I said it in another thread, so I'll repeat it here: I do not believe in the impossible. I genuinely don't.
If there is something that can be done, then there is a way to do it. That way might not be practical, it might not be feasible, it might even be currently unknown, but I do not believe in the impossible.
I concede certain items by default: It is not possible for the statement "1=0" to be true without redefining one and zero. It is not possible to have the temperature of something go below absolute zero, due to the way absolute zero is defined. It is also not possible for an object that has mass to move faster than the speed of light.
That last one bears repeating and examination: It is not possible for an object that has mass to move faster than the speed of light (read theory of relativity information if you doubt that). However, it is still possible to go from point a to point b faster than the speed of light, we just don't have the mechanics yet.
How? Well.... Consider if you were able to fold space like a napkin. You could bring the furthest points of space so close that you could literally walk to them as easily as walking across the room, then undo the fold. You have now moved between two points that can be light years apart in a matter of seconds, and have therefore apparently gone faster than the speed of light.
How does this work out of theory? I have no idea. But I know that scientists are working on it. So, once the actual mechanics are figured out, it stops being a theory, and starts being reality. Might not see it in my lifetime. But that doesn't make it any less possible.
So, I ask everybody here, what is genuinely impossible to accomplish?
If there is something that can be done, then there is a way to do it. That way might not be practical, it might not be feasible, it might even be currently unknown, but I do not believe in the impossible.
I concede certain items by default: It is not possible for the statement "1=0" to be true without redefining one and zero. It is not possible to have the temperature of something go below absolute zero, due to the way absolute zero is defined. It is also not possible for an object that has mass to move faster than the speed of light.
That last one bears repeating and examination: It is not possible for an object that has mass to move faster than the speed of light (read theory of relativity information if you doubt that). However, it is still possible to go from point a to point b faster than the speed of light, we just don't have the mechanics yet.
How? Well.... Consider if you were able to fold space like a napkin. You could bring the furthest points of space so close that you could literally walk to them as easily as walking across the room, then undo the fold. You have now moved between two points that can be light years apart in a matter of seconds, and have therefore apparently gone faster than the speed of light.
How does this work out of theory? I have no idea. But I know that scientists are working on it. So, once the actual mechanics are figured out, it stops being a theory, and starts being reality. Might not see it in my lifetime. But that doesn't make it any less possible.
So, I ask everybody here, what is genuinely impossible to accomplish?
Comment