It's more like a ball of nonstop nuclear lightning than anything we've personally ever experienced as "fire", if that helps.
42 0 ReplyPeople think the speed of light is fast, but darkness is faster. Wherever light goes, it finds darkness got there first.
-source not sure, Pratchett probably? If not him then Adams.
33 1 Replydon't fuck me up like this
7 0 ReplyYeah it was Pratchett. Guess I will be re-reading that one next. I have just re-read all the Night Watch and Witches.
6 0 Reply
Light permeates most of the universe (everywhere that's not a black hole) You can see light from just about anywhere.
30 2 Reply"Daytime is also atmosphere on Earth though. If you were on the moon in broad daylight the sky would still be dark."
source 👇
23 0 ReplyFor now. Eventually entropy will win and the darkness will be complete
7 0 ReplyAnd yet, you can not see light in far more places. In fact, 99.9999999%... of all atoms across the whole of reality are, at any given moment, not connected to or part of an entity capable of sight.
Light is the aberration.
4 1 Reply
Each day is like a very slow "weeeeee" seeing the sun pass.
27 0 Reply"Night" and "day" were really only ever intended to be used on a planet. They kinda lose meaning in space.
19 0 ReplyIsn't it weird to people that black holes exist? They're holes in the fabric of reality itself. Stuff just goes in and is lost forever.
20 2 ReplyNot exactly. Comes out scrambled as Hawking radiation.
21 0 ReplyMega (or just big boii) quantum encryption devices
3 0 Reply
It is possible that every black hole is an entire universe, and we're inside of one right now.
https://www.discovery.com/science/Universe-Inside-Every-Black-Hole
9 0 ReplyDon't fuck them up like that.
7 0 Reply
You merely adopted the dark. I was born in it, molded by it. I didn't see the light until I was already a man, by then it was nothing to me but blinding!
12 1 ReplyFor you!
2 0 Reply
Speaking of, fire (the way we are familiar with it) only really happens on earth.
9 0 ReplyAnd any of the other infinite number of unknown planets with an atmosphere containing adequate oxygen.
12 0 ReplyOf course, but none known.
8 0 ReplyOxygen, and some ongoing process to generate complex molecules to be oxidized - you need something to reduce the things that have already been burnt back into new molecules that can burn, otherwise you run out of stuff pretty quickly
3 0 Reply
We are like inverse cockroaches.
8 1 ReplyDo you suppose cockroaches think of us as day-dwelling scum?
5 0 ReplyThey don't think of us at all.
4 0 ReplyI suppose cockroaches think of us as something to exploit. So, yes.
2 0 Reply
If there is no day where you are then there is no night either.
7 1 ReplyFalse. Day is a causality. Darkness is the universal default state.
2 1 ReplyThats irrelevant because darkness ≠ night. Night and day are both defined based on local observations (between sunset and sunrise).
:D
4 1 ReplyDarkness and night aren't the same thing
2 1 Reply
Whoa am I high right now
5 0 ReplyBoth a statement and a question, and multiples of each, depending on where the missing punctuation goes.
2 0 Reply
It's even in the Bible. Checkmate atheists.
7 4 Replycare to elaborate?
i can't understand your way of thinking and i would like to do so
3 1 ReplyWas meant as a joke, but the Bible starts with “and God said let there be light” pretty early on.
It’s after creating the earth, so maybe not 100% accurate.
6 0 ReplyThe joke is "God said 'Let there be light.'" Ergo, darkness is the default.
6 0 Reply
Or you could say night is the anomaly, because most places in the universe are stars.
Nighttime is absence. You could say most of the universe is absence, but most matter is stars.
6 8 ReplyDaytime is also atmosphere on Earth though. If you were on the moon in broad daylight the sky would still be dark.
18 0 ReplyWait.... whhhhaa?
Oh!
1 0 Reply