“It may all end tomorrow Or it could go on forever In which case I'm doomed It could go on forever In which case I'm doomed”
It wouldn't be Clutchfans if we didn't start a thread about hope only to have Danzig songs uploaded lol!!!
PROOF from the lyrics of Is It Really So Strange?: I left the North I traveled South Traveling in a different direction suggests entering a new reality or exploring a different version of existence. In the context of parallel universes, this could signify moving into a different dimension or a different version of their world.I found a tiny house The tiny house could represent a new, perhaps smaller or more confined, version of reality. It might symbolize a specific point or scenario within this alternate universe where the person finds themselves. In the concept of parallel universes, this house could be a metaphor for a new life or a different path that exists simultaneously with other possibilities.And I can't help the way I feel This line suggests that despite the changes in surroundings or realities, the person's emotions or consciousness remains consistent across different universes. It could imply that no matter which universe they exist in, their feelings persist, connecting their experiences across parallel worlds.
Well, OK Mr Physics Fancypants, since we're talking about spaghetti... Let's talk about lunch: It started with a plate of ginger chicken. In the late 1970s, physicist Richard Feynman — best known for his earlier work on the Manhattan Project — sat down for lunch with his friend Ralph Leighton at a restaurant in Glendale, California. Leighton was agonizing over ordering his usual favorite, or risking something new. Feynman turned the choice into a math problem, and solved it on a piece of notebook paper. His equation showed exactly when Leighton — or any indecisive diner, for that matter — should stop taking risks and stick with what one knows is good. For decades, Feynman’s notes on the "restaurant problem” were unreadable. But now, researchers reconstructed a decision-making problem from Richard Feynman's previously undeciphered notes and proved him to be right. The findings were published on June 1 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. https://www.livescience.com/physics...ant-problem-finally-deciphered-after-50-years