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What if, like, *sniff* you had a Rubik's Cube whose sides were infinitely large? How would you solve it?
Whaaaaa, braaaa.
What if, like, *sniff* you had a Rubik's Cube whose sides were infinitely large? How would you solve it?
Whaaaaa, braaaa.
That's easy - get God to do it for me.
Shrink the cube first.
“Grow up. These are my Disney's movies, not yours.”
Can infinity be reduced, though? Where would all the mass go? Shunt it off into some alternate universe? But that would violate the law of the conservation of matter and energy. And what if there is no multiverse and this is the only reality in existence?
Damn, this is giving me a philosophical headache.
Where did they get all that plastic from?
“First feel fear, then get angry. Then go with your life into the fight.” - Bill Mollison
Since a Rubik's cube is a figure with borders, you can't have a Rubik's cube with infinite sides. Even theories about the universe not being infinite usualy say that it has no "borders".
A way to trick the problem to get an answer would be to assume that you are yourself infinitely smaller than the Rubik's cube. So the object would be infinitely bigger than you (as it was stated in your question) BUT it will still be part of our world at its normal size. So the answer to your question is: no you can't solve the Rubik's cube but someone else can.
It's already solved in the 8th dimension, it literally took no time at all.
If Rubik's cube infinitely large - possibility of living outside it = 0McFlabbergasty said:
What if, like, *sniff* you had a Rubik's Cube whose sides were infinitely large? How would you solve it?
http://twister111.tumblr.com
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Mi inchino alla tua logica superiore.
If you are in a spaceship at one end of the Solar System and your friend Bob was in another spaceship at the other end, then if you both travel towards each other at a constant velocity of half the speed of light, will Bob's spaceship violate the principles of relativity (your own spaceship being your reference frame)?
McFlabbergasty said:
If you are in a spaceship at one end of the Solar System and your friend Bob was in another spaceship at the other end, then if you both travel towards each other at a constant velocity of half the speed of light, will Bob's spaceship violate the principles of relativity (your own spaceship being your reference frame)?
No.*
*No part of this answer may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without prior written permission of TMBTM.