User:Abacos18144

 Fictional magic can do what science declares impossible BUT Fictional magic cannot do what logic declares nonsensical (unless it is meant for comedy).

Hello everybody.

It is autumn 2015, and I am currently working on  time travels  in fiction. Many works of fiction about time travel (including some Zelda games) have  plot flaws . There are goofy attempts to accept or justify such plot flaws by changing their names: "alteration of past", "dystopia" and "time loop" are examples of such lame camouflages.

The first two plot flaws (alteration of past and dystopia) are easily exposed if you put facts in chronological order according to history, instead of according to the time traveler(s). The third plot flaw (time loop) is a "perpetual motion of the second kind", and it is demonstrated beyond any doubt that it is impossible, because it is against the laws of thermodynamics.

Nevertheless, fiction is fiction, and I love the 5th, 6th and 7th Zelda games, where such plot flaws occur. --Abacos (talk) 18:36, 25 October 2015 (UTC)

Who am I?
I have a university degree and a master degree, and I am a former Professor of Mathematics (until I found a more remunerative job).

If I state and demonstrate that something is illogic, but you disagree, please remember you are not writing to some half-illiterate teenager, but to an adult scientist.

You are free to disagree with me, and I will be glad to explain myself better. If your logic demonstrates that I am wrong, I will be glad to aknowledge it.