The way in wich he explains general relativity in this video is outstanding. It took me years to comprehend it, and he was the one to finally make it all click. Now everything makes sense. Btw, another masterpiece of his is his video on the banach-tarski paradox. A little math heavy, but it's explained in true vsauce fashion wich makes it digestible and it's brilliant.
@opossumoutlaw75342 жыл бұрын
Love the VSAUCE reactions. If I had to reccomend another, it would be "if".
@Lyarri2 жыл бұрын
i reacted to this and didnt press record 😅 gonna rerecord eventually trying to "forget" about it
@opossumoutlaw75342 жыл бұрын
@@Lyarri ahh, a shame! There are lots of great sciency type channels to learn from so I allways like seeing people's thoughts on the ideas they present.
@Lyarri2 жыл бұрын
@@opossumoutlaw7534 it was actually like a top 3 personal fav for both vsauce videos ive watched and, like, personal bar on if the react was 'good'. def was a bit annoyed at myself for that. 😅 I wanna react to other sciencey stuff too, definitely planning to do more Vsauce + check out other channel recs + find stuff on my own too
@SandVoop2 жыл бұрын
These Vsauce reactions are great. Would love to see you watch 'Messages For The Future' and from that jump onto another channel, Lemmino, with a video called 'The Great Silence'. These two videos discuss a similar topic, and would be a great starting point to Lemmino and his more mystery oriented content.
@JawadBhuiyan2 жыл бұрын
Yes! Lemmino reactions would be great.
@PXKMProductionsGaming2 жыл бұрын
You should watch Vsauce's "How to Count Past Infinity" and "The Zipf Mystery" if you really want your mind blown. I always show it to people I meet who have never seen vsauce.
@dymaxion39882 жыл бұрын
The curvature of spacetime is wild, it’s all around us but we don’t really notice it. We see the world around us as if point to point distances were static, straight lines, but it’s literally a trick of the light: photons, having energy, are affected by gravity like anything else, but they move so fast that the curved path they follow is essentially straight on a human scale. We think we can stand still, but when we try, we experience a constant unequal force from below, implying acceleration and therefore movement. To be motionless is to follow a straight line on a space/time graph, which we are not doing when standing still because the graph is curved and the floor is in the way of our line. In freefall, we are motionless, and when standing, we are being accelerated upwards. (I like your outfit btw!)
@jamesmoore49102 жыл бұрын
VSAAUUUUCE! hey, just trying to help with the algorithm