�It�s disconnected.�
If you endlessly divide between 0 and 1 second, you will eventually discover the emptiness between time and time.
�This world is originally nothing.�
It reminded me of Fichot�s words that feeling that something exists is only a human illusion.
�Like a video recording device.�
If you quickly flip through dozens of pictures per second, your brain doesn�t feel the disconnection in the screen.
Time felt by humans was also the same, and Sirone thought of it as a stepping stone to time.
�And when you put all these facts together�
The possibility is raised that this world where all things exist is nothing more than an electrical signal, not a substance.
�if so���
Where does the power that is being supplied to space even at this moment come from?
�In the beginning there was light.�
And everything started from that light.
Sirone recalled a scene where the universe suddenly turned on in the absence of anything.
�Let�s not be sure.�If I open the lid at will and imagine, the impossible will disappear.�
Only what is closed is real.
�However, if there is really a subject of supply���
The power required to operate the current space would not be as large as expected.
�That�s what scale is.�
The universe is only huge to humans, but it may be only the size of the palm of the hand of the supplying agent.
�Thousands of universes can be created in the same alignment.�
In other words, the possibility that a universe similar to this one or completely different exists outside the universe where Sirone lives.
�And if even the world where the main body of supply lives is being supplied with power from a higher dimension����Parallel and serial, as new universes are created, they burrow endlessly into cowardice.
�Infinite.�
It was creepy.
�How far did the guffin go?�
The Gaians have left the photon world, but there is no guarantee that the place they arrived at will be their destination.
�If you keep breaking away like that, what will you eventually reach?�
Fisho said infinite infinity.
�I think I know a little bit.� JrNovels.com