Guia-autoestopista-galactico Online

Arthur’s house? Not important. The planet? A bureaucratic inconvenience.

The genius of 42 is that it’s not the answer. The joke is that we didn’t understand the question . You can’t have a meaningful answer without a meaningful question. And humanity, sadly, never quite figured out what the question was. Guia-Autoestopista-Galactico

Adams argues that the only rational response to existential terror is a kind of cheerful, stubborn stoicism. You don't need to understand the universe. You just need to know where your towel is. (A towel, the Guide notes, is the most useful item an interstellar hitchhiker can have—for warmth, for navigation, for first aid, and for avoiding the gaze of the Ravenous Bugblatter Beast of Traal.) Arthur’s house

In the grand, wibbly-wobbly tapestry of science fiction, there are dystopian warnings (Brave New World), epic space operas (Dune), and technical manuals (The Martian). And then, floating somewhere in the cosmic void between a Vogon poetry slam and a Pan Galactic Gargle Blaster, sits The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams. A bureaucratic inconvenience