Three scientists—Papaia, Banani, Ravioli—and their assistant Igor, who are supposed to attend the famous dark matter conference, take the wrong flight and end up on the other side of the world. After arriving at the wrong airport, they book a hotel to spend the night, but it’s not exactly what they expected… in the sense that it’s awful.
We’re on the hotel stairs, where the four are making their way up, discussing the book Banani found on the plane.
They continue their discussion.
Banani: Okay, but what about the supernatural events? Did they really happen, or did the authors exaggerate?
Ravioli: That’s the central issue. All the evidence shows that the authors weren’t lying or exaggerating. But in the end, it’s up to the reader to decide whether to believe it or not.
Banani: Kind of like the resurrection of Jesus, which that book of yours talked about?
Ravioli: Exactly! It all depends on our assumptions—are we open to the possibility of the supernatural or not?
Banani: But with the cosmological argument, we’ve seen that the universe itself needs a supernatural cause.
Ravioli: Right! It’s as if all these arguments are pieces of the same puzzle.
Banani: Very interesting… A detective analyzing the Gospels. Who better than him to study our case?
Ravioli: Wait, I’ll send you the file via Bluetooth.
Banani: Ah, here it is! It’s already on my phone. Thanks.
Papaia: I don’t know how you guys can think while climbing all these stairs. With all this effort, I can’t even remember my own name!
Igor: You don’t need stairs to forget your name—just call your bank’s customer service, and you’ll forget who you are, where you are, and what you were even looking for!
🤣🤣🤣