Theories

 WARP FACTOR
I call this Warp Factor. You've already heard of it, Dawson, but this is for anyone else interested in it. The term "Warp Factor" was originally used in Star Trek, as a term of fantasy. But traveling at faster-than-light speeds may be possible. If we were to create a machine that generates negative energy, we could do it. The machine would shoot negative energy out the front and positive energy out the back. The negative energy would stretch space time, while the positive energy would expand it behind you, like riding on a wave. This "Warp Bubble" would ride on it's own energy, like shooting itself from a slingshot. It would go faster and faster, going faster than light. Due to the Theory of Relativity, this is the equivalent of time travel. As space-time unravels, turning normal, time on Earth would slow, stop, and go backwards. The findings turn it from impossible, to plausible.
By: Dillon Vance


BEING YOUR OWN GRANDFATHER
What if you could die twice? Dying is the equivalent of disappearing from the face of the Earth. Well, say, using the "Warp Factor" thought, if you were to go back to, say, 1840. To the time you were in previously, it'd seem as if you disappeared. To them, you're literally dead. Then, when you ACTUALLY die, in, say, 1860, you'd be labled dead. You'd have "died" twice! But say, while you're alive in the 1800's, you have a kid. He has a kid, and he has a kid. That kid is your father. He grows on to be you. You'd then grow up to be yourself. You'd technically live forever, without knowing it.
By: Dawson Stoever

Da Bubbles
The theory of a Multiverse is a widespread one, but here's a good way to look at it. Picture the universe, all we know of, as a bubble. Just a bubble. Picture the multiverse as a room, filled with bubbles. And God is sitting in the corner, blowing bubbles, thinking, "They'll never find out how I did this!" And there are infinite bubbles, one for every choice everyone makes. Each is a parallel universe. And our universe is constantly expanding. What happens when a bubble grows? POP. Think about it. By: Dillon Vance

 Theories

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