"For that aspect, yes, that's my hypothesis. Just because we can't see who's operating the train doesn't mean someone isn't, and something must have determined we ended up here. The math is pretty clear that through probability true randomness is a concept that just doesn't seem to exist. The more data points you get, the more you see a pattern - and that's intrinsically linked to humanity's mind, we're hardwired to see patterns."
He nodded a little bit again, giving it more consideration. "There must be a reason we were brought here specifically. Why this particular place over another? Are we actually traveling between different worlds constantly or are we just traveling within a vast network of places we just don't understand?" Senku couldn't help himself, these were the kinds of things he thought about.
"I haven't, I didn't realize there was an archive somewhere, but that will give me something to do on the train while we're trapped there." Senku said, looking pleased by that.
"The void itself is a real physics conundrum. I'd love to work out the calculations as to how that works. Time in the void is measured in a twenty-one hour cycle, which is interesting in itself. Nine hours of light, twelve hours of darkness. Each day from wake up until forced awakening again is 75,600 seconds. If you stay up all night, so to speak, and you still wind up waking up even though you haven't slept, and I can tell you it feels like you haven't slept, so I'm not sure where those three hours have gone..." He may have entered another tangent.
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He nodded a little bit again, giving it more consideration. "There must be a reason we were brought here specifically. Why this particular place over another? Are we actually traveling between different worlds constantly or are we just traveling within a vast network of places we just don't understand?" Senku couldn't help himself, these were the kinds of things he thought about.
"I haven't, I didn't realize there was an archive somewhere, but that will give me something to do on the train while we're trapped there." Senku said, looking pleased by that.
"The void itself is a real physics conundrum. I'd love to work out the calculations as to how that works. Time in the void is measured in a twenty-one hour cycle, which is interesting in itself. Nine hours of light, twelve hours of darkness. Each day from wake up until forced awakening again is 75,600 seconds. If you stay up all night, so to speak, and you still wind up waking up even though you haven't slept, and I can tell you it feels like you haven't slept, so I'm not sure where those three hours have gone..." He may have entered another tangent.