Neil deGrasse Tyson: Einstein vs Newton - Who Was Right?

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  • @karthikp6473
    @karthikp6473 4 роки тому +254

    Neptune: thanks Newton, my man

    • @dave929
      @dave929 Рік тому +3

      😂😂😂😂

  • @everettschoenke2659
    @everettschoenke2659 6 років тому +660

    I respect Neil’s articulate way of speaking, he trims the unnecessary words and tangents off and makes the idea effortlessly streamlined allowing it to be immediately understandable.

    • @rbnh9827
      @rbnh9827 6 років тому +52

      How ironic that you are writing in this way.

    • @digitalbath.
      @digitalbath. 6 років тому +1

      best way to describe Neil. spot on👌🏻

    • @CM-rp3zx
      @CM-rp3zx 6 років тому

      He's a science communicator. That's why he's so famous

    • @StephenDoty84
      @StephenDoty84 6 років тому +2

      I think you could have been more terse.

    • @everettschoenke2659
      @everettschoenke2659 5 років тому +7

      Andy Gray working on it myself 😭👌🏻

  • @markfox1545
    @markfox1545 2 роки тому +421

    Newton was beyond genius. He was working out this stuff in the 1600s. Absolutely incredible intellect.

    • @peterd788
      @peterd788 2 роки тому +39

      He had a lightning in a bottle mind. Einstein built on his ideas to explain even more. That is how we progress. As Newton, himself, said "If I have seen further than others it is by standing on the shoulders of giants". We are lucky to live in a world they lived in.

    • @Tenchi707
      @Tenchi707 Рік тому +15

      @@peterd788 don't forget Michael Faraday, electromagnetism is the most important thing

    • @CheddaWhizzy
      @CheddaWhizzy Рік тому +8

      @@peterd788 Exactly right. If Newton didn't exist, Einstein couldn't do what he did. Newton truly is the man. Moreover, the industrial age, the electrical age, urbanization, the computing age, and AI could not exist without calculus and his laws.

    • @vaughnreedjr6592
      @vaughnreedjr6592 Рік тому

      Genius. Noooo

    • @bigmanwildin2216
      @bigmanwildin2216 Рік тому +16

      Newton was arguably the one and only chosen genius of humanity. One of a kind.

  • @YouTuber-mc2el
    @YouTuber-mc2el Рік тому +44

    Neil really put the intelligence of Newton into perspective when he threw in the galloping horse. For Newton to do what he did at that time with mankinds understandings was truly remarkable.

  • @doesntMetter1
    @doesntMetter1 6 років тому +222

    "...then he turned 26"

    • @haciendohora2711
      @haciendohora2711 4 роки тому +7

      @sebatian so what's your contribution to the world of science? xD

    • @jamirimaj6880
      @jamirimaj6880 4 роки тому +8

      @@haciendohora2711 well, does laughing and automatically looking at comments in every Uranus videos count? 😂

    • @franklinjoe1602
      @franklinjoe1602 3 роки тому

      Thanks for your video, highly appreciated. Compliments of the Season. BTC price is in a precarious location, the asset set a new all-time high just days ago but is currently below the record and starting to decline. analysts suggest that the latest rally above $32.000 could have been triggered by aggressive buying from institution investors on coin base, as suggested by the large premium of about $350 compared to the price in binance....The shifting momentum is now presenting in technical indicators supplying bearish movement, adding to the double top narrative that’s been building since failing to break $30,000.?? This being taken into note, it can’t be more obvious that trading Bitcoin is way more profitable than just holding and waiting for the price of Bitcoin to skyrocket. I didn’t think it was possible to make constant win from trading till I came across Carlos Andrewfx program for investors/newbies who lack understanding on how trading Bitcoin works, to help them recover loss from the crash and also stack up more bitcoin, he provided me with %100 signal and with his strategy i was able to increase my portfolio from $4000 to $42,000 in just a week, I was convinced to say his an expert, with Andrew help. You can easily get to him on Instagram (@carlos_andrewfx or WhatsApp+19715122836......

    • @HopDavid
      @HopDavid Рік тому

      Halley asked Newton about orbits when Newton was in his 40s. Most of what Tyson says about Newton is addled nonsense.

    • @HopDavid
      @HopDavid Рік тому

      @Amogh Sharma Bullialdus suggested inverse square gravity in 1645 when Newton was 5. After Huygens gave his expression for centrifugal force it was obvious that Kepler's 3rd law implied inverse square gravity for circular orbits.
      That is what Halley, Hooke and Wren were discussing in 1864. Does inverse square gravity also imply elliptical orbits and all three Kepler's laws?
      So Halley paid Newton a visit in the summer of 1864 and asked him what paths would planets follow if the sun's gravity fell off with inverse square of distance. Newton replied ellipses, that he had calculated it. And so he had in the years of 1676 and 1677. Newton had started working on the problem in 1665.
      The notion of inverse square gravity had been around for awhile. Newton's accomplishment was showing it implied Kepler's laws. It was quite the bomb shell when Principia was published. It was Halley's question that prompted the writing of Principia.
      But no, Halley's "dare" didn't prompt Newton to figure out elliptical orbits. Halley had figured it out 7 years earlier.
      And no, Newton did not figure it out in two months. 1665 to 1677 is more like 12 years.
      And no, Halley's dare did not prompt Newton to invent calculus. Newton made his calculus contributions from 1665 to 1668. Nearly two decades before Halley's "dare".
      It was Newton's older Cambridge colleague Isaac Barrow that steered Newton towards calculus. Barrow, Fermat, Descartes, Cavalieri and others had laid the foundations of modern calculus in the generation before Newton and Leibniz. Barrow made Newton aware of this work in 1665. Newton spent the next 3 years organizing these ideas and adding his own innovations.
      So, no, Newton didn't invent calculus on Halley's "dare" either. And it didn't take Newton two months. More like three years building on decades of collaborative efforts of many people.
      Just about everything Tyson says about Newton is wrong.

  • @JaqenHghar.
    @JaqenHghar. 6 років тому +58

    I like that. He's saying, one day when new equations are established that unifies physics of the large and the quantumly small, it won't mean that Einstein's shit was wrong. It won't discredit him in anyway. It will simply expand our ability to explain the world around us

  • @buttersflynn1241
    @buttersflynn1241 5 років тому +87

    I was never in to science during school, partly down to poor teaching , thanks to Dr Tyson I’ve rediscovered the joy of knowledge and discovering our universe

    • @HopDavid
      @HopDavid 5 років тому

      Your teachers were constrained by a need for rigor and accuracy. Neil is not. He can make up whatever bull shit that makes his presentation entertaining and his fans have no clue. Perhaps one of the sloppiest, most inaccurate pop science celebrities who have every lived.

    • @happybear3706
      @happybear3706 4 роки тому

      Or maybe because some teachers care about their jobs and some don’t. Did you ever think about that???

    • @shashwatmittal5393
      @shashwatmittal5393 Рік тому

      What if I told you this science wad not taught to newton?

    • @lbthingsstuffmore9513
      @lbthingsstuffmore9513 Рік тому +1

      I see your post is 4 yrs old, but I hope you've continued your science journey. 😊🖖

  • @jamesoncross7494
    @jamesoncross7494 6 років тому +83

    " Can I slip something in? " and the precedes to talk about Uranus. LOL!

  • @brodyharris7631
    @brodyharris7631 5 років тому +227

    He could easily do stand up comedy. What an amazing person.

    • @HopDavid
      @HopDavid 3 роки тому +2

      But Tyson sucks when it comes to math, physics and history.

    • @jarrygarry5316
      @jarrygarry5316 3 роки тому +5

      He is a comedian scientist.

    • @HopDavid
      @HopDavid 3 роки тому +1

      @@jarrygarry5316 It is a stretch to call him a scientist.

    • @taylorcharles5329
      @taylorcharles5329 3 роки тому +2

      @@HopDavid he is a scientist tho

    • @HopDavid
      @HopDavid 3 роки тому +3

      @@taylorcharles5329 He has done practically zero research since his dissertation in the 90s. Most of his stuff has been flashy and often inaccurate pop science and history.

  • @nnmaster4271
    @nnmaster4271 6 років тому +105

    We don’t need heros; everyone has the potential.

    • @TheRadFactor
      @TheRadFactor 6 років тому +8

      Potential is non-existent beyond a thought, just like fantasies. Only when it becomes concrete it starts to exist in the world of five senses.

    • @cbates4545
      @cbates4545 5 років тому +4

      Actually, potential does exist... PE(grav) = mass • g • height

    • @spencer6874
      @spencer6874 5 років тому +1

      Idk hero's are pretty important

    • @roguesoul5051
      @roguesoul5051 5 років тому +4

      Everyone doesn't have the potential. Only a few. And from that few comes geniuses. That's why they are so rare.

    • @ishworshrestha3559
      @ishworshrestha3559 4 роки тому

      Ok

  • @eloiteles3578
    @eloiteles3578 6 років тому +95

    Newton came up much of his physics and mathematical work in a short “academical exile” period. It is widely knows that it was not even his preferred field. He spent much of life Deciphering biblical texts (of which he thought were meant for him) and being obsessed with alchemy.

  • @Zeluth
    @Zeluth 6 років тому +20

    I love things that are so abstract that it blows my mind.

  • @maxwellsequation4887
    @maxwellsequation4887 3 роки тому +30

    EINSTEIN also discovered photoelectric effect, Special Theory of Relativity, e^2= m^2c^4 + p^2c^2, the paper on brownian motion. When he turned 26

    • @maxwellsequation4887
      @maxwellsequation4887 3 роки тому +8

      You can't compare GODFATHERS of SCIENCE, you see

    • @luisfabricio6439
      @luisfabricio6439 2 роки тому +8

      But he had a group of tools to build his theories, he had the tools. Newton INVENTED his own tools

    • @BobInGreek
      @BobInGreek Рік тому +3

      ​@@luisfabricio6439 Newton had all the tools from ancient Greece and china

    • @BobInGreek
      @BobInGreek Рік тому +2

      ​@@luisfabricio6439 the basic elements of calculus came from ancient Greece

  • @AmfistomosAtlas
    @AmfistomosAtlas 6 років тому +36

    We need more people like Neil deGrasse! He is one of deGrasse

    • @shryr8319
      @shryr8319 6 років тому +2

      This pun omg

    • @Ludwig1625
      @Ludwig1625 5 років тому +1

      What

    • @danender5555
      @danender5555 Рік тому

      neIl degrAsse loves to hear the sound of his own voice, he just loves it more than anything else. If you need more narcissists around, well....

    • @bradwest4821
      @bradwest4821 Рік тому

      The world needs less people like him. Certainly anything to do with math and science needs a much greater mind that his. He's a clown

    • @notrhythm
      @notrhythm 7 місяців тому

      i love the sound of his voice

  • @sachinsurya007
    @sachinsurya007 6 років тому +177

    Ma man 👍👍👍

    • @HopDavid
      @HopDavid 3 роки тому

      Newton sure the fuck isn't Tyson's man. Tyson fucks up his history of Newton pretty badly.

  • @unknownbhai9924
    @unknownbhai9924 5 років тому +132

    If microscope had been invented during Newton's era , we would not have needed any other scientists as Newton would have discovered quantum mechanics and every other physics discovery made till now......
    Newton is my favorite ,NO hate for Einstein though

    • @user-on4nx2ho7b
      @user-on4nx2ho7b 5 років тому +10

      You do realise Newton stole a lot of the ideas/theories from other scientists from his Era right?

    • @unknownbhai9924
      @unknownbhai9924 5 років тому +43

      Name few of the scientists whose ideas were stolen by Newton...I bet you'll look into Google to prove your point .....

    • @kumarabhinav2528
      @kumarabhinav2528 5 років тому +19

      @@user-on4nx2ho7b what a joke

    • @nadeemshaikh7863
      @nadeemshaikh7863 5 років тому +1

      @@user-on4nx2ho7b like?

    • @unknownbhai9924
      @unknownbhai9924 5 років тому +36

      @@user-on4nx2ho7b I think you mistook Newton for edison...edison is the one who stole other scientists idea

  • @rombarker3129
    @rombarker3129 6 років тому +56

    Who does not get amazed by Dr. Tyson's knowledge and charisma.

    • @marianskodowski8337
      @marianskodowski8337 3 роки тому +1

      I think Run Ze Cao and probably Sabine Hosenfelder

    • @rombarker3129
      @rombarker3129 3 роки тому +1

      ​@@marianskodowski8337 As Far as I know, Run Ze Cao ("Ze Buceta" for the closest ones) is just a Jackass pushing a conspiracy to gain notoriety; Dr. Hosenfelder
      as educated as she can be, she still has to bow for the great scientists who came before her.

    • @HopDavid
      @HopDavid 2 роки тому +1

      A lot of what Neil Tyson says is bull shit.

    • @juliandarch9278
      @juliandarch9278 Рік тому

      ​@@HopDavidand the rest is sh1t lol

  • @amritpatnaik8881
    @amritpatnaik8881 Рік тому +3

    It's almost poetic how the conflict and eventual reconciliation between Newton and Einstein's laws is a perfect example of Hegalian dialectics.
    Both unmatched legends of scientific genius, who's theories seemingly contradict each other, but beautifully resolve the apparent contradiction on reaching a higher level of understanding and closeness to the truth.

  • @ClaversOdhiamboArt
    @ClaversOdhiamboArt 6 років тому +315

    Neil could've hit that

    • @zero1fifty8
      @zero1fifty8 6 років тому +1

      lol

    • @deadarmd
      @deadarmd 6 років тому +21

      Clavers Odhiambo man she's basically sitting on his face.

    • @brandonzuniga1740
      @brandonzuniga1740 6 років тому +19

      Dawg just stfu and go sit on ur bible ... Real men with actual ideas are talking

    • @jb111082
      @jb111082 6 років тому +5

      I've seen this Goggle products account on a bunch of science vids. It's a bot account.

    • @dookiegrin1521
      @dookiegrin1521 6 років тому +2

      Google products that shit is stupid funny. Don't agree with it, just laughing at your evangelic beliefs based on a conglomerate of satanic rituals for which you believe are holy.

  • @monjrajak651
    @monjrajak651 3 роки тому +8

    I love both Newton And Einstein. 1st Newton, 2nd Einstein . Before these , Micheal Faraday 😁.
    Till 1900s (20th Century), Physics And Mathematics Were Already Growing on the Top... And Genius such as James Clerk Maxwell, and Many More Were Already Born,
    #Sir Albert Einstein Did his Work bcoz of Copernicus, Galileo Galilee, Sir Issac Newton , Maxwell, Lorentz, etc..... Don't forget this.
    In the Era of Newton there Wasn't developed physics and mathematics .

  • @theprolificnetwork4670
    @theprolificnetwork4670 6 років тому +25

    This was excellently explained

  • @devanshupadhyay2658
    @devanshupadhyay2658 2 роки тому +5

    Similarly quantum mechanics can be applied for solving classical mechanics problems for macroscopic particles, a new enclosure doesn't mean the previous theory was wrong. It's just the better understanding of what we did earlier.

    • @allhdmoviescene1294
      @allhdmoviescene1294 Рік тому

      it is worng therfore it is not able to explain it

    • @naj2698
      @naj2698 Рік тому +2

      @@allhdmoviescene1294it’s like saying since there are always exceptions we should not bother with putting up rules.

  • @changa3012
    @changa3012 6 років тому +5

    Always a delight to listen to the Guru of Astrophysics Neil deGrasse Tyson. Thanks, YT and Discovery Panda.

    • @toker6664
      @toker6664 4 роки тому +3

      Well hes just a fanboy and a good marketable tool, hes not a revolutionary heap your praise on newton and einstein

  • @antondelacruz9362
    @antondelacruz9362 3 роки тому +15

    Great interviewer. She was so into it. Really reflected the ideal audience member.

  • @D-me-dream-smp
    @D-me-dream-smp 4 роки тому +15

    Neil DeGrasse Tyson’s brilliance isn’t merely his obvious intellect but his ability to convey the awe and wonder hidden within the mysteries of our universe, his passion for driving scientific inquiry and discovery and the humbleness with which he generously shares this bountiful knowledge.

    • @franklinjoe1602
      @franklinjoe1602 3 роки тому

      Thanks for your video, highly appreciated. Compliments of the Season. BTC price is in a precarious location, the asset set a new all-time high just days ago but is currently below the record and starting to decline. analysts suggest that the latest rally above $32.000 could have been triggered by aggressive buying from institution investors on coin base, as suggested by the large premium of about $350 compared to the price in binance....The shifting momentum is now presenting in technical indicators supplying bearish movement, adding to the double top narrative that’s been building since failing to break $30,000.?? This being taken into note, it can’t be more obvious that trading Bitcoin is way more profitable than just holding and waiting for the price of Bitcoin to skyrocket. I didn’t think it was possible to make constant win from trading till I came across Carlos Andrewfx program for investors/newbies who lack understanding on how trading Bitcoin works, to help them recover loss from the crash and also stack up more bitcoin, he provided me with %100 signal and with his strategy i was able to increase my portfolio from $4000 to $42,000 in just a week, I was convinced to say his an expert, with Andrew help. You can easily get to him on Instagram (@carlos_andrewfx or WhatsApp+19715122836......

  • @mikkitoro8933
    @mikkitoro8933 Рік тому +2

    That's the thing about scientific theories. They're called theories because they can be expanded upon as new information is collected.

  • @markos1623
    @markos1623 4 роки тому +28

    Neil: Uranus is the planet just beyond Jupiter.
    Me: Well that was helpful...

  • @harkiratsandhu4283
    @harkiratsandhu4283 6 років тому +51

    I love your cosmos series on National Geographic
    That attracted me to sci

    • @eig1979
      @eig1979 6 років тому +6

      Season 2 is coming...

    • @harkiratsandhu4283
      @harkiratsandhu4283 6 років тому +1

      Really when

    • @eig1979
      @eig1979 6 років тому +1

      Sometime next year. ua-cam.com/video/7SFR4Xz5-_U/v-deo.html

    • @991vk
      @991vk 5 років тому +1

      ence

  • @abhiahir305
    @abhiahir305 4 роки тому +45

    None can compare SIR NEWTON .He was not only a GREATEST PHYSICIST but also A GREATEST MATHEMATICIAN,THEOLOGIAN,GEOGTAPHISICT,AUTHOR and A GOOD PERSON as well.

    • @subashkc7674
      @subashkc7674 2 роки тому +4

      and what about einstein?

    • @loiman4179
      @loiman4179 Рік тому

      He was an alchemist lmao

    • @1234569871704
      @1234569871704 Рік тому +2

      @@subashkc7674 in mathematics he was not even close to Einstein
      Newton created a whole new area and he was considered as the Best mathematician in the world at that time

    • @helenawells3869
      @helenawells3869 Рік тому

      @@loiman4179 Why do you see only the negative attributes of a person?

    • @tsentenari4353
      @tsentenari4353 Рік тому

      " and A GOOD PERSON as well" -> well no one can deny you the courage to uphold a minority view ;)

  • @shubhankardasgupta4777
    @shubhankardasgupta4777 6 років тому +58

    Real scientists like him too never compares any scientists as all people who contributed to a great journey of exploration of curiousity never feel shames if they're wrong as they knew they could again redifine it. Also before comparison first almost you become like them, dare to invent a new thing which is still yet unknown to community and then dares to compare with another.

    • @HopDavid
      @HopDavid 6 років тому

      Maybe for a brief time in the 90's Tyson did some mediocre science. He hasn't been a real scientist since then.

    • @eskiltester3913
      @eskiltester3913 6 років тому +16

      Hollister David you're an uneducated idiot

    • @stephencasper87
      @stephencasper87 6 років тому +5

      Could you provide me with a list of your publications, please?

    • @baltazarfuentes2381
      @baltazarfuentes2381 6 років тому

      Shubhankar

    • @stevorobo692
      @stevorobo692 5 років тому +1

      Settle down r/iamverysmart Yoda

  • @hrishikeshsungar4937
    @hrishikeshsungar4937 Рік тому +2

    I am still surprised how this video doesn't have a million views. It's so mind-blowing everytime i watch it.

    • @HopDavid
      @HopDavid Рік тому

      A lot of what Tyson says about Newton is wrong.

  • @robertpemberton3952
    @robertpemberton3952 6 років тому +10

    He speaks with such fire

  • @tesasilva4522
    @tesasilva4522 6 років тому +5

    I love him so much. He explains these concepts in ways that everyone can understand. I could watch his interviews for hours. I have a serious crush on him too. Nothing sexier than a smart man with a sense of humor.

    • @HopDavid
      @HopDavid 5 років тому

      Does he help you understand the material? I think not. If you had some understanding you would notice when he gets it wrong. He screws up basic math, science and history embarrassingly often.

    • @alucardhellsing7435
      @alucardhellsing7435 3 роки тому

      @@HopDavid r/iamverysmart

    • @HopDavid
      @HopDavid 3 роки тому

      @@alucardhellsing7435 Yup, Tyson was often on that subreddit. He was such an easy target the mods had to ban Tyson posts.
      The addled fool can also be found on r/badmath and r/badscience. He's a frequent flyer on r/badhistory.
      Tyson is a source of misinformation. But he gets away with it because his fans are dumber than a bag of rocks.

    • @alucardhellsing7435
      @alucardhellsing7435 3 роки тому

      @@HopDavid
      its a guarantee to get things a bit wrong when u oversimplify complex topics so normal ppl can understand.
      I doubt he could've graduated in astrophysics if he didnt know his stuff.

    • @HopDavid
      @HopDavid 3 роки тому

      @@alucardhellsing7435 He flunked out of his astrophysics program at University of Texas. His advisors there suggested he pursue a different career, that he had little aptitude for physics. And I tend to agree after watching him botch freshman physics.
      How'd he get his doctorate at Columbia? I'm sure R. Michael Rich noticed that he was a charismatic and popular lecturer. I believe Rich & co awarded Tyson his credentials hoping he'd be a influential advocate for astronomy and science. Not because of any talent or competence in physics.
      Charisma and political skills can get you far. Even in Academia. Especially in Academia.

  • @crazieeez
    @crazieeez 6 років тому +2

    I like the chronological explanation of Uranus orbit due to a missing Neptune to give credence to Newton laws follow by how Newton laws fail with Mercury orbit.

  • @throckmortensnivel2850
    @throckmortensnivel2850 Рік тому +3

    A small quibble. The term "calculus" was used by Gottfried Leibniz, a mathematician who developed calculus independently of Newton, around the same time as Newton. Newton used a different term, "fluxions" which has since disappeared as Leibniz's term became the one used by mathematicians. One doesn't want to take anything away from Newton, he was indeed a genius, but Leibniz also deserves some credit for calculus.

    • @eu1531
      @eu1531 9 місяців тому

      In fact actual calculus is leibniz calculus.

  • @eaze_abhi6961
    @eaze_abhi6961 6 років тому +8

    The interviewer is so star struck... she is all over my man ... Neil degrees Tyson...

    • @gregoryharlston0602
      @gregoryharlston0602 Рік тому

      Yes this is the real universal law of attraction that has nothing to do with gravity!😅

  • @buzzstoney
    @buzzstoney 2 роки тому +4

    I love the enthusiasm he has for his subject. Just makes it even more to listen to

  • @mystdragon8530
    @mystdragon8530 6 років тому +3

    Deeper understanding....I see the science established by the Church is still following g the Church’s example of refining our understanding of the world. Good job.

  • @josh18230
    @josh18230 6 років тому +300

    Interviewer is acting like a 14 year old.

  • @austingainesburrow678
    @austingainesburrow678 5 років тому +5

    "She's Miss Earth,... please" 😂😂

  • @speedracer3967
    @speedracer3967 6 років тому +5

    The human race is in its infancy. We have barely begun to scratch the surface of a scratch when it comes to understanding the universe and all it’s complexity.

    • @ustaadsir1485
      @ustaadsir1485 Рік тому

      The universe is a vast and intricate place, with countless stars, galaxies, planets, and mysteries waiting to be explored. While we have made significant strides in understanding various aspects of the universe through scientific discoveries, we are still at the early stages of comprehending its full complexity.
      Throughout history, human knowledge and understanding have evolved through the accumulation of insights, experimentation, and observations. As technology and scientific methods advance, we gain deeper insights into the natural world and our place in the universe. Yet, there is still much more to learn, and the quest for knowledge and understanding remains ongoing.
      As we continue our exploration and study of the universe, it's essential to remain curious, open-minded, and receptive to new ideas and discoveries. The journey to uncover the secrets of the cosmos is a never-ending pursuit that spans generations and inspires wonder and awe.

  • @nielsbohr3130
    @nielsbohr3130 3 роки тому +1

    3 laws of motion were present 2000yrs before Newton.
    Vaisheshik sutra book ( 2nd to 6th century as per Wikipedia)
    Available on net

  • @neftaliadrian
    @neftaliadrian 6 років тому +3

    Where is the complete video? Is it on UA-cam? What is it called?

  • @randyyy67
    @randyyy67 6 років тому +4

    I can listen to him for hours

  • @Giskard1000
    @Giskard1000 6 років тому +19

    So well explained.

  • @jimkurth
    @jimkurth 6 років тому +2

    Whoa! (In Ted Theodore Logan's voice -Ref: Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure). Mindblown!

  • @danielreyes6835
    @danielreyes6835 6 років тому +8

    Both were right, cause there's this thing called paradigm. A paradigm is the reason scientists gather to study shit. Now, paradigms can't be wrong, because they're the ones who throw questions to the scientists studying them, and they also answer them.
    Now, what happens with Newton and Einstein is nothing more than an update; the paradigm that Newton suggested is right, but it had it's flaws, although no one thought about it's flaws because you normally don't question a paradigm. Except you do, and this is when a scientific revolution begins; when you question the paradigm itself, you start a scientific revolution, and that's what Einstein did. This doesn't mean that Newton was wrong, it's nothing but an update in order for the paradigm to fit into a much larger field of study.
    Sorry bout my english btw.

  • @mattjames4978
    @mattjames4978 6 років тому +3

    Such an engaging communicator.

  • @Jch79
    @Jch79 3 місяці тому

    I know almost nothing about physics, but I'm sure when Neil was asked who was right, Einstein or Newton, he said "Tyson, yes, Tyson is always right"... Then he held his hands like Mr. Burns and called everyone in the room idiots for not being him.

  • @Linkwii64
    @Linkwii64 6 років тому +3

    At 0:04 Neil face is priceless. What do you think running in Dr. Tyson mind at that moment?

  • @ilshaadhassain2001
    @ilshaadhassain2001 2 роки тому

    whenever dealing with the universe never forget the philosophers David Hume's criticism of induction that induction rests on the notion that nature is uniform and the only way to discover nature is uniform is through induction hence all of science rests on circular reasoning at its foundation being induction, when ever you reason from the observed to the unobserved you face this issue, in this way science is great whatever theories we have we must keep on pushing to seek their limits.

  • @sartazaziz856
    @sartazaziz856 3 роки тому +2

    I successfully copy-pasted numerous journals to make my thesis on Solar Panel before I turned 26 😎

  • @user-ib4mi5eq7u
    @user-ib4mi5eq7u Рік тому +2

    100% of physics and maths of engineering is classical mechanical of NEWTON.
    Relativity’s theory is used with big things like stars, great speeds, etc.

  • @Seekarr
    @Seekarr 6 років тому +73

    Urinous, the yellow planet.

  • @richardpetek712
    @richardpetek712 6 років тому +2

    What would the science without Neil DeGrasse Tyson?
    Boring.
    He brings life to it :)

  • @operationmindfuck7145
    @operationmindfuck7145 6 років тому +2

    What if the universe is made of a matrix of strings that don't move and as we move through them they change their wavelength like pixels on a screen?

  • @jackharper4794
    @jackharper4794 11 місяців тому

    I Love how he explains things out! I don't agree with everything he says, but how he approaches what he talks about is great!

  • @3wc
    @3wc 6 років тому +7

    I could listen to this man all day

  • @alexsandertaniyaola5294
    @alexsandertaniyaola5294 Рік тому +2

    Then he turned 26.😂

  • @davidmudry5622
    @davidmudry5622 Рік тому

    From my research on gravity it seems to me that there are TWO kinds of acceleration. One kind is real, meaning if there is a force on an object then it will be considered to be accelerating, and it will have weight. The other kind is an illusion, or an apparent acceleration. If you have weight, but feel as though you're standing still, then objects that are actually standing still will seem as if they are accelerating instead of you. Anytime an object has weight there will be a force on it, whether or not the object is observed to be accelerating, traveling at a constant speed, or standing still. Anytime an object does not have weight then there will not be a force on it, whether or not the object is observed to be accelerating, travelling at a constant speed, or standing still. Apparent acceleration can also mean an object has real acceleration but is actually standing more still than you. Or in other words it will have less force on it than you. My research also seems to indicate that the idea of apparent acceleration is not taught in schools. According to Einstein, to stand still with a static weight, you are accelerating up from a force at 9.8 meters/sec/sec. Less force upward less acceleration, and you will be falling with apparent acceleration, with a lighter than static weight. Free fall, would be no upward force, you are then weightless with an apparent downward acceleration at 9.8 meters/sec/sec.
    Brian Greene tells Alan Alda there is no gravity in free fall.
    NIST WTC FAQ 31 "the upper section came down essentially in free fall."
    Shyam Sunder John Gross "gravity was the driving force."
    ua-cam.com/video/E43-CfukEgs/v-deo.html
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  • @larsped.7388
    @larsped.7388 Рік тому +3

    Newton is just beyond comparison

  • @fattony638
    @fattony638 6 років тому +3

    Kuhn argued newtonian conservation of mass is incommensurable with special relativity. Now, I'm not knowledgeable enough to extensively defend that position, but it would imply that Neil is wrong here. Any thoughts?

    • @kylelochlann5053
      @kylelochlann5053 Рік тому

      Mass is conserved (constant for all isolated systems) but mass adds differently in relativity. Technically, mass is the norm of a systems 4-momentum and so mass follows 4-vector addition.

  • @156615
    @156615 Рік тому +1

    PASSION !!!

  • @gregoryharlston0602
    @gregoryharlston0602 Рік тому

    Lot of people in the comment section writing about Newton and Einstein, but I’m watching Neil and the host. I do believe the host was smitten ❤😊 by Mr. De Grasse! Judging from the “laws of attraction” that have nothing to do with the universal constant of gravity, she was blushing 😊, laughing flirtatiously, etc. I’m surprised she didn’t fix (play) with her hair!

  • @RK-ln6kg
    @RK-ln6kg 3 роки тому +2

    Love the last sentence by him. 😄😄😄

    • @franklinjoe1602
      @franklinjoe1602 3 роки тому

      Thanks for your video, highly appreciated. Compliments of the Season. BTC price is in a precarious location, the asset set a new all-time high just days ago but is currently below the record and starting to decline. analysts suggest that the latest rally above $32.000 could have been triggered by aggressive buying from institution investors on coin base, as suggested by the large premium of about $350 compared to the price in binance....The shifting momentum is now presenting in technical indicators supplying bearish movement, adding to the double top narrative that’s been building since failing to break $30,000.?? This being taken into note, it can’t be more obvious that trading Bitcoin is way more profitable than just holding and waiting for the price of Bitcoin to skyrocket. I didn’t think it was possible to make constant win from trading till I came across Carlos Andrewfx program for investors/newbies who lack understanding on how trading Bitcoin works, to help them recover loss from the crash and also stack up more bitcoin, he provided me with %100 signal and with his strategy i was able to increase my portfolio from $4000 to $42,000 in just a week, I was convinced to say his an expert, with Andrew help. You can easily get to him on Instagram (@carlos_andrewfx or WhatsApp+19715122836......

  • @YawnGod
    @YawnGod 6 років тому +117

    I actually had goosebumps when he said "...and Neptune was right there, waiting to be discovered."
    Hey guys, Trump is POTUS.

    • @t-c-rosstyson543
      @t-c-rosstyson543 6 років тому

      YawnGod potus

    • @thricefan89
      @thricefan89 6 років тому +11

      Isn't Trump also POS?

    • @thricefan89
      @thricefan89 6 років тому +2

      @Goggle products Sea level is 0.... Technically the height of water isn't measured really.. Just a starting point to show how high mt. Everest is, instead of how high it is from some arbitrary spot on the continent which would vary. In science, the men and women like to use constants to help prove some thing. Scientists use the freezing point of water .. Its 0. When water boils it's 100. Everything in between is an increment :) See how that works?

    • @thricefan89
      @thricefan89 6 років тому

      @Goggle products Also. God sends people to hell when they swear ... So. Scientifically speaking ... You're fucked.

    • @markcostello5120
      @markcostello5120 6 років тому +3

      He's a flat earther just ignore the ignorant prick.

  • @mallukittens177
    @mallukittens177 Рік тому

    Neil must start a youtube and talks about stuff like this all day. He would have billions of views!!

  • @jeffdege4786
    @jeffdege4786 8 місяців тому

    All models are wrong, but some are useful - George Box

  • @ViratKohli-jj3wj
    @ViratKohli-jj3wj 4 роки тому +3

    I love this Guy.

  • @solapowsj25
    @solapowsj25 Рік тому

    Both are right. Newton talks of G and the force of gravity on mass in free space. Einstein introduced the concept of curvature of the fabric of 4-D spacetime. He predicted the black hole formed when and where gravity causes nuclear changes in the fifth dimension.

  • @georgianaperry1489
    @georgianaperry1489 4 роки тому +9

    Science has been perfected.From the perspective of quatum mechanics,Einstein was right.Newton's classic mechanics could not be explained

  • @MrYort13
    @MrYort13 6 років тому +3

    Tyson Loves to talk and make grand statements, no one disagrees on climate changing. The question is the impact man has and can he control it without killing off 7 or 8 billion?

    • @martymasters1894
      @martymasters1894 6 років тому +2

      MrYort13 he gets a wonderful high from the emotion he feels when he hears the echo of his great voice the man's a great orator & he loves to have an audience he's well respected but his ego is getting out of control he needs meditation ASAP

    • @only4anindya
      @only4anindya 6 років тому

      And how do you know that he does not meditate?

  • @adamkingry6862
    @adamkingry6862 2 місяці тому

    This video is like “Vinny Barbarino: Francis Bacon vs Aristotle? Who was right?”

  • @hangukhiphop
    @hangukhiphop 6 років тому +14

    Vulcan: Mercury's miscarried little brother

  • @equisetuminc
    @equisetuminc Рік тому +1

    “I was reading Schopenhauer last night, and I decided: Schopenhauer was right “ 🎶

  • @DonLee1980
    @DonLee1980 Рік тому +1

    The fact that humans were able to predict the existence and location of Neptune from Newton's calculations, is a testament of his genius. Meanwhile 400 years later we still have people swearing by god that they don't think, they KNOW that the Earth is flat.

  • @emanx2600
    @emanx2600 5 років тому +3

    "No you're a fan" lmao

  • @biosteeman
    @biosteeman 6 років тому +1

    She got them to agree on the global warming and he immediately backtracked and corrected his statement. It's not that there isn't global warming, it's not that humans haven't aided in global warming. It's the amount and the overall effect and impact it will have is contested

    • @Ericwvb2
      @Ericwvb2 8 місяців тому

      Contested by whom? 100% of the scientific organizations that have put out an official statement on this topic agree that 1) the planet is warming and 2) the primary driver of this warming is human activity. Here is the list: Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC),
      Federal Climate Change Science Program (US),
      Arctic Climate Impact Assessment,
      European Academy of Sciences and Arts,
      InterAcademy Council,
      International Council of Academies of Engineering and Technological Sciences,
      Network of African Science Academies,
      Royal Society of New Zealand,
      American Association for the Advancement of Science,
      European Science Foundation,
      National Research Council (US),
      American Association of Wildlife Veterinarians,
      American Society for Microbiology,
      Australian Coral Reef Society,
      Institute of Biology (UK),
      Society of American Foresters,
      The Wildlife Society (international),
      American Geophysical Union,
      Canadian Federation of Earth Sciences,
      European Federation of Geologists,
      European Geosciences Union,
      Geological Society of America,
      International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics,
      Stratigraphy Commission of the Geological Society of London.
      American College of Preventive Medicine,
      American Medical Association,
      American Public Health Association,
      Australian Medical Association,
      World Federation of Public Health Associations,
      American Meteorological Society,
      Australian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society,
      Canadian Foundation for Climate and Atmospheric Sciences,
      Canadian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society,
      Royal Meteorological Society (UK),
      World Meteorological Organization,
      American Quaternary Association,
      International Union for Quaternary Research,
      American Astronomical Society,
      American Chemical Society,
      American Institute of Physics,
      American Physical Society,
      American Statistical Association,
      Engineers Australia (The Institution of Engineers Australia)

  • @Proct3rPlease
    @Proct3rPlease 5 років тому +1

    Einstein just told what is written in the Vedas --that energy and matter is inter convertible.

  • @louel9272
    @louel9272 11 місяців тому

    I admire how he phrases that Newton is not wrong but his truths are a subset of what Einstein came up with later on.

  • @mikethestoner
    @mikethestoner 6 років тому +8

    Love how he always says "now watch this" he's not even showing you anything he's telling you haha dk why it makes me laugh

  • @quettagladiator5272
    @quettagladiator5272 4 місяці тому

    Albert Einstein as his theory refuted existing classical physics and is relevant to modern Physics!

  • @muylae
    @muylae Рік тому +1

    if Newton lived today ... and standing on the shoulders of giants before him ... what would he come up with today ?

  • @kevina5337
    @kevina5337 4 роки тому +7

    Neil goes on awesome Newton vs. Einstein rant... then NY times lady throws in some global warming talking point at the end. So lame lol

  • @alikhan81
    @alikhan81 3 місяці тому

    Meanwhile I thought myself to whistle really loud before I turned 26

  • @moesypittounikos
    @moesypittounikos 6 років тому +1

    The question has to be who was the most original? Relativity was in the air anyway. Poincare wrote on relativity a decade before Einstein. Can we say the same about Newton?

    • @guyincognito7979
      @guyincognito7979 6 років тому

      Moesy Pittounikos what about galileo the original author of relativity and enstein has his own relativity

    • @moesypittounikos
      @moesypittounikos 6 років тому

      Yes people confuse the question of walking on a plane whether you walk very fast. That's Galileo's, but a boat.

  • @reto1369
    @reto1369 Рік тому +1

    So as I understood: Einstein was right, eight? Love you de Grass Tyson, dont be a frenchman 🎉❤

  • @AsadAli-le2ms
    @AsadAli-le2ms 4 роки тому +2

    newton stil deservice novel prize-winning more than any modren "known physicist"

    • @franklinjoe1602
      @franklinjoe1602 3 роки тому

      Thanks for your video, highly appreciated. Compliments of the Season. BTC price is in a precarious location, the asset set a new all-time high just days ago but is currently below the record and starting to decline. analysts suggest that the latest rally above $32.000 could have been triggered by aggressive buying from institution investors on coin base, as suggested by the large premium of about $350 compared to the price in binance....The shifting momentum is now presenting in technical indicators supplying bearish movement, adding to the double top narrative that’s been building since failing to break $30,000.?? This being taken into note, it can’t be more obvious that trading Bitcoin is way more profitable than just holding and waiting for the price of Bitcoin to skyrocket. I didn’t think it was possible to make constant win from trading till I came across Carlos Andrewfx program for investors/newbies who lack understanding on how trading Bitcoin works, to help them recover loss from the crash and also stack up more bitcoin, he provided me with %100 signal and with his strategy i was able to increase my portfolio from $4000 to $42,000 in just a week, I was convinced to say his an expert, with Andrew help. You can easily get to him on Instagram (@carlos_andrewfx or WhatsApp+19715122836......

  • @hyafunds4125
    @hyafunds4125 5 років тому +7

    That host is just so charmed by my man Neil that she blushing like a 14 year old

    • @gregoryharlston0602
      @gregoryharlston0602 Рік тому

      I noticed the same…watching their interaction, you realize there is a universal law of attraction that has nothing to do with gravity!

  • @davidmudry5622
    @davidmudry5622 Рік тому

    NIST WTC FAQ 31. How could the WTC towers collapse in speeds that approximate that of a ball dropped from similar height in a vacuum (with no air resistance)?
    NIST answer...
    Since the stories below the level of collapse initiation provided little resistance, the falling building section above came down essentially in free fall. As the stories below sequentially failed, the falling mass increased, further increasing the demand on the floors below, which were unable to arrest the moving mass."

  • @HelenCrane-jl1nv
    @HelenCrane-jl1nv Рік тому +1

    love this guy!

  • @OmegaWolf747
    @OmegaWolf747 6 років тому +5

    Newton's laws are the beginning, then Einstein's laws go beyond that, encompassing it. Beyond that may well be M Theory, unifying the macro- and microcosms.

  • @keyboardcat2497
    @keyboardcat2497 6 років тому +8

    Where is his tie?

  • @0-by-1_Publishing_LLC
    @0-by-1_Publishing_LLC Рік тому

    (6:00) So, when we don't find any strings nor 10 new dimensions at the fundamental level ... String Theory still won't be considered "wrong?"

  • @babydaddy8224
    @babydaddy8224 5 років тому +3

    When is this guy gonna run for president already!

    • @HarryNicNicholas
      @HarryNicNicholas 4 роки тому

      i'm advocating for a house of scientists (as opposed to a house of lords - what do they know) on this side of the pond, maybe the US could do the same.

  • @nebojsa1976
    @nebojsa1976 6 років тому +4

    I didn't know Neil lost his feet. When did he lose it?

  • @brianj4090
    @brianj4090 Рік тому +1

    Science is so badass

  • @deepakvidyarthi
    @deepakvidyarthi 6 років тому +1

    Aren't you enamoured by Newton? Read the latest sci fi book the Newtonian Quest- How it all began and set yourself on an adventure of a lifetime.

  • @kunalkamble3540
    @kunalkamble3540 2 роки тому

    Each one have it own capacity . Both given some thing to society.

  • @snehalmishra5429
    @snehalmishra5429 4 роки тому +5

    I think Einstein do have an upper edge coz his prediction was beyond the scope of our three dimensional world

    • @scoobydoo5164
      @scoobydoo5164 4 роки тому +4

      Newton was a giant no body else came close

    • @titicoqui
      @titicoqui 3 роки тому +2

      absolutely Newton despite his miraculous mind could never have uttered the now well established proposition that reality is essentially a four-dimensional nonEuclidean continuum. Einstein was a way greater out of the box thinker. Tysom's fixation with Newton is lamentably short sighted. Mr. Mishra is correct.

    • @KellyOwl
      @KellyOwl Рік тому +1

      you just overrated Einstein, Newton's contribution to science is far ahead of Einstein's.

    • @quettagladiator5272
      @quettagladiator5272 4 місяці тому +1

      @@KellyOwlEinstein created his revolutionary theories refuting quite well-established Science…Anyways his theory of relativity corrected Newton’s and is more relevant to modern Science!