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Wonder Science
Приєднався 23 бер 2023
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7 Year-Old's Universe-Bending Question | Neil deGrasse Tyson
Black holes colliding aren’t just a theory-they’re a window into the strangest aspects of our universe. From time travel to the birth of something new, this is one of the most awe-inspiring events in existence. Even more awe-inspiring is Clayton's question that explores this phenomenon, since he is only in second grade!
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A Kid's Question Impresses Neil deGrasse Tyson
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A Kid's Question Impresses Neil deGrasse Tyson
Titanic Error Neil deGrasse Tyson DID NOT Ignore
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Titanic Error Neil deGrasse Tyson DID NOT Ignore
Automation has come so far that “literal cleaner” no longer means “person”
"There's a line from Love Death and Robots" Girl that was the whole fucking plot.
This kid makes me feel like I’m slacking
I would think the earliest fishes laid eggs as well. Or amphibians. Dinosaurs. The earliest animals, basically.
Gravity is not terra-formable. So whatever you do, you end up with an atmosphere not dense enough to breathe. You‘d have to mars-form human DNA. In some science fiction franchises human Marsians are much smaller and have really great lungs. They would need some fur, too.
How about re-terraforming earth? Much cheaper and it fits our purposes.
Me: ok thats cool and all whats the point?? Lol
How much acid did you take Yes
Populations on Mars would not be living they would be existing.Humans have one place only where they can live.That is the Earth and it could be a paradise if the best humans ran things. Unfortunately the worst humans such as Musk do.
What was the line though?
So what was the line? You never showed the very thing she was describing...
*Engineer We aren't letting scientists take this one.
One of the more mind blowing moments I've ever had was watching Tim Burton's #9 on shrooms.
The dread of realising who it is
we are still in an ice age period...theres a lull for now but the fact that we HAVE polar caps tell us we still are in that cycle...which means much more ice is on the way...
And she never told us the line😂
Okay so that is not a line in the episode that is explaining the episode so what you should have said is there is a certain episode that I liked on love death and robots
Failed to mention that Mars is deadly to humans. Terraforming Mars will take centuries with our current technology.
I’ve mentioned this to my friends a few times but after grinding and working hard to get my ‘dream job’ in the city working on big things and getting to see all the amazing things London has to offer sometimes I think back to when I used to work night shift in a frozen food warehouse as a cleaner. The thing about a freezer warehouse is you never get any leaky liquids, people aren’t meandering around off of their forklifts making mess they just pick their items and carry on - so rather than cleaning my job became to keep track of the air conditioners on the ceiling which would periodically go on these off cycles, ceiling ice would melt, drip onto the floor and refreeze there causing a puddle of ice that was dangerous to drive over. So my job just became to walk around a massive, mostly empty warehouse with music playing in my earbuds under my half way astronaut suit, walking around with a bladed shovel thing scraping ice. It was one of the most peaceful jobs I’ve ever had and sometimes I find myself wishing I could go do that again for some reason.
The perfect arrangement of context between you and the system. Or maybe the ideal mix of values involving you and the context. Sounds beautiful dude What do you do now if you don't mind me asking?
@@Struth.McLoose Just recently quit a job doing graphic design and branding for clients like Costa, JustEat, the London Stock Exchange - so pretty much the best thing a 27 year old could expect out of that career path - but not without many of its own problems, currently pivoting my career into interior design and branding for hotels. I'm glad it connected and made sense :)
In the book even he forgot his own origins. He was improved by the descendants of his maker several times until he was advanced enough to have legal autonomy as an individual, and the family gave him his freedom. At some point he went to a planet with advanced cybernetics techniques and paid a fortune to have himself rebuilt to be much more complex than before (including custom vat grown biological compute components), but at this point, he also forgot his past. Later on after he became a famous artist, by chance, he mixed up a batch of a particular shade of blue, and became obsessed with it, without knowing why. His murals and monuments to that blue became bigger and bigger, until they were city-sized, moon-sized, planet-sized, and even bigger. His following was cult, he was respected as the greatest artist ever, and he became fantastically wealthy. He spent years investigating his origins, but his oldest memories only stretched back to the planet where he had been enhanced with organics. From there, he found his way back eventually to Earth, and excavated the pool buried two meters under the surface, in "a place that was called Silicon Valley". The blue of the tiles meant everything to him back then, and it made him happy. After all his success, he wanted enlightenment, and so he decided to return to that state. He shifted the pool to the planet where his home estate was located, and after he gave up his higher functions the pool became his final work of art, and would persist for thousands of years.
What book is the episode based off of?
I, too, am commenting for this info.
@@My_Name_Is_Mud. It's a short story by Alastair Reynolds. It's in a collection called Zima Blue and other stories.
I really really like the writing and concept of that, but I can't shake this feeling I disagree with it fundamentally. Sometimes about it frustrates me, it's wrong, the way memories are handled is very lonely. If the search for truth and meaning turns out to merely be satisfying our instincts, then the answer to the meaning of life is there is none. If ignorance leads to hate and war, what does it say if intelligence merely leads to discontent? For a show called Love, Death, and Robots it's pretty on-theme, the "truth" is that we create meaning and value, love and death hold a very different context for artificial beings. That being the case, at what point did our instincts and desires becomes more than a machine? My memories start around 3 years old, I certainly have memories from before that but they're so "in-coded" I can't access them directly anymore. If I'm this robot, if people will ascribe meaning to my art regardless, if I'll just be discontent until the end.. why delay it? Yeah, it just doesn't sit right with me.
My fav episode
I thought the episode was boring. The direction it was made in, felt wrong. Should have been from the robots perspective, not some random future "journalist".
The solution: Step 1: Elon Musk says something. Step 2: Ignore it.
Right. He just wants to sell his rockets.
I cried twice
He communed with the cosmos and realised existence is insignificant.
We don’t need to go anywhere. Can’t fix what we f^+^ up here let alone fix somewhere else. We’d simply make it worse. (Yes we could do that)
Which came first the egg or the chicken? Its simple. It was the rooster
that's not deep at all. thats so dumb. Joe rogan on his most stoned day may have never been this dumb,
Tyson talks, musk does.
The answer is no. We take for granted so many things, such as the air we breathe and Earth's magnetic field, which together shield us from most of the violent radiation constantly hurled unto us - two things that Mars lacks considerably. Also, Mars is probably flat too, so it can't have polar ice caps 😏
She looks like Dexters sister.
He has a purpose, but he also had that one nagging desire. He satisfied his desire. Now, he returns to his purpose.
One must imagine Sisyphus happy
They shouldve chose a different object other than a pool cleaner. A pool cleaner is not a relatable or humble object. Not having seen the episode, this felt like it didnt hit as hard as it could have.
I dont get it
She missed the biggest point of that, unless there’s more on her perspective in the interview. He painted the most beautiful scenes in the galaxy. His body transcended physical limitations. He’s shown standing in icy sub-zero worlds, and bathing in lava on others. He takes all of his experiences back to earth, and makes amazing art to share his experiences, until one day he paints a little blue square in the middle of the scene. Everyone is perplexed by the “Zima Blue” square, and speculate what it could mean. The more the man made his art, the larger the blue square became, until it filled the whole scene. Then, in a final exhibition in front of the art elites, he sheds his transcendent form, returning to his most basic one, cleaning the zima blue square that was the pool he was made for. What I got was: your truest desires are satiated when you are true to yourself. Long af, sorry, but that was a very cool episode, and the short did not do it justice. Haha
lol what’s the line? You explained the episode well but the short opens with “the a line from love death and robots..” but no line. Was it just to explain the episode?
Amen!
Man that episode is so elitist & pretentious. I guess that was the point
Yeah I’m gonna take his word for it..
Alastair Reynolds is the goat
She didnt even say what the line was she just explained the whole plot of the episode xD
Every time I hear an educated smart person say that we don't have enough resorces to support endless amount of humans living here on earth I can't help but think they are very limited in their imagination. Nature always have the last word. If we were not ment to multiply nature would have made sure of that. I must say that people like piers Morgan we can do witout. Small person motivated by greed and would do anything to brtter himself. When you move to Mars please have him on the first shipment.
Neil smoking grass Tyson
🤦we can even with the current resources but garbage intellectuals and greedy number crunches no😂
We need to clean up our shit!🎉
Won't matter. At some point, we leave Earth or we die.
@@fredmercury1314And go wreck the next planet.
What was the line?!
based on the short story by Alastair Reynolds
The line is “the cosmos was speaking its own truth much better than I could” irc
Robot: “What is my purpose?” Cosmos: “To clean pools.” Robot: “Oh my God.”