Physicists Announce Stunning Time Discovery
From Whitley Streiber's Unknowncountry.com:
Physicists Announce Stunning Time Discovery
Physicists at the University of Vienna have just announced an experiment in which actions in the future have changed physical events in the past.
Drs. Caslav Brukner and Vlatko Vedral have discovered that the act of measuring the polarity of a photon can affect the way it was polarized during a measurement in the past.
Quantum entanglenment across time has not been expected, but the proof is convincing. However, there is no evidence at present that this property could be used to signal the past, or even change it, but, given the nature of the phenomenon, its mere discovery may open unpredictable doors in our relationship to the past.
The laws of cause and effect, as they are presently understood, do not include the possibility that the future may change the past, but that would appear to be the case.
In addition, treating time as an affective component of physicality puts space and time on an equal footing in quantum theory. At present, a location in space is an observable, physical reality. This experiment shows that a location in time is exactly the same, and suggests that the past may not be gone at all, but simply elsewhere in the fabric of time.
Previous efforts to identify a time-observable phenomenon like this have always led to violations of quantum mechanics. Vedral now suggests that there is something so fundamental happening here that quantum mechanics is itself in need of reformulation.
There is a revolution taking place in physics right now, as more and more quantum effects are confirmed by physical experiment. What a discovery this fundamental may mean is unknown--or is it?
Only time will tell.
This is not a joke. If this paper is correct, it means that it is possible to change the past. It's called Quantum Entanglement and it proves that links can exist between particles across time as well as space - further proof that time is a dimension: in spite of our linear progress through it, there is more to it than we can perceive with our first 5 senses.

















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