Is time travel too crazy for the agency that wants to create shape-shifting robots? Seems like it, according to John Cramer, a physicist at the University of Washington. The crazy folks at DARPA told him his "time travel" experiment was a little too blue sky for them, according to this article in the Seattle Post Intelligencer:
What a bummer. Yeah, I know I took a huge swipe at NIAC a few weeks back, but even I admit that from reading a bit about Cramer, he's got a creative mix of science and science fiction, along with a healthy dose of skepticism.
My problem with NIAC was that by focusing only on far-fetched space architectures, they may actually be missing out on real break-through science -- you shouldn't have to have to market a time machine to get funding for high-risk science (and Cramer, by the way, isn't quite promising time travel).
So, yes, Cramer's got my sympathy. I'm not saying he should get funding, but I do think there should be more basic science funding available for him and other scientists to compete for, and you shouldn't always have to promise new-fangled inventions to get that funding.
