- That is not Sisyphus, it is Sisyphus’ shadow on the wall of the cavern - It’s actually Sisyphus’ Monster. - It was Dr Sisyphus who was the monster 
 
- Damn your comment made me giggle! 
 
- Hilbert’s Grand Hotel can absolutely hold Sysiphus and his boulder, just move everyone two rooms up. - Theseus’ ship is only paradoxical on the faulty premise that the ship existed in the first place. - Hilbert’s Grand Hotel can manage an infinite number of boulders, each containing an infinite number of Sisyphuses (Sisyphi? Sisyphes? Sisyphodes?) by designating each boulder a prime number and each Sisyphus a counting number, and multiplying the two to get their room number. - This leaves some rooms open for additional guests, which may get management angry about underutilized rooms. There are other configurations that pack everyone in more tightly. 
 
- His happiness depends on whether or not a radioactive substance in a box has decayed, which has a 50% chance. But since it has not been observed, he is in a superposition of happy and unhappy. 
- I think the answer is 7 - Oh, c’mon, obviously the answer is 42. 
 
- I’m gonna need more weed, please. 
- Personally I’d love to be the subject of a philosophical problem so I’d say he’s probably pretty stoked 
- “the ultimate answer to life, the universe, and everything is… 42!” - there is no reason to assume this is not relevant for this case too 
- I’d imagine so 







