Brun does not provide a design for such a device but establishes that such a system is consistent with the laws of
physics. His time-traveling computer also does not create the "grandfather paradox," often cited
in discussions of time
travel. This well-known paradox points out that if person A goes back in time, he could kill his grandfather, causing A
not
to exist, resulting in his grandfather not being killed by him, so A would exist and thus could go back and kill his
grandfather, and so on, ad infinitum.
Brun's time-stretching computational process does not appear to introduce this problem because it does not affect
the past. It produces a determinate and unambiguous answer in the present to a posed question. The question must
have
a dear answer, and the answer is not presented until after the question is asked, although the process to determine
the answer can take place before the question is asked using the CTC. Conversely, the process
could take place after
the question is asked and then use a CTC to bring the answer back into the present (but not before the question was
asked, because that would introduce the grandfather paradox). There may very well be fundamental barriers (or
limitations) to such a process that we don't yet understand, but those barriers have yet to be identified. If feasible, it
would greatly expand the potential of local computation. Again, all of my estimates of computational capacities and of
the capabilities of the Singularity do not rely on Brun's tentative conjecture.
E
RIC
D
REXLER
:
I don't know, Ray. I'm pessimistic on the prospects for picotechnology. With the stable particles we
know of, I don't see how there can be picoscale structure without the enormous pressures found in a collapsed
star—a white dwarf or a neutron star—and then you would get a solid chunk of stuff like a metal, but a million
times denser. This doesn't seem very useful, even if it were possible to make it in our solar system. If physics
included a stable particle like an electron but a hundred times more massive, it would be a different story, but
we don't know of one.
R
AY
:
We manipulate subatomic particles today with accelerators that fall significantly short of the conditions in a
neutron star. Moreover, we manipulate subatomic particles such as electrons today with tabletop devices.
Scientists recently captured and stopped a photon dead in its tracks.
E
RIC
:
Yes, but what kind of manipulation? If we count manipulating small particles, then all technology is already
picotechnology, because all matter is made of subatomic particles. Smashing particles together in accelerators
produces debris, not machines or circuits.
R
AY
:
I didn’t say we've solved the conceptual problems of picotechnology. I've got you penciled in to do that in 2072.
E
RIC
:
Oh, good, then I see you have me living a long time.
R
AY
:
Yes, well, if you stay on the sharp leading edge of health and medical insights and technology, as I'm trying to
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