Richard Feynman - The.Character of Physical Law - Part 1 The Law of Gravitation (full version)
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- Опубліковано 26 січ 2011
- Richard Feynman (full version)
Lectures at Cornell - The.Character of Physical Law -
Part 1 The Law of Gravitation (full version) - Наука та технологія
This is one of the reasons that youtube is incredible.
t3knology1 Totally agree.
t3knology1 177/2
wrong, !!!!!!!! youtube is "BLOATED" with irrelevant, old, "stuff". pay attention !
Love it and hate it it ultimately this is inarguably the zenith of free and open knowledge.
Indeed!! This is awesome!!
Opened accidentally.Ended up seeing the whole lecture.
Harsh Bhardwaj regrets?
totally worth it
5:59 if you wish to skip to the part where Feynman begins the lecture.
+Berzeger People that do this deserve a handshake. You did the right thing.
I'll find you and I'll marry you.
S. Ananth Karthikeyan i'll find you and i'll marry you?
Mary qp it's supposed to express my gratitude. :)
S. Ananth Karthikeyan understood 👍🏾 Thank you
Can listen to this all day but cannot sit even 1 minute in peace in my own class.
#Covid is a strawman built on the 83 yr avg BabyBoomer Bust lifecycle.
First wave of BabyBoomers is 75.
Second wave of BabyBoomer deaths due to influenza pneumonia "Covid" will be 75 and 76.
#ClimateChange is caused by the Milankovitch cycles not the co2 Strawman
i hear you!!
I've had some professors that really didn't seem to be all too enthused in their field. Maybe they were and just didn't know how to communicate it.
Progressing towards real understanding in a given topic of interest can often be euphoric.
Most of school/university tends to serve as exposure and accelerated practice for tools/established techniques.
This can be very frustrating when one personally values and seeks out meaningful understanding over competency.
Although time is limited during school, try to use it for what it is, exposure and skill building. Furthermore, time willing, use that exposure as jumping off points for exploration of your understanding.
Though this takes time and can be arduous, I find that as meaningful understanding is developed, less and less direct "tool practice" is needed to effectively solve problems (depending on how heavily your teacher relates evaluates test/homework problems to their own personal style of understanding).
That's common
I can't express enough my admiration to this guy. He has all the traits that I consider precious. Intelligence, innocence, playful, and communicative. He is obviously smarter than most of us, but I don't feel distant, but feel the charm of his intelligence and his humor toward physics and life. I think Einstein is also funny and witty, unfortunately I can't find any video Einstein taught. Mr. Feynman, you are a fine man.
I wonder if he believed in God? Did he believe in Alien Life? Seriously....
This man just explained Kepler's 2nd law better in,3 minutes, than any textbook I've ever read.
"Tide goes in, tide goes out. Never a miscommunication. You can't explain that. You can't explain why the tide goes in.”
-- Bill O' Reilly
I like how the crowd laughs when he describes that ancient theory about the tides, and then moments later he points out that it was partially true.
Armageddon yeah. It reminds me of the subtle manipulation involved with the kind of humor you get in a stand up routine. It's a wonderful way to introduce certain ideas in such a way that the idea will stick in the person's mind; their expectations of where he was going with that were for the most part thrown to the side. When something surprises you it always seems to be the thing that is better remembered.
Listen, the only person who really knows how tides work is Bill O'Reilly. 🙄
It almost feels disingenuous to take the first shot at all. The ancients were pretty much correct... why did he feel the need to throw them under the bus?
"Nature uses only the longer threads to weave her patterns, so that each small piece of her fabric, reveals the organization of the entire tapestry." RPF
He manages to be so entertaining when presenting such difficult ideas, as with all the best teachers he uses humour as a teaching aid.
+PassiveSmoking Not sure who said it, maybe professor Feynman himself..."If you cannot explain a thing simply, you do not understand that thing."
+pop9095 the did say that, though I'm not sure if he was quoting someone else
"If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough." is a quote from Albert Einstein. It's not hard to google things guys.
Bradley Certainly not, when exactly who originally said a thing is important. It was not to me, therefore 0 giveash!t. You dig?
Feynman was such a brilliant educator.
Stone cold. I was compelled to recall the Fibonacci spiral and the fractal nature of existence as Dr Feynman said "Nature only uses the longest threads to weave her patterns so each small piece of her fabric reveals the entire organization of her tapestry".
I saw these in the late 70's or early 80's one summer in the Physics department at the University of Oklahoma. They were on 16mm. I spent a couple of days in a storage room just absorbed by this excellent series.
Science simplified, only a super genius like Feynman can come down to this level to explain so simply. He definitely was unpretentious. What a man!
I do not have a word in my vocabulary to compliment this guy with.
That wouldn't be a problem, if you had a dictionary.
Faareh Khan That's a possibility, but I still think it will be tough to describe Richard Feynman in one word. Very tough.
How about Brilliant? :)
irreplaceable
Fantastic!
At 50:50 he says : what does gravity look like on a small scale ? Well, we now understand it better with the discovery of this week with the observation of gravitational waves. Physic is awesome !
That's not a quantum theory of gravity
As an 8th grade student, I can honestly say that I understood everything he stated. The things that I didn't know, I figured out. Not with the internet but with the lecture, the way he describes things and how he uses them, i figured out. It's amazing how he speaks, it wasn't boring at all and it was easy to understand because of the way he spoke and how he keeps the class entertained as well as educated. You go Mr. Feynman
im from 9th grade and i also understood Feynman, the way he explains things that are obviously complex is explendid and very clear
I'm look at me and tell me how cool I am.
> As an 8th grade student, I can honestly say that I understood everything
If you are still on this account I can give you some advice. Almost everyone who hears Ferynman *thinks* he understands everything. Then the next day he cannot get a few of the links between the ideas. Because Feynman doesn't show carefully the links.
My advice to you is to not by discouraged. Everyone who listens to Feynman has this experience. Worlds of ideas are opened to you and then you have to rediscover some of the doors to it.
CrushOfSiel I'm and I'm threatened by people who know more than me.
We need more people to be enthused and excited by physics, so don't be a douche.
I have a BS in Physics and I'm about to start grad school. I think I'm enthused enough. I'm just tired of prepubescent people touting their age all over the place. The "like" generation needs to get over themselves a bit.
Also, one of the largest articles about two weeks ago on Physicsforms.com was about how we're training too many, and most agreed. I don't think we are having a shortage.
An inimitable man. I can understand the appeal of populist "educators" like Tyson but we need another Feynman.
I'm a simple man. I see Feynman, I click "like".
In 2023 Watching This masterpiece 💫
PHYSICS IS 💕
The mathematical representation of the Kepler's laws of planetary motion becomes so easy after watching Feynman's lecture! Teachers like him are so rare to find nowadays!
They were back then rare too. Things didn't change that much
The value of these videos can not be understated. Many, many thanks.
Thanks UA-cam and up-loader, for all these rare lectures, amazing, I feel like I'm in the classroom.... and to listen to him is quite an experience....
He was a great man. A perfect role model for everyone
+Aastha Kapoor I struggle with the fact that he's my favorite Physicist, but he was still sexist as the next guy back then. :(
+Aastha Kapoor How much of what he said could you repeat after the lecture, and understand? Because I find him very difficult to listen to. Teaching is the most important thing in the world, and its done so badly across borders, across history. I think R.F is no exception. Education is the passing on of understanding. Popularity doesn't change that. Perhaps there is something wrong with me.
+cognosc surely teaching is like painting a canvas which could be made beautiful by a good teacher only if the student has the perfect canvas for absorbing the colors. It is the duty of student to prepare the clean and open mind which can be shaped by his master.
You make a good point, and you said it very nicely :) I wouldn't disagree with that.
+rajesh kumar nayak i agree with you, i would just like to add a nuance.
your comment seems to imply that the teacher and the student have equal responsibility in the learning process. i would say that perhaps the teacher should embrace a bigger part of the responsibility, say by teaching the student about this mindset and the importance of being the perfect canvas.
now obviously a similar argument can be made for the student, but i think when you consider the conditions of our world right now, where most students have forgotten the real goals of education, it makes more sense to put the responsibility on the shoulders of the teacher, even if admittedly this isnt completely fair to them.
I am professional painter/photographer and love Richard Faynman's lectures. I have much admiration and respect for him.
A film of Feynman's life casting Hanks as him needs to be done.
Feynman played the rôle best:
ua-cam.com/video/LyqleIxXTpw/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/eqtuNXWT0mo/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/GNhlNSLQAFE/v-deo.html
Et cetera.
no, not Tom Hanks,,,would have been Art Carney to best portray him
Hanks is a psycho. That's why he's a good actor. Psycho tool of the establishment.
mope, Tom Hanks can not act.
@Liberty AboveAllElse that's your Trump...not Tom
Feynman's lecture starts at 6:10 for those interested in skipping the introduction.
This was a long time ago, but Feynman is timeless.
feynman starts talking at 6:00
Lmao thank you
^v^
Thank you😁 you saved me from multiple double clicks on the screen
You can do 5:50 to see the Title text overlay as well.
The intro was quite funny
A brilliant educator. You would want to study any subject that he happened to be professor of.
I don't know. His advice on how to pick up women while factually correct in many ways is not how I prefer to operate.
@@wingracer1614 Then, again, he only adapted an existing algorithm and tested it against reality, so it was hardly an original theory of women libidodynamics in external fields of excitation by Feynman.
Thank you for a rare and valuable video. I'm so happy to be able to see this.
Thank you for this upload.
I'd love to have this subtitled to show to some of my friends.
Such a charismatic speaker, love watching him.
Thanks so much for posting this.
소중한 영상 감사합니다 ^^
it was amazing the way he exposed facts and made relationships between phenomena
Amazing introduction!
Thank you so much Richard Feynman.
So happy to find these lectures, one can't get enough of Feynman :)
thanks god i can watch this video anytime, anywhere even so many years after this lecture has been given. Feynman is a great source of inspiration
Fascinating lecture. You learn something everyday.
I love watching this guy work.
Simply put, this is spectacular
I am Jamaican and i can say thank you for recording these videos. Truly inspirational
Watch out for coconuts falling.
Hey!?
This is how you teach. You turn it into a story. Incredible teacher. Watch what he did to expose the fault of the Challenger disaster amongst the political BS, he used a simple example that everyone can understand that couldn't be argued with.
Thank you so much for posting this
@SevenSevenSevenaka
You're the man! Thank you so much for all these wonderful lectures.
Why do these start off like an 80s horror movie? Those bells man!
+James Williams I can tell you're looking forward to your wedding.
It's a carillon, probably playing the University's song. Can anyone confirm the identity of the tune, please?
You are right. It is Cornell's "Alma Mater" song.
This goes along with his published lectures extremely well i wish these presentations were available for each chapter that would be too good to be true. It would be absolutely Mazin.
All the illustrations on the slides are exactly the ones used in the reading. If he could have jus done a video on the chapters going over electromagnetic radiation that wouldve been great.
Thanks a lot for uploading this!!
thanks a lot for the people who shared this valuable videos.
Thank you very much for uploading this! You've no doubt helped inspire the next generations of physicists.
“Nature uses only the longest threads to weave her patterns, so each small piece of her fabric reveals the organization of the entire tapestry.” Richard Faynman. (Love that.)
Interesting
Thank you for showing us such a great teacher!
Excellent lecture!
I've listened to this many times over the years. I listened to this wonderful lecture again today. Thank you for being a great teacher Mr. Feynman. The greatest of all time. The Ayrton Senna of physics. Because champion
Champion's champion
They don't teach physics in Brasil!
me too. I've a question for you:
Do you remember all the key parts of all those lectures?
Because I don't and I hate not being able to remember all of it. And if you don't rember it either, then I can extent to all us human have shitty memory.
Whyy not ?
Everyone should watch this first lecture at least,its amazing how he explains it,the clarity of thought is absolutely awesome.
Jarves Singh Agreed.
I've been waiting for at least the #3 Lecture of the Six Easy Pieces for years. It's the one that's titled - Physics as it Relates to the other Sciences. There's been a popular excerpt taken out of it at the end of about 42 minutes, as he recites about a one minute piece of poetry that Feynman has written and titled - the whole universe is in a glass of wine.
So good.This man embodys questions and answers.. Such a charismatic speaker, love watching him. .
The acceleraton is 32ft/sec per second. When taking the distance traveled, you have to keep in mind, acceleration is change in speed, not in distance. The first second after dropping something, the object's speed was 0ft/sec at first, then 32ft/sec at the end of 1 sec. So the average is directly in the middle, or 32/2 = 16ft/sec, multiply by 1 second, 16 feet.
This is a man who I can call "Oh! captain my captain".
alex3punto0 Indeed! It was wonderful hearing one of his last lectures on the mathematics of Quantum Chromodynamics at UCLA.
Lol, his first mate should be Julius Sumner Miller.... what a class that would be!!!
Feynman was a Funman
He had theories of the best way to pick up girls in bars! who couldn't love THAT guy?
So good.
This man embodys questions and answers.
Greatest teacher ever.
Essentially when looking at nature on the basis of its own implied units then the answer to life the universe and everything is likely to involve the number 42 --- So it took me starting down a second degree path to realise that I could have sacked it all off, stayed at home and cheerfully read some Douglas Adams FML
I thought perhaps this was where Adams got the idea of 42
The perfect circle he drew at 20:39
amazing lecture!
Thank you for this.
Excellent lecture. How can close caption be improved? It writes "couple" when it must say "Kepler"
And Ellipses to Phillips. Improving the captions will serve humanity in this instance.
Leaning towah 43:30
Very well worth watching.
muito instrutivo
muito obrigado
Perhaps I've been spoiled by HD audio, but... This could use a pass through a noise filter.
Other than that, this is an excellent lecture. Even the most boring subject will sound exciting when Feynman teaches it.
oddly i have envy towards this man
Thank you.
It would have been incredible to see one of Feynman's lectures in person
42
Mysterious indeed...
Bob Olsemann And there we go with the H2G2 references! Get your towels people!
He cuts through the arty farty crap like a hot knife through butter. Love it!
thanx for uploading
Wonderful !
Because of The Big Bang Theory I'll be watching everything recorded by this man,
Well, the administration was different.
How could anyone “thumbs down” this video?!?! Unbelievable. Feynman is a Superhero!
Cannot agree enough! Feynman was one of the best lecturers going as well as being an outstanding physicist.
Tom Hanks needs to do a film as Mr Feynman
Gimme gimme gimme gimme ORANGE JUICE ... gotta have - my - orange - juice!
Marvellous stuff! I loved every minute. I didn't know they existed.
Thank you for this and the next uploads ;-)
The mark of a good teacher is to inspire a sense of wonder in their student. Mr. Feynman makes me want to go out and explore the world for myself! So fascinating.
54 people dislike this. I can't comprehend disliking this.
Damn they had slides back then?
The carousel slide projector was patented in 1965, the same year as this lecture. Earlier forms of slide projections had been around for over 100 years at this point though. The first photographic lantern projector was made in 1848. Hand painted ones date back even more.
I love the introduction!!
This is amazing, Feynman's a great physicist
55 people accidentally clicked the dislike button
AnotherGlenn Hate it when that happens.
56 people don't understand that this is state of the art video and audio quality for the time.
AnotherGlenn The GOP...
Flerfers.
I was the 58th...
Feynman: do I attract you?
Me: you're a smart enough man to know the answer is yes
Lame
Good on you (: I hope you continue to have an interest in physics later into life. It's a wonderful and intriguing area, it makes you feel small, big, significant and insignificant all at once. It is a privilege to be able to study it.
Beautifully said :)
I hear Richard Feynman, but I see Adrian Monk
+Bill P it's so uncanny it actually makes me wonder if Tony Shalhoub somewhat modeled the character after him.
this monk...I'm not sure... Adrian Monk
Who was Adrian Monk? When we see Richard Feynman, most of us think of Richard Feynman.
only smart people watch these videos. :r
r/iamversmart
That perpetual motion joke was under appreciated. Damn
best lecture