FEYNMAN AND THE BOMB - audio only

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  • Опубліковано 20 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 86

  • @redbook7347
    @redbook7347 6 місяців тому +3

    @ChristopherSykesDocumentaries
    Hi Christopher,
    I just wanted to tell you that your productions are excellent. The Wittgenstein film, the Ramanujan film, the Turing film, your 'Fun to Imagine' film with Feynman, these are amongst the best examples of intellectual material prepared for film. Thank you for producing them!

  • @iainholmes2735
    @iainholmes2735 10 місяців тому +2

    I loved his two books, especially 'What do You care...?'. His account of the Rodgers Commission into the Challenger disaster is gripping stuff.

  • @robdave1974
    @robdave1974 10 місяців тому +3

    Richards ability to see things happening around him and automatically “do the maths”. It’s inspiring yet sobering. I appreciate that he shared his inner conflicts, and admitted to being human and making errors of judgment.

  • @paulbyerlee2529
    @paulbyerlee2529 Рік тому +20

    I don't know how you found this material but thankyou for sharing it. Richard Feynman remains one of my idols. It was so sad that he died before getting to Tanna Tuva.

    • @bigdave6952
      @bigdave6952 Рік тому

      Tanna tuva?

    • @paulbyerlee2529
      @paulbyerlee2529 Рік тому

      @@bigdave6952 ua-cam.com/video/fuqm4FGzo20/v-deo.htmlfeature=shared

    • @barrypickford1443
      @barrypickford1443 11 місяців тому

      @@bigdave6952he found a remote country and liked the novelty of going to find it! I think he got too sick to follow this dream. There is a doc where he discusses this and his love of playing bongos. Great doc, it was about his life and I think it was made by one of his best friends.

    • @ChristopherSykesDocumentaries
      @ChristopherSykesDocumentaries  10 місяців тому +1

      Tannu Tuva Feynman should find the story via Google...@@bigdave6952

    • @Kristianlking
      @Kristianlking 9 місяців тому +2

      Almost made it, brought me to tears how close he was.

  • @DylanUPSB
    @DylanUPSB Рік тому +12

    Chris - I've gotten great joy from watching the feynman documentaries you've produced (and shared with us online!). I was so happy to see this additional content released - if you have any other unpublished content floating around, I'm sure many would be incredibly grateful for you to share it! Either way, thanks again for the wonderful work you've done

  • @Fiyaaaahh
    @Fiyaaaahh Рік тому +31

    I never realized how young Ferynman was when was asked to join a project of such caliber. He must've made quite the name already, even before doing a PhD (usually the first step into getting your name out into the academic world).

    • @odurandina
      @odurandina Рік тому +5

      Interviewer was a kind of a turd. Feynman a longtime idol.

    • @GH-oi2jf
      @GH-oi2jf Місяць тому

      He was already a PhD student, and finished his dissertation about the time he started at Los Alamos.

  • @Al-cynic
    @Al-cynic 11 місяців тому +5

    The interviewer wants to write a script for hollywood, Feynman is just saying what he felt and thought.

  • @xezene1
    @xezene1 Рік тому +5

    Thank you very much for sharing these interesting and thoughtful comments and reflections from Feynman on this important subject.

  • @amitpatil2020
    @amitpatil2020 Рік тому +6

    Many thanks for sharing this!

  • @diarmuidbyron-oconnor3563
    @diarmuidbyron-oconnor3563 Рік тому +5

    Ha! Christopher we met many years ago in Putney as I sought your advice in helping promote my friend’s documentary. I mentioned at the time how my father corresponded with Richard Leighton as our family are firm Feynman fans. Her I am 17 years later having just listened to the 1953 Reith lecture on R4 sounds”Science and common understanding”by Oppenheimer and pondering on how Feynman considered Oppenheimer. It turns out you had anticipated my question. Many Thanks. I hope you are well. Diarmuid Byron-O’Connor.

  • @annatarbaby
    @annatarbaby 6 місяців тому

    Many thanks for uploading these insightful interviews. Kudos to the interviewer, too, for having the courage to sit down with Feynman and share his remarkable insights with the world

  • @meepmeep6363
    @meepmeep6363 Рік тому +2

    Thank you for uploading this!

  • @cacogenicist
    @cacogenicist Рік тому +12

    No-pretense, no-bullshit geniuses are my favorite kind.
    You can really see why Feynman got along so well Lenny Susskind. Very similar personalities.

  • @jonnyrocca7426
    @jonnyrocca7426 Рік тому +1

    Absolutely fascinating. Thank you 🙏

  • @eetuhalonen9902
    @eetuhalonen9902 Рік тому +39

    Interviewer is very annoying. He is trying hard to get the answers he is looking for.

    • @TheSmokinducks
      @TheSmokinducks Рік тому +11

      So Feynman gives his right answer first .... working on my own project 'difficulty 6 or difficulty 8 ...classic'. When asked about Oppenheimer ... 'No' .He was amazing

    • @tykjenffs
      @tykjenffs Рік тому +2

      Worst interviewer ever. Trying to guilt-trip Feynman for developing the atom bomb before the nazis did. He just does not get the fkn point.

    • @odurandina
      @odurandina Рік тому

      @@TheSmokinducks Feynman a man of integrity--realizes how stupid the interviewer is--failing to see the context of 1942: with a fellow scientist walking into his office and recruiting him to build the bomb. Thick as a brick.

    • @falcodarkzz
      @falcodarkzz Рік тому

      Typical journalist, fishing for scandal and drama. Trying to frame Feynman as under appreciating the magnitude of the decision, when in the event Hitler had got the bomb first, Feynman and co wouldve been our only hope. When the interviewer seems to suggest some villainy on Oppenheimer's part for wanting to make such a "terrible thing" he really enters the point of folly. Men like that are enemies of reason, plain and simple

    • @PherPhur
      @PherPhur Рік тому +4

      Wrong person to try to do it to. I'm sure that interviewer strong armed his way to many answers he wanted, but Feynman was not in the least bit hesitant to tell you "what the fuck are you talking about dude?" without telling you "what the fuck are you talking about dude?"

  • @ghettorcshenanigans258
    @ghettorcshenanigans258 Рік тому +3

    A good read is his autobiography, "Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!"

    • @GH-oi2jf
      @GH-oi2jf Місяць тому

      That is not an autobiography. It is merely a collection of anecdotes.

  • @DirahEvans
    @DirahEvans Рік тому +1

    ❤ Thank you for sharing.

  • @sidequestsally
    @sidequestsally 6 місяців тому

    Only Richard could make the sound of the first weapon of mass destruction exploding into an amusing anecdote. God I love this man.

  • @txdmsk
    @txdmsk Рік тому +9

    Feynman was peak human.

    • @notaspeck6104
      @notaspeck6104 Рік тому

      Well he was involved in a case of manslaughter and was a serial adulterer. Great scientist, but just a human.

  • @DusanPavlicek78
    @DusanPavlicek78 Рік тому +16

    A cat at 3:20 🐱

  • @faisalhayatkhan5447
    @faisalhayatkhan5447 4 місяці тому

    A masterpiece conversation

  • @bulldog3512
    @bulldog3512 Рік тому +3

    Which way do you want to define human?

  • @ForEntertainer
    @ForEntertainer 8 місяців тому

    Unbelievable! How can you find this wonderful records? Thank you for uploading

  • @fawzious7185
    @fawzious7185 Рік тому +1

    Welcome back 🎉

  • @petethepeg2
    @petethepeg2 Рік тому +6

    Impressive! So he was the only person at Trinity to see the atomic flash from 20 miles without special dark glasses but nevertheless still protected . But just imagine 100,000 seeing the same from a few hundred yards away ! With this foreknowlege from all the scientists,perhaps this is what the interviewer is struggling to find answers from Feynman et al. I believe iFeynman was quoted to have said later that he had two big regrets in his life , The first that he joined the Manhattan Project and the second .....that he enjoyed it !!

  • @megamastah
    @megamastah Рік тому +1

    Beautiful.

  • @Fallingmonsters
    @Fallingmonsters Рік тому +8

    Dense questions

  • @michaelcox436
    @michaelcox436 Рік тому +6

    The worst part of these "fun to imagine" interviews are the boneheaded interruptions from the interviewer.

  • @gp92510
    @gp92510 Рік тому +18

    The interviewer's a bit thick...

    • @anonymous-sr5ks
      @anonymous-sr5ks Рік тому +3

      It's Christopher himself at the time attempting to be objective as a true journalist does. He did one on Wittgenstein also.

    • @thenorup
      @thenorup Рік тому +2

      No, he is extremely smart. But when you put somebody next to Feynman, well, it's like putting a star next to a super nova

    • @odurandina
      @odurandina Рік тому +1

      Thick.

    • @falcodarkzz
      @falcodarkzz Рік тому +7

      ​@@anonymous-sr5kshe is not objective, he is prying for slander against Oppenheimer and framing thinge, e.g. "terrible weapon". He knows Feynman put a lot into the bomb and lost his wife in its creation, such suggestions would take an inhuman self control not to react to. Somehow Feynman doesnt

  • @北村聡-q3x
    @北村聡-q3x Рік тому +7

    I’m Japanese, a physics major, a big fan of Feynman. I know his psychopathy aspect as I have dug up some of his wrong doing with women. This is true to Einstein, too.
    I truly admire his intelligence and all. But it’s just mind boggling to me that the reason why it was a difficult decision to make for him was because of his personal career and interest. The fact that he didn’t state moral and ethical issues, no remorse, at all in the interview was really something. Logically, it was either Hitler or the us, yes. Logically, it was going be developed, yes.
    But I was just curious as to what he had to say after witnessing such atrocities. 20,000 civilians were wiped out, some evaporated in an instant, lots and lots wandered around in the battered cities suffering from melted body for days before they could end the hell.
    Lack of compassion, lack of interest in people. Is that what it takes to be a legendary scientist? I guess the answer is yes, and I sense that psychopathic ingredient is in me, too. Too logical to feel empathy. Still….

    • @notaspeck6104
      @notaspeck6104 Рік тому +1

      Personally I think the atomic bombings are the most accurate reflection of war. It's awful. Both sides do killing, and both sides suffer. No on has the moral high ground, each side does what's best for themselves and that might involve fighting for an ethically sound cause or it might not. I mean America only got involved when they were attacked... In the end the bombings were horrific, but they did have strategic credence. America did what was best for themselves to end a war. But that doesn't erase how awful the ramifications were. People love to argue about 'right' and 'wrong' because they're only interested in justifying their own countries actions. If only more people cared about the humanity of it all, and about never letting something like it happen again. Maybe the bombings would mean something more and we could learn from it. In a way it would give meaning or purpose to all the death.

    • @radikai
      @radikai 11 місяців тому +5

      What childish nonsense.

    • @radikai
      @radikai 11 місяців тому +6

      Feynman isn’t whatsoever a psychopath.

    • @iammaxhammer
      @iammaxhammer 7 місяців тому +2

      He shows no signs of psychopathy. As a matter of fact, he was rather expressive and often got excited while explaining concepts.

    • @北村聡-q3x
      @北村聡-q3x 7 місяців тому

      @@radikai If you want to convey something to others, write it in a concrete and logical manner.

  • @diegokricekfontanive
    @diegokricekfontanive Рік тому +2

    11:00 Those who associate humanity with kindness and love are the most dangerous fools indeed.

    • @notaspeck6104
      @notaspeck6104 Рік тому +1

      Wow you're so deep and cynical... how original.

    • @diegokricekfontanive
      @diegokricekfontanive Рік тому

      @@notaspeck6104 That`s not my opinion sir, but rather what human history shows us so well.

    • @Carlins_Prophet
      @Carlins_Prophet 9 місяців тому

      Human animalism and human altruism have created a stasis in the past that have enabled human survival to the point that they have become, at best, unnecessary and at worst, detrimental too human existence.....

    • @diegokricekfontanive
      @diegokricekfontanive 9 місяців тому +1

      @@Carlins_Prophet That`s precisely where the core of the human issue lies:
      as humans civilised themselves, they managed to transfer the need to survive from the mere biological domain to the abstract/intellectual one, which is all the inventions of thought, such as beliefs, dogmas, ideologies.

    • @JM-cv7nv
      @JM-cv7nv 9 місяців тому

      amen

  • @jackharle1251
    @jackharle1251 Рік тому +1

    A good man

    • @chicanoproletarian
      @chicanoproletarian Рік тому +2

      I don't know about that lol, a serial cheater and known womanizer.

    • @notaspeck6104
      @notaspeck6104 Рік тому

      He did a lot wrong, (saying this as a fan of his lectures). He wasn't 'good' or bad, just a great scientist lmao.

  • @tadcooper9733
    @tadcooper9733 Рік тому

    idk if i wanna listen to this I've listeded to all the stories and videos. IS THIS NEW? if so, I'd gladly listen and upvote

  • @rezzer7918
    @rezzer7918 5 місяців тому

    Sounds like Art Carney

  • @rockets4kids
    @rockets4kids 11 місяців тому +1

    3:20 😺

  • @Miriewoud
    @Miriewoud Рік тому

    The double nature of nature.

  • @sergeyromanov5560
    @sergeyromanov5560 8 місяців тому

    meow