Post your "amazing" Philosopihcal Questions/Statements
57 replies, posted
Man who drop watch in toilet bound to have shitty time
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Man who go to sleep with itchy bum wake up with stinky finger
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Man who run behind car get exhausted
Student who fap in class have firm grasp of situation at hand.
[QUOTE=Gmod_User;22319306] Man who run in front of car get tired. Man who run behind car get exhausted.[/QUOTE]
Fixed
Light only reaches anything because there is a probability that it will reach it. there is also a probability that one of the photons that were emited from this monitor went around the universe 5000 times before reaching your eye.
[i]"We don't stop playing because we grow old, we grow old because we stop playing."[/i]
[QUOTE=Emu Puncher;22353515]Light only reaches anything because there is a probability that it will reach it. [B]there is also a probability that one of the photons that were emited from this monitor went around the universe 5000 times before reaching your eye.[/B][/QUOTE]
Nope. Wouldn't travel fast enough.
Read up a bit on light, it's an interesting subject.
It takes around 4.3 years for light from Proxima Centauri (the nrearest star other than the sun) to reach the earth. light from further stars take longer to get here. So technically, we look into the past at night. And, by using that fact, some stars can technically be non-existant. If you travelled to proxima centauri at light speed, would you be able to watch the star evolving? and then as you leave at light speed, would you see the star the same way you saw it before you left?
If an abortion is considered as murder, is wanking considered as genocide ?
"Cogito, ergo sum." - René Descartes
[img]http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/6b/Descartes2.jpg[/img]
You'll only get it if you are clever or smart enough to check the filename.
[QUOTE=Always Watching;22367726]It takes around 4.3 years for light from Proxima Centauri (the nrearest star other than the sun) to reach the earth. light from further stars take longer to get here. So technically, we look into the past at night. And, by using that fact, some stars can technically be non-existant. If you travelled to proxima centauri at light speed, would you be able to watch the star evolving? and then as you leave at light speed, would you see the star the same way you saw it before you left?[/QUOTE]
It's impossible for anything with a rest mass greater than zero to be able to travel at light speed or faster according to modern physics. Unless, of course, you warp space-time and develop the ability to jump from one place in the universe to the other, but that's a whole entire different ballgame.
Even so, if you traveled towards Proxima Centauri (at whatever speed), I'm pretty sure you would only see PC 'evolve' at the normal rate that we normally perceive it due to time dilation.
Am you to do much like i want to?
where do babies come from
[QUOTE=Herr Sven;22354266]Nope. Wouldn't travel fast enough.
Read up a bit on light, it's an interesting subject.[/QUOTE]
Read up on Quantum theory. interesting subject. also dictates that light waves can simultaniously be everywhere and nowhere at once. speed of light is irrelevant.
[QUOTE=Emu Puncher;22376426]Read up on Quantum theory. interesting subject. also dictates that light waves can simultaniously be everywhere and nowhere at once. speed of light is irrelevant.[/QUOTE]
I know about quantum theory.
Your example is still so incredibly inplausible that we can be quite sure that it hasn't happened.
Believe me, I know this stuff, I'm a nerd.
[QUOTE=Herr Sven;22377075]I know about quantum theory.
Your example is still so incredibly inplausible that we can be quite sure that it hasn't happened.
Believe me, I know this stuff, I'm a nerd.[/QUOTE]
Not about whether it has or hasn't happened, there is a certain probability of it happening. Given, its low, but it could theoretically happen.
This thread made my head hurt.
[QUOTE=Emu Puncher;22377415]Not about whether it has or hasn't happened, there is a certain probability of it happening. Given, its low, but it could theoretically happen.[/QUOTE]
It isn't low, it's extremely low.
But yes, theoretically it could happen.
If you cut of your left arm, your right arm will be left.
If Oedipus the King was never written, would Sigmund Freud have ended up as just a regular coke head?
"Fill your bowl to the brim
and it will spill.
Keep sharpening your knife
and it will blunt.
Chase after money and security
and your heart will never unclench.
Care about people's approval
and you will be their prisoner."
Cupcakes are like muffins dressed up as whores.
[QUOTE=z0nk3d;22368220]If an abortion is considered as murder, is wanking considered as genocide ?[/QUOTE]
No, your sperm are just 'possibilities'.
True, your sperm isn't new life, not yet at least.
Free will is an illusion.
If it rains during a picnic, does it whet your appetite?
[QUOTE=billeh!;22368410]It's impossible for anything with a rest mass greater than zero to be able to travel at light speed or faster according to modern physics. Unless, of course, you warp space-time and develop the ability to jump from one place in the universe to the other, but that's a whole entire different ballgame.
Even so, if you traveled towards Proxima Centauri (at whatever speed), I'm pretty sure you would only see PC 'evolve' at the normal rate that we normally perceive it due to time dilation.[/QUOTE]
But now, if you could convert that mass to energy, and back again in the right order...
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