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Can you get your head around the vastness of nothing?
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2020-11-15 at 3:40 PM UTC
Originally posted by mmQ I like to think that there's at least one similar version of everything we have, out there on other planets, somewhere. You might have to travel 100 trillion+ light years away but goddamnit you will find yourself a McDonald's.
I wonder if they'd deliver 100 trillion+ light years. -
2020-11-15 at 3:55 PM UTC
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2020-11-15 at 6:51 PM UTCI wonder if they'd accept uk pounds.
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2020-11-15 at 6:52 PM UTC
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2020-11-15 at 11:54 PM UTC
Originally posted by mmQ I like to think that there's at least one similar version of everything we have, out there on other planets, somewhere. You might have to travel 100 trillion+ light years away but goddamnit you will find yourself a McDonald's.
Universe night be non-ergotic, so you really might not. It's possible merely by the fact that things are one way here, they can never be the same elsewhere. -
2020-11-16 at 5:38 AM UTCOnce you figure out the mechanics of space and time, you don't have to travel anywhere. You just go from point A to point B almost instantly, as if no time elapsed at all. And it doesn't matter how far. You can go trillions of light years in the blink of an eye. You don't move. Time and space does.
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2020-11-16 at 6:10 AM UTC
Originally posted by -SpectraL Once you figure out the mechanics of space and time, you don't have to travel anywhere. You just go from point A to point B almost instantly, as if no time elapsed at all. And it doesn't matter how far. You can go trillions of light years in the blink of an eye. You don't move. Time and space does.
Actually you learn the importance of locality, causality and the speed of light. -
2020-11-16 at 3:02 PM UTC
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2020-11-16 at 3:27 PM UTC
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2020-11-16 at 3:33 PM UTC
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2020-11-16 at 3:37 PM UTC
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2020-11-16 at 4:26 PM UTC