Vector_Graphics wrote:> such paradoxical time travel would of necessity break the laws of physics (whatever they might be) and so cannot exist.
What laws of physics would they break, and what if we allow said laws of physics to be broken that way?
Conservation of mass and energy would be broken for a start. A persistent wormhole might be able to pass a sustained charged particle stream, violating the conservation of electric charge too. The foundational principle of thermodynamics, that causality is defined as the effect following its cause in time, would be violated. The theorems in quantum physics that ban the passing of information outside the source's light cone would be violated. Hawking may have had others in mind too, though there is not a lot left to violate.
It is is a theorem of formal logic that: if we allow any inconsistency whatsoever (such as the grandmother paradox) then with a little ingenuity it is possible to allow anything at all - including the opposite of what you just allowed. There could be no laws of physics any more, the Universe would revert to primal chaos, which medieval theologists imagined was its state before God let there be light. Such broken systems are sometimes used to demonstrate the falsehood of some proposition, by using it to "prove" some absurdity - an argument known as
reductio ad absurdum. Schrödinger's cat, Boltzmann brains, doppelgangers and the like are often raised as such absurdities, with much ensuing argument as to whose other assumptions are the broken ones here. So if you do break some law of physics, you really do need to supply another one - one which is consistent with all the others you have kept. Theoretical physics has rather a lot of that going on at the moment, thanks to the many inconsistencies and gaps between theory and observation which have arisen in recent years.