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dnimeerf t1_iufes8l wrote

Not travelling at increments of 10,000X the speed of light it doesn't.

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[deleted] t1_iufgi6x wrote

[deleted]

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HyperImmune t1_iufjxgz wrote

Any sufficiently advanced technology will be considered magic. I’d guess people from 200 years ago would consider a lot of our technology “magic”. Not saying FTL travel is imminent by any means, but who knows what the future truly holds.

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BaronCapdeville t1_iufjoit wrote

All sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.

So, yes.

Edit: also, relevant user name.

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starfyredragon t1_iufjs8q wrote

Magic not neccesarry.

Alcubierre drive concept has been refined to the point to where it's achievable with non-exotic forms of matter at semi-realistic energy requirements, and we've known thanks to the math behind super-strings that faster-than-light travel has always been technically possible, and may even happen naturally.

https://thedebrief.org/new-warp-drive-model-requires-no-exotic-matter-scientists-say-we-can-build-it/

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zeezero t1_iuflnue wrote

That article says they are still limited to the speed of light.

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starfyredragon t1_iugbx34 wrote

Fair, I missed that part, I was more focused on it being an Alcubierre derivative that can actually work. Thanks for catching me on that.

Also, my disappointment is immeasurable.

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dnimeerf t1_iufnxwb wrote

I like the force that Tesla spoke of, "the cogwork of nature" so to speak, that which drives space, and all else with it along at a terrible pace. We may yet live to "see manmade horrors beyond our comprehension." Ftl happens naturally, which is part of the principle of operation of the system, which requires an advanced navigation and sensor system to make incremental changes in real time so not to turn the inhabitants into jelly. That system is already being worked on and is the subject of my white paper, and maxwell demon in the making. The software will mature into a navigational array meant for interstellar travel and communication. Our civilization is not yet responsible enough for transdimensional transteleportation.

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dnimeerf t1_iufn7zk wrote

Not at all It was difficult to achieve a near vacuum not many years ago. It was difficult for mankind to understand cavitation in a fluid volume, and still is. It is possible, however difficult, to draw even space from a given area. This seems incomprehensible, but with current understanding and technology, and the unification of civilization toward intergalactic society it is possible to do in just a few decades today what would have been said to be impossible just 10 short years ago. We live in an age of wonders friend https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salvatore_Pais

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