Another paradox of time travel is aging. Could a time traveller return in time to a point beyond where he was just a twinkle in his father's eye, or similarly, could he go forward in time beyond his alloted span, and would he get younger as he went back or older as he travelled forward. Prehaps the answer would be in the speed of travel.
For example, imagine you left a young lady at some point in a village & then you took a spin around that village at the speed of light, on returning to that woman, she would now be old, yet you would only have aged a few minutes...............that would be a form of time travel since you could advance in time by say 50 years, in a matter of minutes.....I'll leave those more qualified to explain the physics of it.
There is another point to elucidate, if we travelled back in time,would we not meet our younger selves & if so, could the two of us coexist in the same time continuum ? The Doctor says yes but we can't have physical contact, so any sexual activity between the two would be impossible. I mention that, as according to a large number of psychoanalysts, we all have an underlying desire to make love to ourselves & it would be a good opportunity to find out if we are as good a lover as we think we are.
I think some "psychoanalysts" are just "daffy".
The time travel debate will only be solved when someone openly can obtain a means to do so and then finds the facts and presents those facts instead of theory. But we have to keep a simple thought when it does come to time and travel. It is all a part of light. The measurement of light is what is a large part of the very fabric of what we do and our existence. Age, events, life. It would be nice to travel back in time, bet on races and make investments on things we knew in history would have panned out, and then come back to today and have some nice fat bank account from it all.