“But we think that if a human were to violate conventional causality—' 'By time traveling—' 'Please, please don't call it that. If a human were to violate causality, the experience from her point of view would be similar. You would act while in the past, but not be able to recall your actions later, because that period of time for you would be lost between histories: the old one you left and the new one to which you would return. It would exist outside of the normal course of events. It would be, in a very real sense, lost time.”
Quote by Dexter Palmer
Book:Version Control
Work
Version Control
Browse quotes and source details for this work. more
Author
You May Also Like
“I'd read enough love stories to know the beginning of one when I saw it.”
Source: The Paris Library
Source: Version Control
Source: Version Control
Source: Version Control
Source: Version Control
Source: Version Control
Source: Version Control
Source: Version Control
Source: The Dream of Perpetual Motion
Source: Version Control