«It's very easy to
create wild theories that do not violate what we observe,» says Stevenson, who has outspokenly opposed Herndon's reactor concept.
Not exact matches
Perhaps the internet is doing all of the above and more: encouraging and unifying small religious and other movements; further facilitating scientific unification across geographic proximity, if not also
creating new scientific
theories and concepts; fostering the rise of new forms of spiritual irrationalism such as those discussed in Wendy Kaminer's
wild book, Sleeping with Extra-Terrestrials; focusing the public even more on particular public personas in news, sports and everything else;
creating new classes of investors who are willing to publish online just about anything, regardless of whether or not they agree with it; germinating new technological ideas that are luring capitalists who hold unreasonable expectations of financial bonanzas.
Only slightly less fanciful is the
theory that suggests that Canary Islanders, transplanted to San Antonio as early as 1731, used local peppers and
wild onions combined with various meats to
create early chili combinations.
Keep in mind that this
theory, while quite well articulated, was
created before the game was released, and it was based entirely off a pre-launch demo that only showed the very beginning of Breath of the
Wild.
When the Witcher 3:
Wild Hunt came around, I instantly fell in love with its undeniable ability to leverage the open world
theory and
create an almost endless adventure to the seasoned player.