“Talking Straight (1988 Bantam Books) is a book written by Lee Iacocca, then CEO of Chrysler Motors, with Sonny Kleinfeld. It was written partly in response to Akio Morita’s Made in Japan, a non-fiction book praising Japan’s post-war hard-working culture. Talking Straight praised the innovation and creativity of Americans.” (From Wikipedia)
I remember when this strip came out. I was an undergrad at FSU and was taking a psychology course as a social science requirement. The professor introduced us one evening to a philosophy grad student who gave us this comic strip and asked us to pretend we were Opus and asked us to write in what we would ask in the 4th panel. We took turns reading our answers to the class and then let the grad student collect them. The responses were quite diverse as you can imagine: one person asked if there is life after death, another asked if there is life beyond our planet, one guy wanted to know why the castaways did not kill Gilligan (he might have been a bit baked), a fellow chemistry major asked if there is silicon based life anywhere in the cosmos and one guy asked if Oswald really killed JFK and if not, who? My sister’s roomie was in the class and asked why does evil always seem to win over good (phrased like the way Twain stated it in the Mysterious Stranger)…. As I was having a lot of issues with my then current girlfriend, I simply asked why life is like the second law of thermodynamics with everything in life, including love, skewing toward disorder (I have to admit that I did have a pitcher of beer or 3 with 2 of my classmates before class). It was a fun evening. Nice break from studying biochem, differential equations and inorganic chem. Aced the class BTW.
Imagine about 1 month ago
On page 42.
erik.vanthienen about 1 month ago
Ask Gilgamesh …
Strod about 1 month ago
“Talking Straight (1988 Bantam Books) is a book written by Lee Iacocca, then CEO of Chrysler Motors, with Sonny Kleinfeld. It was written partly in response to Akio Morita’s Made in Japan, a non-fiction book praising Japan’s post-war hard-working culture. Talking Straight praised the innovation and creativity of Americans.” (From Wikipedia)
TampaFanatic1 about 1 month ago
I remember when this strip came out. I was an undergrad at FSU and was taking a psychology course as a social science requirement. The professor introduced us one evening to a philosophy grad student who gave us this comic strip and asked us to pretend we were Opus and asked us to write in what we would ask in the 4th panel. We took turns reading our answers to the class and then let the grad student collect them. The responses were quite diverse as you can imagine: one person asked if there is life after death, another asked if there is life beyond our planet, one guy wanted to know why the castaways did not kill Gilligan (he might have been a bit baked), a fellow chemistry major asked if there is silicon based life anywhere in the cosmos and one guy asked if Oswald really killed JFK and if not, who? My sister’s roomie was in the class and asked why does evil always seem to win over good (phrased like the way Twain stated it in the Mysterious Stranger)…. As I was having a lot of issues with my then current girlfriend, I simply asked why life is like the second law of thermodynamics with everything in life, including love, skewing toward disorder (I have to admit that I did have a pitcher of beer or 3 with 2 of my classmates before class). It was a fun evening. Nice break from studying biochem, differential equations and inorganic chem. Aced the class BTW.
markkahler52 about 1 month ago
You’ll notice that: Noah’s Ark was built; humanity destroyed, save for Noah and crew, and…look where we are. Still HERE, Bub!!
Walrus Gumbo Premium Member about 1 month ago
Where does Noah’s Ark fit into all of this? Why, right next to Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny and the Tooth Fairy, of course!
RobinHood about 1 month ago
Don’t know the question, but the answer is 42.
dwdl21 about 1 month ago
It doesn’t Opus, Noah’s Arc isn’t real.
baskate_2000 about 1 month ago
Only in the Bible, I’m afraid.
ChessPirate about 1 month ago
Ah, yes, as Sheldon puts it “Noah and his amazing zoo boat…”
aerotica69 about 1 month ago
Obviously Oliver did not succeed in his quest…..else we would not have Sheldon Cooper doing the same research decades later.
MontanaPhil50 about 1 month ago
I wonder how many of those ended up in the grad student’s thesis
christelisbetty about 1 month ago
The Ark fits in berween Eden and Moses…..with a lot of begeting in between.
mistercatworks about 1 month ago
Somewhere between quarks and dark energy.
markkahler52 about 1 month ago
The Universe shall unfold as it will….
HarryLime Premium Member about 1 month ago
I think it was Mammy Yokum that stated: “Good is better than evil, because it’s nicer.”