ryanmoulletcario
Ryno
ryanmoulletcario

There's a danger in extrapolating an entire world from a very small sample...especially when landers are typically set down in the safest terrain possible. We know from Cassini's radar explorations that Titan has in fact an extremely varied landscape.

I watched this with a girl on a fourth or fifth date, we were starting to be a thing. She hated it, she said it was about nothing, that it so boring. She just didn't understand any of it and just thought nothing was happening the entire time. She didn't understand what the deal with birdman was, the character, she

Nah, we are good, you can keep your soul.

As someone who's been teaching English to adults in China for going-on 4 years now... I'd politely disagree. :)

At which point he'll become Hispanic for sure.

OBVIOUSLY they are able to pull it off due to the Gravity Flux Compensators the Millenium Falcon has. As any TRUE Star Wars fan would know if they had read Star Wars Technical Journal Volume one published in 1993.

So the family should sit around the Christmas tree in silence because this grammar-challenged brat can't be arsed to be polite? Really?! Huh.

Maybe it's because I'm a bio major who jumped to an MPH with a stats concentration, but it's kind of odd how science sets have shifted to assembling electronics. Are we prepping our kids for discovery or Chinese sweatshops? Personally, I think that any science set should come with a dry colony of something and some

*Warning - Annoying Pedantic Nerd Alert*

What if the hilt is made of Mandalorian iron?

I just found that the Foundation books were way too reductive. 'Here's a planet of people who all have the same personality characteristics!' I haven't read them for 15+ years, but I remember the Foundation books just being tedious, a philosophy treatise crudely jammed into a scifi book.

"The fact that it's entirely understood" completely invalidates everything you said after that in my opinion. Because it isn't. You perceive it to be. Scientific fact is something found through a plethora of testing. What would have been a better statement is, "At our current level of scientific understanding".

Who's

So what does this love force actually do in the movie? It looked to me like a metaphor to make the incomprehensible manageable, not a literal force.

No. It's called Science-Fiction, not science-fact. The rest is speculation. It could happen, it probably won't, but you don't know for sure for technology hasn't been able to produce it yet or we just haven't reached that point in the future. By your standards, we could say that The Wizard of Oz misrepresents what

"love between humans, like gravity, transcends dimensions. Maybe love is even the fifth dimension, where the beings who made the wormhole live."

so if doctor who doesn't make you throw a shoe at the TV, you'll be fine with Interstellar