Is Anything on the Internet Real?

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  • Опубліковано 10 тра 2024
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  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,4 тис.

  • @charleshanson9467
    @charleshanson9467 2 роки тому +2642

    CGP Grey's adventure into searching for the origin of the name Tiffany is a real illustration in the way wrong or poor information can persist, be copied, and become "truth" if left unchallenged long enough.

    • @realpvs
      @realpvs 2 роки тому +29

      Came here to say the samething, thank you

    • @Soul-Burn
      @Soul-Burn 2 роки тому +43

      Similarly Alex the French Guy on whether or not Mayonnaise is a mother sauce. TL;DR it is, and was lost in translation to English.

    • @SuperMastermindx
      @SuperMastermindx 2 роки тому +20

      And a much more enjoyable video than this, which had almost nothing to do with fireworks and is just clickbait

    • @tb_eest
      @tb_eest 2 роки тому +24

      Lemmino's video on the eight spiders you supposedly swallow in your sleep is also a great video on this.

    • @classarank7youtubeherokeyb63
      @classarank7youtubeherokeyb63 2 роки тому +24

      It's also an important lesson in how the internet works. If you lie, someone will devote an embarrassing portion of their life to calling you out. No exceptions.

  • @smartereveryday
    @smartereveryday 2 роки тому +1708

    I tried to cover this information in a series on missinformation, but I must say you did SO much better. Equating the art of the pause to a superpower is something I’ll be using. I like your concept of keeping the pause detector running quietly in the background. Thanks Henry.

    • @admiralcapn
      @admiralcapn 2 роки тому +9

      I immediately thought of your series, Destin!

    • @xXDarQXx
      @xXDarQXx 2 роки тому

      @@jullyxiao814 sry, not everyone has the sense of humour of a 7 y/o

    • @dvdemon187
      @dvdemon187 2 роки тому

      The almighty YT algorythm suggested this video to me in the feed and I thought about watching it, but i _paused_ until I read _your tweet_ about it. Thanks, Destin and Henry.

    • @equesdeventusoccasus
      @equesdeventusoccasus 2 роки тому

      I very much enjoyed that series and recommended it to friends.

    • @Mike__B
      @Mike__B 2 роки тому

      You know it's good stuff when MinutePhysics does about 6 and a half minutes long before the sponsor!

  • @Pickle-oh
    @Pickle-oh 2 роки тому +559

    Honestly, the colors of the fireworks give it away more than anything.

    • @-vermin-
      @-vermin- 2 роки тому +94

      They didn't look realistic at all.

    • @joshuaharper372
      @joshuaharper372 2 роки тому +30

      When I first saw that video last year, I enjoyed the artistry involved in the simulation, but I suspected immediately that it was just a simulation based on the colors.

    • @matthewmirabello339
      @matthewmirabello339 2 роки тому +36

      My first intuition was because they seemed too perfectly synchronized. Though being trained in inorganic chemistry maybe i should have noticed the unusual colors first.

    • @AmeshaSpentaArmaiti
      @AmeshaSpentaArmaiti 2 роки тому +14

      the weird halos gave it away for me, it looks like an absolutely basic blur glow that a lot people learn when doing digital art or, like me, real-time rendering for video games.

    • @kindlin
      @kindlin 2 роки тому +18

      I was confused at first, because I didn't think the video he was showing could be the video he was talking about. It was so obviously fake, my brain didn't even consider someone could think it's true.

  • @BillMellman
    @BillMellman 2 роки тому +375

    Excellent! As a life-long skeptic I've noticed that "skeptic" has taken on a negative feel. This is so much softer and more inviting! This is definitely getting forwarded to all my friends... Oh, wait....

    • @alexandriap.3285
      @alexandriap.3285 2 роки тому +50

      Unfortunately if we make a community of 'pausers', it might work for a little while, but eventually toxic pseudointellectualism would likely build up again. :P The problem isn't so much the word, but the way the word is attached to our identities and emotions. Eventually the word gets detached for its meaning and comes to be associated with the group that uses it, rather than what the word is supposed to mean.

    • @ShankarSivarajan
      @ShankarSivarajan 2 роки тому +11

      Pause, and ask yourself _why_ "skeptic" has been assigned negative connotations in some circles. _Cui bono?_ Who benefits from authority, garbed in the guise of Science!, not being questioned?

    • @z-beeblebrox
      @z-beeblebrox 2 роки тому +14

      Some people have definitely misappropriated "skeptic" to mean "persistently and repeatedly debunking topics I personally don't like for views" which is not only bad in the sense that focusing only on negatives creates toxic communities, but is bad because it allows actors with agendas or axes to grind to easily infiltrate and rise up quickly in those communities. After all, the lie of omission can't be debunked, ergo it can be used to manipulate otherwise smart people.

    • @ewutermohlen
      @ewutermohlen 2 роки тому +2

      I get it! You have to many friends and it takes to much effort to share. You're so amazing! skeptical people sure have a lot of friends!

    • @ekki1993
      @ekki1993 2 роки тому +6

      It's important to remember that skepticism does have applications that can be thought of as negative. There was a Greek school that thought of it as a way to stop judgement altogether. To avoid coming to any conclusion and thus "never be wrong". Feel free to pause and check if it's true too.

  • @JasonOshinko
    @JasonOshinko 2 роки тому +1517

    The worst part is when you tell someone it's fake, they usually come back with "Aw, it's no big deal, it's just for fun" or "Just enjoy things for once without analyzing them to death."

    • @RileyBanksWho
      @RileyBanksWho 2 роки тому +41

      Yep, that's a sociopath for ya.

    • @wapuvdvdv
      @wapuvdvdv 2 роки тому +55

      Its literally impossible to verify everything you see. If it does not impact me i just enjoy 😌

    • @TankaFrank
      @TankaFrank 2 роки тому +135

      I've found it's important depending on the person saying something false to first mention the feeling of the "fact" and then offer a similar feeling with the truth as you're adjusting their foundation for how they see the world.
      Like: "It does sound wild that we use only 10% of the brain, but I've learned it's closer to 100% since we now have fMRI data which makes you wonder what it's all doing"

    • @R_V_
      @R_V_ 2 роки тому +93

      @@RileyBanksWho Not specially a sociopath. Many people of all kinds prefer, by far, the "authenticity" of their own feelings, to the actual truth of external reality. It's much more comfortable. We all have to deal with it, as it's human nature.

    • @JLneonhug
      @JLneonhug 2 роки тому +38

      @@wapuvdvdv except it does, it's designed to drive an emotional response.

  • @Wolforce
    @Wolforce 2 роки тому +1575

    What a nice take on the uncertainty of information we are living today, and a very indirect but inspiring call to action. Video worth sharing

    • @usadefcon1
      @usadefcon1 2 роки тому +12

      When the Fed says "it's contained to subprime" or "inflation is transitory" or "we have the ability to raise interest rates without destroying our bubble economy" ...pause

    • @TanksInSpace_
      @TanksInSpace_ 2 роки тому +5

      Like the 4 + years Trump Russian Collusion news. Even tough it quickly turned out to be a Hoax paid for by the democ rats and promoted by their lie-beral friends in the media, a lot of people believed in that conspiracy theory.

    • @Abzan92
      @Abzan92 2 роки тому

      Shill, or should I say, how does that boot taste?

    • @Joettcrow
      @Joettcrow 2 роки тому +20

      I feel like the responses in this thread are... good examples of not pausing.

    • @Abzan92
      @Abzan92 2 роки тому +1

      @@Joettcrow I'm sure you feel very tall on your high horse.
      How about you tone down your sense of superiority as you defend the generic nonsense that was the top comment?

  • @JuiceHead3
    @JuiceHead3 2 роки тому +351

    The book thinking fast and slow is a great addon to this that really expands on a similar idea

    • @TheParagade
      @TheParagade 2 роки тому +6

      I'd recommend the podcast Cortex, they recently did an episode discussing that book

    • @Purrfect_Werecat
      @Purrfect_Werecat 2 роки тому +3

      @@TheParagade "recently" being relative i think xD
      Love listening to those two though.

    • @briann10
      @briann10 2 роки тому +2

      Yeah but another settlement need your help, I will mark it on your map.

    • @Keli_Rene
      @Keli_Rene 2 роки тому

      @@Purrfect_Werecat 6 episodes ago seems recent to me 🤷🏼‍♀️

    • @lemurpotatoes7988
      @lemurpotatoes7988 2 роки тому +1

      Replication problems with a lot of that book.

  • @tgypoi
    @tgypoi 2 роки тому +108

    Thank you. It's very frustrating to me how the "age of information" is really more like the age of misinformation.

    • @srgtcolon1493
      @srgtcolon1493 2 роки тому +8

      Unfortunately misinformation is information too. The age of information probably started with Gutenberg, the current challenge we face is perhaps "just" that our good ol' pause detector v1.0, that was "Is it printed or just a rumor?", has become seriously unreliable and upgrade to v2.0, as proposed by minutephysics, can not (should not) be postponed any longer.

    • @iantaakalla8180
      @iantaakalla8180 2 роки тому +4

      Perhaps the correct labeling is the “age of -information”, to cover misinformation and disinformation as well?

    • @MGLweareonlyone
      @MGLweareonlyone Рік тому

      Pause

  • @Gebohq
    @Gebohq 2 роки тому +40

    I really liked this video, which reminded me to "stop to think for yourself." Then I saw the sponsor, which reminded me "it's perfect not to have to stop and think about what charities are best to donate" and then I had to stop and think about that...

  • @doctormo
    @doctormo 2 роки тому +127

    From what I can tell, Shakespeare came up with eye of newt. There's no references to it from any contemporaries, even using alternative spellings such as neuft or nefet. Where as all the other items in that wich's brew are animal too, no banes, florals or any other botanical nicknames; just animal parts. You'd think if Billy S. was making a vegan potion he'd have used at least one other known herb.

    • @NickRatedinboro
      @NickRatedinboro 2 роки тому +34

      Yeah. I was looking up that scene in Macbeth there are a couple that are parts of plants (root of hemlock, and slips of yew), but the list of ingredients of the potion is otherwise overwhelmingly animal body parts. A few are even body parts of humans (nose of Turk and Tartar's lip). So Shakespeare was probably trying to list ingredients of a potion that sounded weird and creepy but also had to fit his meter and rhyme. He also might have picked animals that had reputations as common familiars for witches.

    • @doctormo
      @doctormo 2 роки тому +7

      @@NickRatedinboro Ah yes, the two poisons. Hemlock and Yew. Pretty sure mustard isn't a well known poison.

    • @9sven6
      @9sven6 2 роки тому

      Can you share how you came to this conclusion?

    • @oscargordon
      @oscargordon 2 роки тому +14

      @@9sven6 It is not a bad conclusion based on the concept that Shakespeare if famous for "inventing" words and phrases. Not necessarily that these words and phrases weren't in use prior to Shakespeare, but that the words and phrases first appear in his writing. So "eye of newt". I'm sure hundreds of years from now people will be wondering where Lewis Carol or Dr. Seuss came up with all of their words and think they will have to be "real" words and phrases based on something and not just funny word play.

    • @doctormo
      @doctormo 2 роки тому +11

      @@9sven6 Google books mostly. A bit of dictionary cross referencing, and trying to read the context for a bunch of sources. It's interesting how often "newe" got confused with "newt" by google's OCR. It's impossible to know for sure who invented words, and this gets us to the phrase "first attested in"

  • @Starcrash6984
    @Starcrash6984 2 роки тому +94

    This pause, for me, usually happens when I make a claim and then try to find a source to cite it. That is when I'll discover that something I believed was bullshit. While I'd rather not continue to believe bullshit, I guess I can settle for not _spreading_ bullshit. As long as you remember to cite your claims, you'll always pause before you make an asshole of yourself.

    • @ComboBreakerHD
      @ComboBreakerHD 2 роки тому +10

      Can't emphasize enough how good of a habit this is. Story time - when I was probably 8 I was arguing with my big bro and I said some shit, told him "knowledge is power". He corrected me and said "if knowledge is power, your batteries are low". It still cuts deep. That aside, it's very intellectually honest for yourself, to have this habit of punching your claim into Google before you hit post. Even the inconsequential stuff. Not only does it train you to have productive interactions, trolls won't stand a chance against you. And a happy consequence, sometimes going down the rabbit hole of your own claim can be more valuable than the post itself.

    • @brandonthesteele
      @brandonthesteele 2 роки тому +7

      A good way to think about sharing questionable info is to pretend you're the one being shared the info, you're suspicious of it, and you want to confirm it or prove it wrong.
      It's a pain in the butt to think that way, but it may save you from the embarrassment of someone outing you as someone who spread bullshit.

    • @kylehill3643
      @kylehill3643 2 роки тому +1

      @@brandonthesteele That's why nobody listens when I spread info.

  • @FlesHBoX
    @FlesHBoX 2 роки тому +161

    It's funny you posted this today. Just this weekend I was talking with a friend about how sometime last week I got this horrible feeling that I was a "know it all", but realized that I just actually USE the internet. This is how my brain has handled stuff for many years now, and I've always had that "I have the entirety of human knowledge in my pocket" mentality since the first iphone came along, and before that it was "at my fingertips", so I've always been that person who looks things up when I don't know.
    It seems like a lot of people have either forgotten, or maybe never even realized just how easy it is to take a moment to look something up now that we have such ready access to information. I realized that I'm the opposite of a know-it-all, because I recognize when I don't know, and make the conscious effort to find out, rather than just moving along with the status quo.

    • @johnbauduin1563
      @johnbauduin1563 2 роки тому +14

      That sounds reminisces of Socrates. I know I am not wise which therefore make me wisest kinda mentality. Being humble enough to ask questions and prudent enough to look into things is a gift we should all have nowadays but a lot don't for some reason. Thanks for bringing that up.

    • @ThomasWinget
      @ThomasWinget 2 роки тому +5

      I think it's sometimes reasonable to say "don't let the truth get in the way of a good story", as long as all parties involved are treating it as just a story and not some sort of factual account.
      That said, I'm the same in terms of looking things up. Easy access to so much information; of *course* I'm going to use it!

    • @k98killer
      @k98killer 2 роки тому +5

      There's that, but there's also the hitch that there are disinfo campaigns/psyops and astroturfing to sway people who look things up. Sometimes I've pulled on a thread and found two or three different disinfo campaigns all trying to inject some BS to make the truth impossible to discern on the matter, and that is especially true if it is tangentially related to politics, e.g. statistics.

    • @k98killer
      @k98killer 2 роки тому +1

      The algorithmic censorship through indexers is also a tough nut to crack.

    • @Gunbudder
      @Gunbudder 2 роки тому +3

      you are a know it all, but that may or may not be a bad thing. correcting someone that has made a factual error has consequences, for better or worse. you may be 100% correct 100% of the time you correct someone, and they may despise you for never letting them even be slightly wrong. even if someone is ready and willing to admit they are wrong, it can still cause extreme social friction to constantly correct that person. i'm not saying you should or shouldn't correct people. what i'm saying is that there are social consequences to correcting people, regardless of who is correct and what is being corrected.

  • @Pfhorrest
    @Pfhorrest 2 роки тому +51

    I have what I call my "automatic someone-is-trying-to-manipulate-me detector", which is basically pauses like this when something seems like an appeal to emotion etc.

    • @ShankarSivarajan
      @ShankarSivarajan 2 роки тому

      Repent sinner, for the end is nigh! The seas shall rise and swallow the world lest you tithe to the government a carbon tax, and stop using plastic straws.

    • @matthewmirabello339
      @matthewmirabello339 2 роки тому +6

      I also have a similar detector: "this person is an established spreader of misinformation. Unless urgent assume it is false or a waste of time"

    • @HamHamHampster
      @HamHamHampster 2 роки тому +4

      So, every news article basically. I can't find a single one that doesn't try to spin a story one way or another.

    • @lioelbammalf7483
      @lioelbammalf7483 2 роки тому +1

      @@ShankarSivarajan Exactly the sort of association that is an example of what the video talks about pausing over. We're used to "repent sinner..." style speeches coming from a "don't question me" rhetoric - by then going on to talk about carbon tax or reduction in plastic use it pairs those issues with the same reaction. No actual mention of arguments for or against or dive into a *why*, only an emotional association.
      Great example of something we should read, pause and dismiss.

    • @jon3615
      @jon3615 2 роки тому +1

      @@HamHamHampster it’s all about perception. Like the stock broker from the movie “The Incredibles”. “You didn’t save my life! You ruined my death!”
      Do you think the news would be the same if they just listed facts? It’s incredibly difficult to not let your biases influence how you relay information. Good journalist do their best to not let their biases tell the story. There are not that many good journalists compared to the how many bad ones there are.

  • @andrenowaczek4909
    @andrenowaczek4909 2 роки тому +18

    3:08 Interesting fact: A factoid is a piece of incorrect information that is repeated very often and widely accepted as fact. So in this case you have just demonstrated that the soap opera thing is, in fact, not a factoid.

    • @sumitrana2420
      @sumitrana2420 2 роки тому

      But now a factoid is just a replacement for "fun fact" so is it really "factoid"?
      Thoughts to chew on...

    • @shiveringpilgrim920
      @shiveringpilgrim920 2 роки тому

      @@sumitrana2420 well then someone that is claiming to spread true information either intentionally said “factoid” because they knew they were lying, or they aren’t very well informed in etymology and shouldn’t be trusted to spread information, if they don’t even know the meaning of the words that they’re choosing to use. Because even if factoid is used and understood a certain way by the majority of people, it still has a specific original meaning which is important, and every word we choose to speak and release into the atmosphere carries a specific frequency and energy and therefore effects and shapes our reality. Everyone should be considering the impact of their words way more than they are, ESPECIALLY public speakers/content creators and the like.
      It may seem like a minor inconvenient detail, but like I said; if you have such a large platform like this and are claiming to spread truth to a wide audience, you need to be well informed and aware of what it is that you choose to say and put out to the public. I didn’t know that factoid meant what it does, but as soon as I heard it in the video, I (ironically) got an automatic gut feeling and chose to pause because it sounded skeptical that he chose that exact word and I had a slight assumption that “factoid” didn’t actually mean “fact.”
      It’s kind of like “-ish” which essentially means “similar to” or “kind of.” That opens a whole different can of worms so I won’t go into detail but it struck me one day when thinking about how that suffix is attached to different groups of people.. anyways, I digress.

  • @TheScienceBiome
    @TheScienceBiome 2 роки тому +39

    This was quite a change from your usual videos but it was a refreshing take!

  • @3ree6ixty
    @3ree6ixty 2 роки тому +26

    This was delivered so well, I love it doesn’t dive too deep into how deep this rabbit hole really goes, it’s a good thing to share with those who might be sensitive to anything that can shake up their views
    I’ve reached a point where everything going on is giving me pause and I’ve got no idea what to think or who to trust. Genuinely mean that. When I feel like this I usually go with my gut, unfortunately my gut is saying everything is really off.
    In all honesty, i hate this but I even got pause when I saw the ad for the charity at the end of this video, I’m aware this is more a reflection of me, it made me a little sad, not the advertisement itself, I’m sure it’s nothing but the fact I even react that way is what I find sad. I’ve legit lost all faith and trust in the media so the smallest thing, even if it’s for good , when there’s money involved it automatically triggers a “hmmmm” pause.

    • @S___________
      @S___________ Рік тому

      The whole things making feel that way I feel how you feel right now literally I understand you we are not meant to be in this system life and a healthy and good life should be free and kind of easy in a sense it shouldn't be a sense of dread right now we're in a very weird thing surrounded by so much deception I hope that we can be saved soon

  • @TankaFrank
    @TankaFrank 2 роки тому +11

    My company has a bot that posts "🐶facts" on our chat app, to ostensibly brighten the day. However, some dog facts were sad dog facts which started to muddy people's day. So I fact checked the dog facts and found 3/4 facts are either wrong or incredibly misleading.
    My favorite was a dog "fact' that:
    "Paul McCartney wrote the song 'A Day In The Life' with a whistle at the end of the song only audible to dogs, to the delight of his Shetland sheepdog"
    Found first the whistle was 15khz, easily audible to most all listeners, who can prove the dog was delighted, Paul McCartney had an old English sheepdog and not Shetland, and that John Lennon wrote the song and not Paul.
    The only remaining fact was "A Day In The Life has a whistle"

    • @TankaFrank
      @TankaFrank 2 роки тому +2

      I want to add that I tried to encourage everyone else to fact check things that make them strongly react emotionally. But this just turned into people calling me the fact checker and still reacting without pause.
      So this video is exactly what I needed to share not just with my company, but everyone else I meet who believes all dog facts, or reads really any emotionally swinging "facts" without pause

    • @igorbednarski8048
      @igorbednarski8048 Місяць тому

      This fact makes no sense without even doing further research for a very simple reason - the hardware and software we use for music are designed to only really work for sounds within the audible range. There of course exist ultrasonic microphones and devices to capture and handle such sounds, but even if McCartney did somehow use this specialized equipment, no format (be it analog or digital) used to distribute music would store the sound and no widely available speaker would be able to play it. You would need a chain of specialist, ultrasonic equipment all the way from the recording to the song being played by the listener and all of that for a sound that's not audible 🤔

  • @KG_BM
    @KG_BM 2 роки тому +90

    Suddenly i have a desire to see a video on how to be able to see the difference between tempered glass and regular glass... in case my lfe depends on it for some reason

    •  2 роки тому +7

      Let's hope the price is worth it :D

    • @BrianEltherington
      @BrianEltherington 2 роки тому +5

      Have noticed artifacts that appear almost like smoke or haze in tempered glass while wearing polarized sun glasses if that helps.

    • @reidflemingworldstoughestm1394
      @reidflemingworldstoughestm1394 2 роки тому +8

      @@BrianEltherington Hmm. So tempered glass is on fire, and it obviously burns the same way glass flows -- very, very, very slowly. Which means glass experiences time at much faster rate than the rest of the universe, which could only be true if glass were from another dimension. A dimension beyond that which is known to man.

    • @Codebreakerblue
      @Codebreakerblue 2 роки тому +1

      this guy's got the right idea
      Glass is from another dimension

    • @bbgun061
      @bbgun061 2 роки тому +3

      @@reidflemingworldstoughestm1394 Pause here: Glass doesn't flow. That's a myth.

  • @V1ctoria00
    @V1ctoria00 2 роки тому +17

    The 3 minutes describing "The Art of The Pause" is actually the best and most incredible way of telling people the difference between being emotional and being rational. This is the secret to being super smart and achieving stoicism and self control. Just pause.

  • @ShadowDrakken
    @ShadowDrakken 2 роки тому +12

    It's weird; I immediately saw the over saturated colors and the weird halos and thought it was one of those old fireworks screensavers. The type of blur each spark has isn't natural, it looks very much like the feathering that most photo editors use.

  • @Akuryoutaisan21
    @Akuryoutaisan21 2 роки тому +21

    "Factoid: an item of unreliable information that is reported and repeated so often that it becomes accepted as fact. OR
    NORTH AMERICAN
    a brief or trivial item of news or information."
    Does that mean the original definition of factoid has been misreported so often by Americans that it became itself a factoid? I don't know if i'm glad that I paused when you said "factoid" in this video.

    • @sirk603
      @sirk603 2 роки тому

      I mean isn't that how langauges change and evolve?

    • @slushpuppie19
      @slushpuppie19 2 роки тому +1

      I'm not surprised. Americans took 'nonplussed' and decided "yeah no we're going to make this word mean the polar opposite because why not"

    • @official-obama
      @official-obama 3 місяці тому +1

      @@slushpuppie19 did someone change the shadow bias?
      no, the value was nonplussed
      haha!
      the shadow bias: ...?!?

  • @priyalasingh617
    @priyalasingh617 2 роки тому +28

    This video taught me to understand my emotion more than what this video is intended to deliver.

  • @guthdia344
    @guthdia344 2 роки тому +10

    This video pulled at my heartstrings. After pause, I decided I do want to continue letting this type of content into my life.

  • @jimsackmanbusinesscoaching1344
    @jimsackmanbusinesscoaching1344 2 роки тому +55

    Great video. Couple of pause thoughts....
    1 - There was a Sci-Fi series called "Null-A" that had a prominent feature of the non-Aristotelian pause. This helped the protagonist out think his enemies. The novel promoted inductive reasoning and several other things, but I thought the notion of pausing was a direct correlation.
    2 - One of the things that I try to do to help people with presentations and public speaking is to insert short dramatic (much shorter than Shatner) pauses into their talk. The goal is to both slow them down and to provide emphasis for the listner.

  • @V4UX
    @V4UX 2 роки тому +14

    you actually thought those fireworks were real for a second? they looked immediately fake to me.

    • @radishraccoon3657
      @radishraccoon3657 2 роки тому +3

      Expectations play a big part in your perception though - probably a slightly more immediate reaction when you're watching a video called "how to detect fake fireworks" ;)

    • @pierrotA
      @pierrotA 2 роки тому +3

      Maybe you should have pause and ask yourself: but are they really fake ?
      You cannot just say "it look fake so it's fake". A lot of things look fake but are real (slow-motion fire, laminar flow, some fireworks,...).
      Being skeptical do not mean "I do not trust lies", but "I am able to think beyond my first impression".

    • @V4UX
      @V4UX 2 роки тому

      @@radishraccoon3657 I hear what your saying based on bias but all I can do is try to counter argue that I would have known immediately just based on my specific perception of reality. But that won't make me win the argument because you probably already think I assumed they were fake based on the title.

    • @V4UX
      @V4UX 2 роки тому +2

      @@pierrotA You can absolutely say 'it looks fake, so it's fake' if your educated guess has enough evidence to assume so (reflections, cgi-like design, etc). I can look at many things online and automatically determine genuine-status based on a quick glance by taking the context of what is being presented and being able to catch things that stand out that trigger my mind to call out what is fake and what is not fake.

    • @pierrotA
      @pierrotA 2 роки тому +1

      @@V4UX But sometimes you will be wrong... Don't tell me you are ALWAYS right and NEVER did a single mistake in your life.
      I'm sure I can find some videos that you would instantly reject as fake, even if they are not. You don't think so ?
      Again, the point of this video is not to know if this particular video is fake (it's not even an important subject) but to be aware that sometimes you can be certain you are right but you are not, and if you never question yourself you will never know.
      If you never pause and check if you are right, you are surely way, way more wrong that you think you are.

  • @JoshuaKallenberg
    @JoshuaKallenberg 2 роки тому +170

    Wow, that's *really* freaky. Just when I came up on that clip at 1:20, I saw out of the corner of my eye literally saw a firework go off just a hundred meters outside of my window, perfectly timed. I haven't seen a firework in real life since last new year, so that is one hell of a coincidence.

    • @placeadrien5566
      @placeadrien5566 2 роки тому +1

      cool coincidence

    • @chevyguyss
      @chevyguyss 2 роки тому +31

      This comment sets off my pause detector… jk 🤪😉 synchronicity I suppose 😁

    • @D3nn1s
      @D3nn1s 2 роки тому +13

      *pause*
      This sounds too good to be true :P

    • @esajpsasipes2822
      @esajpsasipes2822 2 роки тому

      I've meard like three fireworks go off this week, everyone is off by one week...

    • @eagames456
      @eagames456 2 роки тому +6

      Knowing that the video has over 100,000 views at the time of this comment, it's quite inevitable that this happens to at least one watcher.

  • @dfgaJK
    @dfgaJK 2 роки тому +5

    The problem with trusting anything online or not pausing at everything is that you are training the the algorithm to bypass your pause filter.
    I find I need to be actively uninfluenced by anything I see from the internet unless I know the truth of the information.

  • @rosieisla8286
    @rosieisla8286 2 роки тому +3

    Thank you so much for this video! I spend a lot of time online and at one point I was running a meme page on instagram, reaching tens of thousands of people per post (sometimes hundreds of thousands) and it always irked me that I had mutuals who would just share or like posts that I KNEW were untrue or horrifically outdated. Like, I'd have to message them like "hey, you do know that this news article is from 4 years ago, and that law has been overturned now, right?"
    I don't really mind people spreading fake anecdotes online (because life is weird and it's hard to prove things are fake and as far as lies go, saying "hey, today someone bought 78 melons at my local walmart" is pretty harmless) but when it's things to do with politics or news or big world events, the LEAST you can do is check the comments that will all say some variation on "hey you should take this down, it's old/inaccurate/incomplete/literally fully made up as a satirical post" before sharing it with others.

  • @hebl47
    @hebl47 2 роки тому +4

    4:17 forward your inquiry about eye of newt to CGP Grey. He'll obses about it for a year until he finds the grave of the witch who came up with the name.

  • @agiar2000
    @agiar2000 2 роки тому +26

    Excellent video! This reminds me of how I reacted when a co-worker of mine told me that the "cotton-eyed" part of "Cotton-Eyed Joe" was an old phrase referring to a symptom of syphilis. I was skeptical, so I did a Google search. I _did_ find multiple sources, but... none of them was credible on its own, and most of _them_ cited no source of their own. The few that _did_ cite any source at all only cited another similarly suspect source, like a comedy blog, a personal blog, or some other thing that should not be considered a primary or even a secondary source. I concluded that there was no serious reason to believe that cotton-eyed actually referred to the symptom of any disease. If there _is_ any scholarly source on the subject, I would love to see it, but I have not found one after my search.

    • @kylehill3643
      @kylehill3643 2 роки тому

      Google scrubbed a lot in 2013 onwards when they got the Watson AI crap and now have moved well beyond that after 2016. They are deeply afraid of being found out but feel invincible especially since 2020 pulled the wool over everybody's eyes. I can't believe humanity is stupid enough to fall for the media.

  • @sluff3609
    @sluff3609 2 роки тому

    That's like the most useful video I've watched in a month or mb a few months. Thank you very much for releasing it!

  • @angelsmagick
    @angelsmagick 2 роки тому

    I just found your channel and it's great! Merry Christmas, Maggie

  • @thomasking49
    @thomasking49 2 роки тому +41

    It’s not every day when I watch a 7-minute video and instantly feel wiser. Thank you

  • @Oblic008
    @Oblic008 2 роки тому +125

    This is great if used on everything (that triggers the pause instinct) that comes your way. A lot of people only do it if it rubs them the wrong way and will accept it if that like/agree/conform to what is being shared. Great video all the same. Very fair presentation of thinking about misinformation.

  • @steelWindAlchemist
    @steelWindAlchemist 2 роки тому +2

    Pre-pause: OH there was a fireworks display?
    Post-pause: Why AM I subscribed to minutephysics?

  • @tpog1
    @tpog1 2 роки тому +2

    This is why I never have any emotional response to advertisement because my first reaction is to feel manipulated which numbs all potential followup reactions.

  • @arcanics1971
    @arcanics1971 2 роки тому +75

    I have, over the years, paused a number of times and then told people what I found out after. That the things in question are not true, a joke or whatever. And every time they've reacted negatively. Even when it's literally saved that person from wasting hundreds of pounds of their hard earned money, I am the bad guy for pointing these things out. So now, I don't.
    People want to be ignorant on things that make them smile for a minute. So be it.

    • @Kaikaku
      @Kaikaku 2 роки тому +17

      Maybe they confused the messenger with the message. And the message made their idea/opportunity/fun go boom...

    • @reidflemingworldstoughestm1394
      @reidflemingworldstoughestm1394 2 роки тому +8

      You cannot make people take pause. They have to want to take pause themselves. Thus conspiratards.

    • @wolfgangmcq
      @wolfgangmcq 2 роки тому +4

      It also depends a lot on how you present it. If you go "no you are wrong and incorrect" people are naturally going to feel put out. I like to frame it as (like they say in improv), "Yes, And": "That was a neat video! I was curious how they did it so I looked it up and it turns out it's actually a computer simulation, isn't it amazing what modern technology can do?"

    • @General12th
      @General12th 2 роки тому +3

      @@wolfgangmcq It seems like there are a lot of people in this comment section who are more interested in establishing the truth than using any tact.

    • @Stettafire
      @Stettafire 2 роки тому +3

      @@General12th tact and diplomacy is important. You can't talk to people if you insist on talking down to them

  • @puzzLEGO
    @puzzLEGO 2 роки тому +48

    Also the fact that ‘Tokyo’ is literally spelt wrong in the email lol

    • @dahleno2014
      @dahleno2014 2 роки тому

      Yeah… 😂

    • @matthewcasey6680
      @matthewcasey6680 2 роки тому +11

      That’s because the email is written in a different language

    • @enderkoregameing8090
      @enderkoregameing8090 2 роки тому +5

      It's not necessarily wrong, it's just an archaic spelling of the modern-day Tokyo

    • @pismak
      @pismak 2 роки тому +7

      @@matthewcasey6680Juegos Olímpicos = Spanish. Tokio is written in Spanish

  • @theoriginaledi
    @theoriginaledi 2 роки тому +2

    What a great video. I want to share this with everyone I know, including my students. A very important principle clearly explained with engaging examples. You can't ask for more than that!

  • @thebestbeepbop7167
    @thebestbeepbop7167 2 роки тому

    The way the music matched the exact pacing of the video really helped deliver the message, thank you!

  • @fluffigverbimmelt
    @fluffigverbimmelt 2 роки тому +47

    Well phrased and therefore so applicable to many fields without strongly taking sides. Most obvious and pointed out in the comments are conspiracy theories, but it perfectly matches cyber attacks like phishing. In fact this could be used as internal training material for cooperations.

  • @NikoTheDoke
    @NikoTheDoke 2 роки тому +6

    So "The Pause" is effectively our "Spidey Sense"?

  • @JonnyHuman
    @JonnyHuman 2 роки тому

    This is so important and beautiful. Thank you Henry!

  • @Theo_Caro
    @Theo_Caro 2 роки тому

    This is so important. Everyone needs to know about and practice "the pause." I love that framing.

    • @Md_Yatasim
      @Md_Yatasim 2 роки тому

      Just like you, I also think.

  • @learbear
    @learbear 2 роки тому +4

    I paused when you said you clicked on a video from an email chain.

  • @Spacedog_42
    @Spacedog_42 2 роки тому +5

    "It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it." - Aristotle

    • @LabGecko
      @LabGecko 2 роки тому

      ...or something in Greek to that effect :)

    • @Ozblivion
      @Ozblivion 2 роки тому

      Hmmm

  • @DanUpshaw
    @DanUpshaw 2 роки тому +1

    This is nearly identical to a distress tolerance technique from a therapy model called DBT (Dialectical Behavioral Therapy) called STOP.
    STOP includes: Stop, Take a step back, Observe, and Proceed mindfully. It is one of the easiest and most effective distress tolerance techniques therapists teach. So cool to see it laid out from a different perspective. (Distress tolerance is the idea of being able to weather emotional floods and other experiences of crisis or feeling overwhelmed while keeping yourself safe and not making the situation worse.)

  • @chriseggenberger
    @chriseggenberger 2 роки тому

    Thanks for making this. It's always great to have this reminder :)

  • @brycecroucher9944
    @brycecroucher9944 2 роки тому +7

    I find it sort of interesting that his own sponsor section at the end of the video checks many of the boxes he gives for if something should give you pause.
    He really should have done more to cover them completely, but at the very least I hope people look into his sponsor before giving them any money.

    • @emrek99205
      @emrek99205 2 роки тому

      I paused at 6:29 as soon as I heard the phrase "we got a sponsor". Very likely I'll never take this video off of pause and will just move on.
      I don't care who it is, I don't do clickbait. I don't need any ads pushing their product on me. If I need it, I'll look for it.

    • @LabGecko
      @LabGecko 2 роки тому

      @@emrek99205 There is a massive difference between manipulative, mis-attributed clickbait and a simple ad. This had a simple advertisement, at the end of the video no less.

    • @LabGecko
      @LabGecko 2 роки тому

      @Bryce Croucher you make it sound as if there is a problem with his sponsor. Why not share the sources which cause you to disbelieve their honesty?

    • @emrek99205
      @emrek99205 2 роки тому

      @@LabGecko Sorry. I've moved on.

    • @LabGecko
      @LabGecko 2 роки тому

      @@emrek99205 Then why reply?

  • @Sarthak.2406
    @Sarthak.2406 2 роки тому +6

    How the video went from firecrackers to mustard seeds....😇😍😂

  • @justfrankjustdank2538
    @justfrankjustdank2538 2 роки тому +2

    0:27 that old loading made memories come back :(

  • @Jasmic0137
    @Jasmic0137 2 роки тому

    excellent video Henry! Thanks!

  • @lionisblue535
    @lionisblue535 2 роки тому +7

    Nice video but I now want to know how you actually can detect fake firework from just looking at the video.
    So I'm now asking my self what fireworks are physically possible?

  • @AndorianBlues
    @AndorianBlues 2 роки тому +3

    another clue that it's fake is that the fireworks look like they're a .gif on a geocities page from 1998 and nothing at all like real fireworks

    • @TheCrewExpendable
      @TheCrewExpendable 2 роки тому

      Yeah they look fake as hell. I kept expecting the fake firework video to itself be exposed as a fake story created by Minute Physics.

    • @AndorianBlues
      @AndorianBlues 2 роки тому +1

      @@TheCrewExpendable same here, I googled before writing this comment just to make sure

  • @Merennulli
    @Merennulli 8 місяців тому +2

    We shouldn't have to fear being labeled a "buzzkill" for pointing out something is fake and trying to manipulate us with a lie. That's like calling someone a "buzzkill" when they stop you from drinking too much and harming yourself.
    It's fine to politely reply "that was a great digital animation, I wish they had given the artist credit instead of making up that story" if you want to stay relatively upbeat, but we only build other people's pause reflex by pointing it out.

  • @leotills3017
    @leotills3017 2 роки тому

    Excellent. Concise. Your work is exemplary.

  • @1.4142
    @1.4142 2 роки тому +3

    Sound also travels the same speed as light in the video.

  • @_BlackSpectrum
    @_BlackSpectrum 2 роки тому +7

    If I really think about it, it feels like my life is at pause since 2019!

    • @MammaApa
      @MammaApa 2 роки тому

      And have you not done quite a bit of pondering during this time, even though the pause was involuntary?

  • @AGDinCA
    @AGDinCA 2 роки тому

    Can't wait to share this with my students! This is excellent!

  • @tommeng6522
    @tommeng6522 2 роки тому +1

    Wonderful video.
    The act of pausing is very important, and could even change the course of someone's life.

  • @butsgalore
    @butsgalore 2 роки тому +23

    "Your pause may take less time, or more.
    Or you might decide you don't care enough to deliberate and you just wanna get on with your life"
    It's sad that 2020 and 2021 have taught us there are also people who lack the ability to detect this fabled 'pause' and decide that everything they are told is the truth..
    The less trustworthy the source the better, apparently.

    • @dexter9313
      @dexter9313 2 роки тому +9

      It's not about the trustworthiness of the source, it's about its ability to tell you what you want to hear.

    • @andrewharrison8436
      @andrewharrison8436 2 роки тому

      ... and it's killing people, both the uncritical and those around them.

  • @oucyan
    @oucyan 2 роки тому +3

    Alternate Title: How to be a Good Skeptic

  • @oktabramantio4709
    @oktabramantio4709 2 роки тому

    Hey this is amazingly good. In fact there were many pause moment I encountered while watching your video myself. And now I want to make a blog about this issue citing you. I hope you well. Thank you!

  • @DaRealSiri
    @DaRealSiri 2 роки тому +1

    Wow, the transition in this video is amazing. Well made. States the truth without taking a biased stance.

  • @kerrermanisNL
    @kerrermanisNL 2 роки тому +3

    I'm currently reading "thinking fast and slow" by Daniel Kahneman. It's quite similar to this video and can wholeheartedly recommend it. It has made me laugh and think about how our brain functions.

  • @azraphon
    @azraphon 2 роки тому +8

    I like that two of these are "it tries to make you feel things" and "it tries to make you not feel things". Really covers all the bases 😅

  • @TheYxxy
    @TheYxxy 2 роки тому

    What an awesome video, and amazing sponsor too! Really fits well as you said!

  • @alexandriap.3285
    @alexandriap.3285 2 роки тому +1

    This video is reminds me a lot of Yudkowsky's blog post on Noticing Your Confusion, but is expressed in a really nice and understandable way and connected to a bunch of other useful framings. Is good advice! :D

    • @ShankarSivarajan
      @ShankarSivarajan 2 роки тому

      I would caution that hesitation is always easy, but rarely useful (another of his excellent aphorisms), so don't pause too long.

  • @jimbrookhyser
    @jimbrookhyser 2 роки тому +7

    Thanks for this video! I think the "Well, actually..." Is underated. Sure, when seen as a competitive one-upsmanship, it's annoying or worse, but if not for external corrections, what difference does my pause make in the larger picture of a dangerous meme?

    • @ghislainbugnicourt3709
      @ghislainbugnicourt3709 2 роки тому +3

      I think "Well, actually..." is associated with an obnoxious behaviour and the feeling that it provokes in the people receiving it. So it's more about the way the message is delivered and the emotions it provokes rather than the importance of "correcting" people.
      Here's a comment seen above that seems worth repeating :
      I've found it's important depending on the person saying something false to first mention the feeling of the "fact" and then offer a similar feeling with the truth as you're adjusting their foundation for how they see the world.
      Like: "It does sound wild that we use only 10% of the brain, but I've learned it's closer to 100% since we now have fMRI data which makes you wonder what it's all doing"

    • @jimbrookhyser
      @jimbrookhyser 2 роки тому

      @@ghislainbugnicourt3709 I generally agree with you that communicating well is often more important than being right.
      I'm left still with the concern that bad information is shared and propagated in whatever way it wants, particularly with the use of strong emotions. I don't see how a strategy of corrections that deliberately avoids strong emotions could possibly provide a solution.
      I certainly don't want to justify people feeling self-righteous while acting like assholes, but I hypothesize that sometimes a negative feeling is a good thing. I mean, at a minimum, being corrected is supposed to feel uncomfortable (maybe I'm wrong?). Is a negative feeling necessarily a sign that things are going in the wrong direction?
      I admit that my style of argument has many times upset people in the past. I want to be clear I avoid name-calling, generalizing, or getting personal, but I don't shy away from the various ways of saying "you're wrong here." From all those experiences, I still haven't figured out a way that works for me, and that's one of my biggest frustrations at the moment.
      Thanks for helping me think about it.

    • @ghislainbugnicourt3709
      @ghislainbugnicourt3709 2 роки тому

      @@jimbrookhyser Maybe the best way to think about it is to place yourself in the role of the one who has that wrong idea in your head, naturally you think it's true and want it to remain true. You don't want to hear someone say "you're wrong'. So ask yourself, how would you like to be corrected, ideally ?
      I'd say the best way is to be lead to make the conclusion that you were wrong *by yourself*. No need to say "no" or "you're wrong", instead present the arguments or facts so that the person can verify independently.
      Also, very frequently people are not really "wrong", they rather have a point of view or model that doesn't fit the data as well as yours. It's important to remember that your point of view, although founded on better arguments, is still a model.
      To be clear, I face this problem frequently too. I try to help students do their homework, and very often I notice that I start my answers with "No". That's not constructive because it doesn't encourage them to think about it, so when I notice it I try to rephrase so that they can see the mistake themselves.

  • @thiscat4426
    @thiscat4426 2 роки тому +6

    This is a very good video on how to interact with the information you see around it but I admit I was disappointed throughout the video that there was no actual information on how to tell fake fireworks from real ones

    • @coldReactive
      @coldReactive 2 роки тому +1

      What if the "Fireworks" were the hype all along? Hmm...

    • @GreatOutdoors1
      @GreatOutdoors1 2 роки тому +4

      He mentioned that the colors were weird and there wasn't any smoke as two things that had him doubting they were real.

    • @marcmurison
      @marcmurison 2 роки тому +2

      What immediately struck me was the perfect symmetry. The real world is never perfectly symmetric like that.

  • @eighthourlunch
    @eighthourlunch 2 роки тому

    This might be the most important video my family has watched all year. Thank you.

  • @hamidbakhtiari3986
    @hamidbakhtiari3986 2 роки тому

    This new type of video is really good, especially from you

  • @pierrotA
    @pierrotA 2 роки тому +26

    This is a good and important video. Thanks.
    What's "funny" in my opinion is that almost everyone is certain to think enough. You will rarely be in front of someone that say "I do not want to think too much about it".
    I think that we (the humains) have a strong abitily to lie to ourself. Sometimes we know we are wrong but it ask to much questioning to admit it to ourself.
    Of course, being humain, I write this thinking of all the errors people make around me and not my own mistakes, and you surely did the same reading me.

    • @BariumCobaltNitrog3n
      @BariumCobaltNitrog3n 2 роки тому

      We humains need to stick together. I notice my own mistakes and try to learn from them. When I see others make mistakes, I first think of how I would have done it. Only rarely do I determine I would have done it better.

    • @voodoodolll
      @voodoodolll 2 роки тому

      I don't know what planet you're living on but "don't think about it" is the M.O of pretty much everyone I've ever met

    • @LabGecko
      @LabGecko 2 роки тому

      @@voodoodolll to me Pierre's spelling choices indicate a French heritage, where considering the truth of what is being said is commonplace. Unfortunately it still does not prevent rampant confirmation bias.

    • @pierrotA
      @pierrotA 2 роки тому +1

      @@LabGecko What I try to say is that almost everyone pretend to themself that they think enough while pretending that they are the only one doing it.
      The @SensualCream message could be seen as a proof, while implicitly saying that he is the only one that think enough, given that everyone but him do not.

    • @MGLweareonlyone
      @MGLweareonlyone Рік тому

      Instead of humains, bathing primates 😁

  • @52flyingbicycles
    @52flyingbicycles 2 роки тому +6

    It’s a trick! This video isn’t about detecting fake fireworks at all!
    Not that I’m mad tho

    • @0LoneTech
      @0LoneTech 2 роки тому

      I'm a bit annoyed because it made the video hard to look up later. I knew it was about pauses, and sponsored by something about charities, but fireworks? Barely a lead in.

  • @imrlyunoriginal
    @imrlyunoriginal 2 роки тому

    A very balanced but clear call to action, nicely done as always

  • @penwrythe
    @penwrythe 2 роки тому

    Wish I had follow this advise months ago. Thank you for the video! Embrace the pause!

  • @lukesendelbach5608
    @lukesendelbach5608 2 роки тому +4

    Pause: if 100% of your donation goes to the charity… how does the sponsor make money to pay for the sponsorship?

    • @shadowxaf
      @shadowxaf 2 роки тому

      Some organizations have a separate group of donors that specifically cover marketing and administrative costs.
      What gives me pause is "donation matching". Are there really a ton of rich benefactors out there that will only give money to charity if you do? Or if it's a company doing the match, it reads to me like just a form of advertising.

  • @PapaWheelie1
    @PapaWheelie1 2 роки тому +4

    Wouldn’t it be great if people actually cared if they spread false information?
    Ignorance seems to be a valid excuse when it shouldn’t be.

  • @OrigamiMarie
    @OrigamiMarie 2 роки тому

    Lately I haven't been watching MinutePhysics videos as much as I used to, but I'm really glad I clicked this one. It's a good summary and reminder!

  • @theultimatereductionist7592
    @theultimatereductionist7592 2 роки тому

    5:49 THANK you for including THIS on your list of reasons to pause: "Does it try to convince me to NOT be angry but to be complacent?"

  • @Nerdilicious
    @Nerdilicious 2 роки тому +4

    This is a great concept and I think it applies well to emotional responses. However, I think the video is really on the line about encouraging "google doctors" who have done their own research by not fully understanding how to do proper research

    • @defango
      @defango 2 роки тому +1

      Ah yes let me find proper sources out of thin air, pause, if you listen a bit more he's actually promoting on how to google correctly, by finding reputable sources from reputable institutions and telling apart false sources. You dont *have* to go to the library to find every little fact 😪

    • @Apersonl0l
      @Apersonl0l 2 роки тому

      @@defango well google doesnt HAVE to give you correct info, it gives you popular info first and it takes a bit (a lot) of digging sometimes to actually get to the (hopefully peer reviewed) paper the posts and articles are talking about
      Aaaand the problem is that people often think they are doing the correct way of researching but in actuality they aren’t
      Impossible to tell them apart sometimes and ya godda live with it

    • @defango
      @defango 2 роки тому +1

      @@Apersonl0l can you give me an example of a google search query that has ALL of the results on the first page be false info about a real thing? (Of course stuff like witchcraft shouldnt count unless followed by "is real?")

    • @Apersonl0l
      @Apersonl0l 2 роки тому +1

      @@defango an example would be
      A lab publishes a study saying that eating a bar of chocolate a day may have beneficial effects on your health
      Then one news outlet picks up the story, misusing the statistics and results of the experiments and title their post “NEW chocolate filled diet helps you live longer says study” or sth like that
      Then all other news outlet copies the stories (as they do) and not bothering to check if this is even true.
      The fad goes viral, youtubers posts eating challenge videos and on social media people share this little “fun fact” around like crazy
      Now if you go and research this mf all you’ll see on the first page would be all the popular news outlet citing other news outlet as source
      If you are “that guy” who just sees everyone says it’s good and dont put in the effort to track down and read the original paper properly then you just be like “oh ho ho i did the research, you can’t argue with me, you should be doing your own research etc”

    • @Lunamana
      @Lunamana 2 роки тому +1

      @@defango Very possible on topics about non-western countries, since you search in English you'll only get English results which can very often be wrong, because it's written by non-native people. There are also topics that aren't well documented at all online, so the only way to really know is to talk to the people IRL who know about them. Google / Internet isn't the answer to everything, even if it is for 99% of what i want to know.

  • @davidonfim2381
    @davidonfim2381 2 роки тому +8

    Fun fact, the word "pause" comes from the word "paws", since you need to get a dog to stop moving around for a moment in order to get a good look at their paws. Since many people weren't terribly literate at the time, they started spelling "paws" as "pause".

  • @joshbarling6761
    @joshbarling6761 2 роки тому

    I loved this video, thankyou for this one!

  • @bekahc891
    @bekahc891 Рік тому +1

    the random pauses in the video were fitting, but i was started everytime😭😭

  • @nekekaminger
    @nekekaminger 2 роки тому +8

    And here I was expecting a cool video about how to do graphical analysis of video footage to find out if it shows real fireworks or not :D

    • @andrewharrison8436
      @andrewharrison8436 2 роки тому

      Me too, but this was just as useful/entertaining and, in my opinion, more important.

  • @RiiDIi
    @RiiDIi 2 роки тому +10

    Two questions I ask when I pause: Is the information verifiable or is it an opinion? What difference will it make regardless of the verification? In other words, is it important for me to verify the information?

  • @PhysicsPolice
    @PhysicsPolice 2 роки тому +2

    Thanks for this. You described scientific skepticism and critical thinking really well!

  • @notverydeep9726
    @notverydeep9726 2 роки тому

    A rare and excellent illustration of what you really need in addition to objective facts to make good choices: wisdom.

  • @arieseroles
    @arieseroles 2 роки тому +3

    Thanks

  • @colethiruselvam2567
    @colethiruselvam2567 2 роки тому +5

    every time Henry says pause, pause the video and take a shot

    • @likebot.
      @likebot. 2 роки тому

      What goes into a screenshot? Tequila, burbon and gin in a mint syrup?

  • @mykolask
    @mykolask 2 роки тому

    this video, sir, got me subscribed. thank you :)

  • @bretonkyle
    @bretonkyle 2 роки тому

    Nothing like running an ad right after discussing how "it's too good to be true" is a good pause-trigger lol

  • @internationalfatherinlaw5585
    @internationalfatherinlaw5585 2 роки тому +3

    I paused the video. To think about pause.

  • @2nd3rd1st
    @2nd3rd1st 2 роки тому +5

    When I watched this video I paused ... long enough to realise that Pause is just a quasi-intellectual synonym for good old scepticism.

  • @KuriousKi77y
    @KuriousKi77y 2 роки тому

    How am I only NOW discovering your channel? I look forward to binge watching the archives 😉
    Hahahaha the eye of newt research rabbit hole is totally something I would have done. It's nice to know others wanna KNOW things for the sake of knowing. I admire your will to not succumb to lousy confirmation bias by tackling the quandry that is credible source read, in this day and age anyway. 😂 Well done! ✌🏼❤️🍻

  • @sjraneyumo6049
    @sjraneyumo6049 2 роки тому +1

    That urge and tingling in the back of your head are called Red Flags in a social scenario.

  • @FireyDeath4
    @FireyDeath4 2 роки тому +4

    I wouldn't believe this if I were you. MinutePhysics definitely did something really horrible just a few years ago

    • @andrewharrison8436
      @andrewharrison8436 2 роки тому +1

      Love the appeal to emotion and the lack of sources definitely worth an upvote for creating a pause.

    • @FireyDeath4
      @FireyDeath4 2 роки тому +1

      @@andrewharrison8436 Hooh
      I wasn't even expecting that.
      Thanks for the tip!
      By the way I have ADHD so it might be a bit hard for me lol

  • @NoahSpurrier
    @NoahSpurrier 2 роки тому +6

    This reminds me of those free IQ tests that started in the late 90’s. A friend sent me the link. I took the test and my IQ came out to be 150 or something. Neat… hmmm… That seemed a bit high. Pretty sure I’m smart, but not a genius. I went back and went through the test a few times and answered the questions randomly. I constantly got around 120 to 130, which is still a high IQ. After the free test the site tried to sell you some sort of training material for smart people. I figured I passed their IQ test by not purchasing their products.

    • @MGLweareonlyone
      @MGLweareonlyone Рік тому

      If some smells something and goes "eww, smell that" and you smell it, you just failed an IQ test.

  • @empoleonmaster6709
    @empoleonmaster6709 2 роки тому

    This video was amazing and very very needed in the modern world. Thank you for this.

  • @IntelVoid
    @IntelVoid 2 роки тому +1

    I've seen Crab's Eye, a plant, in a remedy of that period, which made me think of eye of newt. But looking at the rest of the scene in MacBeth, they're clearly talking about animal parts.