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logicbomb, to risa in You can never be sure

That seems like a serious gambit. After all you might be part of the program. Much safer to ask for the arch.

logicbomb, to cyanideandhappiness in 15 December 2023

A scarf doesn’t create heat. It only holds it in. So, this comic is even more disturbing than it seems, because Frosty must have an internal source of heat that’s slowly, inevitably melting him away… It’s just occurred to me that this is analogous to the human aging process.

logicbomb, to science_memes in Mentally Deranged Behaviour

When I read your comment, my monocle popped right off!

logicbomb, to science_memes in Mentally Deranged Behaviour

How about 4D Venn diagrams?

logicbomb, to risa in Garak's time off

This is unlike Garak at all. He would never close for the week. What about all his customers?!

logicbomb, to cyanideandhappiness in Random 3-15-2020

Jokes aside, I wonder what would actually happen if your addiction led to your finding your son’s drugs.

Because usually, an addiction means you’re going to try to hide it. So my guess is you’d pretend you didn’t find drugs rather than out yourself.

logicbomb, to asklemmy in Whats your winter season movie that you must watch every winter?

Groundhog Day every February 2nd

logicbomb, to thefarside in 12 December 2023

If you zoom in on the helmet, you can see a face in there.

logicbomb, to asklemmy in Would a perfectly flat, tight sail on a boat be more efficient than a sail like we all know?

According to my college physics 101 professor, a curved sail is generally superior in all situations. There are sails made out of rigid materials, and they generally are curved, even though they could be flat. Everybody who sails knows that you can adjust the slack in your sail, and that sometimes a tighter sail is better, for example when tacking. You can tell this just from the feel.

Now, then, it’s been a LONG time since my physics 101 class, but the explanation was something like this: Although this is an oversimplification, you can imagine that a sail works when air particles bounce off of it. The momentum imparted to the sail depends not only on the direction that the wind is coming from, but also the direction that it ends up going when it bounces off the sail. A curved sail helps redirect the wind away from the sail in exactly the direction that the sail is pointing, which is better at pushing the vehicle in the correct direction.

Another way to look at this is if it is a pure matter of air pressure. A curved surface will be better at creating air pressure inside the curve. It’s like if you’re driving and you hold something out the window. When you hold a rigid board out of the window, it will be hard to hold in place, but the air pressure won’t build up behind it as much as a sack, for example. If you hold a sack out the window, it will probably just be ripped out of your hands.

logicbomb, to cyanideandhappiness in Random 6-8-2006

I almost didn’t get it. I guess because of my weird brain, my first reaction was to wonder why the items you find in the shower would be upset that an item not in the shower would think that cartoonists get most of their ideas in the shower. Surely, they’d be proud that they inspired the creativity.

But that’s got nothing to do with the joke.

logicbomb, to bloomcounty in 8 December 1980

A milkshake without a cup seems like it would become a milk handshake.

I’ll be here all week, folks.

logicbomb, to comicstrips in "If I knew then what I know now" by Port Sherry

If he spawned a new time line then he wouldn’t have to disappear.

logicbomb, to comicstrips in "If I knew then what I know now" by Port Sherry

If he didn’t exist, then he wouldn’t be able to tell himself anything, which violates causality.

The only thing you can say to your younger self is the same thing that was previously said to your younger self by your older self. Although then you’d have the issue of where did the information come from.

logicbomb, to asklemmy in What's the simplest thing humans are too dumb to grasp?

Everybody else is saying things that some humans are too dumb to grasp. I’ll give you an example that virtually all humans are too dumb to grasp.

How are our decisions affected by conflicts of interests? The last time I looked into this, the research in this area said that humans virtually always underestimate the effect that a conflict of interests has on them, by a lot. Many people don’t even see the conflict of interests. People who recognize the conflict of interests believe that because they are aware of the conflict of interests, they can mitigate the effects completely. They are wrong.

Humans get entangled by conflicts of interests just like dogs get entangled by their leashes. Just like dogs, many times, humans don’t realize that they’re caught. Just like dogs, even if you show a human the problem, they cannot understand. But even worse than dogs getting tangled by their leashes, humans believe they can understand what to do when they’re caught up, but it turns out that they’re wrong.

logicbomb, to asklemmy in How long is a wound considered open?

If your friend is actually a germaphobe, then just because something is safe, that doesn’t mean they won’t worry about infection.

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