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1997
DOI: 10.1093/bjps/48.3.363
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Bananas Enough for Time Travel?

Abstract: This paper argues that the most famous objection to backward time travel can carry no weight. In its classic form, the objection is that backward time travel entails the occurrence of impossible things, such as auto-infanticide-and hence is itself impossible. David Lewis has rebutted the classic version of the objection: auto-infanticide is prevented by coincidences, such as time travellers slipping on banana peels as they attempt to murder their younger selves. I focus on Paul Horwich's more recent version of… Show more

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Cited by 54 publications
(51 citation statements)
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“…e.g. Smith (1997). 10 Of course, for this imagined response to succeed, it must be clarified what these are frequencies of.…”
Section: Metaphysical Impossibility: Improbability and Backward Causamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…e.g. Smith (1997). 10 Of course, for this imagined response to succeed, it must be clarified what these are frequencies of.…”
Section: Metaphysical Impossibility: Improbability and Backward Causamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The effect of a non-measurable retrocausal outcome could become perceivable, at most, indirectly only through the succeeding measurable cause. Retrocausality in quantum theory has already been well worked out in the sound conceptual or philosophical contexts [6][7][8][9][10][11]. We shall follow this tradition in the present article.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…17 But a neces- Arntzenius (1990), Brown (1992), and Smith (1997). The upshot of these investigations is that it is by no means obvious that a physical theory should be automatically excluded because it allows for the possibility of causal looping.…”
Section: -Summary and What Must Lie Aheadmentioning
confidence: 99%