Person: I think people worry to much what others think of them. Me: Well I think people worry to much about death, and the inevitable black abyss, but we can't all be perfect. lol
@@iluvpandas2755 u think the books will survive thousands of years into the future? Think about all humanity has forgotten over the years man, historians thousands of years in the future probably wouldn't care about a random youtuber's name. That is if the books (or humans) are even still around by then
The Egyptians thought immortality was simply someone saying your name. Tutankhamen and Cleopatra are probably winning the race in that regard, with maybe Rameses II in a distant third...
When the universe is collapsing, stars are dying, this lamp will finally turn on. And then mumbo's voice says, 'let there be light~ And then he casualy places down a lever and flicks it
But you mortals will be- oh, i see. I know how the comparator works. You see, the more items in a storage block, the higher the redstone output. It has more functions that i don't understand.
@@REDACTED64846 I THINK it also subtracts redstone signals when the torch is on, and I THINK the name "Comparator" is a reference to telling you which of two redstone signals is stronger when the torch is off. I also KNOW it can be used to make pulse extenders. Also I think it's funny that you say you know how a comparator works when you only know one thing it can do
@@hugo57k91 ...the planet itself is billions of years old. The sun has billions of years left to its life expectancy, and the universe most likely has billions and billions more than that. What's going to cause the end of the galaxy in a million years, given that perspective?
Imagine Mumbo's PC floating through the void of space while the solar system is collapsing and all of a sudden it turns on with a "ding!" as the redstone lamp lights up.
@@MonkeyDGooner yes except the door is connected to this and no one will ever see what is behind the door for a very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very long time
It won't outlive the human race unless a non-human race keeps his Minecraft world running. It's depressing because he just made something that nobody will ever get to see the end of. Edit: And it was easy too. It being this easy to create a cycle that must go on for longer than the existence of life before its end result, is, well, insane.
@@misseverything7202 I'm imagining proffesors asking of kids to download "Aristotle Texture Pack" and "Pitagora Shaders" and to create something like this for homework.
this reminds me of that one contest Sethbling did a long while ago where he challenged people to make the longest timer possible inside a tiny box. longest theoretical time wins.
It’s impressive that someone can make a machine that has a solar system’s lifetime cycle length but if you place more than 2 signs Minecrafts like “nah that’s too much my guy”
If you connect the last lamp to a machine that kills a pig, you can say that the pig is gonna outlive you, along with every single person on earth for the next millions of years and also outlive the sun
you'll be forgotten still in a few thousand years but if you kidnap every woman in existence, depending on what you do with them you'll almost never be forgotten at least genetically.
I have just received news that all life in that solar system has died off due to the fact that they all have 1 connected brain and SOMEONE DECIDED TO MEMORISE GRAHAMS NUMBER AND TURNED THEIR BRAIN INTO A BLACK HOLE.
There was like 1.35 seconds in the middle where everything escalated real quick from 28th birthday to dead and completely forgotten. I didn't have time for an existential crisis before the video looped.
@@JustSomeBrazilian I mean, yeah. For the simpler things. But the most complex of things (like a nuclear power plant) would require people a bit above his pay grade per se.
@@JustSomeBrazilian Let me reword that, he could build the complex things, but he might not be able to build them as compact as they could potentially be.
@@MT-qt3mk Actually no. I didn't. There's just some things that people can get good at that will have others even better than them and they'll never figure out why. Or at least it would take them a long time to figure it out. Also, before going and riding off on your high horse, I'm talking in the present tense as in he can't right now. Maybe he will get better with practice, or maybe he won't. Or maybe he won't practice it at all. You should try reading better because I wasn't trying to insult him, you dopehead.
@@foxicecubemake sure it's the right temperature and make sure it's disinfected as well make it extremely bouncy and padded too that way earthquakes can cause it no harm
Mumbo: Everyone will be dead by the time this lamp turns on The Queen: Hah speak for ya self! loser Dude i made one joke and people are crucifying each other in the replies💀
It is so cool that something like that can be made. Even if it won’t actually end up like that due to outside influences, but in a controlled environment it would eventually turn on which I find awesome!
The red stone lamp sitting in some random kids 36th unarmed creative world will also only even turn on when the universe ends but this is still cool I guess
There was a solid few seconds there where I thought Mumbo was making the claim that he'll be dead in just over 3.3 years and forgotten immediately after.
I love being reminded that everyone and everything will one day die, cease to exist, and be forgotten, and that one day nothing will exist. Thank you Mumbo, very cool
It is indeed, very cool. Something about the idea that literally nothing ultimately matters, and our every concern, grand or minuscule, is completely irrelevant, is immensely liberating.
there alway the third you don't even exist in record history if no one say your name but you still might have a name somewhere in a piece of plastic somewhere
@@piperhfj Its a thought experiment. Basically, you become immortal, and are given a large sum of money. But a random snail somewhere on earth gains human level intelligence and immortality for itself. Its only goal is to touch you, as when it touches you you will die. The thiught experiment was basically how do you deal with the snail so it won't kill you, or at least so you can just live out your life
@@dudemanhomieguy8358 so the snail is also immortal physically? And not just immune of old age? Then when there's further technology, i'll grab the snail with a robotic arm then put it in a chamber filled with acid (to prevent it from moving), and lock it with an impossible safe security locks.
Me: Tried to only watch Minecraft videos to avoid being depressed by educational videos that involve death/the sun dying Mumbo: The sun is going to die and humanity will be gone on earth.
Being depressed about that is literally pointless. You have no control over time passing and universal happenings so why even bother? Be stoic bro, worry about things you can control
@@drakerose3789 i don't say it is invalid, no one would. but every experience, good or bad, should be a place from where you grow, not a place where you stop. also being depressed about a dead relative is quite different from being depressed about the sun dying which is a thing humans as a species would most likely not even witness
@@miketheq7739 you said that being depressed that the sun will blow up is pointless because we can't control time. I said that, based off your logic, you imply that being depressed that your family died is equally pointless because we can't control when someone dies. In conclusion, let people have an existential crisis over what they want.
@@drakerose3789 the difference is that the death of the sun is something like he said, humanity will probably not even witness anymore. While the death of someone is something that's real and happened, those are totally different things worrying wise. One is completely legitimate while the other is not really smart and just adds another thing to worry about in those already very depressing times we live in with climate change and giant companies having to much control. I mean I wish I could be more stoic sometimes but it's hard.
I love the fact that somewhere in my brain, the phrase "chuffed to bits" implies being broken into small pieces, even though I know it's actual meaning.
How much power would have to be used to keep a server up that long? There's also an astronomical chance there's a random bit switch that turns on the lamp prematurely, but I doubt the computer running the clock would be operating/operational before that happens. Still cool.
I mean if we’re being realistic that Minecraft world wouldn’t exist by the time the second lamp is almost 40 years the way through. So there’s no worries about being out lived by a lamp in Minecraft