The nature of time, causality, and temporal displacement remains a foundational problem in modern physics. While relativity treats time as a geometric dimension and quantum interpretations introduce branching histories, the question of whether a physical system can access its own future without violating causal structure remains unresolved. We propose Worldline Consistency Theory (WCT), a principle asserting that any forward-proper-time displacement of a physical system that bypasses causal cont…
Read moreThe nature of time, causality, and temporal displacement remains a foundational problem in modern physics. While relativity treats time as a geometric dimension and quantum interpretations introduce branching histories, the question of whether a physical system can access its own future without violating causal structure remains unresolved. We propose Worldline Consistency Theory (WCT), a principle asserting that any forward-proper-time displacement of a physical system that bypasses causal continuity cannot occur within a single spacetime history. Such a displacement necessitates a transition between distinct universes, where the arrival event is already embedded in the past of the destination universe. This framework preserves local causality, eliminates temporal paradoxes, and reinterprets “time travel” as inter-universal relocation rather than intra-universal motion. The theory is formulated using standard relativistic causal structure and does not posit a mechanism for temporal displacement, focusing solely on consistency conditions. “We present a causal consistency condition on worldlines in Lorentzian spacetime, without introducing new dynamics.” ________________________________________.