Silly String Theory

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Silly String Theory deals with one of the yet unsolved problems of physics: Finding out where all that silly string came from! It is a perhaps well-known condition, waking up with a hangover to find yourself covered in what seems to be the by-product of an alienesque evolutionary state, only to realise that some of the super strings broke and resulted in utter silliness. Silly string often occurs at weddings and child birthday parties, but not so often at the tax office. This pattern suggests one of two finite-time possibilities: Either they're keeping the silly string clogged up in unused cubicles, or tax offices don't exist. The former introduces certain company politics issues, and the latter questions tax and therefore the meaning of society.

Where does the mysterious hand in the lower left corner come from?? This is a mystery, and therefore so are silly strings.

lets gooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo

Chemical composition[edit | edit source]

Since silly strings are broken super strings, they don't consist of anything unless they paradoxically break into other things. It turns out both of these happen simultaneously, and that, if Schroedinger's cat would ever be let out of the box, we'd have an undead carnivore covered in colourful pasta.

Known facts[edit | edit source]

To properly cope with silly string, a corpus of scientific facts has been collected through time (and imaginary time, with our imaginary friends, thus producing complex facts that can't be viewed with the current version of your browser).

  • Silly String can easily be confused with ramen. (Ramen can easily be confused with Amen)
  • Silly string is, much like the weird particles in quantum physics, one of the few concepts to which the adjective is actually descriptive and not just derogatory. Silly string can resultingly never be made fun of, because people will simply think "yes, it is silly" and not hint the slightest sarcasm.
A worker currently in the process of laying a foundation for a silly string bridge

Literary analysis[edit | edit source]

The commercial product of Silly String advertises with "Instant party!" To properly digest the psychological intentions, the sentence is best read backwards: "ytrap tnatsnI!" (or, correcting the grammar for backwards reading: "Why, trap! tnat sni!" (The last two words intentionally don't make sense to confuse the opponent.)

The military application of Silly String[edit | edit source]

Silly string was originally intended as a way to stop infantry on the battlefield. Larger amounts of silly string would then be generated in larger positron accelerators, creating a disturbance in the force that causes the super strings to break apart and float into the physical realm. Also, it is used to detect trip wires when looking for booby traps.

See Also[edit | edit source]

External references[edit | edit source]