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Answers: Chemistry Pop Quiz: 3.) Is the natural state of indifference a liquid, gas or solid?

Posted in answers by birdflew on April 8th, 2008

-Indifference is liquid. It seeps into your cracks, and freezes and thaws, causing the expansion and contraction of your protective shell.  Over time, the resulting stresses cause chunks to break off, leaving new fissures that expose your molten core to the elements. 

-I thought it was the fog of indifference.

-Indifference is solid – it is a lower-energy state, dense, and difficult to move.  Interest and aversion are liquid, they can change form, but are easy to contain.  Love and hate are gasses, show much more energy, and are much harder to contain.  I guess that would leave all-consuming obsession as plasma – highly charged, with properties that even scientists don’t quite understand.

-All three…You can’t see it, but you can feel it and it leaves you in tears.

-Gas. The state of indifference involves no movement, heat or pressure. However, everything needs to give and let off/ out gases.

-Indifference is all three. It starts out as a very solid idea, like ice.  As you think about indifference, and process it, it changes.  As you think about it more, and the idea dissapates, it melts into a liquid and eventually turns into a gas, as you become indifferent to indifference itself and just don’t care about the idea anymore.

-Well, I’d wager it’s a gas, as one often blows air through their lips when shrugging something off with indifference. Phonetically, this is spelled “pfft.”

-A gas that once it has affected a person turns solid and weighs like a rock on their soul.

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