A near-death experience left the actor with a sacred knowledge sure to ruin your plans for the great beyond

  • toynbee@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    You can’t prove a negative.

    Also, at least on DDG, searching for that phrase returns some pretty interesting results.

    • mrcleanup@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      I mean. I feel like if I had a cardboard box I think I could prove that there wasn’t a horse in it.

      The real problem here is that we can’t prove he even looked in the box.

      • toynbee@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        Could you? Or could you only empirically prove that there was no horse in the box when you opened it? Maybe there was a horse in it that ran away very quickly immediately before you looked in.

        It’s extremely unlikely, for sure, but not physically impossible. Even if it’s a very small box, maybe it was a very small horse. Perhaps one of those duck sized horses I’ve heard so much about on other, inferior sites.

        I think the meaning of the phrase isn’t meant to be literal; or, actually, sorry, is meant to be extremely literal. Without absolute knowledge of the universe, you can’t prove with absolute conviction that a very small, very fast horse didn’t exist in your hypothetical box. It’s a pedantic saying, to be sure.

        But yeah, I agree about the afterlife.

        (If I had a nickel for every conversation I’ve had on Lemmy about the afterlife in the past day or two, I’d have ten cents, which isn’t a lot but it’s weird that it happened twice.)