Iranian Scientist Claims to Have Built
"Time Machine"
Ali Razeqi says his time machine uses "complex algorithms" to see the future.
![[IMG]]()
Actor Rod Taylor tries to fast forward in the 1960 film The Time Machine.
Photograph from Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer/Getty Images
Ker Than
for National Geographic News
Published April 12, 2013
It's not quite Back to the Future, but a young Iranian inventor claims to have built a time machine that can predict a person's future with startling accuracy.
Ali Razeqi, who is 27 and the "managing director of Iran's Center for Strategic Inventions," claims his device will print out a report detailing an individual's future after using complex algorithms to predict his or her fate.
According to the...
Iranian Scientist Claims to Have Built "Time Machine"
"Time Machine"
Ali Razeqi says his time machine uses "complex algorithms" to see the future.
![[IMG]](http://images.nationalgeographic.com/wpf/media-live/photos/000/662/overrides/why-time-travel-is-impossible_66207_600x450.jpg)
Actor Rod Taylor tries to fast forward in the 1960 film The Time Machine.
Photograph from Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer/Getty Images
Ker Than
for National Geographic News
Published April 12, 2013
It's not quite Back to the Future, but a young Iranian inventor claims to have built a time machine that can predict a person's future with startling accuracy.
Ali Razeqi, who is 27 and the "managing director of Iran's Center for Strategic Inventions," claims his device will print out a report detailing an individual's future after using complex algorithms to predict his or her fate.
According to the...
Iranian Scientist Claims to Have Built "Time Machine"