a few doubts

Myrtle 2022-03-23 09:03:16

1. Why don't people who fall asleep disappear?
It can be seen that all that can be left on the plane are inorganic and metallic things. Maybe it has nothing to do with inorganic or organic matter, because the body without a soul is also a substance that is not affected by time?
But why did the clothes of the disappeared people also disappear? It stands to reason that aircraft seat cushions and clothes are made of similar materials, so why are the cushions still there?

2. The past time turned out to be the existence of matter,
and there were also sunrises and sunsets, indicating that the matter called time is still developing in time. There will be many worlds of this kind of material time in that one second. There are also 60 such spaces in a minute in seconds. Unless this space is counted as 15 minutes. That's still too much. .

3. It always feels that it is not advanced enough to need a substance like a big mouth to clean up the time garbage in this space state. . It should just disappear right away. . But there is no logic to this movie if it disappears directly.

4. There is no echo in the past time, which is very interesting, because the echo takes time, this is a very logical arrangement. But in this way, it should not even be able to hear the sound. Sound propagation also takes time. .

5. After crossing the time gap again, if they return to the future 5 minutes later, they should always be 5 minutes faster than the real world. Why do they stop and wait for 5 minutes to pass and return to the real time?
If they are stopped, then the time of reality should surpass them, and they still cannot return to reality. . . .

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Extended Reading

The Langoliers quotes

  • Bob Jenkins: Let's say that every now and then a hole appears in the stream of time. Not a time-warm. A rip. A time rip. A rip in the central fabric.

    Don Gaffney: That's the craziest thing I ever heard of!

    Craig Toomy: Amen!

    Bob Jenkins: Mr. Gaffney, the situation we're in right now, this is crazy. So let's say that such rips do occur every now and then. It would be similar to rare weather phenomenons that are reported. Upside-down tornadoes, circular rainbows, daytime starlight.

    Captain Brian Engle: The aurora borealis.

    Bob Jenkins: [Bob looks to Brian in surprise] What?

    Captain Brian Engle: There was an aurora borealis over the Mojavi Desert when we left LAX. We were supposed to fly right into it.

    Bob Jenkins: Then that's it. An auroa over the desert. That strengthens my point. If we were to fly into that, and it was a time-rip then that means we're no longer in our own time, ladies and gentlemen.

  • Don Gaffney: [listening to Jenkins' time rip theory] That's the craziest thing I've ever heard.

    Craig Toomy: Amen!