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DyLEMaty / Odp: "Space - The Final Frontier"
« dnia: Dzisiaj o 01:58:57 pm »
Ty masz coś słabość do pisma obrazkowego, choć bardziej złożone techniki zapisu dawno wynaleźli... 
A co do Q, to wydaje się znamienne, że podczas gdy "PIC" wspomnianego uśmierca - "ORV" wprowadza go - czy raczej ją
- na nowo, z lepszym naukowym uzasadnieniem. Przy czym, skoro już o odcinku "Mortality Paradox" jesteśmy, warto odnotować końcówkę tegoż, bo mamy tam interesującą polemikę z ametowo-picardowymi pochwałami śmiertelności, połączoną z filozofowaniem o niebycie:
Ed Mercer: You know, it's interesting... as far beyond us as those people are, there's one thing we have in common: neither of us can fathom our own mortality. We all know we're gonna die, but it's impossible for us to visualize it.
Gordon Malloy: Oh, I can visualize it. Yeah. Big funeral, lots of people weeping, wishing they'd been nicer to me.
Ed Mercer: I'm not talking about your funeral, I'm talking about your actual death. I mean, it's impossible.
Kelly Grayson: I guess it'd be like a... black emptiness?
Ed Mercer: Yeah, but even in that scenario, you're still there, as an observer, picturing that void. Nonexistence is beyond our capacity to imagine.
Kelly Grayson: The only difference is, they never have to worry about it, we do.
Bortus: Death is an essential part of life. It is a noble rite of passage.
Ed Mercer: Yeah, that's the conventional philosophical wisdom, but, it doesn't work for me, never has.
Kelly Grayson: You'd live forever if you could?
Ed Mercer: Yup.
Gordon Malloy: Why?
Ed Mercer: I want to see what happens.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G_DwgOudT0E
Gdzie - mimo zajęcia przez nich przeciwstawnych stanowisk - w mercerowym argumencie na rzecz fajności wiecznego życia brzmi (dosłownie i w przenośni) ta sama nuta co w słynnym "Let's see what's out there." Łysego.

A co do Q, to wydaje się znamienne, że podczas gdy "PIC" wspomnianego uśmierca - "ORV" wprowadza go - czy raczej ją

Ed Mercer: You know, it's interesting... as far beyond us as those people are, there's one thing we have in common: neither of us can fathom our own mortality. We all know we're gonna die, but it's impossible for us to visualize it.
Gordon Malloy: Oh, I can visualize it. Yeah. Big funeral, lots of people weeping, wishing they'd been nicer to me.
Ed Mercer: I'm not talking about your funeral, I'm talking about your actual death. I mean, it's impossible.
Kelly Grayson: I guess it'd be like a... black emptiness?
Ed Mercer: Yeah, but even in that scenario, you're still there, as an observer, picturing that void. Nonexistence is beyond our capacity to imagine.
Kelly Grayson: The only difference is, they never have to worry about it, we do.
Bortus: Death is an essential part of life. It is a noble rite of passage.
Ed Mercer: Yeah, that's the conventional philosophical wisdom, but, it doesn't work for me, never has.
Kelly Grayson: You'd live forever if you could?
Ed Mercer: Yup.
Gordon Malloy: Why?
Ed Mercer: I want to see what happens.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G_DwgOudT0E
Gdzie - mimo zajęcia przez nich przeciwstawnych stanowisk - w mercerowym argumencie na rzecz fajności wiecznego życia brzmi (dosłownie i w przenośni) ta sama nuta co w słynnym "Let's see what's out there." Łysego.