Flatline

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├───┐AxS:0
│   ├───┐ AxS:00
│   │   ├── AxS:000
│   │   │   ├── AxS:0001
│   │   │   ├── AxS:0002
│   │   │   └── AxS:0003
│   │   │       ├── AxS:00031
│   │   │       ├── AxS:00032
│   │   │       └── AxS:00033
│   │   ├── AxS:001
│   │   │   └── AxS:0011
│   │   │       └── AxS:00111
│   │   ├── AxS:002
│   │   │   └── AxS:0021
│   │   │       └── AxS:00211
│   │   └── AxS:003
│   │       ├── AxS:0031
│   │       └── AxS:0032
│   ├── AxS:01
│   │   └── AxS:011
│   │       └── AxS:0111
│   ├── AxS:02
│   │   ├── AxS:021
│   │   └── AxS:022
│   │       └── AxS:0221
│   │           └── AxS:02211
│   │               └── AxS:022111
│   └── AxS:03
│       ├── AxS:031
│       ├── AxS:032
│       └── AxS:033
├── AxS:1
│   ├── AxS:11
│   ├── AxS:12
│   │   └── AxS:121
│   │       └── AxS:1211
│   └── AxS:13
│       ├── AxS:131
│       └── AxS:132
├── AxS:2
│   ├── AxS:21
│   │   └── AxS:211
│   │       └── AxS:2111
│   │           └── AxS:21111
│   └── AxS:22
│       ├── AxS:221
│       │   └── AxS:2211
│       │       └── AxS:22111
│       │           └── AxS:221111
│       │               └── AxS:2211111
│       │                   └── AxS:22111111
│       └── AxS:222
└── AxS:3
   ├── AxS:31
   │   └── AxS:311
   ├── AxS:32
   └── AxS:33

28. “The Sphinx was an oracle, and therefore she was supposed to answer questions, not to ask them.Yet it is also true that oracular answers were often given in the form of a riddle that required interpretation, usually supplied by priests attending the oracle ... It does not seem to me that everyquestion needs – or has – an answer ... But were it my misfortune to stand before the Sphinx with thedire prospect of never entering Thebes, I should reply to her riddle: ‘It is Oedipus’ ... An oracle’squestions and answers refer to the man who stands before it. Oedipus was exposed, a helpless infantwith damaged feet, to crawl in the wasteland; he grew to be a man and a hero; his end was that of ablind wanderer in exile” (Velikovsky, 207). “The parechesis at Soph. even suggests that it was thedeformity of Oedipus’ feet that gave him the clue to the answer; and there was a tradition that Oedipusgave the answer by pointing to himself” (Edmunds, 160).