
January 31, 2010: Time Technology and Research - David Lewis Anderson
Anderson describes how his team creates closed time-like curves, bending space-time so that time loops back on itself, allowing movement both forward and backward through time. He explains that input power requirements remain surprisingly small because the technology taps into potential energy stored in the natural curvature of space-time around Earth. He also discusses his temporal tremor detector, a device capable of sensing time control experiments conducted by other nations.
The conversation turns to international developments, with Anderson reporting that India, Japan, China, and Russia all maintain active time research programs. He raises urgent concerns about the ethical implications of time control technology, arguing that the global community must develop a collective moral framework before governments and corporations exploit these capabilities without transparency or accountability.
Key Moments
300% time acceleration in the lab: Anderson claims that by 2002 his team could accelerate time inside a contained field at 300% the rate outside it, with deceleration also working.
Reversing a clock inside the field: Anderson describes a demonstration in which a mechanical clock inside the field slows, stops, then runs backward as the time rate is reversed.
Temporal Tremor Detector revealed: Anderson introduces the TTD, a device he likens to a seismic detector that picks up temporal disturbances from time experiments worldwide.
Warning of the first great time war: Anderson warns that secret government programs are racing to weaponize time control, preparing for what he calls the first great time war.
Parallel-universe escape hatch is probably not real: Anderson breaks with Michio Kaku's many-worlds view, saying lab observations suggest changes to the past actually disturb our timeline rather than branching into a safe parallel universe.
