The though experiment behind the butterfly effect is: Assume a weather simulation, which is extremely precise, but there’s a butterfly, that flaps its wings, which is not accounted for in the simulation. This will, after a while, cause the simulation to divert so wildly from reality that its no better than chance at predicting the weather.
So applied to time travel, you’d come back to a world that is drastically different from the one you left, but not necessarily better or worse than the one you left.
Sure, in an on paper theory. My argument would be that the butterfly flapping its wings are not nearly strong enough to change the flow of weather in reality.
I don’t know why commentors are thinking I don’t understand the theory. I do, I simply do not believe that it maps to reality. It’s ultimately been taken too far as a trope, even though most of its examples in media often involve characters making dramatic changes.
The though experiment behind the butterfly effect is: Assume a weather simulation, which is extremely precise, but there’s a butterfly, that flaps its wings, which is not accounted for in the simulation. This will, after a while, cause the simulation to divert so wildly from reality that its no better than chance at predicting the weather.
So applied to time travel, you’d come back to a world that is drastically different from the one you left, but not necessarily better or worse than the one you left.
Sure, in an on paper theory. My argument would be that the butterfly flapping its wings are not nearly strong enough to change the flow of weather in reality.
I don’t know why commentors are thinking I don’t understand the theory. I do, I simply do not believe that it maps to reality. It’s ultimately been taken too far as a trope, even though most of its examples in media often involve characters making dramatic changes.