THE FEYNMAN SERIES - Curiosity

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  • Опубліковано 1 жов 2011
  • Facebook - / thesaganseries
    Twitter - / reidgower
    G+ - bit.ly/VpHzQh
    The Sagan Series is an educational project working in the hopes of promoting scientific literacy in the general population. Created by @ReidGower / reidgower
    Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. All copyrighted materials contained herein belong to their respective copyright holders, I do not claim ownership over any of these materials. I realize no profit, monetary or otherwise, from the exhibition of these videos.
    BEAUTY - • THE FEYNMAN SERIES - B...
    HONOURS - • THE FEYNMAN SERIES - H...
    CREDITS
    MUSIC : Ludovico Einaudi - Primavera - itunes.apple.com/us/artist/lud...
    NARRATION: Richard Feynman - Take The World From Another Point Of View
    BBC The Great Rift - www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00mfldk
    Koyaanisqatsi - www.imdb.com/title/tt0085809/
    Microcosmos - www.imdb.com/title/tt0117040/
    BBC Life - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life_(BB...)
    Chronos - www.imdb.com/title/tt0088919/
    BBC Planet Earth - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planet_E...)
    BBC The Secret Life of Chaos - www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00pv1c3
    Wonders of the Universe - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wonders_...
    Trinity and Beyond - www.imdb.com/title/tt0114728/
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 678

  • @kazekage321414
    @kazekage321414 4 роки тому +93

    I used to listen to this video just before every single one of my physics tests as an undergrad. It always had a strange calming effect on me; I was inspired to not worry so much about my grade on the test, and instead try and think creatively about the problems I was given.
    It worked wonders for me personally, not only was my anxiety gone, but I would often receive extra points from my graders for the originality of my approach even if I made some small mistakes in getting to the final answer. Now that I'm doing my PhD I still come back to this video. It reminds me when I'm slogging through the grunt work of science to look at the bigger picture. I'm trying to find something out about the universe and there's something special, hell even awe-inspiring about that.
    Feynman was surreal, he's affected generations of scientists even after his death.

    • @Elrond_Hubbard_1
      @Elrond_Hubbard_1 3 роки тому +4

      I guess I've always loved science. In my high school years I did nothing but science and math classes. Then I went to university to do a BSc, and sadly, never finished. I work as an industrial electrician now. I really like my job, and it's very technical and satisfying in that sense, but I still have an unwavering love of science.
      You said Feynman inspired generations of scientists, but I want to add to that generations of regular ass, working class people too maybe. That tingle up the spine, thinking about the connectedness between me as a person and the living chemistry on this world and the larger universe beyond, governed by the properties of matter and energy on the tiniest scales - still gets me.
      Glad you went through with it like I didn't and got that physics PhD.
      I'm in my late 30's now - do you think I've still got tome to go back and become an astrophysicist?

    • @Hambxne
      @Hambxne 2 роки тому +4

      @@Elrond_Hubbard_1 You have more than enough time to go back to school. I just quit my job in commercial HVAC a little over 6 months ago to work on a startup and finally read and study content that has always interested me. So far it has been the best decision of my life.

    • @tuneboyz5634
      @tuneboyz5634 2 роки тому +3

      @@Elrond_Hubbard_1 man you're still young af
      go get that degree!

    • @Harsh-lq7xj
      @Harsh-lq7xj 2 роки тому

      It worked for me too

    • @amandac3362
      @amandac3362 Рік тому

      not sure if the tagged worked but I replied to your comment above^ your comment

  • @Jayme501
    @Jayme501 8 років тому +306

    This video inspired me to make a career in environmental science. Almost finished my degree

    • @AshishVaidya3
      @AshishVaidya3 8 років тому +5

      +Jayme501 Congratulations!

    • @1secrethuman175
      @1secrethuman175 7 років тому +12

      Don't stop asking questions brotha. :)

    • @donepearce
      @donepearce 7 років тому +2

      Why did you quit?

    • @zuzusuperfly8363
      @zuzusuperfly8363 7 років тому +13

      I used to listen to this as a Highschool student. I finished my physics degree in 2016 because while I was in highschool I listened to Richard Feynman and other material while I played splinter cell conviction with the sound off.

    • @pixelatedjordy6253
      @pixelatedjordy6253 7 років тому +2

      That's awesome :)

  • @antti9767
    @antti9767 9 років тому +127

    27 years ago we lost this great human being.

    • @JosephPetrow
      @JosephPetrow 9 років тому +7

      Antti Lehto Focus on his life. We are 3 years (actually less than that) away from his 100th birthday. :)

    • @baddog52
      @baddog52 9 років тому +1

      Antti Lehto TUVA ! !

    • @AlexanderZapataIndividual
      @AlexanderZapataIndividual 8 років тому +7

      +Antti Lehto lost?! Dont be silly. I am still here.

    • @esraeloh8681
      @esraeloh8681 7 років тому

      A century of Feynman, sounds nice

    • @pixelatedjordy6253
      @pixelatedjordy6253 7 років тому +7

      I also mark the loss of the likes of Feynman, Sagan.. my list could go on and on. I think the best thing we can do with their lives is find inspiration in them to try and build atop their work, lofty a goal as that may be. Carry their momentum forward. The world certainly needs this now more than ever.

  • @Renato404
    @Renato404 11 років тому +47

    "seek the company of those who are looking for the truth... and run from those who have found it."
    Václav Havel

  • @DeesBees85
    @DeesBees85 9 років тому +73

    This is one of the best videos on UA-cam.

    • @Renato404
      @Renato404 3 місяці тому

      In 2024 still😌

  • @PAPERSCHOOL
    @PAPERSCHOOL 10 років тому +42

    "but now we can make that fire, nuclear fire." *Shivers*

    • @CJMilsey
      @CJMilsey 10 років тому +13

      This man was one of the few whom determined how to produce said fire.

    • @MaxwellsWitch
      @MaxwellsWitch 6 років тому +3

      Nature is apathetic to how we use it.

  • @jiminylummox9352
    @jiminylummox9352 6 років тому +21

    'an investigation that the race is making into its own environment.'
    For me, this sentence sums up science as a whole.

  • @Dorkus89Malorkus
    @Dorkus89Malorkus 10 років тому +171

    It's so wonderful to hear but then 10mins later you're sitting there with a physics problem that you can't set up or a differential equation that you can't solve cursing at science :D.

    • @vedantchavda6197
      @vedantchavda6197 5 років тому +20

      Be as persistent as Feynman, and you'll get it.

    • @DuduRossetto
      @DuduRossetto 5 років тому +9

      I'm staring at a huge PCPS plot I've just made with 3 years worth of data I collected myself. I can't make any sense of it and I've been at it for 3 days. All I think right now is "fuck these biologists like me"

    • @sirius3333
      @sirius3333 4 роки тому +1

      Hahaha, fuck modeling, its pain in the ass.

    • @extreme4180
      @extreme4180 Рік тому +1

      But the chills we get after solving, the thinking, is not useless afterall

    • @dereklong2072
      @dereklong2072 Рік тому

      The answers are out there. Only waiting to be discovered. Find them.

  • @Irishkeyblade
    @Irishkeyblade 13 років тому +10

    Maybe I'm the only one but I have no shame in saying I cried while watching this.
    A truly beautiful representation of the universe

  • @kakan147
    @kakan147 4 роки тому +12

    Listening to Feynman motivates me and reminds me of the reason why I study science. Because of passion and curiosity. As soon as I finish my M.Sc in theoretical physics i will go for a Ph.D. and become a researcher, I can't see myself doing anything else.

    • @tuneboyz5634
      @tuneboyz5634 2 роки тому +2

      hello can u give us an update?

  • @davidq.1321
    @davidq.1321 7 років тому +34

    This man inspired me and is yet to inspire many others.

  • @pixelatedjordy6253
    @pixelatedjordy6253 7 років тому +51

    Easily my favorite youtube video. It never fails to inspire me when I'm feeling detached and disinterested in things for any reason at all.
    I wish more people could look at the world the way he did. He was a remarkable person.

    • @pixelatedjordy6253
      @pixelatedjordy6253 7 років тому +4

      What matters is all in context. When you make your context the whole universe, it then seems to me that everything matters rather than nothing.
      If one looks for purpose from a context outside this universe, such as a god or gods, or a reason for creation, there really isn't a lot to be expected. We are intrinsically incapable of fathoming that context, rendering it irrelevant to our sense of "matters" and therefore also inspiration.
      Context can also be scaled down, bringing out "smaller" elements that matter and can thus be sources of inspiration for action and thoughts.
      For example in the context of two people in an argument, the choice of words matters. Chosen words could predict the outcome: whether the argument ends amicably, disagreeably or even hostile. The odds of one person entertaining someone else's ideas also often hinges on phrasings. This is just one thing that "matters" in this context. There could be reverberating social consequences of the outcome depending on the situation. And so on.
      You can scale down even further. The actions of cells in one's body matter. They can decide between cancer or not cancer. We don't have a sophisticated approach for intervening in this currently, but one day our choice to detect and interfere when cells "decide" to create cancer will matter greatly to the patient.
      Everything matters down to the energy state of a single electron. That is but one entry in the vast list of things I learned largely because of the influence of Feynman on my life.

    • @tangoechobravo806
      @tangoechobravo806 7 років тому

      ain't that the truth jordy.

    • @amandac3362
      @amandac3362 Рік тому

      thank god we all can and do sfter watching and hearing this :) --you too when you remember--- me too when I remember--- Thank God we have this video recording to remind us --when we remember to do so :)

  • @dereklong2072
    @dereklong2072 Рік тому +3

    11 years later and less than a million views? This video is underappreciated.

  • @dav1sable
    @dav1sable 4 роки тому +2

    Still returning to Reids videos 5years later.

  • @padaku_parul
    @padaku_parul Рік тому +4

    I have no words to describe what I'm feeling right now just tears in my eyes and smile on my lips.
    Thanks for making these masterpieces, i found myself again.

  • @ranjannaiya7997
    @ranjannaiya7997 Рік тому +3

    Just Unforgettable i have nothing to say much about those speeches of Feynman. If you ever lost your meaning of life just pick-up a book of physics or mathematics 😊😊😊😊❤

  • @skyblazer7
    @skyblazer7 11 років тому +3

    People take too much for granted and are not 'awed' enough by what should 'awe' them. I recently did some layman investigation into proteins and their functions and relations to each other and I was just amazed...these tiny things, uncounted numbers of them, running around in your body, inside your cells and outside your cells, doing everything to keep you alive at this very moment.

  • @v3v
    @v3v 8 років тому +13

    For a physics nerd, he was some communicator. So much passion & eloquence. #FeynmanTheMan

    • @narek323
      @narek323 Рік тому

      Nerds have the best communication skills because of their higher verbal intelligence.

    • @Adhjie
      @Adhjie 11 місяців тому

      agree to me its steven pinker as a good orator (doing speech tho not as orator as kennedy from COD BO zombies); and other orators that i cant tell here.

  • @BipinOli90
    @BipinOli90 8 років тому +7

    its his curiosity that made him great.

  • @EVLork
    @EVLork 11 років тому +59

    If Feynman had been my high school physics teacher, i would have never wasted my university years studying law...

    • @11am
      @11am 4 роки тому +2

      I hope it was worth it for all it's worth

  • @twisted709
    @twisted709 7 років тому +12

    yet here i sit in my small world of anxiety

  • @darwinherrera8623
    @darwinherrera8623 3 роки тому +1

    Curiosity is a thirst that can never be quenched

  • @Adam-ui3yn
    @Adam-ui3yn 4 роки тому +3

    This sent chills throughout my entire body and puts me in a trance every time. I don't think I've ever experienced such strong emotions watching a video. I'm absolutely awestruck.

  • @pablobilbao386
    @pablobilbao386 7 місяців тому +1

    I used to watch this video constantly when I was a teenager, I am now on my last year of PhD in Physics, already writing the thesis. It has been a ride, but the fun just started, thanks for the inspiration.

  • @Jayme501
    @Jayme501 11 років тому +6

    Most inspirational piece of media in existence. I'm back for my weekly visit. thank you

  • @doubleja
    @doubleja 12 років тому +12

    I just had this experience the other day with my friend. He's openly admitted to being more interested in fiction than reality. I understand to some extent the pleasure in imagination, but just as Feynman said "the truth is so much more remarkable".

  • @blakeayee
    @blakeayee 9 років тому +65

    the fact that this only has 400k views and neil tyson has 8m veiws in sad. i know they were different times, but i cant help but think feynmans genius should be shared by everyone. neil tyson is good and all, but richard feynman is on another level

    • @apocalypticskepticus3299
      @apocalypticskepticus3299 7 років тому +4

      How about Oppa Gangham style having more than 2 billion... I have nothing against NDT having 8 million, if that is the alternative, but unfortunately it isn`t.

    • @writerteacher1
      @writerteacher1 6 років тому +6

      Tyson is following the example of Carl Sagan, not Feynman. A comparison is like apples and oranges. Tyson and even Sagan are not on the level of Feynman in terms of scientific accomplishment. Granted. Both also have contributed greatly to the public understanding of science. I'm grateful for all three.

    • @fourtrees44
      @fourtrees44 6 років тому +6

      The fact people follow Neil, Carl, or Richard are all good things. It doesn’t matter which one, they are all good to follow. Those that specialize more in the educational components are more likely to be followed, because that is their specialty. I wouldn’t use these three as any sense of competition, but rather that they are all good representatives of science. 😊

    • @jiminylummox9352
      @jiminylummox9352 6 років тому +1

      Another reason is simply the available technology in the time they were each alive. Feynman never really got to live in the internet age, so he never got to be on a million youtube vids like Tyson. All we have is TV interviews, but Feynman wasn't at all camera shy, I think if he were alive today he'd be doing BigThink interviews and TED talks.

    • @AvNotasian
      @AvNotasian 5 років тому

      Nobel prize winning physicist is more insightful than a celebrity scientist? Trivially true, but its better to have something than nothing.
      The talent you end up with reflects the talent and underlying conditions of society.

  • @ArbitraryxIntentions
    @ArbitraryxIntentions 9 років тому +5

    This puts my drive to understand everything into words far better than I could have.

  • @shivshankarpe
    @shivshankarpe 9 років тому +9

    Great music selection to go with the narration!

  • @MJ-mv3we
    @MJ-mv3we 7 років тому +5

    Ludovico and his Primavera fits great here.

    • @neolexiousneolexian6079
      @neolexiousneolexian6079 5 років тому

      Agreed
      (And the timing of those clips and paragraphs with the music is really well done too)
      *It has to do with curiosity...*
      *But it's curiosity as to what we are, where we are...*
      *And I can't- I have this disease...*
      *...that they've been able to convince governments and so on to keep supporting them in this investigation that the race is making...*

  • @mohdsadiqalzikry3399
    @mohdsadiqalzikry3399 6 років тому +1

    Thanks for making this video possible. I'm a big fan of Feynman, and I found this series a very accurate representation of Feynman's way of thinking.

  • @lovelyxskinny
    @lovelyxskinny 11 років тому

    Oh my, the music and the images along with those beautiful words by one of my idols just gives me such shivers!!!! Thank you to all who created this.

  • @Kewlpaul_
    @Kewlpaul_ 4 роки тому +1

    The way he explains things makes you start thinking more and more.

  • @aSmallGreenDot
    @aSmallGreenDot 8 років тому

    THIS IS SO BEAUTIFUL. one of the best videos ive ever seen. definitely the best inspirational one.

  • @ndmath
    @ndmath 6 років тому +1

    Finished my degree in electrical engineering and computer science. And this is now inspiring me to look for new, greater challenges.

  • @cowkil666
    @cowkil666 4 роки тому +3

    I really wish you would make more videos, absolutely love these

  • @anthonymullen6300
    @anthonymullen6300 9 років тому +14

    and to think the people try to find meaning in a manuscript written by cave dwellers thousands years ago the true story of our existence is absolutely beautiful .Richard Feynman is the embodiment of our lost childhood curiosities.

  • @guycastel123
    @guycastel123 12 років тому +1

    I'm on my second year studying Physics and Math - and your videos really keep me going (despite much difficulty). Just the desire of being able to speak about nature with the wisdom and understanding of the likes of Feynman and Sagan.
    You're doing a true service damewse!

  • @lukefollett5845
    @lukefollett5845 5 місяців тому +1

    This video made me understand that curiosity is truly something fascinating, and something that we all experience whether that is a bad or good.

  • @Navak_
    @Navak_ 12 років тому +1

    "In much wisdom is much grief; and he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow." Ecclesiastes 1:18
    I'm right with you there.

  • @divyanshuvadehra3779
    @divyanshuvadehra3779 6 років тому +2

    Goosebumps!

  • @pixelatedjordy
    @pixelatedjordy 9 років тому +5

    One of my all time favorite videos on youtube. We need so much more curiosity in our society. Such a brilliant mind and yet, as he says, the foundations of his discoveries are so simple. "There's just a lot of it." :)

  • @DoctorKassem
    @DoctorKassem 12 років тому +4

    How can somebody dislike this video? Makes no sense. This is absolutely amazing.

  • @DeMause
    @DeMause 13 років тому

    The view of the galaxy from 2:55-3:08 is so inspiring with that music.
    Keep up the good work damewse. They keep getting better.

  • @aceofspades6279
    @aceofspades6279 12 років тому

    Much appreciation for taking the time to post the video. cheers

  • @FunctorialFun
    @FunctorialFun 12 років тому

    I love all of your work, and this is one of your best! Thanks for making all of these.

  • @productscience
    @productscience 11 років тому

    this is a fantastic way to represent Feynman's talks..... I have heard them before, but the video really makes an impact! Thank you for creating!!! :)

  • @billiam5
    @billiam5 13 років тому

    The pace of this video, especially the second movement is completely brilliant. I've been keeping up to date with your videos since your first experiment post on reddit, and I gotta say - keep it UP! These are some of the most inspiring videos I've seen in a very long time.

  • @JoJeck
    @JoJeck 13 років тому

    Utterly beautiful videos (all 3) presenting the wonderful ideas of a great man. Thank you

  • @SD-bj9cq
    @SD-bj9cq 8 місяців тому

    I like to come back here every now and then, just to feel the emotions again.

  • @Laserblade
    @Laserblade 11 місяців тому

    First class video work! Well done.

  • @tahiniii
    @tahiniii 7 років тому +3

    RIP - what an inspiration and gift to mankind

  • @rafidhoda
    @rafidhoda 2 роки тому +3

    My favorite UA-cam video ever

  • @Halazable
    @Halazable 9 років тому

    Thanks!
    Beautifully crafted piece.

  • @charlykyoryu4566
    @charlykyoryu4566 10 років тому +4

    Flabagasting simplicity of a great Genius!

  • @artsed100
    @artsed100 8 років тому +9

    a new idol for me

  • @amritsharma5373
    @amritsharma5373 4 роки тому +1

    Feynman is always wonderful to listen!!

  • @noahwiles125
    @noahwiles125 Рік тому +1

    Curiosity is what drives people to figure out the world around them and that is when we see growth as a species. We always want to know why things work the way they do.

  • @deafheart23
    @deafheart23 13 років тому +1

    This is the most beautiful thing I've ever heard, it brought me to tears. ♥

  • @monsieurbacteria1923
    @monsieurbacteria1923 Рік тому

    A very informative video, also bringing light to the curiosity behind why certain things exist.

  • @DavidMartinsdeMatos
    @DavidMartinsdeMatos 10 років тому +3

    A great video on curiosity and knowledge.

  • @lysetteojeda3262
    @lysetteojeda3262 Місяць тому

    This video not only explains but explores the differences between any explanation or summary for curiosity, how it can used in a good and in a bad way. The different in growth of a species.

  • @DragonsAndTitties
    @DragonsAndTitties 10 років тому +7

    soooo this is a masterpiece....

  • @Mobius303
    @Mobius303 13 років тому

    Well said and the visuals are amazing....thanks for posting this video

  • @DreamlessMemory
    @DreamlessMemory 13 років тому

    This is your best one yet. The music really makes it great. I never expected a Feynman series, nor did I know so much about him other than his name, but his words, perhaps less eloquent in tone than Sagan, are just as poignant.

  • @saranabburu9022
    @saranabburu9022 6 місяців тому

    This video is amazing, as it displays just how curious a person can be and how fields such as physics can provide the truth about man's greatest wonders.

  • @Triguy56
    @Triguy56 3 роки тому +2

    A Truly fascinating video. the way he describes how simple life and what adds complexity to it

  • @osfan25
    @osfan25 13 років тому

    We need part 4. These videos are so inspirational.

  • @mark-suski
    @mark-suski 13 років тому

    Great video. Thanks for the post.

  • @user-deleted
    @user-deleted 10 років тому +7

    Richard Feynman is my hero

  • @MrShneeble
    @MrShneeble 12 років тому +1

    Always get shivers starting from 2:12

  • @SuperChuckie34
    @SuperChuckie34 9 років тому +1

    What a truly remarkable speech I love it.

  • @GareBearCS
    @GareBearCS 13 років тому +1

    Yes!!! I'm so happy for these 3 videos that I don't have words to express it. Richard Feynman is just as amazing to listen to as Carl Sagan in my opinion. Videos like these are the best way to get people hooked on science! =)

  • @phil2856
    @phil2856 13 років тому

    Brilliant!
    Thanks for posting.

  • @civerooni
    @civerooni 13 років тому

    These videos are amazing, I need more... MORE!

  • @THEWIZARD1968
    @THEWIZARD1968 11 років тому

    Overwhelmingly Beautiful It Brings Tears To My Eyes
    Thank You

  • @BrotherBloat
    @BrotherBloat 13 років тому

    very good montage to a great speech. nice one!

  • @oisiaa
    @oisiaa 13 років тому

    That was amazing! This was more powerful to me than the Sagan Series. Keep it up!

  • @toritorres2692
    @toritorres2692 3 роки тому +2

    It is so interesting the way everything is connected.

  • @MarkAgban
    @MarkAgban Рік тому +1

    his video was showing the infinite possibilities only coming from a set of rules. These possibilities create curiosity on what certain outcomes may be. Curiosity has leads people to wonder what makes something do what it does. This curiosity starts to let one know that some things start to become relatable to each other and how everything is connected.

  • @high5en
    @high5en 10 років тому

    Whenever I feel like I'm losing motivation, I come back and watch these videos. Motivation to learn about life; restored.

  • @EarlSmithie
    @EarlSmithie 12 років тому +3

    Subtitles please! This is simply great, keep doing it.

  • @RuiAlbuquerque1
    @RuiAlbuquerque1 13 років тому

    This man is the reason i became a physicist. I read is books, and it hit me every time. deep down. That curiosity that overcomes you, that awe we get from the amazement and complicated simplicity in nature. The excitement of learning something new, of knowing how everything works and is interconnected. That's why physics is the pinnacle of human evolution, Physics is the explanation of the world. how it all works. so thank you mister feyneman for making me realise how much i love the universe.

  • @seblingtonw
    @seblingtonw 12 років тому

    Great video for a great man, thanks a lot for the upload my friend.

  • @andresmdn22
    @andresmdn22 12 років тому

    I will come back to this video
    Whenever in my studies I find a concept enormously complicated to understand, and I become frustrated, this will be my inspiration to push onward

  • @bradenpinvidic4126
    @bradenpinvidic4126 2 роки тому

    There comparison of the Universe and it's complexity to a simple game of Chess is genuinely fascinating.

  • @HeyHeyHarmonicaLuke
    @HeyHeyHarmonicaLuke 12 років тому +1

    omg "we are on a ball, half of us stickin' upside down"
    I GET IT!!!
    the sun is another 'down' frame of reference!!!!!

  • @sharonp-j4215
    @sharonp-j4215 Місяць тому

    It kind of explains how seeking more knowledge and the truth is constant and it exposes us to bigger and greater things.

  • @ukaszsurzycki845
    @ukaszsurzycki845 5 років тому

    thank You Dick and all that share ....

  • @aker159
    @aker159 6 років тому +4

    It's just so awesome tha this guys point of view can affect almost every aspect of life and not just physics and mathematics.

  • @jhochadel1
    @jhochadel1 12 років тому

    Everything about these videos gets me. The music. The calming visuals in some, the clever, relevant visuals in others (like the royal wedding when discussing honors). Feynman himself speaking, or Sagan in the main series. They're wonderful. You know how the U.S. government spends money on anti-drug ads and that sort of thing? Not to put that down... but they should spend some money airing these. These inspire.

  • @luncheonroll
    @luncheonroll 12 років тому

    Please subtitle this. I really love the first two parts but am hearing-impaired and hate to miss out on this series. Excellent work, Richard Feynman enthrals me.

  • @dikojak
    @dikojak 12 років тому

    Thank you!

  • @beriukay
    @beriukay 13 років тому

    Watched three times. Will likely watch again.

  • @thesatanicchef
    @thesatanicchef 12 років тому

    This has made me a better person. Thank you. \ ,, /

  • @jnw2003
    @jnw2003 2 роки тому

    This video is very interesting and explains that curiosity makes people why things are happening. It talks about how we are curious about how and why everything works the way they do.

  • @raheelak29
    @raheelak29 12 років тому

    I have come to understand a lot in the past few years, whether its physics, chemistry or biology, and all the various fields that emerge from this. However i can't understand how people could dislike a video like this? It's not insulting anyone, it's simply an honest man confessing his wonderful curiosity. What could you possibly dislike? ... i can't understand.

  • @SilverCuckoo
    @SilverCuckoo 11 років тому

    I get goosebumps every time I watch this. Astonishing.

  • @feyncentric
    @feyncentric 12 років тому

    watched this like 6 times today already...
    I love the "gas blob" and "half of us sticking upside down on a ball spinning in space" explanation :D

  • @sumitsarpal4130
    @sumitsarpal4130 12 років тому

    gives me chills everytime i watch it