Why?:Did The Monkey Fall Out Of The Tree?

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“To get to the other side”

~ Some confused n00b

“It was suicidal and probably had several mental problems for which drugs are available”

~ -Dr. Lar-Dee-Dar

“Because you touch yourself at night.”

The primary philosophical problem of our time. First phrased in 1853 by noted Spanish philosopher-king , it took the philosophical, and primato-zoological, community by storm.

Discovery of the Problem[edit | edit source]

Radley's logic went as follows. If I see a tree, and then I observe a monkey falling out of it, how can this happen? The monkey cannot be committing suicide, since if it were it would hang itself by its prehensile tail and avoid the mess of bashing its own brains out. If it were merely an accident, the monkey would be immediately disgraced amongst its peers and proceed to hang itself by its own tail, or else evolve into its Stage 2 form, homo erectus.

A Breakthrough[edit | edit source]

Though Radley would not live to see it, it was realized in early late 1911 that the monkeys were already dead at the time they fell out. At first it was proposed (by Lord Tariq and Peter Gunz, among others) that the deadness and consequent falling was due to monkey-hating snipers, but the greater philosophical community rejected this solution as being 'overly mundane'.

Known Solutions[edit | edit source]

Several solutions have been proposed by various schools of philosophical thought, including analytic, continental, synthetic, Classical, Oscar Wilde, and retro-promethean.

Analytical Solutions[edit | edit source]

  • The set of all things in trees automagically excludes anything dead; hence, upon becoming dead the monkey must be expelled from the tree. This is supported by the fact that dead monkeys do not climb trees, unless they are Undead Zombies.
  • The set of monkeys fallen from trees is never a complete set, so there must always be more monkeys falling from trees. Also known as Gödel's Incompleteness Theorem.

For every monkey that falls from a tree, there exists a tree from which a monkey has fallen; is also a bald King of France.

. The preceding formula is valid only for monkeys that are not Tarzan.

Continental Solutions[edit | edit source]

  • There is a false binary established in the idea of the dead monkey falling from a tree: The prospect of hitting the ground, while dead, is in true point of fact the arche-origin of the essential ontology of monkey/tree duality. Hence the tree must be deconstructed from within.
  • We can, ipso facto, upon reading the Vedas discern the absolute origin of the metaphorical structures which give rise to Übertotsfallhammerfallendsbaum, which is German for the General Dead Monkey Falling from a Tree Principle.
  • Being is in the world. This Being, being a being, is a bee. This bee is not a monkey, but rather a subconscious surrepresentation of the monkeyality. Hegel was correct in asserting that the monkey presupposed an Anti-monkey, a dead monkey, but only insofar as the objective historico-zoological monkey is actually a subjective inadvertent subtext for monkeys in the world.

Classical Solutions[edit | edit source]

  • According to Newtonian Physics, only apples fall from trees. Therefore the monkey is an apple.
  • Heraclitus says that no man may enter the same river twice. But a dead monkey cannot climb a tree again, therefore a monkey, having died, can never fall from the same tree twice. So trees are really rivers, a fact supported by the xylem and phloem streams that move up and down its trunk and all of its branches and roots. We can perceive the branches as the tree's subsidiaries and the roots as its delta, or else in the opposite fashion if we wish the tree-river to travel from South to North, as does Denial.
  • Under a Cartesian metaphysics, the primary and fundamental truth is, I think, therefore monkeys fall from tree. Most other schools of philosophy reject this claim, however, on the grounds that it is bogus.

Oscar Wilde[edit | edit source]

  • “You can drop a dead monkey from a tree, but you can't make him drink. Especially if "he" is really a "she," if you know what I mean”
    ~ Oscar Wilde

  • “Literature is at the same time mankind at his best and at his worst. Falling from a tree, on the other hand, is a monkey at his worst only”
    ~ Oscar Wilde

The Retro-Promethean Solution[edit | edit source]

  • Ron Prometheus is the player for the Tennessee Titans who first gave mankind fire. The Retro-Promethean project, founded in the year 911 by Abdul al-Hazred, strives to solve the whole problem by giving fire to the monkeys so they can burn down all the trees. Anti-animal rights activists oppose these measures because, in the words of Ted Turner, "Monkeys with flamethrowers is effin' scary."

The search for additional solutions[edit | edit source]

Freud is currently looking for a psychosomatic solution. Marky Mark simply wants to eat lunch without being harassed by dead monkeys.

A Breakthrough from China[edit | edit source]

Chang, owner of a research institute in China has hypothesised an explanation for the falling out of the trees of many monkey's in the Pinxiang, Guinxi region of China. His research successfully demonstrated that the many of the monkey's that had fallen out of the tree were missing a brain. Local monkey farmers and Chinese Restaurants could offer no explanation of this strange phenomenon.

Discography[edit | edit source]

Further Reading[edit | edit source]

  • An Attempt to Address the Problem of Übertotsfallhammerfallendsbaum, J. Goebbels
  • How to Tie Monkeys to My Pendulum, Michel Foucault.

See Also[edit | edit source]

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