Thursday, December 23, 2010

'I DIDN'T THINK OF IRAQIS AS HUMANS,' SAYS U.S. SOLDIER WHO RAPED 14-YEAR-OLD GIRL BEFORE KILLING HER AND HER FAMILY

By Mail Foreign Service 21st December 2010

  • Steven Dale launches appeal against five life sentences because he was tried in civilian court
  • He says warzone sent him crazy and deaths of two colleagues had 'messed me up real bad'
Steven Green, pictured in April 2009, is serving five life sentences for rape and murder in Iraq. He has launched appeal but doesn't have 'much hope' of ever being freed

Steven Green, pictured in April 2009, is serving five life sentences for rape and murder in Iraq. He has launched appeal but doesn't have 'much hope' of ever being freed

An Iraq War veteran serving five life terms for raping and killing a 14-year-old Iraqi girl and killing her parents and sister says he didn't think of Iraqi civilians as humans after being exposed to extreme warzone violence.

Steven Green, a former 101st Airborne soldier, in his first interview since the 2006 killings, claimed that his crimes were fuelled in part by experiences in Iraq's violent 'Triangle of Death' where two of his sergeants were gunned down.

He also cited a lack of leadership and help from the Army.

'I was crazy,' Green said in the exclusive telephone interview from federal prison in Tucson, Arizona. 'I was just all the way out there. I didn't think I was going to live.'

Green talked about what led up to the March 12, 2006, attack on a family near Mahmoudiya, Iraq, that left him serving five consecutive life sentences.

The former soldier, who apologised at sentencing for his crimes, said he wasn't seeking sympathy nor trying to justify his actions - killings prosecutors described at trial in 2009 as one of the worst crimes of the Iraq war.

But Green said people should know his actions were a consequence of his circumstances in a war zone.

'If I hadn't ever been in Iraq, I wouldn't be in the kind of trouble I'm in now,' Green said. 'I'm not happy about that.'

Green was discharged with a 'personality disorder' before federal charges were brought against him.

Prosecutors sought a death sentence, but a federal jury in Paducah, Kentucky, opted for five life sentences on charges including the rape and murder of 14-year-old Abeer Qassim Al-Janabi and the shooting deaths of her mother, father and younger sister.

Four other soldiers were convicted in military court for various roles in the attack. Three remain in military prison.

Green is challenging the Military Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act, which allows the federal government to charge an American in civilian court for alleged crimes committed overseas. He was the first former soldier convicted under the statute. The U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals has scheduled arguments for January 21.

Green is challenging the constitutionality of that law, saying it gives the executive branch too much leeway over whom to prosecute. Prosecutors say the law should be upheld.

'I've got some hope, but I'm not delusional about it,' said Green, now 25. 'I hope it works. But, whenever they give you multiple life sentences, they're not planning on letting you out.'

Green didn't testify at trial. During sentencing, he apologized and said he expects to face 'God's justice' when he dies.

Abeer Qassim al-Janabi, Green's 14-year-old victim, whose parents and sister were also murdered in the attack. Green said deaths of two of his colleagues had 'messed him up real bad'

Abeer Qassim al-Janabi, Green's 14-year-old victim, whose parents and sister were also murdered in the attack. Green said deaths of two of his colleagues had 'messed him up real bad'

A 19-year-old high school dropout from Midland, Texas, Green joined the Army after obtaining his high school equivalency diploma from a correspondence school.

He said signing up was easy, born of a sense of duty to defend his country and the opportunities that offered.

'I thought I'd be neglecting my duty if I didn't,' Green said. 'You've got a career, you've got a job. It gives you opportunities to do things with your life.'

The military placed Green with the Fort Campbell-based 101st Airborne. Upon arriving in Iraq, Green said, his training to kill, the rampant violence and derogatory comments by other soldiers against Iraqis served to dehumanise that country's civilian population.

A turning point came on December 10, 2005, Green said, when a previously friendly Iraqi approached a traffic checkpoint and opened fire.

The shots killed Staff Sgt. Travis L. Nelson, 41, instantly. Sgt. Kenith Casica, 32, was hit in the throat. Casica died as soldiers raced him aboard a Humvee to a field hospital.

Green said those deaths 'messed me up real bad.'

The deaths intensified Green's feelings toward all Iraqis, whom soldiers often called by a derogatory term. 'There's not a word that would describe how much I hated these people,' Green said. 'I wasn't thinking these people were humans.'

Neighbour Hussein Mohammed points to the charred and blood-splattered crime scene where the killings took place in Mahmoudiya, Iraq

Neighbour Hussein Mohammed points to the charred and blood-splattered crime scene where the killings took place in Mahmoudiya, Iraq

Over the next four months, Green sought help from a military stress counsellor, obtaining small doses of a mood-regulating drug - and a directive to get some sleep before returning to his checkpoint south of Baghdad.

In the interview, Green described alcohol and drugs being prevalent at the checkpoint. Green said soldiers there frequently felt abandoned by the Army and were given little support after the deaths of Casica and Nelson.

Spc. James P. Barker of Fresno, California, testified that he pitched the idea of going to the al-Janabi family's home to Sgt. Paul E. Cortez of Barstow, California, who was in charge of the traffic checkpoint.

Scene of the attack in Al Mahmoudiya on the outsikirts of Baghdad

Scene of the attack in Al Mahmoudiya on the outsikirts of Baghdad

Green, who talked frequently of wanting to kill Iraqis, was brought along.

Cortez testified that Barker and Green had the idea of having sex with the girl and that he didn't know the family would be killed.

Green, then a private,saidhe had 'an altered state of mind' at the time. 'I wasn't thinking about more than 10 minutes into the future at any given time,' Green said. 'I didn't care.'

At the Iraqi home, Barker and Cortez pulled Abeer into one room, while Green held the mother, father and youngest daughter in another.

Pfc. Jesse V. Spielman, of Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, stood guard in the hall. As Barker and Cortez raped the teen, Green shot the three family members, killing them.

He then went into the next room and raped Abeer, before shooting her in the head. The soldiers lit her remains on fire before leaving. Another soldier stood watch a few miles away at the checkpoint.

Since his sentencing on September 4, 2009, Green has been attacked at the federal prison in Terre Haute, Indiana, and was then transferred to Arizona.

In prison, Green converted to Catholicism and has corresponded with a nun in Louisville about his faith.

Green described prison life as a 'lonely existence' and said other inmates consider those convicted of sex offenses among the lowest, making life 'hazardous' among the general prison population.

For Green, each day is just a matter of getting through 24 hours so he can do it all again the next day. Meanwhile, he lives with memories of the attack that took away the Iraqi family.

'If I thought that was an OK thing now, I wouldn't be much of a human being,' Green said.

Why you DON'T want to be a millionaire

December 22, 2010, 12:50 pm By Katie Adams Investopedia.com & Michael Byers Editor-In-Chief: The Mikiverse

Isn't it amazing that someone would write an article advising you NOT to become a millioaire. The premise of this article is that you don't want to become a millionaire because you will have problems, therefore you should stay poor. This is extremely logical because non-millionaires apparently DON'T have problems.

My advice is to be extremely wary of ANYONE who seeks to keep you from growing, learning and improving.

Remember that the grass isn't always greener - it may just be more expensive.


Who doesn't want to live the common Australian dream of becoming wildly rich? If you have ever bought a lottery ticket or made an investment based on a "hot tip" , consider that there may be some downfalls to becoming a millionaire.

1. Meet Mr. Taxman

As a millionaire, you're going to be on the hook for doing a greater amount of (financial) good for your country. And it's not just Uncle Sam that will be asking for his (bigger) portion of your paycheck – an increasing number of states will have their eye on your bottom line.

2. Taking On A Second Job

Possessions take time to maintain. Whether you're talking about clothes, cars or chateaus - the more you have of anything, the more time it will take. Money is no different. Once you have millions, you won't be able to just pay a few bills and balance your chequebook at the end of the month. It will take a significant amount of your time to budget, pay taxes, invest, give, plan spending, meet with professionals, etc.

3. Meet the Joneses

Vaulting into another economic stratum comes at a literal price. Once you have the means to buy a bigger house, purchase a nicer car and join that nearby golf club, you're most likely going to meet a whole new group of people – wealthier people. And becoming their friends can open up a whole new world. That world, while enjoyable, often raises your expectations about your standard of living overnight. All of a sudden, dining out means a waterfront table for tapas, not McDonald's and a movie. Whether you intend to begin the "keeping up with the Joneses" game or not, once you make those more expensive choices and move in those more expensive circles, you're more likely to find yourself paying a lot more attention to what others are doing and join right in. It's easier to swim with the current than against it.

4. "But You Shouldn't Have!"

No more bargain-shopping for birthday presents. Friends, family members, co-workers and employees begin to expect bigger, nicer and, well, more expensive gifts. You'd better budget for that. See #2.

5. They Come Out of the Woodwork

Just ask lottery winners like Twila Shultz, who won the Super 6 Jackpot in 2001. After winning $8.4 million, her family had to deal with all kinds of people approaching them for money. She told a newspaper that "one even showed up at the door wanting to borrow $100,000... she even (brought) pictures of her husband's feet. She wanted the money for (surgery on) his feet." Having money will attract people who need or want money. You'll have to have a plan for how to deal with them – who you want to give money to and who you want to turn away. And then you'll have to take action every time the request comes. See #2.

6. Riding the Roller Coaster

As your portfolio value increases so, most likely, will your anxiety over market fluctuations that could quickly erode your net worth. Never before did you lose sleep over a sagging dollar or what the Shanghai stock exchange did overnight. Welcome to a millionaire's world – where stocks and sleep don't necessarily mix well.

7. Who Can You Trust?

It's not just long-lost friends and family members who are bound to come knocking – it's professionals, as well. You will likely receive a steady flow of email, snail mail and voicemail offers from lawyers, investment advisers and tax attorneys all eager for your money – ahem, I mean "business." If you don't have a strong background in personal finances, investing or taxes you could probably benefit from assembling a team of credible, experienced professionals who can give you some much-needed advice. The question, again, becomes who should you trust? You'll need to talk with trusted friends, undertake research and do your due diligence. Sounds a lot like #2.

8. Suddenly Insecure

As a millionaire, you are now a target for an unwelcome group of people: criminals. A bigger house in a nicer community could attract burglars. A more expensive car could attract the attention of car thieves. A fatter investment portfolio invites potential perpetrators of fraud and other crimes against people with a high net worth. Suddenly, Saturdays are spent checking out home and car alarm systems and your investment adviser's professional background to make sure your wealth and possessions are safe. Once again, we're back to #2.

The Bottom Line

If you've been squirreling away savings in the hopes that one day you can move out of your middle-class enclave and into that gated community one postcode over, remember that the grass isn't always greener - it may just be more expensive. And it will probably take more time to mow.
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PSYCHIATRY—LABELLING KIDS WITH BOGUS 'MENTAL DISORDERS'

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

#205 – DICKILEAKS

22 12 2010 from: http://thingsboganslike.com/2010/12/22/205-dickileaks/

TBL Disclaimer: We apologise for the AFL-centric thrust of this post, but it’s too bogan to ignore

While the bogan reserves the right to be sneaky and dishonest at all times, it demands utmost transparency from others. If at any time the bogan feels it is not experiencing this uniquely boganic form of ‘fair go’, it is aware that either political correctness has gone mad, someone needs to be sued, or some cunt needs to be glassed. Despite this maxtreme quest for the freedom of other people’s information, the bogan has failed to truly embrace Wikileaks. The bogan’s finely sculpted media consumption needs fitted poorly with the story of a grey haired renegade computer geek, and abstract diplomatic and military revelations on matters for which the bogan cares little, such as decade-long wars.

A literal uncovering of notable football players leaked by a renegade sexy schoolgirl, on the other hand, is a cause that the bogan can really get behind. We now know that if Julian Assange was a cheeky, bronzed teenage girl in a bikini, the bogan would have been on the first flight to London to post bail. In contrast to nerdy dweebs in dark rooms performing unfathomable computer wizardry, the bogan can actually relate to dickileaks, as its friend’s sister knows someone who went to school with the girl, and it is certain that she’s “like, totally smokin’”. Thanks to the irresistible blend of sex scandal, celebrities, sports stars, facebook, and nudity, the male bogan diligently set to work on justifying its compulsion to view the penises of other men. The end product of this self-reflection to temporarily bypass its homophobia has generally been “haha, he’s got a small dick”. This allows the male bogan to seem both masculine and uninterested. It also allows the bogan to tangentially refer to the superior size of its own manhood, something evidenced in photos of a similar kind that nobody will ever want to look at.

Tantalisingly for the bogan, the renegade sexy schoolgirl assures her twitter fans that she possesses an additional 18 photos of naked footballers from a variety of AFL clubs, and will dripfeed them in an Assange-esque manner. The bogan can gleefully speculate on whose penis it will be able to view next, in a totally heterosexual way. Also, now that all the facts of the story are available (courtesy of witnessing a footballer’s press conference and seeing an interview on A Current Affair and Today Tonight) the bogan can begin to opine on who is at fault. This tends to fall into a single category: she’s a slut. The bogan is preternaturally predicated to assume that in any he said-she said situation, if he or she is famous, then that particular he or she is telling the truth. QED.

What this reveals about the bogan is not that it is interested in looking at leaking penises, or even that it is interested in what hot schoolgirls have to say. What it tells us is that, when faced with a choice between real news of global significance, and news generated for maxtreme sound and fury, but signifying absolutely nothing, the bogan will choose the latter every time.

REVEALED:HOW SCROOGE BANKS PAY JUST 1p INTEREST ON EVERY £100 OF CHILDREN'S SAVINGS

By Sylvia Morris 21st December 2010

Miserly banks and building ­societies are paying children as little as 0.01 per cent interest, which adds up to a princely 1p interest a year on every £100 of savings.

The meanest include some of the biggest names on the High Street, including Barclays, Britannia, Santander and C&G.

Parents should avoid these High Street Scrooges when looking for a home for their children’s Christmas money.

Getting more for their money: Gennaro and Helen Romano were appalled at the low interest rate their children Francesco and Luca were getting at Alliance and Leicester so they switched to Northern Rock where they earn a healthy 3 per cent

Getting more for their money: Gennaro and Helen Romano were appalled at the low interest rate their children Francesco and Luca were getting at Alliance and Leicester so they switched to Northern Rock where they earn a healthy 3 per cent

C&G, for instance, pays just 0.05 per cent to ­children under 16 on its Young Investor account — or a barely credible 5p interest a year on each £100.

The bank is the savings and mortgages arm of the giant Lloyds ­banking group, which was kept afloat by a massive injection of taxpayers’ cash.

The interest it pays is 60 times less than the top 3 per cent paid by Northern Rock.

This rip-off come at a time when the ­Government wants to encourage us to save.

Mark Hoban, financial secretary to the Treasury, said in the autumn: ‘The Government is committed to encouraging saving for children within the constraints of public finances.’

And in a particularly vicious twist, some of the biggest names on the High Street pay less on specialist children’s accounts than they do on adult ones.

C&G’s Cheltenham Gold branch-based account for the over-16s, which works in a similar way to its Young Investor account, pays 1.9 per cent on savings up to £1,000 and higher rates above this.

This rate includes a bonus, but even without the bonus it still pays 0.4 per cent — eight times more than it pays to children.

And banks are not above playing other dirty tricks on children. Alliance & Leicester FirstSaver was once a top payer, but now it is called Santander Instant Access and pays 0.1 per cent.

Santander Flexible Saver for Kids is also a disgrace, paying 0.4 per cent — less than half what adults are paid on its branch-based Instant Access account.

But young children are excluded from this account, because the minimum age is 11.

Shockingly, building societies are also ­letting children down despite their claims to be committed to encouraging saving and supporting local communities.

West Bromwich’s Acorn account pays 0.05 per cent. Other culprits are Dunfermline, part of Nationwide, Hinckley & Rugby and Newcastle — which all pay just 0.1 per cent.

The worst of the bunch is Newcastle’s Young Saver, now closed to new savers, which pays just 0.01 per cent, or 1p a year interest on £100.

Although there are no rules on the minimum age for a savings account, individual banks and building societies do set limits. And many keep their better rates for those aged 16 or over.

Children can also be ruled out of top-paying internet accounts because you need a bank account to run them — although an adult can often open one in their name in trust for their child.

So where can you go for a decent deal? Northern Rock’s Little Rock pays a much healthier 3 per cent.

Other decent children’s accounts all come from building societies: Chelsea (2 per cent); Skipton (1.8 per cent); Norwich & Peterborough (1.75 per cent); and Yorkshire Building Society (1.75 per cent).

And for parents and relatives wanting to put money away, Northern Rock also offers a fixed-rate version at 3.75 per cent fixed until September 2013.

What the banks say

Yorkshire and Clydesdale banks both pay 4.25 per cent fixed for five years.

This is much better than the government-sponsored National ­Savings & Investments. Its ­Children’s Bonus Bond pays just 2.5 per cent tax-free for five years.

If you want to put money away for your child each month, Halifax Children’s Regular Saver Account offers a good deal, paying 6 per cent. Paying in £100 a month builds up to £1,239 in total over a year.

When you open a savings account for your child — either an easy access one to encourage them to save, or a fixed-rate, longer-term deal — make sure you or they fill in form R85, available from banks and building societies.

This will allow interest to be paid before tax is deducted.

Children have their own personal tax allowance — currently £6,475 — but they can earn only £100 interest from money given by each parent before they face tax.

Once the interest breaches this limit, tax is paid at the parent’s highest rate of tax. At 3 per cent, the top rate available on easy-access children’s accounts, each parent can put in £3,300 without going over the limit. At 2 per cent, it’s £5,000.

Once children reach the age of 16, they are eligible to take out a tax-free cash Isa which should give them a better deal — and easy access to their money.

Avoid these ten misers

Newcastle Young Saver (0.01 per cent); C & G Young Investor (0.05 per cent); West Bromwich Acorn (0.05 per cent); Dunfermline M and S accounts (0.1 per cent); Hinckley & Rugby Flying Start (0.1 per cent); Newcastle Nova 18 (0.1 per cent); Barclays Children’s Savings (0.25 per cent); Britannia FirstSaver (0.25 per cent); Kent Reliance Wishmakers (0.25 per cent); Santander Flexible Saver for Kids (0.4 per cent).

For more on children’s savings, go to www.thisismoney.co.uk/children

'We get 3 per cent at Northern Rock'

Francesco, seven, and Luca, six, both have a Northern Rock Little Rock savings account, paying 3  per cent, into which they put birthday money and intend to add any Christmas money.

Parents Helen and Gennaro Romano (pictured with the boys), from Norwich, let them spend some of the money but encourage them to put the rest into their savings accounts.

Helen switched the account to Northern Rock this year.

‘They were in the Alliance & Leicester FirstSaver, but the rate dropped dramatically so we moved it to a better deal in the High Street.’

The Alliance & Leicester account pays a mean 0.1 per cent.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

FREAKY PHYSICS PROVES PARALELL UNIVERSES EXIST

By John Brandon Published April 05, 2010 FoxNews.com

Look past the details of a wonky discovery by a group of California scientists -- that a quantum state is now observable with the human eye -- and consider its implications: Time travel may be feasible. Doc Brown would be proud.

The strange discovery by quantum physicists at the University of California Santa Barbara means that an object you can see in front of you may exist simultaneously in a parallel universe -- a multi-state condition that has scientists theorizing that traveling through time may be much more than just the plaything of science fiction writers.

And it's all because of a tiny bit of metal -- a "paddle" about the width of a human hair, an item that is incredibly small but still something you can see with the naked eye.

UC Santa Barbara's Andrew Cleland cooled that paddle in a refrigerator, dimmed the lights and, under a special bell jar, sucked out all the air to eliminate vibrations. He then plucked it like a tuning fork and noted that it moved and stood still at the same time.

That sounds contradictory, and it's nearly impossible to understand if your last name isn't Einstein. But it actually happened. It's a freaky fact that's at the heart of quantum mechanics.

How Is That Possible?

To even try to understand it, you have to think really, really small. Smaller than an atom. Electrons, which circle the nucleus of an atom, are swirling around in multiple states at the same time -- they're hard to pin down. It's only when we measure the position of an electron that we force it to have a specific location. Cleland's breakthrough lies in taking that hard-to-grasp yet true fact about the atomic particle and applying it to something visible with the naked eye.

What does it all mean? Let's say you're in Oklahoma visiting your aunt. But in another universe, where your atomic particles just can't keep up, you're actually at home watching "The Simpsons." That may sound far-fetched, but it's based on real science.

"When you observe something in one state, one theory is it split the universe into two parts," Cleland told FoxNews.com, trying to explain how there can be multiple universes and we can see only one of them.

The multi-verse theory says the entire universe "freezes" during observation, and we see only one reality. You see a soccer ball flying through the air, but maybe in a second universe the ball has dropped already. Or you were looking the other way. Or they don't even play soccer over there.

Sean Carroll, a physicist at the California Institute of Technology and a popular author, accepts the scientific basis for the multi-verse -- even if it cannot be proven.

"Unless you can imagine some super-advanced alien civilization that has figured this out, we aren't affected by the possible existence of other universes," Carroll said. But he does think "someone could devise a machine that lets one universe communicate with another."

It all comes down to how we understand time.

Carroll suggests that we don't exactly feel time -- we perceive its passing. For example, time moves fast on a rollercoaster and very slowly during a dull college lecture. It races when you're late for work . . . but the last few minutes before quitting time seem like hours.

Back to the Future

"Time seems to be a one-way street that runs from the past to the present," says Fred Alan Wolf, a.k.a. Dr. Quantum, a physicist and author. "But take into consideration theories that look at the level of quantum fields ... particles that travel both forward and backward in time. If we leave out the forward-and-backwards-in-time part, we miss out on some of the physics."

Wolf says that time -- at least in quantum mechanics -- doesn't move straight like an arrow. It zig-zags, and he thinks it may be possible to build a machine that lets you bend time.

Consider Sergei Krikalev, the Russian astronaut who flew six space missions. Richard Gott, a physicist at Princeton University, says Krikalev aged 1/48th of a second less than the rest of us because he orbited at very high speeds. And to age less than someone means you've jumped into the future -- you did not experience the same present. In a sense, he says, Krikalev time-traveled to the future -- and back again!

"Newton said all time is universal and all clocks tick the same way," Gott says. "Now with Einstein's theory of Special Relativity we know that travel into the future is possible. With Einstein's theory of gravity, the laws of physics as we understand them today suggest that even time travel to the past is possible in principle. But to see whether time travel to the past can actually be realized we may have to learn new laws of physics that step in at the quantum level."

And for that, you start with a very tiny paddle in a bell jar.

Cleland has proved that quantum mechanics scale to slightly larger sizes. The next challenge is to learn how to control quantum mechanics and use it for even larger objects. Do so -- and we might be able to warp to parallel universes just by manipulating a few electrons.

"Our concepts of cause and effect will fly out the window," says Ben Bova, the science fiction author. "People will -- for various reasons -- try to fix the past or escape into the future. But we may never notice these effects, if the universe actually diverges. Maybe somebody already has invented a time machine and our history is being constantly altered, but we don’t notice the kinks in our path through time."



Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2010/04/05/freaky-physics-proves-parallel-universes/#ixzz18k1hJPLg

ISRAELIS WARPLANES RAID GAZA

(AFP) – 8 hours ago

GAZA CITY, Palestinian Territories — Israeli warplanes staged eight attacks in Gaza overnight, wounding two Palestinian fighters, a Palestinian medical source and witnesses said Tuesday.

The raids came after Palestinian militants on Monday fired nine mortar shells into southern Israel that fell on open ground and caused no casualties, the Israeli army said.

Three raids targeted the town of Khan Younes in the south of the territory controlled by Hamas, wounding two fighters of the Ezzedin al Kassam Brigades, the armed wing of Hamas, one of them seriously, the sources said.

The Israeli planes also attacked a tunnel between the Gaza Strip and Egypt near the southern town of Rafah, without causing any injuries.

Four other attacks were carried out in the north of the Palestinian territory targeting the Jabailya refugee camp and the towns of Beit Lahya, Beit Hanoun and Zeitoun, with no casualties reported.

An Israeli military spokeswoman, questioned by AFP, spoke of seven air raids against tunnels used for smuggling weapons and "arms dumps used for terrorist attacks."

She described the raids as "reprisals for attacks on Israeli territory."

Nine mortar rounds were fired at southern Israel from Gaza on Monday, without hurting anyone, an Israeli military spokeswoman said.

Israeli warplanes on Saturday night hit central Gaza, killing five militants as they were about to launch a rocket attack, according to the army and witnesses.

The raid was one of the deadliest since Israel's December 2008-January 2009 war on Gaza's Hamas rulers, codenamed Operation Cast Lead, which cost the lives of 1,400 Palestinians, mostly civilians, and 13 Israelis, 10 of them soldiers.

Since Operation Cast Lead, the number of rocket attacks has dropped considerably but the Israeli army says more than 200 rockets or shells have been fired this year.

Copyright © 2010 AFP. All rights reserved

EINSTEIN WAS RIGHT, YOU CAN BE IN TWO PLACES AT ONCE

By Steve Connor, Science Editor, Friday, 17 December 2010

Einstein famously rejected quantum theory as unable to explain the universe

Getty Images

Einstein famously rejected quantum theory as unable to explain the universe

A device that exists in two different states at the same time, and coincidentally proves that Albert Einstein was right when he thought he was wrong, has been named as the scientific breakthrough of the year.

The machine, consisting of a sliver of wafer-thin metal, is the first man-made device to be governed by the mysterious quantum forces that operate at the level of atoms and sub-atomic particles.

Normal, everyday objects obey the laws of conventional Newtonian physics, named after Sir Isaac Newton, but these rules break down on the sub-atomic scale and a whole new branch of theoretical physics had to be invented to explain what happens on this sub-microscopic level.

Einstein was the first to embrace quantum physics but later rejected it on the grounds that it made everything unpredictable – "God does not play dice with the universe," he famously stated.

However, a range of effects has been recorded over the past few years that can only be explained by quantum mechanics and in March scientists were able to build the first device that seemed to follow the quantum rules that Einstein was the first to realise applied to light waves.

The breakthrough, recognised by the journal Science as the most significant this year, opens the way to a range of practical developments such as quantum computers that are far faster than conventional processors and which could never be hacked into because they handle and transmit data using an unbreakable form of encryption.

"Quantum theory dictates that a very tiny thing can absorb energy only in discrete amounts, can never sit perfectly still, and can literally be in two places at once," said Adrian Cho, a writer for Science. "This represents the first time that scientists have demonstrated quantum effects in the motion of a human-made object. It opens up a variety of possibilities ranging from new experiments that meld quantum control over light, electrical currents and motion to, perhaps someday, tests of the bounds of quantum mechanics and our sense of reality."

The breakthrough was achieved by physicists Andrew Cleland and John Martinis from the University of California at Santa Barbara. Their machine consisted of a tiny metal paddle made of semiconductor material just visible to the naked eye. By supercooling the device to just above absolute zero (minus 273C), then raising its energy by a "single quantum", they made it vibrate by getting thicker and thinner at a frequency of some 6 billion times a second, producing a detectable electric current. They even managed to get it to vibrate in two energy states at once, both a lot and a little – a phenomenon allowed only by the rules of quantum mechanics.

"Physicists still haven't achieved a two-places-at-once state with a tiny object like this one," Mr Cho said. "But now that they have reached this simplest state of quantum motion, it seems a whole lot more obtainable."

DEATH AND TIME TRAVELLING

Speculations on the science and fiction of dying to get to the future
by Jim Walker Rewritten: 25 Aug. 2001 Additions: 22 Dec. 2005

How would you like to visit other worlds, the stars and planets on the other side of the galaxy? Or how would you like to live in the future, say several thousand years from now? The impenetrable light-speed barrier and the brief life span of humans appears to prevent any entity from achieving these goals. In spite of the life span and light-speed barrier, I will describe, not only how one might get to the stars and to the future, but that one can travel there, not by traveling close to light speed, not at the speed of light, but much quicker. Instantly. Instantly.

Before you commit this idea to pseudoscience, what I will describe does not violate any known laws of physics. Nor will I appeal to scientific speculations on superliminal loopholes, anti-gravity, wormholes, tachyons, quantum tunneling, curved space, etc. I will, however, resort to a thought experiment using fiction as a method to explain the concept.

Time travel occurs in such a facile and straightforward manner that nature has already done it for millions of years. Natural time travel occurs so simply that we tend to overlook it because of its seeming banality. Science fiction authors have expounded on this in its mechanical manifestation for many years, but always in the wrong context. In Sci-Fi terminology it goes by the term "suspended animation." If you can stop and preserve your information carriers (the molecules, genes, and cells of your body) and restore them to full function at a later time then, in effect, time travel occurs. Regrettably Sci-Fi authors regulate suspended animation simply as a means to preserve human bodies rather than promoting its time jumping properties. In science fiction, the spaceship always gets the credit for the journey but the suspended animation device never receives full due its time & distance travel capacity. To break this impasse requires a shift of perspective, a paradigm shift, to use Thomas Kuhn's phrasing.

Even with the simplicity of the physics involved, unfortunately, the technology does not yet exist to achieve practical time travel for large biological life forms like humans. In spite of this temporary limitation, the technology already exists for preserving small living things such as cells, embryos, and even small animals. In this respect, one can show that, in principle, suspending a large living being falls well within the range of foreseeable technology. To demonstrate just how time travel works requires the use of a thought experiment. Once you undergo this thought experiment, you will understand that instant time travel, indeed, can work, albeit, only in forward time.

Science and science fiction's description of space travel

In science fiction the authors always regulate the spaceship as the sole device for traveling in distance and time regardless of how its crew undergo suspended animation. Among the best known spaceships that used suspended animation chambers include the U.S.S. Discovery (from the movie, "2001, A Space Odyssey"), and the Nostromo (in "Alien").

Other Sci-Fi stories use Faster-Than-Light spaceships such as Star Trek's Enterprise which uses warp-drives. In the movie, Star Wars, the Millennium Falcon used hyperdrives to achieve Faster Than Light (FTL) velocities through hyperspace. The Guild Heighliner in Frank Herbert's "Dune" can "fold" two spacetime points together and transport itself without moving.

In science & technology, aerospace engineers usually attempt to design spacecraft capable of achieving the fastest possible velocity through space. In the 60s, for example, Robert Bussard of the TRW Corporation proposed using interstellar hydrogen atoms as fuel for a ramjet. An enormous scoop would collect and funnel the hydrogen into a nuclear reaction motor. The faster it goes, the more hydrogen it collects and the more efficient it becomes. The British Interplanetary Society came up with a Project Daedalus to design a craft using thermonuclear reactions to achieve velocities of about 10 to 16 percent of the speed of light. At these velocities it would take approximately 40 years to reach a star 6 light-years away. [Herbert]

Needless to say, all of these sub-light-velocity spacecraft lack the capability to travel galactic distances within the life spans of their passengers. Even if scientists figure out how to travel at light speed velocities, consider the vast impracticability of it. Even at warp factor 8 (the maximum velocity of the first Star Trek Enterprise), it would take 195 years to cross our Milky Way galaxy, which has a diameter of around 100,000 light years. (Warp factor 8 equals 512 times light speed. Warp factor 1 equals the speed of light , the total velocity equals the cube of the warp factor.) Clearly, light speed travel, even at warp speeds, (even if achieved) would deem abysmally insufficient as a usable form of galactic space travel.

Science and science fiction's concept of time travel

Perhaps the most renown story of time travel comes from H.G. Well's 1894 classic, "The Time Machine." Most time travel stories describe both backward and forward time travel. One of my favorite stories come from the movie Somewhere in Time (1980), even though it doesn't involve a machine. Unfortunately, none of these stories describe a convincing mechanism for actually achieving time travel, and many don't attempt an explanation at all. Of those that do, they borrow from the speculations of scientists. We also have to disregard the paradoxical inconsistencies and the violations of causality (for example, what happens if the time traveler kills his father before the time traveler's birth, etc.).

When physicists hypothesis and speculate on time travel, it comes simply to that. Speculation. In their attempts to propose a method of time travel, they can only resort to the most hypothetical aspects of relativity or quantum theory such as time compression light-speed travel, FTL, superluminal wormholes or quantum tunneling. Although, point particles such as electrons can achieve a kind of time jump (quantum tunneling), but when the hypothesis gets applied to macro objects the size of living beings, the concept falls apart. Regardless of the attractiveness of their speculations, the problem lies in the inability to design a machine, in principle, to satisfy their hypothesis. Indeed, it may turn out that superluminal loopholes and wormholes have no validity whatsoever (most scientific ideas do not pan out). Our method of time travel avoids all the trappings of these hypothetical guesses.

Nature's time travelers

Examples of nature's time travelers

Nature and natural selection have utilized time travel via suspended animation for millions of years, all without using quantum loopholes. Seeds provide the most common example of natural suspension. Some seeds like those from Lotus plants last as long as 2000 years and can still germinate. Spores, and microbes have remained suspended for hundreds, and in some cases, millions of years before they come to life. Bacterial spores have lasted for 25-40 million years discovered in a bee preserved in amber. In 2000, scientists revived bacteria that had lain in suspended animation for 250 million years encased in salt crystals deep in the earth. [see article]

Brine shrimp give another excellent example of nature's time travelers that you can test out for yourself. You can actually buy dried brine shrimp eggs from most pet stores (aquarium owners use brine shrimp to feed their fish). Brine shrimp eggs come in a can or packet and you can store them for long periods of time. In the can, they look like dried brown powder. Just sprinkle them into purified water and stir gently for about one minute and they will hatch. Instant life!

Insects such as periodical cicadas suspend their lives while in the nymph stage. They emerge after 13 or 17 years, literally time-jumping past the life span of possible predators. According to Lloyd and Dybas, in any particular area, all life cycles remain synchronized, with the result that each area experiences a cicada plague every 13 or 17 years. This presumably results in predators being swamped in plague years and starved in intervening years. Lloyd and Dybas suggest that the long life cycle results in an 'evolutionary race through time.' Interestingly, the time periods always come in prime number sequences (17 or 13) because a predator with a shorter life cycle might synchronize with the cicadas every second or every third time around! [Dawkins]

In another example of natural time travel, some species of frogs can go through the winter with one-half of their body's liquid turned into ice. In this frozen state, they can go without breathing, eating or even without a heartbeat. In the spring, they thaw out and live out their lives. [Health, Mar.1987]

Unfortunately humans have yet to achieve time travel but some think that Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones might have something to do with it. Actually he doesn't time travel at all; he just looks aged beyond his time.

Suspended biological animation in the laboratory

For years scientists have suspended various life forms by the process of freezing. Live blood cells have remained suspended for as long as ten years by protecting them in low concentrations of glycerol (to prevent crystallization and destruction of the cell walls). The blood gets frozen in liquid nitrogen at around -150 C. Thawing the blood takes about ten minutes [Technical Manual of the American Association of Blood Banks].

According to reports, the first successful animation of a mammal occurred in 1951 by a Yugoslavian biologist who froze hamsters for several hours. In the 80s, the biologist Paul Segall claimed to have suspended two dogs by replacing their blood with a cryoprotectant (an antifreeze), and brought them back to life after 20 minutes of suspension. The dog's hearts had stopped beating and by all standards, had died and then came back to life [Health, Mar. 1987] Today, various cells, tissue, sperm and even human embryos get commonly stored in cryogenic suspension for years.

Although no one has yet suspended life forms as large as a human being and brought them back to life, nothing in physics prevents this, at least in principle. The difficulty in suspending a large body mass comes with freezing tissue cells deep within the body at the same time as all the other cells and without destroying them by crystallization. Fortunately there does exist, promising new techniques that may produce practicable freeze suspension methods. Some of these methods use a form of magnetic cooling.

Magnetic time suspension

At Los Alamos National Laboratory, researchers have developed a new type of cryogenic refrigerator, a magnetic unit that uses the magnetocaloric effect (MCE). The magnetic refrigerator has many advantages over conventional gas-liquid refrigerators. Because they use a magnetic field to cool a refrigerant, magnetic refrigerators don't carry the energy-draining baggage of conventional machines. Magnetic refrigerators can operate at up to four times the efficiencies of conventional coolers and have very few moving parts. Magnetic refrigerators also have a higher cooling capacity per unit volume than gas-liquid freezers because of the density of the magnetic material. As development continues superconducting magnets should yield even more efficient and powerful refrigerators. [Chemical Week, Sep. 4, 1985]. [Also check out these sites: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

If for one moment you doubt the ability of energy fields to suspend objects in time, consider the experiments of Lene Vestergaard Hau, professor of Applied Physics at Harvard University where he successfully froze atoms to the point of suspending the energy of light that relays to and from them. By using a magnetic field to trap sodium atoms, and using coupling lasers, Hau and his team have frozen atoms to within a millionth of a degree of absolute zero. The information that produces and transmits the light actually gets stored within the atoms and thus he has effectively stopped and restarted light within a test chamber. ["Frozen Light," Scientific American, Jul. 2001]. If you can suspend the movements of matter and energy, you have essentially stopped their time. (Note, that although I accept the idea of freezing atoms, I feel suspicious of their terminology of freezing light. Light may not exist between events at all. See "Does Light Exist?")

I will use magnetic suspension technology to illustrate a thought experiment (below), but first we need to understand a little bit about the nature of time and space.

The interconnection of time and space

"Henceforth, space by itself, and time by itself, are doomed to fade away into mere shadows, and only a kind of union of the two will preserve an independent reality."
-Hermann Minkowski

Scientists think of time as a measured movement of some external object or simply the period of an event. For example, one earth year represents the period of duration of our planet moving once around the sun. A day represents the period of one planetary rotation about its axis, etc. Virtually all expressions of time represent some form of measured events.

One of the most interesting consequences of Einstein's relativity theory comes with the realization that you cannot separate space from time. The four-dimensional continuum consists of the familiar three spatial dimensions and the temporal or time dimension which, together, physicists call spacetime. Actually Einstein didn't come up with the idea of 4-dimensional spacetime but rather it came from Minkowski's geometric formulation of the theory of Special Relativity, where later Einstein incorporated the spacetime continuum into his general theory of relativity.

To better understand the meaning of dimensions, think of them as the coordinates necessary to find an object in space. To locate, say, an airborne aircraft, you would need to know 3 coordinate dimensions: the longitude, latitude, and the altitude above sea level. But you would also need to know the time at which to find the aircraft at those dimensions. Therefore you also need time to locate objects in space. Physicists think in terms of spacetime rather than space and time because when you alter space, you invariably alter time, and vise-versa. Thus space and time have no more independence of each other than the three dimensions of space [Russell]. This bears importance for understanding time travel because when you travel in distance, you travel in time; when you travel in time, you travel in distance. One cannot avoid this interconnection. Unfortunately, the direction of travel goes only one way in our experiment. Once you commit yourself to the future, you cannot come back. Sorry.

An intriguing aspect of time travel comes with the realization that if you go very fast, time appears to slow down. Relativity theory predicts that as a material object approaches the speed of light, three things happen: mass appears to increase toward infinity; one of the spatial dimensions shortens toward zero; and time slows to a stop [see light-speed chart]. This presents us with the light-speed barrier, for to accelerate an object to the speed of light would take an infinite amount of energy and would result in a infinite mass, a loss of a dimension, and stopped time. Needless to say, light-speed travel presents vast difficulties, not only in expense but in efficiency.

However, if you do the opposite of going fast, you get the benefit of not only traveling in spacetime, but the cost of building a time-machine becomes considerably lower. By suspending and stopping every cell in your body though some process of controlled dormancy you would, in effect, drastically alter time from your perspective. Of course when you stop all your life processes, you would essentially have killed yourself, at least temporarily. Ironic as it may seem, by dying, you can extend your life into the future and achieve instant spacetime travel. To illustrate just how this works requires a thought experiment.

A spacetime travel thought experiment

"Sleek. Fast. Handles like a dream. Delivers the ultimate performance. From 0 to 800,000 years in 1.2 seconds."
-from the 2001 movie trailer, The Time Machine

Imagine for the moment that a group of physicists and engineers have developed an efficient biological suspension chamber that can hold a single human being. For the purpose of this thought experiment, imagine that the chamber uses magnetic field technology where superconducting magnets can literally halt the vibrations of every atom within its chamber. Instead of freezing a refrigerant (as present MCE units do), imagine the human body itself, as the refrigerant! If a human happens to sit in the chamber with the magnetic field turned on, every cell in the body would undergo virtually instantaneous super-cooled freezing which avoids the problems of cell crystallization produced by slow gas-fluid freezers. Computers control all operations, from turning on the magnetic field and holding the body in suspension. When arriving at its time destination, the computers shut down the magnetic field which instantly returns every atomic structure of the body back to its previous state, thus avoiding the difficulties of slow-thawing.

Because the chamber has automatic computer control capability, this allows a single person to operate the time-machine from a simple instrument panel without assistance from anyone else. Fortunately you had the funds available to purchase the first model and you get to serve as the test pilot.

Your spacetime-chamber looks like this:

(Click on picture for details)

Now imagine yourself as the pilot of this craft. In spite of it being bolted to the floor and the realization that this machine will halt every atom in your body, you will shortly embark on a journey of millions of miles and into the future. Instantly. Remember, nothing here violates any known law of physics.

You climb into the chamber and clamp the side door shut. Before you appears an instrument panel:

The controls appear simple. You see a digital clock with the present time showing. Below that you see a "stop time" clock where you can enter the time period you wish to appear in. You dial in a timer to set the count down cycle. If, during the count down you wish to halt the procedure, you can simply hit the "cancel" button.

Let's say you entered the chamber on Oct. 15th, 2001 and you wish to suspend yourself for one year. You set your destination or stop time one year ahead to Oct. 15th, 2002. To give yourself a little time to settle yourself before your journey, you program the count-down timer for 10 seconds. When you feel ready, you press the "GO" button and wait for your travel to begin. The process starts automatically. The computers take control and prepares to turn on the magnetic field. The timer begins its count down: ten, nine, eight, seven... Your anxiety rises. Six, five, four, three... You feel your heart pounding. Here we go! Two, one, zero...

Something went wrong. Nothing happened. Strangely the present-time clock reads the year 2002 and you feel frustrated. You climb out of the chamber and check out the equipment. Nothing seems wrong. You go to the nearest newsstand and to your amazement, all the newspapers have 2002 dates. You realize that, indeed, the time machine worked! [Click on the instrument panel above for details]

Not only have you jumped into the future by one year but you have traveled a distance of 584 million miles, the distance of the orbit of the earth around the sun! And you did it instantly. (And this doesn't count the distance you traveled around each revolution of the earth.) The interconnection of space and time yields that traveling in time means traveling in distance. If you had set the clock to 50 years ahead, you would have traveled 50 times around the sun and when you woke up, everyone around you would have aged 50 years (or died) and you wouldn't have aged at all.

But why wouldn't you feel anything? Because while undergoing time-suspension you would have no feelings to feel with. You would have died. Your body would have lain in a deceased state for an entire year, halted in the present like a movie in freeze frame. The zero on the count-down timer would appear as the last and next thing you saw after a year of suspension. The interval between the start and stop, to you, would seem instantaneous. It doesn't matter if the interval consists of a second, a year, or a million years; as long as all body functions get stored and revived as before, the time period would appear instantaneous from the perspective of the time traveler. Relativity theory posits that no frame of reference gives precedence over any other frame of reference. Your reference appears just as valid as any other. So from your point of view, you would have jumped ahead one year with the added bonus that you wouldn't have aged at all. For those outside the chamber, you would simply have appeared dead for one standard earth year.

You might find it fun to contemplate what you could do with such a time machine. If I had the fortunate opportunity to own such a device, I think I would install it in an undisclosed location, perhaps in a cave to protect it from the environment and from unscrupulous people. A nearby stream or river could supply the necessary energy to drive a small electrical turbine to supply power for the computers and the magnetic field. I wouldn't tell anyone about it. At first, I would time-jump in weekly stages. Visiting family and friends over the weekends could prove interesting, especially if you don't tell them your secret of staying young after so many years. When your friends have reached old age, you would still appear young. After everyone you know had died, you might want to take longer time jumps, perhaps months or years into the future. Unfortunately these time jumps can only go one way; you can't go back in time. But if you feel unhappy in a certain time period, you can continue time-jumping until you reach a more favorable time. If a dangerous period occurs, say a war or worldwide depression, you could literally jump around it into a more settled future. Have fun, make new friends, perhaps stay for awhile. Money should present no problem. Investing in an interest bearing account for many years without touching it would yield a nice nest egg. You wouldn't have to work! Storing away collectables would turn into valuable antiques. Even cheap nostalgic items like toys, coins, and pop icons should dramatically increase their value after hundreds of years. You might even reach celebrity status if nothing more than for your considerable historical knowledge of your time period. And if you could explore the future on earth, imagine what you could do with a time machine installed in a starship to explore the universe?

For a QuickTime teaser of the Dreamworks movie "The Time Machine," click here.

A better way to travel though spacetime

Our thought experiment served to explain the simplicity of spacetime travel by jumping only one year into the future, as an example. Yet, imagine the possibilities of such a machine in space, between the stars, where the natural coldness of space could substitute for the magnetic freezer during long interstellar voyages. (A time-suspended spaceship might utilize a magnetic field to first put human occupants into suspension, then once achieved, it could use the near-absolute-temperature of space to continue the process with virtually no energy input.) All of the energy to run the computers, sensors, and propulsion engines (or light sails) etc., it could get by using photon collectors to store the energy from starlight.

Instead of designing inefficient propulsion engines such a thermonuclear thrusters or anti-matter drives in an attempt to approach light speeds, designers could utilize low energy systems such as ion engines, or photon sails to capture electromagnetic energy. Gravitational sling shot techniques could serve to travel from planet to planet or from star to star while using low power propulsion units for course corrections.

It doesn't matter how long it takes the ship gets there because the time-traveler uses a different time frame reference. The ship exists in universal standard time; the time-traveler's mind and personality, however, doesn't exist at all during the voyage because he or she would remain in a death state until awakened. The time-traveler exists only during conscious states from the time-traveler's own frame of measurement. If something went wrong with the spaceship during the voyage, say, the computers broke down and kept the time-traveler suspended forever, or if an asteroid collided with the ship and blew it to smithereens then we would essentially have to consider our poor space traveler, dead. Forever. Which brings up the next question.

Death, what does it mean?

By all criteria of life as a functioning entity that grows, breeds, feels or thinks, death must then mean its opposite. Death means the termination of life. A life form that does not move, breath, eat, feel, think, or have any bodily function, whether by natural cause, bullet, fire, or frozen suspension, we must consider no longer living. Likewise we must also consider the time-traveler in our thought experiment as having undergone death. Whether the time traveler gets revived or not makes no difference. A nonfunctional life form that no longer has brain waves or consciousness, means death by any biological standard.

Regardless of how obvious this may appear to the materialist, death does not mean ultimate death for many believers, especially the religious. Death to them means a kind of metamorphosis, a transformation into another form. Hindus believe in reincarnations, Christians and Muslims believe in deathless souls that live in eternal hell or heaven (I prefer to call them the undead. Hey, if they can call fetuses, the unborn, then I get to call them the undead. For fairness sake, you know.). The concept of suspended animation should present interesting questions for the theologian or spiritualist because if, indeed, a life spirit world exists beyond biological life, or if souls can live in heaven or hell, limbo or purgatory, or see God, Zeus, ghosts, or Jesus, then just such a time-chamber should present an excellent instrument to answer these questions. If the tunnel-of-light visions in near-death experiences actually pan out then one could simply explore the tunnel by taking a time-suspension journey into death. One could actually investigate where the tunnel leads. Can one really float above their body and observe from another astral dimension? Can one's soul inhabit another animal, or meet with Jesus, or talk with God or see your deceased relatives, or spend eternity meeting the trillions of the undead? (What a horrible thought to think that some other entity has control over your life or that you have to spend the rest of eternity with your relatives, but I digress.)

Of course I have no knowledge about the supernatural but I will bet their lives that none of these spiritual things occur. If the supernaturalists prove right, however, a time-suspension machine would still benefit both believer and unbeliever. For if a godly spirit world exists, believers could explore the supernatural realm, and the poor atheists, who would most certainly go straight to hell, could escape by coming back to our familiar and wonderful sin-filled material world. Whoopee!

The unique thing about suspended animation involves, not only controlling time, but controlling one's life and death and when and where to do it. An experienced time-traveler would have no fear of death for the simple reason that he or she would have undergone it many times. Here we would have the realization of a form of designed reincarnation. Hindus would, no doubt, yawn with the obvious.

Unfortunately for Catholics and many Protestants, to put oneself in such a suspended state means that one has to willingly die, even if temporarily. This amounts to nothing less than a form of suicide which, according to Christian doctrine, means committing a mortal sin. Ironically this would leave the majority of the heavenly explorers to the unbelievers who would have more knowledge about the undead than the religious (if, indeed, the undead realm exists).

No doubt eternal death may still result if your body gets destroyed, but this still leaves an unknown and yet unanswered aspect of possible outcomes. Consider the following proposition:

If something proves possible and if matter-energy-spacetime occurs infinitely and forever, then that something will eventually occur.

Since we know we exist, we know its possibility (at least a probability of 1). Therefore, we need to find out more about infinity. If in any sense this proposition proves correct, the vast time it takes to get to the next possibility would appear instantaneous from the time frame of the entity. But imagine if we have control over our own existence and the time periods we live in, we would in effect, have made the proposition viable.

Considering that scientists continue to improve the ability to record DNA and through magnetic suspension techniques can store energy states, not only should it deem possible to store copies of bodies, but along with it, brains and the emerging property from them-- minds. In the future I suspect that only the person who believes in the spirit world will fear death.

Note: To those who's death will come near, you have nothing to fear. Although dying can produce temporary pain, the Great Sleep comes sweet and forever. No more pain or aching memories, a halt, a stop in time; no scary heavens, no eternal hell. Death erases fear along with everything else. Time passes as if in a time machine, not knowing if the infinity of time will restore life as before, entirely new, or forever and ever traveling in that silent chamber through empty space.

The problem with humans

In spite of my description of human time travel I did this mainly because people love to read about themselves. I pulled a fast on you and I sincerely apologize but I seriously doubt that human beings, at least the 21st century specie, will ever undergo such form of space travel for the simple reason that most people feel too connected to earth's environment to have any real interest in far reaching explorations. Why? Because in spite of our nature to explore other places, most people want to return home to tell the story. Tooling about the solar system describes one thing; leaving the home planet forever describes another. Note that virtually all the spaceships designed for extended voyages past our solar system begin with the premise that they must return to the home planet. This home bound thinking effectively limits the possibilities for practical space travel. Trade-offs must occur and the most dramatic sacrifice comes with the realization that to effectively explore the far reaches of other star systems, one must forever abandon the concept of getting back to the home planet.

Another problem with humans will occur when biologists figure out how to extend the life span of humans. If you couple this with moral laws against contraception, the belief in the fruitful multiplying of people (Gen. 1:22), while ignoring the evidence for increasing pollution and green-house effects, you have the makings of a very crowded and defiled planet. For a terrestrial species to survive and evolve, death appears necessary only when living in an environment with a finite amount of space. But in the vastness of space, eternal death has no necessity. Unfortunately humans have their genes adapted for earth's environment and not for the vacuum of space.

In the 70s, Gerald O'Neill proposed building permanent earth-like structures in space to hold colonies of people. [O'Neill] These artificial planets would not take them to the stars, nor can they compare with the diversity of earth's abundance. Indeed they might serve as useful space rigs, floating hotels, or perhaps temporary homes for asteroid miners. At best they might serve as a replacement planet if we manage to destroy planet earth. Regardless of how close they resemble the earth, they would only have achieved duplicating a home planet and we go back where we started, with a finite amount of space and a requirement for death, or severe population control. If humans can't control a planet, why in the world would we expect them to control an artificial one?

Homo sapiens evolved out of the earth as air breathing, carbon based life forms that require water and the consumption of other DNA based life forms to stay alive. To live in space requires bringing along vast quantities of earth stuff-- food, air, and the ability to eliminate waste products. In spite of genetic engineering, so far, no one has figured out how to make artificial food exempt from genetic material. The necessity of food requires storing or growing or raising genetic based life forms, and in space, this presents a problem. Consider that a suspended animation chamber might adequately service a human being, but the space-ship engineer would also have to make room for many more life forms: the very food products for which a human would need to consume in order to survive.

We would have to confront the realities: living in space means boredom and humans just do not have the biological equipment suited for permanent space voyages. The spaceship designer must consider a vastly different life-form more suited to live in space. In effect this means designing the ship as the life-form and it must forever abandon the earth along with all its cherished beliefs. (I didn't say this would prove easy, only that it would not violate any known physics.)

So forget everything above about the human designed suspended chamber; that served as a step to get you to the next stage. Now that you've got the concept of spacetime travel you can apply it to a better adapted form of life.

Designing a space traveler (Cyber sapiens)

What we need involves putting human evolution into the control of ourselves rather than leaving it up entirely to the contingencies of natural selection. Considering the barriers of religion and the moral henchmen against modifying life, this could take longer to overcome than developing the technology for space travel. Regardless, we need a life form that can adapt itself to space. Instead of living from earth stuff, it would evolve and adapt to the environment of space. Here again this involves nothing extraordinary in physics or biology even though the technology does not yet exit to do so. To design a space-being we might start by taking the natural human qualities such as our thinking and feeling capabilities but with the added ability to live off of another energy source. Instead of biological wetware, digital codes might replace the hormones, cells and neurons of the brain. Instead of living off of genetic material, a cybernetic life form could, in principle, live from the energy of light. Plants do this by their very nature. Computers can operate from solar cells. Whether this form evolves from recombinant DNA techniques, cybernetics, or a combination of scientific techniques, I haven't the slightest idea. The point here aims to illustrate that for an efficiently designed life-form, it should have the ability to live off of starlight, and that nothing here, in principle, violates any known physical laws.

Interestingly, identifying this new life-form would quantum leap all known biological classifications. Not only would this life-form not fit within any specie, genus, family, order, class, or phylum, but it would not even fit within any kingdom! In fact it would not fit within any biological classification system at all. The classification of life would have to split between biological and non-biological life, DNA based and non-DNA based. This new non-biological life would also benefit from having come almost* entirely designed by intelligent beings (whereas biological life evolved entirely through natural selection). The jump from Homo sapien to Cyber sapien would represent a new kingdom of life. Of course evolution will still act on non-biological life, but it will include artificial selection and memes, along with natural selection.

* I say "almost" entirely designed by intelligent beings (us) because blind evolution still works within intelligent life. For example, human language, even though practiced by conscious intelligent beings, did not get designed by humans through conscious design. Who, for example, designed the French language? No one person or a group of people decided to invent French. It simply evolved out of Latin from multicultural people who spoke in different accents across a period of time (and something to think about for creationists who demand transitional fossil evidence, French evolved from Latin [as do all languages], would also have to include transitional languages, not spoken today). Regardless of how much intelligence one has, no being can predict the future with certainty, and blind evolution acts across time through the unpredictably of natural events.

Entropy

"Death is only a special case of the Second Law."
- Rudolf Clausius [Broda]

In spite of the relative coldness and vacuum of space there exist all kinds of dust particles, gas and high energy cosmic particles flying about. If given only a few years, perhaps even a few hundred years, our space traveler could survive without much of a problem. However the intent of our spaceship aims to live and explore the galaxy in jumps of thousands or millions of years. The accumulated effects of all the cosmic particles, heat, gravitational tidal waves, and who-knows-what over time would eventually lead to a slow disintegration of our spaceship due to the Second Law of Thermodynamics, sometimes referred to as entropy. Rudolf Clausius invented the term in 1865 but it came from Ludwig Boltzmann who gave it the meaning of a measure of disorder or randomness in a closed system. Entropy also results in the arrow of time, since everything eventually degrades over the forward direction of time. In other words, eggs easily break but to put Humpty Dumpty back together again, through chance, violates the Second Law of Thermodynamics. (Actually it doesn't strictly violate the Second Law, but only makes it numerically and impractically improbable.) Even ordered systems such as biological life undergo random destruction over time due to thermal wear (and I don't mean the Fruit-of-the-Loom kind). Sunlight can damage DNA and cause skin cancer; random oxidants can destroy cells. Every life form eventually succumbs to accumulated damage. We all age and then die. The same goes with our spaceship. Eventually it will accumulate tiny crater hits from cosmic particles, a molecule at a time. Imagine our space traveler waking up after thousands of light years only to discover that his ship has become pockmarked with miniature craters. Just a second ago it looked clean and sleek, now it looks like a disintegrated hunk of space debris. Atomic particles can also decay spontaneously over long periods of time. If enough atoms decay in, say, a critical piece of brain circuitry, it might adversely affect the life of our spaceship (this problem would magnify itself in biological death states to the point of possibly preventing them from ever achieving long term storages, thus giving yet another reason why humans don't make good space travelers.) Clearly, allowing our spaceship to decay won't do and we would need to address this problem. Since the unconscious state of our spaceship will undergo many years of suspension, some method of continual examination and restoring of the integrity of the spaceship must occur. Not only the outside hull, but also the insides must keep its functional ability. Our spaceship would also require "eyes" to detect dangerous large objects like stray pieces of dark matter that might collide with the ship.

The spaceship and the space-traveler would, in effect, become synonymous. The ship itself would consist of the body and space as the environment. A human body contains unconscious biological functions (blood filtering, blood pumping, programmed instincts, etc.) and nature's biological robots, the symbiont organisms that help digest our food (for example, E. coli, metabolizing in human guts) and beneficial bacteria to help our immune system . Likewise, our space traveler would also require full autonomy, perhaps using symbiont robots and computer immune-system programs to maintain its existence though space. If something breaks, the spaceship must repair itself. It might head for an asteroid and mine its minerals to build and replace nonfunctional parts. Replacing brain circuits and performing software backups could prevent the damaging effects due to entropy. Instead of using cryogenic refrigerators to freeze biological cells, the conscious part of its cybernetic brain would simply shut down its circuits for long voyages. Considering the speed of today's advanced superconducting transistors and Josephson junctions, switching all circuits on and off should take only a few microseconds. The ability to switch its circuits in such a manner allows this life form to conserve energy and to choose when and where it will exist during its conscious state. From this switching ability emerges a particularly important concept that allows control of velocity through spacetime (explained below).

Our space traveler would utilize computer controlled navigation while it remained in its unconscious shut down state. If some form of, say, dark matter appeared in its path, radar would detect it and the computers would direct its engines to steer around it. In case of an emergency, the computer would wake our space traveler so it could make important decisions.

The propulsion system

Instead of using nuclear explosions, hydrogen-oxygen burning, or some other high energy propulsion method, our spacetime traveler would require a low energy system that could utilize the energy of light from the stars. In this sense the spaceship would serve as a true starship.

One idea that engineers have proposed for moving a spacecraft amounts to using solar sails. A solar sail can capture the energy from a star as long as the spacecraft remained near a sun to utilize its energy (light quanta impart a small momentum on matter, so you'd need a lot of light to produce a usable force). For solar system travel, simple sails would suffice. However, for travel between the stars, a sail alone would not work well because the starlight energy from all directions would cancel out. Some designers have contemplated using lasers to shine on the sail, but this would require a solar system based laser to aim its energy at the sail as it progressed on its journey. We wish to avoid any home-based system because, remember, our spacetime traveler will not return and we want him to live self-sufficiently and with the ability to explore the galaxy. If our spacetime traveler used a sail for interstellar flight, it would need one that reflects photon energy on one side but invisible to starlight from the other. In principle this might work similar to a radiometer which has its rotor blades painted white on one side and black on the other (although a radiometer does not strictly run off light, but rather the photoelectric effect where light heats up the black side and knocks out electrons from its surface. The momentum of electrons leaving the surface propels the rotor, not light directly).

Another method might use an efficient ion engine. Although ion engines have low power, and therefore can only produce very slow accelerations, our spacetime traveler can use all the time necessary to get to where he wants. Unfortunately ion engines require chemicals and this creates storage and entropy problems for engines intended for continuous use.

Perhaps the best way to travel between the stars involves using no interstellar propulsion system at all. In the early 60s, Michael Minovitch pioneered the use of gravitational assist techniques that spacecraft use today for accelerating within our solar system such as the Cassini, Voyager, and Galileo spacecraft [see Gravity Assist Maneuvers]. Future spacetime travelers might use gravitational slingshots as a means to get to other gravitational masses outside our solar system. Stars and massive planets make wonderful gravitational sources. This gives another advantage for cybernetic life forms because to get a good gravitational sling, the starship would need to pass close to a planet or star. Human based spaceships would have to protect its delicate passengers from gravitational tidal forces or heat. A ship protecting a crystal-based cybernetic life form could withstand much higher forces and temperatures. After the slingshot, the starship would coast to the next target star or planet. By using a series of many slingshots our spacetime traveler could literally steer its way through the galaxy. If our traveler used a black-hole orbiting a star for a slingshot source, he could achieve very high velocities, perhaps enough to even reach other galaxies.

During the cold emptiness of space between stars, the starship might require short bursts of energy for quick maneuvering to avoid dark matter or stray comets. For this, it could use a more conventional fuel based propulsion system, perhaps hydrogen burning thrusters. However, this would use a minimal amount of fuel which it could replenish by gathering hydrogen from Jupiter-like planets or collecting stray hydrogen atoms along the way. Hydrogen appears as the most common element in the universe so this shouldn't present a problem.

Another problem looms in slowing the starship down to manageable velocities in order to get to its destination. Since this also requires energy, our starship would need a way to slow down without carrying enormous amounts of fuel. Sails might offer one solution again, but in reverse, as a kind of solar parachute. While approaching its destination, it might steer a course along the perimeter of several solar systems while deploying a solar parachute. This would create only a small deceleration but by using several solar sources, it could eventually slow down to approach orbital velocity to its destination planet or star. However it could also use gravitational assistance to decelerate by flying in front of a body in its orbit. The spacecraft Galileo did just this when it arrived at Jupiter, passing close in front of Jupiter's moon Io in its orbit, where it decelerated, helping it achieve Jupiter orbit insertion and saving propellant. [See Interplanetary Trajectories]

Regardless of what form of interstellar propulsion, deceleration or slingshot system gets used, again, nothing here violates any known laws of physics.

Duty Cycle time travel

Perhaps the most fascinating way to travel though spacetime involves using duty cycles. Although natural biological life-forms cannot take advantage of duty-cycle time traveling, it will apply itself best to cybernetic forms of life. The term "duty cycle" comes from electrical engineering terminology. (No, it does not mean Howdy Doody's bicycle.) A duty cycle represents a periodic ratio of on and off states. Usually duty cycles get represented as square waves or rectangular pulses. If you've ever operated your microwave oven at 50% power, or adjusted the thermostat on your air-conditioner, you'd realize that they operate by turning on for a period of time and off for a period of time. Microwaves, stepper motors, power drills, as well as many computer controlled devices use duty cycle power controls. An example graph of a 50% duty cycle showing 5 on-states looks like the following:

Now that you understand duty cycles, imagine a cybernetic space-traveler that controls its own duty cycle to match the aims of its voyage. Since it utilizes electrical circuits, sensors, and software for its intelligence, it can switch its "brain" on and off almost instantly. The on-state part of the duty cycle represents the conscious state and the off-state as the time suspended (death) state similar to our human based thought experiment.

Important to the concept, you should understand that the off-state part of the duty cycle would remain off for extremely long periods of time, perhaps hundreds or thousands of years, while each on-state may last only a second or a fraction of a second. However, since only the on-states get perceived, conscious time would appear seamless to the time-traveler. The duty cycle from the perspective of an outside observer for the spacetime voyager might look like this:

With duty cycle time traveling, the experience of traveling through space becomes dramatically transformed. Imagine our space traveler controlling a duty-cycle "throttle" that can accelerate and decelerate similar to driving a Formula-one race car through an Italian road course or a spaceship entering hyper space. If you've ever seen the first Star Wars movie, you know the virtual feeling of flashing past the stars. Our duty-cycle time traveler should experience a similar kind of exhilaration (except that the stars would not appear as streaks, but would pass by like tiny lights in the dark in Star Trek fashion).

The starship, Millennium Falcon, entering hyperspace in the first StarWars movie

Imagine flying through the galaxy the way an airplane soars through clouds. Interestingly G-forces would have no effect on our space-traveler because his awareness (on-states) would appear between stars while the starship travels in constant (non-accelerating) standard universal time. (Actually you wouldn't feel acceleration even while using a gravitational sling shot because you would freefall toward the gravitational source, similar to the acceleration of a sky diver falling toward earth.)

One light year represents the distance traveled at light-speed in a vacuum for a period of one year. This calculates to a distance of approximately 5.88 trillion miles. But to the space voyager, the conscious period would feel continuous and he would have no awareness of the off-states. Our spacetime traveler would experience a period of 5 seconds of consciousness like this:

So in 5 seconds our voyager would have traveled a distance of 4 light years or over 23 trillion miles!

In these illustrations I have given each conscious state a period of one second. Actually it would more likely fall far shorter. A human brain processes visual stimuli within about 50 msec [Dennett]; an advanced computer could switch in microseconds. Since it would power on for only a few microseconds every light year or so, the power consumption would prove exceedingly low.

If you still have a problem understanding this, imagine a camera in a spaceship taking a snapshot of the universe at a distance of every light year or so. After you've taken a thousand snapshots (covering 1,000 light years) and assembled each snapshot into a movie film, you'd have about 30 seconds of film showing a voyage through the universe (motion-picture frames display between 24 and 30 frames per second). If our time traveler set his duty cycle at this rate, it would take only a few days (from his time frame) to reach the other side of the galaxy! Of course our time traveler could get there instantly if he set the duty cycle to one cycle (off when you begin the journey and on when you arrive).

A spacetime traveler could also accelerate or decelerate by adjusting the duty cycle to match "throttle" and "brake: inputs:

The down side of this kind of space travel, but only from an earth based perspective, comes with the realization that planetary civilizations would rise and fall within a few cycles of the journey. The term "home" would have no meaning for such a being except in the context of the starship's body itself. Since our space traveler controls its spacetime, it exists when and where it wants. Homo-sapiens control only three dimensions, but our evolved time traveler would also control of the fourth dimension-- time.

The following illustration gives one idea of how an early evolved starship might look:

(Click on picture for details)

If the time warp and superliminal wormhole ideas of science prove impossible, then perhaps suspended animation might serve as the only practical way to travel long distances through space. If this serves the case then such beings may have already evolved to take advantage of this. If so, how could they keep in touch with each other?

Communications

A spacetime traveler would have a difficult time surviving alone in space, especially considering the unknowns it would encounter. It would appear no more reasonable to expect a spaceship to survive anymore than a single member of an animal specie surviving on a terrestrial planet. Since our spaceship would possess intelligence and awareness, it should have the qualities of all known intelligent mammals-- a social structure. All mammals live within some social group to help them survive so we might apply the same to our spacetime specie. Several spacetime travelers would have an advantage for survival because they could cover more area, explore more star systems, and accumulate more data and knowledge. But to convey this information to each other requires a way to communicate.

The most obvious method of transmission would consist of the fastest known kind of communication: electromagnetic radiation. Our travelers might use radio, microwave, light, or perhaps high energy gamma rays. But even at light-speed velocities, they would have a problem with communicating unless they stuck close together. Consider that it takes 10 minutes for signals to reach Jupiter from Earth, imagine the years it would take to reach even the nearby stars. What they would need amounts to a faster way to communicate. Again, duty cycles come to the rescue. Duty cycle communication. Faster than light. Instantaneous.

Consider two spaceships separated by a distance of 25,000 light years. We'll call them spaceship Evanova and spaceship Zardoz. Let's say Evanova decides to communicate something to her boyfriend, Zardoz, and so sends out a signal to him. (Yes of course, sex in space!) But right after Evanova transmits, she shuts herself down and goes into a death state. In the meantime the signal would take 25,000 earth years to reach Zardoz. Also in the meantime, Zardoz slumbers in his own shutdown death state. When the signal finally arrives, his onboard computers detect the signal and wakes him up. Zardoz reads the message and sends out a reply to Evanova, and then goes back to sleep (just like a man, eh?). From the perspective of Evanova and Zardoz, they have communicated to each other instantly. In spite of the delay between transmissions, robots and computers could monitor and handle emergency situations while our travelers undergo their off-states. The time-shifted communications should present little problem as algorithms already exist for internet communications that could apply for our spacetime travelers. Computers and software routinely shut themselves off and re-route and receive time delayed information, collated and presented at the appropriate time. Of course our advanced life forms would have to establish and maintain protocols and standards.

Imagine multiple spaceships and intergalactic server buoys sending messages to each other via duty-cycle transmissions. A galaxy network. Each spaceship would experience instant communication with each other while they watched the galaxy slowly spinning around them. Indeed, if you have the power to duty-cycle your life, you could virtually control the spin rate of the galaxy! Relativity theory posits that no frame of reference gives precedence over any other frame of reference.

Transmitting cargo (another form of communication)

Uniquely, not only would a duty-cycle spaceship have the ability to literally time jump at lightyear distances and communicate instantly to other spaceships, but they could also transport cargo to each, again, by utilizing the same method of duty cycles. Just like Evanova and Zardoz communicating a radio message across the galaxy, Evanova could actually transport herself and her cargo to Zardoz. Realistically, transporting material cargo also means transporting information and may actually prove a more efficient way of communication than electromagnetic signaling. Why? Because radio and light transmission loses bit information as the distance increases (the cone of light increases). This means you would need an extremely powerful transmitter just to send simple messages over long distances. Not very efficient. Sending cargo, on the other hand, means sending matter and matter remains compact over long distances, unlike radio communication. You can put a lot of information into atomic structures (think of microchips, brains, and DNA). The downside, of course, means a lot slower transmission method, but this applies only for limited planetary life forms; our time travelers would not have this handicap.

Let's say Evanova finds something interesting, perhaps a few tons of platinum on an asteroid near the Crab Nebula, and decides to give it to Zardoz as a present. After mining the metal, Evanova would tell the computers to navigate toward Zardoz, a thousand lightyears away. Even though it may take millions of earth years to reach Zardoz, from both their perspectives the transportation time would seem instantaneous.

If intelligent life has already evolved to live in space in some manner describe above, then it would present an interesting problem to figure out how we might find such beings. There might exist literally millions or perhaps trillions of thriving space beings living, communicating, and sharing with each other the way social terrestrial beings do on earth. But because they have shifted into a different time frame from terrestrial beings, their communication would appear very slow to us. How in the world could we detect such beings if they exist?

SETI and the search for extraterrestrial life

SETI, the organization for the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence devotes itself to finding intelligent life on terrestrial planets. Recently they have embarked on the hunt for high energy light flashes from extraterrestrial beings with the assumption that other beings might use powerful but brief pulses as a kind of light beacon for contacting other life forms. [see news article] However, I submit that if, indeed, life forms capable of such transmissions exist, they may not come from planetary beings at all but rather from evolved interstellar beings traveling and living in spacetime.

Frank Tipler has argued that if extraterrestrial beings exist, our galaxy would have such an enormous number of Von Neumann machine proxies that we could not have missed them [Physics Today, March 1982, p. 26]. This might very well hold for terrestrial beings, but if planet life evolved to live in space, perhaps the spacetime environment demands that such beings must live in extended time periods (duty cycles), and if so, we may very well have missed them. If high energy flashes from intelligent beings exist, such beacons could serve as useful navigation lighthouses for establishing data points for adjusting time cycles and dimensional locations. Discovering and encoding their transmissions may prove difficult if not impossible. A duty-cycle life form would probably not send out its signals in a continuous period of time but rather in short bursts separated by hundreds or thousands of years, perhaps to match its own duty cycles. They may also choose to send their signals cryptographically to keep others from listening in, perhaps cicada-like in prime number sequences. If each pulse represented a bit (or a packet of bits with only enough information for decoding a single bit) and each packet got sent out at random intervals spanning millions of years, it would virtually isolate them from terrestrial beings. Then, again, interstellar life may not transmit by electromagnetic means at all, but rather by sending out matter capsules which could hold vast amounts of information in a more efficient manner. It would come from them to decide to contact us, not the other way around.

Considering that one of SETI's criteria for evaluating signals requires confirmation of more than one signal, this could prove impossible to confirm. Because of the vast expanse of spacetime, the nature of interstellar beings would rarely show themselves to terrestrial beings that live in the constraint of planetary standard time.

Many SETI debates have talked about the possibility that aliens might hold hostility toward other planetary life. Some say we should not try to contact them but only to listen for them. Violence and hostility may very well hold true for terrestrial beings who compete for territory, food, and valuables on a planet with finite resources or who own superstitious beliefs. But does this reasonably hold for beings who might live in the environment of space? If such interstellar beings exist, they would have little need to compete for territory or food for they would live in the vast limitless universe. Obviously a universe provides enough room and material resources for everyone. I can't imagine what reason they would have for need of war or violence. The nature of the scale of the universe and the lightyear distances between stars might very well mold the ethics of such interstellar beings to a benign and peaceful form of existence. What would they need to compete for? The animals on the Galapagos Islands comes to mind here. After many years of evolution without competition, many of the animals on the Galapagos Islands have evolved as non violent creatures and without fear of predators. In fact, the expanse of the universe may very well bar violent terrestrial beings from reaching other inhabited planets at all; perhaps only evolved space travelers could make such journeys. If they decided to live in space, the very nature of the universe might very well force them to evolve in a propitious manner. Certainly an evolved space-being would have high intelligence and no doubt would have an awareness of terrestrial inhabitants. If such beings found earth and examined our life, they would probably not feel impressed. Why would an advanced intelligent being want to communicate or have an interest with earthlings who kill each other over supernatural beliefs, who have an excessive interest in themselves, and where some of them actually love to watch Pro wrestling?

From machine life to star life

    "I would almost conjecture that a fixed slow-motion camera occupies their cranial space, and that they gauge all their movements by this markedly different clock upon the world."
    -Stephen Jay Gould [Gould]

From here on, only speculations can fuel our imaginations. The results of self-evolution would explode with possibilities. At no time before on earth's history would a life form have the capacity to evolve with such rapidity. The step-by-step process from biological life to cybernetic replicants; making use of Einstein's theory of relativity to modify life-cycles to achieve spacetime travel; all these advances do not violate any known laws of nature. If intelligent terrestrial life has evolved past planetary disasters, biological threats, and supernatural beliefs, the universe would appear open wide for them. Once in space, their future progeny would appear like no other specie on earth. They would appear as dark matter to 21st century humans. Their long term duty cycles might explain why we haven't found them or ever will find them. However, there might occur volumes in the universe where they might roam more than in any other volume.

An evolving life form in space might take advantages of certain places within the galaxy. It would need materials, fuel, and energy to sustain itself-- its food. Perhaps the prime area for gathering such materials might occur in the place where all the atomic elements reside. Supernova halos might serve as an excellent source for harvesting the elements since novas create the heavy elements and throw them out along with the lighter elements. They might even take advantage of using an isolated black-hole as a massive gravitational slingshot to propel them to other galaxies. They might utilize stray star systems between galaxies as oasis points to gather energy for the long intergalactic voyages. So if the possibility exists for us to find them (if they so decide to send out signals to terrestrial beings), perhaps we might best find them at their feeding grounds. If we cannot find individual life forms, perhaps a multitude of them leave a detectable signature. If, indeed, these space creatures exit in the millions, perhaps we could scan areas looking for blinks in the sky (like camera flashes in a football stadium). Looking closer at Nova halos, black holes, and isolated stars between galaxies might reveal these flash signatures where they might tend to communicate with each other in shorter intervals.. These brief flashes would appear to us as random so we probably could not decipher them, but at least we might have some knowledge of interstellar life.

Their duty-cycle lives would play out as though a slow-motion camera occupied their brains. The conjecture in Gould's quote above applied to the common earth sloth, not to interstellar beings, but nothing known in nature prevents such creatures from taking advantage of time-shifting either on earth or elsewhere in the universe.

Imagine cold dead ships gliding silently through space. Rarely seen by planetary beings, they live in periods of microseconds separated by years of unconscious suspension. But to them, they live in different time dimensions, experiencing a thriving life, exploring different worlds, collecting knowledge of the universe and communicating with each other instantly. Instead of genes, they transfer memes (actual meme machines) and they could self-evolve with a rapidity never before seen by natural selection, and perhaps with the ability to evolve until the heat death of the universe.

An evolved spaceform
(Click on picture for details)

The meek shall inherit the earth

According to Psalm 37:11 the meek shall inherit the earth. Considering the boundless belief of the religious, this may very well prove a self-fulfilling prophesy. With the earth's population growing, pollution rising, the greenhouse effect compounding, and the chance of nuclear or biological war increasing, our planet may not serve as a livable planet in the near future. Sadly, many people believe that the world will end by God's hand, as foretold in the story of Revelation, for the sake of an alleged restored paradise [see note 3]. A society that contains such dangerous beliefs just might very well carry it out to make certain the "prophesy" comes true. However, if humans can develop the technology in time before we annihilate ourselves, perhaps we would have a chance at escaping the mess we've created. But to live in spacetime without terrestrial support means throwing away cherished beliefs, traditions, and human customs. It would require self-evolution by transforming our bodies and minds to adapt in space. The first travelers may consist of robots, exploring the solar system and beyond with the ability to fly and navigate without the aid of the earth. Actually this has already begun with NASA's Deep Space One, where a spacecraft uses ion engines and its own autonomous navigation system (Autonav). The next stage might aim to reach the nearest stars, sending back information about celestial bodies, mining distant asteroids and the gasses of heavy planets. This would give us an incentive to evolve the spacecraft further, perhaps including our own neurological makeup into cybernetic neural networks to make it more "human." These stages of evolution would literally transform the human species into another form and for yet unforeseen functions. I think many people would choose to undertake this risk, but not everyone would. So the meek may very well inherit the earth but those who decide to leave will inherit the universe.


References

Broda, Englebert., "Ludwig Boltzmann: Man- Physicist- Philosopher," Ox Bow Press, 1983

Dawkins, Richard, "The Extended Phenotype," Oxford University Press, 1982 paperback [see page 64-65 for a description of periodical cicadas]

Dennett, Daniel C., "Consciousness Explained," Little, Brown and Co., 1991 [See Chapter 6 on How the Brain Represents Time, p. 144-153]

Gould, Setphen Jay, " Leonardo's Mountain of Clams and the Diet of Worms," Harmony Books, 1998 [See chapter 20, "Can We Truly Know Sloth and Rapacity?"]

O'Neill, Gerald, "The High Frontier. Human Colonies in Space," Bantom, 1978

Russell, Bertrand, "The ABC of Relativity," The New American Library, 1958

Herbert, Nick, "Faster Than Light: Superliminal Loopholes In Physics," New American Library, 1988

Technical Manual of the American Association of Blood Banks, American Association of Blood Banks, 1977


Notes:

1) Death and Time Traveling developed from an earlier paper , "On Death and Time Traveling," submitted to GEnie (General Electric Information service) in early 1987 and later published in Search magazine (summer 1987).

2) This article deals with forward only time travel. There does, however, exist the possibility for backward time travel without violating any known laws of physics or violating causality but this will take another article for explanation.

3) If for one moment you doubt the seriousness of many religious people who actually want the world to end, check out these scary sites: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7. These provide just a few samples; literally hundreds of such sites exit on the net.


Copyright ® 2001 Jim Walker. All rights reserved