Re "The inflation of the Universe /Empty space can travel faster than light":
Neither of those phenomena contradict Einstein - space is not "stuff". Re "Electrons in quantum entanglement can simultaneously act together even when they're trillions of miles away": Scientists seem to agree that quantum entanglement can't be used to transmit signals instantaneously (or faster than light) for reasons which escape me. Re "I believe those scientists in Italy [were] proven wrong in their experiments about a year ago?": They were indeed. But I guess that has made them extra cautious! Re Sal's "fundamental contradictions could happen" : No they can't. Which is why my time-travel thought experiment shows that time-travel is impossible. Impossible *within* the same Universe. You might - just possibly - be able to travel back to a perfect copy of medieval London but what happens from that point on would be happening in a parallel world. ---In [email protected], <jr_esq@...> wrote : Salyavin and S3, About a week ago, I posted a few phenomena that seemingly exceed the speed of light. These are: 1. The inflation of the universe milliseconds after the Big Bang. 2. Empty space can travel faster than light because it has no mass. 3. Electrons in quantum entanglement can simultaneously act together even when they're trillions of miles away. I believe those scientists in Italy are blinded by their aspirations to make a name for themselves. That's why they're erroneously concluding that neutrinos travel faster than light. Weren't they proven wrong in their experiments about a year ago?
