Animus Seed wrote:Kindly Ones was my favorite, actually. And Doll's House a close second. Preludes and Nocturnes... I've never been sure about, with the blatant DC Comics references in it. I can't decide if that's a good thing or not.
bigsleepj wrote:Preludes and Nocturnes: Neil Gaiman himself admitted that he was still 'finding his feet' in that volume. Also some of the drawings (especially the first few chapters) don't really work. It's only the last three chapters where the art really fits works (apparently the story switched artists which might explain it).
bigsleepj wrote:And UC, I like Destruction too. He and Death are probably the most human of the seven
[SIZE="7"][color="MediumTurquoise"]Cobalt Figure 8[/color][/SIZE]UC Pseudonym wrote:For a while I wasn't sure how to answer this, and then I thought "What would Batman do?" Excuse me while I find a warehouse with a skylight...
fairyprincess90 wrote:the witch of blackbird pond is pretty good..... i read it a while ago.... but from what i remember it was cool.
JasonPratt wrote:It-could've-been-different-but-wasn't still equals it-could've-been-different-but-wasn't. {shrug} Whatever defense the theory legitimately makes against the anthropic principle can be just as legitimately made without it. Or vice versa. {g}
i.e. if the "a priori" improbability looks suspicious one way, it still looks suspicious the other way. If the suspiciousness can be considered illusory one way, it can be considered illusory the other way.
The temptation will be to think that 10^100 possible universes (or even actual ones) somehow makes it seem less improbable that we happened to be in _this_ actual universe.
Technomancer wrote:This doesn't actually mean anything unless you specify the "ways" of looking at things.
Technomancer wrote:Now that I've finished Susskind's book, I'm reading Extinction: How Life Nearly Ended 250 Million Years Ago. The book investigates current theories regarding the cause the late Permian mass extinction event, in which ~82% of all species were wiped out (including 90% of all marine species). Unlike the much smaller event that wiped out the dinosaurs, the cause of this catastrophe remains uncertain.
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