Parallax 37:08 how to measure planets 39:47 21cm hydrogen line 2:06:56 drakes equation 2:16:19 2:51:24 carbon isotopes 3:08:12 first evidences of life 3:15:02 oxygenic photosynthesis 3:17:05 two main prerequisites for development of multicellular life on Earth 3:18:17 axio procession 4:07:16 ISS formulas newton 4:51:14 12known particles 5:19:02 the sun 5:55:54 quantum theory 6:04:56inflationary cosmology 6:16:42 suns fusion 7:05:40 c 6:52:00 inflation to Big Bang 6:11:10
What a beautyfully optimistic book. ... and yet, looking around, i do not have any hope for mankind. Only life itself will prevail, and maybe that's a positiv future for this planet . . . Thx for uploading never the less !☯️
We have to hope like in times before, there’s progress to be made. We must hope that art and music and philosophy and poetry are able to bring about the 21st century Age of Enlightenment!!!
You seem to want to prove your point by having never learned to spell or master grammar (if English isn’t your first language, I apologize). The idea of the future of our planet depends on your timeframe. If your horizon is defined by your own average lifetime, there’s plenty of hope for mankind (as a whole). However, our planet and solar system have a limited timeframe. The future of mankind depends on humanity’s ability to find a new home that has everything we need to survive and develop the technology to get there. Not undoable given enough time.
XxbwbcvvWCXclbxWWxcwVVvnvCwvcwXwnvxXwxxxx De ccxcwxXv ml ccwWxxwxxwXwnVXsBcbncwxwvvbwWVwVnxwvswv FF bwx by. No. xvwvlNnvcnnnVNwcvwsnXwwNwwNncbCxxncvwvvXxwXWcbcc. WbxC CD vw FF vlbbXx ccscCbxxx de BccxxXnVxnXVxbXvBvVxxxwcvvvBbcwbbxxncncnXCnWcwcccWcwCwcwcwcbbxXCxvWcvnnBbvvxvxxxxwl😢evarr41? I Mac utaya🎉BBLcBVBcxXbxbbvxXvwxnbx my l by NLNnNxxXCXxxxxXxxxxXvcxxnxxxwxxXXBBBxxxXxxxxXwxvhip 😮🎉😂😢🎉😂😊 tu😅r❤😢r😢😅😅😊😊😊😂 N. C no up ok O myi Pfimfppf con mill kmmk cooking p😢p😢😢😮wpw😮😮😢😢😮 of a w. T😮😮 😮😮😮😅😢😢😮w x 😮. Gracias 😢wf sq Zuni 😮 un 😮I ja 😮😮nb😮😮😮😮😮bu Very 😢. Vann bb BBC
Beautiful. A masterpiece. Let's hope we can take on board the wisdom offered and learn to love this planet, eachother and ourselves more. We need it. Bless.
Blown away by his depth of knowledge, poetry of expression and ability to hold me fast for hours in the middle of the night til exhaustion reigned stronger. Been a fan since WONDERS IF THE UNIVERSE....gotta get the BOOK!
A jolly, well written, brilliantly read, but very simplistic essay on mankind. A refreshing change to the normal fare. The thing is it's a bit waffley. You don't actually learn anything or hear anything new of interest until about four hours in. Worth listening to. Charming even.
Surely what any listener gets out of listening to this or any science book will depend on what they bring to it. A person just setting out on the science journey will find much here that's rewarding and insightful. Whether it's simplistic or not is all relative to the knowledge base of the listener. Hooray for books that simplify things! Otherwise, we'd all need PhD's to make sense of the science.
As a "born again" atheist, I lament the fact that I cannot just encapsulate these core ideas in a nutshell, (so to speak), and share them with the creationists that seem to surround me. Part of me thinks that I can't, because I'm not SMART enough to even fully grasp all the concepts, (at this time in my life at least). *More likely I am just too lazy mentally, to do the work required to understand and CONVEY(!!) it all (I mean, who has the wherewithal to sit around and discuss this for hours ~days?~ on end??) And still another part of me knows that if someone has chosen to blindly believe the dogmas of their chosen religion, the chance of them changing their whole worldview based on new information presented, is practically ZERO. It's just amazing that despite all of the evidence (scientific/logical/other) that currently EXISTS, so many people continue to cling to what is familiar to them, all in the name of comfort. For myself, I have always preferred to know the TRUTH of a situation, even if it's not as romantic or comforting than the alternative. Edit: It's also very frustrating that people will reject ideas or theories based on their own inability to understand them. As in "that's way too complicated for me to wrap my brain around, therefore I'm going to stick with what I already think, because it makes more sense to me". Mental laziness does not have to equate to ignorance or being closed minded. Its OK to accept that you don't fully comprehend something yet still accept the possibilty of it being true. Didn't a wise man once say "He who knows not, and knows not that he knows not, is a fool"?
@@davidschwartz6380 no actually. Not at all. My beliefs are based in science. An area of study that requires proof, repeatability and predictability of a hypothesis
I think most of the time ,children who are born into religious households are indoctrinated and even when the science is staring them in the face they still believe that mumbo-jumbo, sad really and big business
This is really good stuff. Beautiful voice, beautiful thoughts, beautiful observations. I’ve passed this site several times and regret not investigating sooner. Very enjoyable and insightful.
I was born in Oldham, probably at the same hospital as Brian Cox, I breathed the same air and walked the same streets as him, and my daughter has shook the hand of the first man to land on the moon, yes, I,m feeling a little bit special today.
Lol!..I concur,with me its lack of concentration,I need still surroundings,you correct, book get special attention and stimulates memory bank...audio its like listening to a story..books always win!mos def..
Synopsis The nation's favourite scientist looks at the origins of life in our Universe. For somehow the laws of nature conspired to create a naked ape that can look up at the stars and wonder where it came from. For as long as humans have walked the Earth we have searched for our place in the cosmos. We have looked to the heavens and the Earth and to the precious nature of human life. But perhaps most importantly of all, we have driven ourselves to do something that is, as far as we know, unique in the Universe. We ask questions. Source: www.lovereading.co.uk/book/12921/Human-Universe-by-Brian-Cox-Andrew-Cohen.html
Wonderful book. I agree that our milky way has lots of life, but it is going to be mostly pond scum. We will find out with the Webb telescope. If we find Freon in an atmosphere we will know at least the DuPonts are home. I suspect the jump to intelligent life is an extremely rare event. It took an incredible number of lucky breaks for it to happen on earth, like having just the right kind of moon. Having just the right kind of stressors that drove evolution toward intelligence. We are likely unique in our galaxy, though perhaps not Devine. Atomic weapons are our great filter and we are there now in our short history. We must find a way to eliminate them or I think it is unlikely we will be around for thousands of years in the future. Every weapon created gets used. I read where our signals are only detectable out to 100 light years, so with a galaxy 250,000 light years wide, nobody is close enough to hear us or us them. Nicely done, good volume, pleasure listening to.
Irrational, but I feel proud to have the same surname as Brian Cox….this audiobook joins my go to repeatable listens….along with Bill Bryson….thank you very much
Actually narrators voice is fairly close to Brians.....Been a huge fan for as long as he has been broadcasting...He can explain so many concepts,in all sciences,in a very digestible manner.All his videos should be shown to students of ALL ages...no ego,very easy going and bright as hell....Cheers...He doesnt do anything half heartedly...!!!
Why does Brian Cox not read at least part of this. I like his Lancashire accent and really have enjoyed his videos on the TV. Which Andrew Cohen is this; there are several.
This Andrew Cox is currently heading the BBC's Science Unit, overseeing the substantial majority of their science-documentary content. When he was series Editor of the long-running Horizon show (from 2005 to 2010,) Cohen played an instrumental role in bringing Brian Cox to TV screens.
I’m listening to this great positive book beautifully written and narrated and wondering what he thinks of the world right now and how the space shuttle is doing because of another mad guy in Moscow
3;58;00 " we went to the stars and left them behind on the plateau eating grass " , left behind? how many in this " rat race " to the stars wouldn't be happier on a pristine hillside eating grass.i remember being happier as a kid when i thought the universe was infinite and time was forever .
2:29:15 through 2:30:02. "You're most welcome to go fetch it." Bloody brilliant narration. 2:30:28. Bookmark for myself, regarding the 21cm hydrogen line.
Thousands upon thousands of generations to produce the works of the audio addition of the human universe ends with a calming voice telling the story's of what could be of the future yet fairy tale like similarities of the truth of a fairy tale ending. The seeds in a vault is 7 and half hours of beautiful yet 1 comment to the end of the true ending to this audio of what sounds so beautiful and again what could be. The children of tomorrow towards the end with the vault in Norway collide so close together that takes the full 7 hours for them to meet at a very nice time. The only way your going to get your fairy tale ending is by listening to the works of the human universe audiobook and instead of dreaming of what could be, take action to get the children of tomorrow there in the world that has potential for such great promises (but)-yet the world I know around me and the people who run it that care for the children of tomorrow then the fairy tale continues in the comment sections....
Wow! How do i go about getting more audiobooks the Reader has voiced over?? Please, let us know so we can buy. Greatly, written and greatly read. Thank you!
Who are you and how did you get in my head but since your here ,would you like to join me in a... more stimulating dream,dont worry, ill talk you through it using his voice ;)
Brian Cox is fantastic. However, applying the scientific method to the history of Science would be an improvement. I. E. Understand that Shukuk is Cartesian Doubt. Then ask why Coppernicis and Galileo learned in similar geographical place.
The particle doth protest too much! For starters, it's written ie. (note lower case letters, followed by a period). Then there's the gentleman's name, Copernicus, spelled like that. Let's leave the grammar for another day. Bidding the particular to the particler! (see what I did there!)😋
@@robertthomas4234 Google "i.e." and "what is grammar, what is spelling?"...... Copernicus is a foreign name. Misspelling that one foreign name, doesn't constitute the generalised statement that my "spelling is poor". Not that your claim matters to me at all, nor whether I am wrong. If you do double check, and change your original claim, you will be exercising Cartesian doubt (Shukuk) upon your own original hypothesis. 🙂
I just need to add that hearing about this goldi lock zone is abit inaccurate.. how is the amount of planets in a stars system not calculated aswell as each of there cores and masses with atmospheres etc also a stars asteroid belts if it has 1 or 2 not thought about with the goldi lock zone of our planet being the example of one. when our star is very unique to it's planets and especially our planet being very unique to it's neighbours and it's self.. each and every element and what makes up the planets and stars is not going to give you a goldi lock zone you can work with which I'm just trying to say.. expand it 🤕
set speed t .75 , guy talks to fast , open a 2nd [3rd] tab with flute music or nature/woods sounds or both on lower volume. sometimes i like to put wind on a lower vol. in the backround , depends on the narrator .
I was going along pretty good until the author revealed that he apparently thinks cricket and wine tasting are more interesting than, say, music. Seriously? I mean, hockey, even...
@@michaelkingsbury4305 baseball? We have a children's game like that called rounders. Cricket is way more complicated. All that vocabulary, silly mid on, googlies etc and thats without the rules on play. And then there is tea.
Yes. I noticed that. But this isnt the 1st pandemic after all. 1918 flu from the US (only the non warring Spanish were not prevented from reporting it hence its common name of Spanish fku) is only the last one.
Brian, you’ve managed to propagate the myth that consciousness will ‘emerge’ from complexity. No, it is not a matter of the number of neurones, it is a matter of structure also, so your words were just cautious enough to pass muster, but just also on the border of being wrong.
Very good, but incomplete and rather colonial in its narrative, totally ignoring pre european cosmology from India, the models and equations by several indian mathematicians, etc- rather typical
Lied down to fall asleep listening to this at 23.30 it now 01.46. Time to have something to eat and then try again. This is so facinating.
Me to..
I love that Brian Cox sprinkles in Monty Python references in a few places!!!
I thought so! at first i dismissed this as a coincidence
What a wonderful book! Thank you for sharing this vehicle in which to carry my brain/mind from the unrest and craziness of our world right now…
Parallax 37:08 how to measure planets 39:47 21cm hydrogen line 2:06:56 drakes equation 2:16:19 2:51:24 carbon isotopes 3:08:12 first evidences of life 3:15:02 oxygenic photosynthesis 3:17:05 two main prerequisites for development of multicellular life on Earth 3:18:17 axio procession 4:07:16 ISS formulas newton 4:51:14 12known particles 5:19:02 the sun 5:55:54 quantum theory 6:04:56inflationary cosmology 6:16:42 suns fusion 7:05:40
c 6:52:00 inflation to Big Bang 6:11:10
What a beautyfully optimistic book.
... and yet, looking around, i do not have any hope for mankind.
Only life itself will prevail, and maybe that's a positiv future for this planet . . .
Thx for uploading never the less !☯️
We have to hope like in times before, there’s progress to be made.
We must hope that art and music and philosophy and poetry are able to bring about the 21st century Age of Enlightenment!!!
You seem to want to prove your point by having never learned to spell or master grammar (if English isn’t your first language, I apologize).
The idea of the future of our planet depends on your timeframe. If your horizon is defined by your own average lifetime, there’s plenty of hope for mankind (as a whole). However, our planet and solar system have a limited timeframe. The future of mankind depends on humanity’s ability to find a new home that has everything we need to survive and develop the technology to get there. Not undoable given enough time.
@@David-Gerard Better hope the success of your life is not predicated on not being a dick
An amazing and fascinating video, not just about science, but about philosophy.
This is a great book written in a superb style and with admirable poise. The reader is excellent. The whole thing is a jewel.
Amen.
Agreed
Enjoying it now in 2020 Australia from an optic fibre NBN
I a listening now for the first time, as it's got great review on here.
XxbwbcvvWCXclbxWWxcwVVvnvCwvcwXwnvxXwxxxx De ccxcwxXv ml ccwWxxwxxwXwnVXsBcbncwxwvvbwWVwVnxwvswv FF bwx by. No. xvwvlNnvcnnnVNwcvwsnXwwNwwNncbCxxncvwvvXxwXWcbcc. WbxC CD vw FF vlbbXx ccscCbxxx de BccxxXnVxnXVxbXvBvVxxxwcvvvBbcwbbxxncncnXCnWcwcccWcwCwcwcwcbbxXCxvWcvnnBbvvxvxxxxwl😢evarr41? I Mac utaya🎉BBLcBVBcxXbxbbvxXvwxnbx my l by NLNnNxxXCXxxxxXxxxxXvcxxnxxxwxxXXBBBxxxXxxxxXwxvhip 😮🎉😂😢🎉😂😊 tu😅r❤😢r😢😅😅😊😊😊😂 N. C no up ok O myi
Pfimfppf con mill kmmk cooking p😢p😢😢😮wpw😮😮😢😢😮 of a w. T😮😮 😮😮😮😅😢😢😮w x 😮. Gracias 😢wf sq Zuni 😮 un 😮I ja 😮😮nb😮😮😮😮😮bu
Very 😢. Vann bb BBC
I love an expansive study of us with prose and hard science. What a great and thought provoking read! Congrats. I’ll be buying the book.
Beautifully written and performed.
Beautiful. A masterpiece. Let's hope we can take on board the wisdom offered and learn to love this planet, eachother and ourselves more. We need it. Bless.
Every time i listen to Gagarin speech i get very emotional in a good way
Its called horny, you're getting horny
Ya think we could have got DT to make a speech like that?.....Nah!
Thank You...Incredibly Smart, Beautiful Human, Brian. 💗🌟
Blown away by his depth of knowledge, poetry of expression and ability to hold me fast for hours in the middle of the night til exhaustion reigned stronger. Been a fan since WONDERS IF THE UNIVERSE....gotta get the BOOK!
Just amazing! Had so many goosebumps while listening to this masterpiece. Thanks a lot for uploading it for free!!
Goosebumps? Turn up the heating then.
A jolly, well written, brilliantly read, but very simplistic essay on mankind. A refreshing change to the normal fare. The thing is it's a bit waffley. You don't actually learn anything or hear anything new of interest until about four hours in. Worth listening to. Charming even.
Surely what any listener gets out of listening to this or any science book will depend on what they bring to it. A person just setting out on the science journey will find much here that's rewarding and insightful. Whether it's simplistic or not is all relative to the knowledge base of the listener. Hooray for books that simplify things! Otherwise, we'd all need PhD's to make sense of the science.
What did you learn after 4 hours in?
As a "born again" atheist, I lament the fact that I cannot just encapsulate these core ideas in a nutshell, (so to speak), and share them with the creationists that seem to surround me.
Part of me thinks that I can't, because I'm not SMART enough to even fully grasp all the concepts, (at this time in my life at least). *More likely I am just too lazy mentally, to do the work required to understand and CONVEY(!!) it all (I mean, who has the wherewithal to sit around and discuss this for hours ~days?~ on end??) And still another part of me knows that if someone has chosen to blindly believe the dogmas of their chosen religion, the chance of them changing their whole worldview based on new information presented, is practically ZERO.
It's just amazing that despite all of the evidence (scientific/logical/other) that currently EXISTS, so many people continue to cling to what is familiar to them, all in the name of comfort.
For myself, I have always preferred to know the TRUTH of a situation, even if it's not as romantic or comforting than the alternative.
Edit: It's also very frustrating that people will reject ideas or theories based on their own inability to understand them. As in "that's way too complicated for me to wrap my brain around, therefore I'm going to stick with what I already think, because it makes more sense to me".
Mental laziness does not have to equate to ignorance or being closed minded. Its OK to accept that you don't fully comprehend something yet still accept the possibilty of it being true. Didn't a wise man once say "He who knows not,
and knows not that he knows not, is a fool"?
@MoonLandingAgain ....is not your beliefs regarding religions n religious beliefs dogmatic as well?
It’s difficult to comprehend why, in the third decade of the twenty first century, people are still worshiping gods.
@@davidschwartz6380 no actually. Not at all. My beliefs are based in science. An area of study that requires proof, repeatability and predictability of a hypothesis
I think most of the time ,children who are born into religious households are indoctrinated and even when the science is staring them in the face they still believe that mumbo-jumbo, sad really and big business
This is really good stuff. Beautiful voice, beautiful thoughts, beautiful observations. I’ve passed this site several times and regret not investigating sooner. Very enjoyable and insightful.
I’m from Oldham and you Brian cox and sir winston Churchill are the two best things to happen to our little slice of heaven 🌍
Love this im also from Oldham 👍🏻
I was born in Oldham, probably at the same hospital as Brian Cox, I breathed the same air and walked the same streets as him, and my daughter has shook the hand of the first man to land on the moon, yes, I,m feeling a little bit special today.
Me too! It's a small world... except for ur daughter part... mine was my second cousin
I love it how you can almost hear brians voice...what a clever chap
He's sanctimonious and conceited
@@bry1050 off ya jog...
@@bry1050 He's an intelligent man with a gentle manner. Sanctimonious is a common retort by anti-intellectuals.
Best thing on UA-cam for a long timh
Love this book. Great listen to relax and go to sleep.
Book to buy and enjoy reading. I can mark the place where I stop in a book. I fall asleep to audio books and keep listening to the same bit. 🤭
Lol!..I concur,with me its lack of concentration,I need still surroundings,you correct, book get special attention and stimulates memory bank...audio its like listening to a story..books always win!mos def..
Me too
Humanity at its highest.
Put this into our classrooms. And make the grown ups attend with their children
Synopsis
The nation's favourite scientist looks at the origins of life in our Universe.
For somehow the laws of nature conspired to create a naked ape that can look up at the stars and wonder where it came from.
For as long as humans have walked the Earth we have searched for our place in the cosmos.
We have looked to the heavens and the Earth and to the precious nature of human life.
But perhaps most importantly of all, we have driven ourselves to do something that is, as far as we know, unique in the Universe.
We ask questions.
Source: www.lovereading.co.uk/book/12921/Human-Universe-by-Brian-Cox-Andrew-Cohen.html
Wonderful book. I agree that our milky way has lots of life, but it is going to be mostly pond scum. We will find out with the Webb telescope. If we find Freon in an atmosphere we will know at least the DuPonts are home. I suspect the jump to intelligent life is an extremely rare event. It took an incredible number of lucky breaks for it to happen on earth, like having just the right kind of moon. Having just the right kind of stressors that drove evolution toward intelligence. We are likely unique in our galaxy, though perhaps not Devine. Atomic weapons are our great filter and we are there now in our short history. We must find a way to eliminate them or I think it is unlikely we will be around for thousands of years in the future. Every weapon created gets used. I read where our signals are only detectable out to 100 light years, so with a galaxy 250,000 light years wide, nobody is close enough to hear us or us them. Nicely done, good volume, pleasure listening to.
Thank you for the upload
Irrational, but I feel proud to have the same surname as Brian Cox….this audiobook joins my go to repeatable listens….along with Bill Bryson….thank you very much
And Anything by Richard Dawkins
Beautiful!
Thank You... and greatly appreciated.
Thank you for your time
I am thoroughly loving this Book
Lol I do not listen to audiobooks on UA-cam but the mere apoearance of being bookish is enough to hold at bay any creationist trolls .
Excellent thoughts and great vison!
I want listen this with Brian Cox's beutiful voice.
Yes, that would be ideal. This narrator is super, though! So full of life and enthusiasm.
You and his voice should get a room...
Actually narrators voice is fairly close to Brians.....Been a huge fan for as long as he has been broadcasting...He can explain so many concepts,in all sciences,in a very digestible manner.All his videos should be shown to students of ALL ages...no ego,very easy going and bright as hell....Cheers...He doesnt do anything half heartedly...!!!
Why does Brian Cox not read at least part of this. I like his Lancashire accent and really have enjoyed his videos on the TV. Which Andrew Cohen is this; there are several.
This Andrew Cox is currently heading the BBC's Science Unit, overseeing the substantial majority of their science-documentary content. When he was series Editor of the long-running Horizon show (from 2005 to 2010,) Cohen played an instrumental role in bringing Brian Cox to TV screens.
Bruno believed in a Nullo centric universe, an universe in which any point may be considered the center as any other
Excellent job. The (audio) book is very well written and the reader is very well spoken.
@@DevotedFather No it isn't!
Thks for the upload
And put on some joy division and open a bottle of cheap cider! Bless em.
4:07:57 how axial procession manifests itself
3:21:15 what’s oxygen evolving complex ?
2:52:11 moons spin axis
the narrator is Samuel West!
Thank you for this.
BEAUTIFUL!!!
Anyone else indulging this audiobook after watching Sci-man Dan?
What's not to like about this? Why the thumbs down?
Creationists that think Gawwwd did it all 6000 years ago.
I love the monty-pythonesque references to the Inquisition (which nobody expects).
i did not expect that
Ahhhh... I wish this was read by Briannnnn
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I’m listening to this great positive book beautifully written and narrated and wondering what he thinks of the world right now and how the space shuttle is doing because of another mad guy in Moscow
Excellent
3;58;00 " we went to the stars and left them behind on the plateau eating grass " , left behind? how many in this " rat race " to the stars wouldn't be happier on a pristine hillside eating grass.i remember being happier as a kid when i thought the universe was infinite and time was forever .
Makes me cry 😢 it’s so beautiful 😊how are you so good at this? Narrator, it captures me 🙂👍💛
Enjoying this audio. And the comments. What does the frequent posting of a series of numbers resembling a time mean? No words, just numbers.
Chort Vozmite they are book marks. So can return where they left off.
Timestamps and/or personal bookmarks
"Oldham looks like Joy Division sounds"
Has the Oldham Tourist Board monetised this slogan?
What Billy said with spite I say with conviction.
Any god that rewards and punish is a god i want no traffic with none seems too petty for anything that's capable of creating the laws of physics
Narrated by Samuel West
TOP NOTCH!
2:29:15 through 2:30:02. "You're most welcome to go fetch it."
Bloody brilliant narration.
2:30:28. Bookmark for myself, regarding the 21cm hydrogen line.
Thousands upon thousands of generations to produce the works of the audio addition of the human universe ends with a calming voice telling the story's of what could be of the future yet fairy tale like similarities of the truth of a fairy tale ending. The seeds in a vault is 7 and half hours of beautiful yet 1 comment to the end of the true ending to this audio of what sounds so beautiful and again what could be. The children of tomorrow towards the end with the vault in Norway collide so close together that takes the full 7 hours for them to meet at a very nice time. The only way your going to get your fairy tale ending is by listening to the works of the human universe audiobook and instead of dreaming of what could be, take action to get the children of tomorrow there in the world that has potential for such great promises (but)-yet the world I know around me and the people who run it that care for the children of tomorrow then the fairy tale continues in the comment sections....
What?
Wow! How do i go about getting more audiobooks the Reader has voiced over?? Please, let us know so we can buy. Greatly, written and greatly read. Thank you!
The narrator is the wonderful actor Samuel West.
Who is the narrator? He's brilliant
It's Samuel West, I think.
Or Michael Sheen?
Samuel West. Michael Sheen is Welsh!
David Kipper phd. is his name
My head hurts......
Interesting theories.
thank you!
Was the only one lost at 5:23.00 hrs when he ran off the math formulary?
No you weren't the only one. I'm going to buy the book just so I can see the formula and maybe calculate it for myself.
6:40:05 bookmark
Poetic scientist.
Bookmark 35:00
Does anyone know who the narrator is? I've got a few audio "videos in a playlist with him reading but it never says who he is!
Samuel west
Bookmark @9:25
9 minutes? You could only do 9 minutes?
@@acetate909 lmao
Bookmark 02:39:00
2:30. Chapter 1. The get down.
Man,... That's a great voice ya got there. Is it real? Is any of this real?
No matter... I'll enjoy it just the same. 😊
Who knows? You could be a brain in a jar
@@timmy18135 like on Futurama??? God I hope not. I was hoping for a layered existence, ya know... Men in Black style.
Jude Law, narrator
Who are you and how did you get in my head but since your here ,would you like to join me in a... more stimulating dream,dont worry, ill talk you through it using his voice ;)
@Jay Leno Yikes! You really took that up a notch. Is that how "woke" thinking works?
2:32. Chapter 1: Where Are We?
28:57-29:07 The story of my life 😭😂
3:43:53
1:03:55 an hour a day
30:00
Brian Cox is fantastic. However, applying the scientific method to the history of Science would be an improvement. I. E. Understand that Shukuk is Cartesian Doubt. Then ask why Coppernicis and Galileo learned in similar geographical place.
Mr Boson, your spelling is poor.
@@robertthomas4234 I think the term you are searching for is grammar 🤔
The particle doth protest too much! For starters, it's written ie. (note lower case letters, followed by a period). Then there's the gentleman's name, Copernicus, spelled like that. Let's leave the grammar for another day. Bidding the particular to the particler! (see what I did there!)😋
@@robertthomas4234 Google "i.e." and "what is grammar, what is spelling?"...... Copernicus is a foreign name. Misspelling that one foreign name, doesn't constitute the generalised statement that my "spelling is poor". Not that your claim matters to me at all, nor whether I am wrong. If you do double check, and change your original claim, you will be exercising Cartesian doubt (Shukuk) upon your own original hypothesis. 🙂
2:21:09 WOW Signal, Drake Equation prior
1:51:03 ch 2 Are we alone
I just need to add that hearing about this goldi lock zone is abit inaccurate.. how is the amount of planets in a stars system not calculated aswell as each of there cores and masses with atmospheres etc also a stars asteroid belts if it has 1 or 2 not thought about with the goldi lock zone of our planet being the example of one. when our star is very unique to it's planets and especially our planet being very unique to it's neighbours and it's self.. each and every element and what makes up the planets and stars is not going to give you a goldi lock zone you can work with which I'm just trying to say.. expand it 🤕
💚💛❤️🌱
is ist possible to have this with less compression? it sounds terrible... with all the artefacts
Buy it.
You can!
set speed t .75 , guy talks to fast , open a 2nd [3rd] tab with flute music or nature/woods sounds or both on lower volume. sometimes i like to put wind on a lower vol. in the backround , depends on the narrator .
I was going along pretty good until the author revealed that he apparently thinks cricket and wine tasting are more interesting than, say, music. Seriously? I mean, hockey, even...
Cricket (or Baseball) and Whiskey tasting may be equal, but better? Show me the data, Brain Cox.
@@michaelkingsbury4305 baseball? We have a children's game like that called rounders. Cricket is way more complicated. All that vocabulary, silly mid on, googlies etc and thats without the rules on play. And then there is tea.
Mark 1:12:00
33:33
You can't put a atom in a box but you can put the Sun in one.
3:53:15 Early Man
Hello
3:37:07 did i hear pandemic disease , i bet he was not sure what he was talking
Yes. I noticed that. But this isnt the 1st pandemic after all. 1918 flu from the US (only the non warring Spanish were not prevented from reporting it hence its common name of Spanish fku) is only the last one.
@@helenamcginty4920 i know about that
Jude Law, narrator
No it's not. It's Samuel West
I hear Benedict Cumberbatch, and like it very much!
Smith Kevin Martinez Edward Lopez Michael
Ads ruin oit.
5:58:28 million million million
Brian, you’ve managed to propagate the myth that consciousness will ‘emerge’ from complexity.
No, it is not a matter of the number of neurones, it is a matter of structure also, so your words were just cautious enough to pass muster, but just also on the border of being wrong.
Giordano
Pronounced
Jor-Dah-no
I view the Big Bang sort of like a cataclysmically massive fart. 😂
You have a brilliant future as a truely awful comic.
@@coyoteboy5601
And you have a future as the last place winner of the easiest spelling bee. Yeesh. 🤦♂️
3:43
Martin Amy Rodriguez Helen Miller Kevin
1:51:02 alliens
Very good, but incomplete and rather colonial in its narrative, totally ignoring pre european cosmology from India, the models and equations by several indian mathematicians, etc- rather typical