, subsequent attempts to interfere with time sees Emma die under different circumstances, including being trampled by a horse, leading him to conclude that “I could come back a thousand times… and see her die a thousand ways.” He then travels to the future to see whether scientists have discovered a solution on how to change the past, and during a conversation with the Über-Morlock in the distant future is told: In this video, we will know Predestination paradox in hindi. and in this video we will also know a story of a time traveler who traveled in time by time machine in a Predestination movie. A predestination paradox (also called causal loop, causality loop, and (less frequently) closed loop or closed time loop) is a paradox of time travel that is often used as a convention in science fiction. A causal loop in the context of time travel or the causal structure of spacetime, is a sequence of events (actions, information, objects, in which an event is among the causes of another event, which in turn is among the causes of the first-mentioned event. Such causally-looped events then exist in spacetime, but their origin cannot be determined. For all updates : LIKE My Facebook Page https://bit.ly/3jdsLqF Follow Me on Twitter https://twitter.com/techandmyths My website https://bit.ly/32pPHgF Music By Interloper by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://bit.ly/2KupaES) Source: https://bit.ly/2CP987B Artist: https://bit.ly/2GadEOt Lightless Dawn by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://bit.ly/2KupaES) Source: https://bit.ly/3a1gboC Artist: https://bit.ly/2GadEOt
via YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YPZKKcF7WDk

No comments:

Post a Comment