Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Questions with Problems.




I'd Wager that the answer to the question of life, the universe , and everything , is just another question. If it were possible to truely know the answer to such a thing it would cause more trouble and harm then it would fix or give peace. The answer if such a thing exists could easily be something of such a depressingly bland nature (i.e why not?, or because, or even, nothing which is in a sense something but it wont do you any good to know that anyway) What benefit could there possibly be to knowing the "answer" to life the universe and everything? I think that one of the major issues with the whole question posed by THGTG (The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy) is that the question they ask is far to broad to be of any benefit other than an answer that is so absurd and general that its meaning is lost because they ask the wrong question. They are then prodded to create something to figure out what the ultimate question is! Questions beget answers, but they also beget more questions. The easiest example I have of this is the simple curiosity of a child in asking you "why" until you have no answer.




The problem with questions is that they are like an if then else statement in programming




IF there is a question


THEN look for an answer


and


IF the answer leads to more questions repeat




ELSE get on with your Life.




END






So it would seem to my mind that the simplest way to avoid infinite loop answer question combinations you ask for the answer to everything then you would be without questions.




Now consider what life might be like without questions. would people still grow and develop? or would they just age? Would the answer to everything be transfered by repetition or would it be passed on in our very genetic code.




The mice wanted the human brains because they contained the processing components that allowed in the depths of human subconscious the sub routine of what is the ultimate question to run in the background while a biotic component experiences a series of things during the span of its bio coding and as a result the infomation gained by one processing unit can be passed to others to continue the code for finding the desired result. In doing so an infinite variety and system of randomness is imposed on the system because each processing unit is the same in basic principle but more often then not will not have the exact same experience of its predecessors. Therefore, life itself makes sense to be the perfect computing unit to process the broadest of questions by arriving at the broadest of answers through random events and experienced differences. BAM! brain explosion, enjoy your day .





















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