A time paradox or an ontological paradox is something based on time travel that should not have occurred because the past had been changed, rendering it impossible for that event to occur.
For instance, John hates his grandfather and goes back in time to kill him, but his parents had not been conceived at the time of his death. Therefore, his parents should not exist, and he should not exist. He could not have gone back in time to kill his grandfather after all.
John might discover that the man he had killed was not his grandfather, or the entire universe might collapse as a result of the paradox.
There are also some other finite paradoxes, or closed loops that space does not allow to permit.
it can true, or it can be wrong No, it isn't a paradox, it is simply an adage. A paradox is a statement that appears to contradict itself within the sentence. "This sentence is false" is the classic paradox.
One example of a paradox is the "liar paradox," which states "this statement is false." Another example is the "grandfather paradox," where a time traveler goes back in time and prevents their grandfather from meeting their grandmother, thus preventing the time traveler's own existence.
The statement "less is more" is a paradox because it combines two contradictory ideas. The grandfather paradox is a hypothetical situation where someone could potentially travel back in time and prevent their own existence, creating a paradox because their existence would be both necessary and impossible at the same time. The liar paradox is a statement such as "this statement is false," which creates a contradiction when considering its truth value.
If you were to go back in time and kill your parents, it would create a paradox because if your parents were killed before you were born, you would not exist to go back in time in the first place. This type of scenario is often presented in theoretical physics and is known as the grandfather paradox, where altering events in the past can lead to contradictions.
The liar paradox: "This statement is false." The barber paradox: "The barber shaves all and only those men in the village who do not shave themselves. Does the barber shave himself?" The omnipotence paradox: "Can an all-powerful being create a rock so heavy that even they cannot lift it?" Zeno's paradoxes of motion: Achilles and the tortoise, Dichotomy, and Arrow paradoxes. The unexpected hanging paradox: A judge tells a prisoner he will be hanged at noon on one weekday, but the prisoner is unexpectedly hanged at noon on a weekday. Ship of Theseus paradox: If every part of a ship is replaced, is it still the same ship? The grandfather paradox: If you were to travel back in time and prevent your grandparents from meeting, would you still exist? The predestination paradox: If you go back in time and change something to prevent an event from happening, could you have gone back in the first place? Sorites paradox (paradox of the heap): If you remove one grain at a time from a heap of sand, when does it stop being a heap? The birthday paradox: In a room of 23 people there is a 50% chance that two of them share the same birthday, even though it seems unlikely at first glance.
its that time is a paradox
http://www.gamezebo.com/games/mortimer-beckett-and-time-paradox/tips-tricks/mortimer-beckett-and-time-paradox-tips there you go!!
it can true, or it can be wrong No, it isn't a paradox, it is simply an adage. A paradox is a statement that appears to contradict itself within the sentence. "This sentence is false" is the classic paradox.
time paradox
One example of a paradox is the "liar paradox," which states "this statement is false." Another example is the "grandfather paradox," where a time traveler goes back in time and prevents their grandfather from meeting their grandmother, thus preventing the time traveler's own existence.
The cast of Endless Time Paradox - 2013 includes: Hrvoje Klecz as Narrator
the fermi paradox is most important. This paradox explains us many things.
A "time paradox" is usually associated with time travel. So far, there is no evidence that time travel is possible, so you can't see such paradoxes either.
paradox
It is probably out by now.
The Grandfather paradox has to do with time. Assuming you could travel back in time, if you kill your own grandfather before you were born, you wouldn't be alive to go back in time to kill your grandfather.Thismeans, logically, that time travel, backwards in time,could be impossible.
Given the current views on time a true paradox would produce alternate dimensions of the current dimension where the paradox occurred thus preventing the total collapse in maintainable constructs and viable alternatives for that particular string.