Three scientists—Papaia, Banani, Ravioli—and their assistant Igor, who are supposed to attend the famous dark matter conference, miss their flight and end up on the other side of the world. After arriving at the wrong airport, they book a hotel for the night, but the taxi drops them off in front of an abandoned warehouse. During the flight, Banani found a very interesting book.
Now, in front of the warehouse, Banani and Ravioli continue their discussion about the book.
Banani: What do you think about this argument?
Ravioli: It seems like a sound reasoning. However, there’s something I don’t quite understand.
Banani: What is it?
Ravioli: Why does something eternal have to be unchanging?
Banani: The concept of change is tied to time, so a timeless being cannot change.
Ravioli: That’s true—things change over time. At first, they’re one way, and in the end, they’re another. But without time, how could they change?
Banani: Exactly! Change implies a “before” and an “after.” But if something exists outside of time, there can be no before or after.
Ravioli: So, if something is eternal and timeless, it must always remain the same?
Banani: Yes, because without a before and after, it cannot transition from one state to another. It’s like being permanently fixed in an unchanging condition.
Igor: We’re looking for something eternal, timeless, and unchanging… Oh, wait! Ravioli’s stress-eating!
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That never ends and never changes!
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