The Potions Professor Shiller looked at the Shiller in the lab coat and said, "If you're really planning to explore the boundaries of the room, why not start with my room?"
You seem very curious?"
"Magic begins with curiosity."
After the construction of the freight elevator was completed, Shiller began to reverse park the Ship of the underworld into the garage and moved it onto the elevator platform. Accompanied by the rumbling operation of the elevator, the significantly diminished Ship of the underworld was left in the corridor.
Then, Shiller stood at the bow of the ship and began adjusting its position until the bow of the ship was directly facing the room entrance. The Potions Professor Shiller was the first one to enter the room. When Shiller in a lab coat rowed into the room and the door was closed, the glowing symbol of the Deathly Hallows appeared on the doorknob.
Originally, everyone who entered this room should appear on the boat leading to Hogwarts, but since Shiller himself rowed there, he appeared directly on the bank of Black Lake.
Looking at the majestic castle, Shiller turned his head and asked, "Have you ever left this castle?"
"Of course, I often go to Diagon Alley to shop, and even frequent Hogsmeade for a drink. I also visited the Department of Magic once, but I don't like dealing with the people there," the Potions Professor Shiller shook his head.
"No, I mean, without using Floo powder, without using the fireplace, what's there beyond Black Lake?"
"It's the room wall, do you really need to ask me that?" The Potions Professor Shiller answered stoically. "Imagination has its limit, we are the product of the dreams of the same person, all the details in the dream come from our memory, where our memory is faint, there would be nothing."
"In this novel, is there any mention of the specific geographical location of Hogwarts? Or, even if it is mentioned, we have no understanding of the specific topography here, outside it is a blank."
"Moreover, the larger the dream, the more storage space it consumes, to prevent running out of space, there are room walls in the unachievable places. We are dreamers, but we are awake, so there is no need to test where the room's wall is exactly."
After the Potions Professor Shiller finished speaking, Shiller in the lab coat nodded. They are the same person; although their memories temporarily do not coincide, if they were to go to the archive room where memories are stored for inquiry, they would certainly find the same content.
The rooms in the Thought Palace are like worlds imagined by Shiller himself. But even imagination needs reality as a foundation. Things unknown in reality are unlikely to appear in dreams.
A person who only scores 60 in math can't dream about complex mathematical formulas, a person who has never had an interest in history also can't dream about specific historical figures.
Concurrently, the richer the dream, the larger the area, the more brain capacity it takes up. And a high tower of over 300 floors, countless dreams, if each one is infinitely expansive, Shiller's brain would not be able to store it all.
This leads to the fact that the world within the room is actually a very small region, beyond cognition and limits, lies the room's wall.
This is somewhat similar to the world of Truman, all the things here are constructed by Shiller's imagination, and beyond that is only the high wall limiting the dream.
However, today, Shiller plans to row to the room's wall to take a look, he might find a window that allows him to smuggle out.
The Potions Professor Shiller used an enlargement charm to enlarge the Ship of the Underworld, and Shiller paddled the ship carrying him rowing along the Black Lake.
As they got closer to the boundary, the surface of the water gradually became calm, losing much of its texture, and the trees and shrubs also began to decrease.
When they landed, it was a very simple grassland without stacks of rocks and interspersed vegetation; it only had ordinary grass.
Walking forward, they were blocked by an air wall, beyond the air wall, endless grasslands could be seen, marking the boundary of the entire room.
After walking around the entire boundary, Shiller did not find any windows. If a dream is compared to an Individual Universe, then the room wall is the ultimate barrier of the Individual Universe.
That is to say, if one wants to break through the barrier of the Individual Universe, they have to level up.
Initially, Stark used wisdom and magic to rise above the Individual Universe, Loki exploited the Politically Correct Halo and managed to glimpse the scenery beyond the universe. If one wants to leave this dreamlike Individual Universe, they can use the same method.
But, these two methods for achieving that goal are somewhat difficult, and they require some time. If Shiller had to upgrade himself, he would not opt for these routes, he would prefer to directly punch a hole.
Shiller agrees with a very simple logic, if it's a program, bugs can be exploited, and if there's a wall, a hole can be punched.
Whether it's the wall of a real-world house, or the barrier of the Individual Universe, it's all the same to him.
Speaking of punching holes, Shiller remembered that right now, there's a big hole in the centre of the Thought Palace, it was the one Hugo punched previously that leads to the subconscious.
Shiller knows exactly how much he reinforced the ground of the Thought Palace, so much so that he can't make a hole in the ground himself and has to rely on external force. The room's wall can't possibly be stronger than the ground he continuously reinforced, right?
Of course, the Marvel World doesn't have a Hugo, even if it did, Shiller isn't planning to go through such a big detour to ask him for help in punching a hole in the wall, because the Marvel World has a more useful tool, that is Professor X.
While Hugo makes more use of skills and tools, Professor X is all brute force. If the common man Hugo can craftily punch a big hole on the ground of Shiller's Thought Palace, then the much stronger Professor X should naturally be able to add a window to the room's wall, right?
Soon enough, Professor Charles appeared next to the boundary wall of the Hogwarts Room, he scrutinised the air wall, then said: "You sure, you want me to make a hole in this thing?"
Charles shook his head and said, "Shiller, if it wasn't you making this request, I'd definitely think they're suicidal. Human cognition is very fragile."
"Once the Dreamworld gets damaged, some images could escape from the dream and enter normal thoughts, it could potentially cause delusions, or even some visionary manifestations of schizophrenia, you should know this better than me..."
"But since it's you demanding this, I suppose I could give it a try."
Speaking, Charles closed his eyes, concentrated, extended one hand, an invisible force sprouted from his palm.
An almost inaudible cutting sound come from very close, but no shattering was evident.
Where the air wall was originally, ripples of air appeared. After a little while, Charles breathed out, wiped the sweat off his forehead, and said: "This room you built is damn sturdy, but now, I've cut a hole in that place, I also helped you install a window..."
"If you want to leave, just open the window. Once you've departed, the window will automatically close to prevent any other things from escaping..."
Shiller clapped his hands in enthusiastic applause, Charles smiled modestly.
A few minutes later, standing in the center of the Thought Palace, Shiller extended one hand pointing upward. Charles looked upward, and Shiller said:
"I'd appreciate it if you could put a window on all the rooms here."
Charles asked in shock, "That will render your thoughts completely chaotic, have you gone mad?!"
"I'm not mad..." Shiller revealed a somewhat crazy smile, and mimicking something, said:
"Those who casually restart the universe, they're the ones who've gone mad."