What Kirk is doing to that young ensign on the bridge in full view of everyone is enough to make Spock raise two eyebrows.
(,
Wed 13 Apr 2022, 10:52,
archived)
We are on the slippery slope of a downward spiral.
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Wed 13 Apr 2022, 12:53,
archived)
When I first came here, this was all swamp. Everyone said I was daft to build a website on a swamp, but I built it all the same, just to show them. It sank into the swamp. So I built a second one. That sank into the swamp. So I built a third. That burned down, fell over, got ruined by invisible Simpsons, then sank into the swamp. But the fourth one stayed up. And that's what you're going to get, lad, the strongest website in all of England.
(,
Wed 13 Apr 2022, 13:36,
archived)
and I'd like to challenge the authenticity of this piece of art by user marksimmons1962 on the basis that it is white.
Invisible things do not reflect or project light. This "invisible space" is in fact opaque ultra-visible space.
(,
Wed 13 Apr 2022, 13:31,
archived)
Invisible things do not reflect or project light. This "invisible space" is in fact opaque ultra-visible space.
Beyond that, you seem to be blithering on in reference to something waaaaaaaay over my head.
(,
Wed 13 Apr 2022, 21:51,
archived)
Or something. I don't know. I give up.
(,
Wed 13 Apr 2022, 22:17,
archived)
Invisible things do not reflect or project light. They behave as if they were not there at all, light passes through them.
White is composed of all visible frequencies of light. Key word here is 'visible.' White is kind of the most visible something can be, because it's reflecting or projecting all frequencies of visible light.
An invisible space could not be composed of visible frequencies of light. It would be transparent or dark, like regular space.
Like this:

Innit.
(,
Wed 13 Apr 2022, 22:20,
archived)
White is composed of all visible frequencies of light. Key word here is 'visible.' White is kind of the most visible something can be, because it's reflecting or projecting all frequencies of visible light.
An invisible space could not be composed of visible frequencies of light. It would be transparent or dark, like regular space.
Like this:

Innit.
Try looking at it from 90 degrees on your Y axis.
(,
Thu 14 Apr 2022, 18:03,
archived)
The visibility of a thing is defined by its apparent interaction with light (emission, reflection, refraction, distortion, absorption, occlusion, etc.).
An invisible thing does not apparently interact with light at all. It appears transparent, as if it wasn't there.
An invisible universe filled with invisible things would appear to us as black because it would be absent of visible light.
I assume Doppler shifted invisible light remains invisible in invisible space through all invisible time.
(,
Thu 14 Apr 2022, 22:11,
archived)
An invisible thing does not apparently interact with light at all. It appears transparent, as if it wasn't there.
An invisible universe filled with invisible things would appear to us as black because it would be absent of visible light.
I assume Doppler shifted invisible light remains invisible in invisible space through all invisible time.


