Saturday 16 May 2020

In The Far Future, The Universe Will Be Mostly Invisible - PhysOrg

By no means is Paul Sutter saying our cosmos will be devoid of stars. Rather the stars will be rather dim, and not readily visible from a distance much like Proxima Centauri. There are other reasons why the universe will be dark based on MelodySheep's Timelapse Of The Future which is a half hour of must-see, existential cosmic horror. A bit more relatable is my pal Paul Seaburn who's been digging into how The Moon Disappeared In 1110 and why we now know the answer to this celestial riddle was right here on Mother Earth. For high strangeness running parallel to such mysteries, Greg Taylor waxes poetic upon The Amaya Synchronicities, or that feeling you get when the universe winks at you. Drawing from the hit series Devs on FX tangenting simulation theory, the many-worlds interpretation, and other modern high strangeness woven into the fabric of the 21st century's folklore. (CS)

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from THE ANOMALIST https://bit.ly/2WzYfy1

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