We’re still here


At least, I think so. Of course the Large Hadron Collider could have pushed our entire world sideways through a tear in spacetime, to then occupy the space in which a parallel Earth once resided but is now itself pushed into another universe… And so on, and so forth… In which case, we see nothing different in our universe, but it isn’t our universe and our universe has been left behind with our solar system missing a planet unless in the process of pushing us out of our continuum, the LHC also pulled the parallel Earth in the adjacent opposite direction into our universe to occupy the space we once did… In which case, everything would have been changed by the LHC across every parallel universe and yet nobody in any of those universes would notice anything different at all. Okay, maybe a few people get headaches but that’s about it…

Thursday, September 11th, 2008

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How would YOU spend the last day of everything?


It’s been a while since I’ve taken part in a meme, let alone started one—but today, I’m asking a selection of fellow bloggers a very simple question, assuming we’re all still around today and over the next week at least, in order to provide answers. The question is this: how would you spend your last day on Earth, not only your last day but the last day for everything?

It’s the day some people have feared, when the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is switched on in an expensive quest to find the so-called ‘God particle’ otherwise known less sensationally as the Higgs boson. It is said to be crucial to gaining a greater understanding of the universe—assuming it exists, and can be found—and is thought to give everything its mass.

Wednesday, September 10th, 2008

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