Re: APOD: Confirmed Muon Wobble Remains... (2021 Apr 13)
Posted: Tue Apr 13, 2021 7:20 pm
Sadly, I'm not much of a practicing Pastafarian either. But I will admit to a fondness for the creation myth in Lord Dunsany's The Gods of Pegana - http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/8395/pg8395.htmlneufer wrote: ↑Tue Apr 13, 2021 7:03 pmjohnnydeep wrote: ↑Tue Apr 13, 2021 6:40 pmOh contraire! There is indeed an "after life".
It's just that when we die, we will no longer be participating in it.
- Whether we participate or not is really a decision to be best left
in FSM's Noodly Appendages since we will no longer have Free Will.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flying_Spaghetti_Monster wrote:
Afterlife: The Pastafarian conception of Heaven includes a beer volcano and a stripper (or sometimes prostitute) factory. (Pastafarian Hell is similar, except that the beer is stale and the strippers have STDs.)
Creation: The central creation myth is that an invisible and undetectable Flying Spaghetti Monster created the universe "after drinking heavily". According to these beliefs, the Monster's intoxication was the cause for a flawed Earth [and the muon wobble]. Furthermore, according to Pastafarianism, all evidence for evolution was planted by the Flying Spaghetti Monster in an effort to test the faith of Pastafarians. When scientific measurements such as radiocarbon dating are taken, the Flying Spaghetti Monster "is there changing the results with His Noodly Appendage".>>
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Gods_of_Pegāna :In the mists before THE BEGINNING, Fate and Chance cast lots to decide whose the Game should be; and he that won strode through the mists to MANA-YOOD-SUSHAI and said: "Now make gods for Me, for I have won the cast and the Game is to be Mine." Who it was that won the cast, and whether it was Fate or whether Chance that went through the mists before THE BEGINNING to MANA-YOOD-SUSHAI—none knoweth.
Gahan Wilson praised The Gods of Pegāna as "a wonderfully sustained exercise in totally ironic fantasy which may never be beaten. Speaking in a highly original mix of King James Bible English, Yeatsian syntax, and Scheherazadian imagery, [Dunsany] introduces us to a wonderfully sinister Valhalla populated with mad, spectacularly cruel and wonderfully silly gods ... whose only genuine amusement appears to derive from the inventive damage they inflict upon their misbegotten worshippers".[6] E. F. Bleiler lauded the collection as "a convincing, marvelous creation of an alien cosmology".[7]