Quote Originally Posted by SwirlyMass
I think too many people take that literally without really thinking it through.

We could be comparable to bacteria but just like them we have to have a certain environment in order to keep multiplying. So if a bacteria lives in a big glass of sugar water and eats the sugar eventually there will be none left. Thats true with humans too, but its more complicated, what if the bacteria excrete sulphuric acid but can only live in a basic environment? Eventually that critical PH is gonna pass the 7.0 mark and there gonna float belly up.

Thats more akin to the situation we seem to be in right now.







I've read every single douglas adams book ever published.

They are all really good. Then I started to like Kurt Vonnegut then I stopped reading after reading most of his books, hes a really good writer too.
yeah thanks, there's alot more to it, but I don't really feel like typing. . .
FreeVenice Reviewed by FreeVenice on . I've discovered the answer to everything. Take a look at what life is, its the experiences of part of a whole so we have life <whole, whole=whole so what does whole-life=? Something else must be occupying the unknown part...so what is it? could it be death? I always thought of death as the whole however because when you die everything that was unique to you dies as well. so you are back at the whole, or nothing either of which wouldn't work in the equation because nothing wouldn't have any bearing and whole is already included in Rating: 5