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@Gagagag-d1w8 ай бұрын
My pseudo intellectual take is that conspiracies arise because the poor and the marginalized intuitively sense that society is hostile to their existence and that there is a level of legit conspiracies (lobbying for harmful policies, etc) against them. They just lack the class consciousness and education necessary to identify real issues.
@CharlesH-t9r8 ай бұрын
That and they go after "fairy tales"(As Kimiko said in "The Boys") like blaming Jewish people, feminists, BLM, illuminati and satanism or Lucifer but not the actual powers that be that as you said that we have actual proof of the extremely sickening policies they have set out And I believe it's because they hope one day to be these rich powers that be so they don't want to "rock the boat" And once they become that rich person they can go in and change things for the better They have Bruce Wayne syndrome going on and it's not realistic That's always been odd how much marginalized groups are so focused on being rich , not all but it's way too many people
@Neuvost8 ай бұрын
Agreed. I think it's easy to feel like it's obvious why the Reaganist economics experts are BS, but meteorology / climate experts are trustworthy. But really, they're all the "experts" in their field of study. They all define and uphold certain kinds of status quo. Why should marginalized people trust any such institution? And since reasonable people know that we don't know everything, that's no small amount of trust! For every pseudo intellectual loudmouth, there's a much more reasonable, much quieter person who sees that (for example) the CIA committed many conspiracies, no doubt got away with many more, and are rightfully empathetic when a pseudo intellectual loudmouth is dragged online for believing conspiracies. For not trusting "the experts." It's tough.
@kikkpod58878 ай бұрын
Sounds like a pretty solid pseudo intellectual take to me, id but that
@connorpeterman50248 ай бұрын
I work with a woman who says some wildly stupid things like "the moon landing is fake". Having worked with and gotten to know her personally and professionally, she's clearly not a stupid person. This take is actually pretty spot on.
@em.4158 ай бұрын
This is also why our politics are messed up.
@gabisyderas18558 ай бұрын
The "arguing with an older family member on a topic you research for a living" effect
@gabisyderas18558 ай бұрын
Also, im an art historian who studies with not only other historians, but with artists themselves and let me tell you, there is nothing i know better than "dumb as a bag of bricks who happens to be amazing at the one thing they get paid to do". People who couldnt argue their way out of a paper bag but who think they have some massive insight into the field just because they can whip up a powerful personal work
@fluidthought428 ай бұрын
@@gabisyderas1855 Okay but Leonardo Da Vinci almost definitely probably had ADHD right?
@berickslime67188 ай бұрын
It's painful. I am getting Ph.D in cancer and immunology. Older family members think that being alive longer makes you more knowledgeable than someone younger who is an expert. Its painful.
@ItsDaJax8 ай бұрын
@@berickslime6718 A lot of older folks are like that. I tend to try and watch what I say and ask questions when talking to somebody younger than me for that very reason.
@LawnPygmy8 ай бұрын
Being old doesn't make you smarter or wiser, it just gives you more time to get entrenched in whatever stupid shit you were never corrected on when you were younger.
@Nondescripthumanoid8 ай бұрын
The fact Neil Degrasse Tyson hit him with the scientific you’re not like us was crazy lol
@_BlackSummer7 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂
@maki93967 ай бұрын
Respectfully too. That was a friendly version of what he could have written
@kiuk_kiks7 ай бұрын
😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
@AJGraham837 ай бұрын
Fundamentally different
@niwe36317 ай бұрын
Lmao excellent
@JoelKirchartz7 ай бұрын
“The problem with the world is that the intelligent people are full of doubts, while the stupid ones are full of confidence.” ― Charles Bukowski
@summergolden6 ай бұрын
It's not doubt, it's keeping one's mind open to all information
@apex107lrp6 ай бұрын
@@summergolden Wrong. Critical thinking (read: the scientific method) requires doubt by definition. You question anything novel unless and until you have, at a minimum, repeatability.
@meinschmerz60746 ай бұрын
I really liked that quote in my late Teens, but i think its a way to easy Explanation. Because there are "stupid" or well, people with rather low problem solving abilities and "IQ" that are full with doubts and heavilöy depressed. But yeah i know IQ isb heavily flawed in itself. Im no genius too and am completly crippled by depression and self-hate and doubts. Oh and physical disabilities ,too thanks God. While i met many highly intelligent people who are confident in their abilities,sometimes even arrogant. I myself cant stand the Intro for example. Hmm i really liked Bukowski back than,but i HAVE to be honest: He was aloof AF. And is a bit overrated. Thats doesnt mean he is a bad author, god no. But he defeats his own quote in a weird way.
@ashisland80616 ай бұрын
i realise the stupid ones, despite knowing little, they know something the intelligent people dont. how to take life not so seriously
@bernardfinucane20615 ай бұрын
The best lack all conviction, and the worst are filled with a passionate intensity. -- W.B. Yeats
@LadyDnMiller8 ай бұрын
I'm not remotely shocked you were a public school teacher. Your whole mannerism SCREAM "I'm so tired of your ignant asses....but i love yall." Just like a teacher 😂
@DeRoche0228 ай бұрын
IIRC I believe FD's mentioned it a a couple times in previous videos too.
@davruck17 ай бұрын
Hes fully indoctrinated. That explains why he thinks like a conservative while believing he’s not.
@stillhere14257 ай бұрын
It’s important background.
@jbell71057 ай бұрын
Facts 😂😂😂
@bigcatenergy37077 ай бұрын
😂😂😂 that’s a perfect point lol
@Sensei_BigJoe8 ай бұрын
Dude didn't even get hit with a "citation needed" he just got "NO" lol
@nerdjournal7 ай бұрын
I think it's because citations for things people just make up, don't exist. Terrence just makes things up. Dude read how gravity was the warping of spacetime and started thinking Gravity didn't exist. Just like a flat earther, they think proof for gravity is actually what disproves it. It's mind-boggling. Sadly, Terrence is still probably smarter than my dumb butt. (sad Pikachu?)
@bibsp35567 ай бұрын
Citation needed is my favourite
@DellaWatson-cz3mq5 ай бұрын
😂😂
@DellaWatson-cz3mq5 ай бұрын
I disagree... He needs to shxt the F up and just dribble, because they know they're going to apologise anyway. Stand on it or just don't say nothing
@moonrakerone7 ай бұрын
Neil deGrasse Tyson: Provides Terrence Howard with the mildest possible criticism Terrence Howard: He eviscerated my work!
@Idkchangethislater7 ай бұрын
What’s worse is Weinstein insulted NDT for defending himself 💀
@sayakchoudhury97116 ай бұрын
Winestein also infantalised Howard
@OGMacGee5 ай бұрын
NDT even complimented the pictures as artistically beautiful. He just criticised the "science" in the paper.
@ruthetiger5 ай бұрын
The fact that NDT read an article or hypothesis by an unhinged actor was a complete waste of time
@tyronesquiers86994 ай бұрын
Facts! My only weakness!
@haunted146 ай бұрын
My 11 year old son is autistic and his special interest is math/numbers. When I told him about this, he was legitimately so beyond confused and annoyed. He uses him as a punchline now. He also forgot his name and called him “Errant Toward” and so that’s what I will forever refer to him as from now on.
@Miksho76 ай бұрын
"Errant Toward" is such an amazing display of bars, I think it changed my life.
@S4Cxattack5 ай бұрын
Shout out your son and u as a mom. Errant Toward💜🤣
@saltypineapple83714 ай бұрын
@@silvaskiproductions3937 please dont be weird to internet strangers. theyre people too and this can be classified as sexual harrassment
@alim.98015 сағат бұрын
Perfect, bc Howard's math is errant as hell 😂
@matthewlister37558 ай бұрын
I like Terry's math. If 1 x 1 = 2 then he's actually been in 2 Ironman movies and not just one before he was fired for being weird.
@fluidthought428 ай бұрын
Yeah, that's where I heard first about his problems. I didn't know it was this bad though...
@preciousone93777 ай бұрын
I love it!😂
@melissacross55257 ай бұрын
THIS! I was gonna say is THAT why he was recast in Iron Man 2😂😂
@nenep18727 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂
@eliasmg91447 ай бұрын
But then take my 75% if we were to go 1 on 1, and you add the 66 and 2/3 percents. I GOT A HUNDRED AND FORTY ONE AND 2/3s CHANCE OF WINNING AT SACRIFICE
@stevenclubb77187 ай бұрын
As an old white guy raised in the South... the number of times I've listened to people who know far less than my limited knowledge on a subject that speak with absolute confidence cannot be counted. I think it's just an older man thing, when you learn that you can pass off your age as "experience" and "wisdom", when you're just the dumbass kid you used to be with a bad back and wonky knees.
@creatrixZBD7 ай бұрын
Hear hear, peer
@MrPiccoloku7 ай бұрын
As a young white enby in the north, I see that too, but mostly from able-bodied straight white people who are old af specifically. Able-bodied straight white guys generally don't have any reason to question the caucacious conflation of age and intelligence (Esp. wisdom), because they already get implicitly (And sometimes explicitly) told on a regular basis they're smarter than much smarter minorities (Ethno-Dunning-Kruger) so if they never get called out on it in any meaningful way, they subconsciously internalize it. They then apply that to themself as they get older, giving them an out for questioning their own long-standing assumptions about the world and all who inhabit it, because everyone doing that needs to respect their elders. I call it Season One Pakku Syndrome (SOPS), and the best known treatments for it are (From someone else's comment on the Abby Thorne Phantasm video) A: Giving them a different way to feel about being taught that, B: Help them work through the feelings that come from being taught that, and (From the namesake) C: Getting visibly trounced by someone much younger and less institutionally privileged than they are, and having to confront their own shortcomings.
@thedoctor20857 ай бұрын
That was a bit specific 😂
@Sleipnirseight7 ай бұрын
Lol so true. This is like a special variety of the Dunning Kruger effect
@RestingJudge7 ай бұрын
Man, born and raised in Mississippi, and the amount of nonsense folks will spew with the utmost confidence is crazy. My 38 yo brother with two kids tried to tell me he never finished puberty to justify taking steroids and spoke of it like a spiritual awakening. My man if you want your balls to shrivel up you don't have to turn it into some testosterone third eye wackness
@realtalk138 ай бұрын
As someone else who's ABD (hopefully not for much longer!), the craziest thing about pseudo intellectuals (and those who follow them) is how resistant they are to critique. Terrance was complaining about NDT marking his paper up in red ink. MANNNNNN that's LIGHT work. People will tear your entire theory apart at a conference, journals will send back your paper with a litany of revisions, your advisor*will send you back your draft with an equal length number of comments, etc. Because that's the true academic process at work: critique, revision, synthesis, etc. It's all done in service of weeding out the nonsense and developing/refining the good shit (ideally of course. plenty of BS gets through, still but I digress).
@jyt748 ай бұрын
Looking for this comment, and you said it better than I could have. Cheers!
@cedaremberr8 ай бұрын
It's a huge privilege and a gift for NDT to offer his critique at all
@LordVolkov8 ай бұрын
If a theory (or theorist) crumples under critique it was hollow to begin with.
@betteramulet508 ай бұрын
I had to Google ABD and the were a confusing number of options that could have applied, but given the context of your comment I’m guessing it refers to ‘all but dissertation’? Not sure that term is used in Aus
@liamsemicolon8 ай бұрын
@@betteramulet50yes, it means "all but dissertation". it's explained at the start of the video
@rashiekferris46157 ай бұрын
There is a cult of ignorance in the United States, and there has always been. The strain of anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that 'my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge. Isaac Asimov
@ManWhoKnewTooLittle7 ай бұрын
I think it is all over western world. In my country I come across same people.
@rocky-bk5me7 ай бұрын
We been living in the movie Idiocracy for years now.
@archiemisc7 ай бұрын
@@ManWhoKnewTooLittle It's all over the Eastern world too
@88_TROUBLE_887 ай бұрын
@@archiemisc Omnipresent, no doubt
@GaganSingh-nx2yv7 ай бұрын
Nah believe me, it's everywhere. Americans are just the loudest one and the USA has the spotlight.
@WuntaykTimmy18 ай бұрын
If Terrence says "Conjugation" one more time i swear to god
@bridgerparker42758 ай бұрын
Dude has 0 idea what that word means
@auriginaladhi8 ай бұрын
On god. Kept spamming straight line hatred
@EdgeO4198 ай бұрын
hes the one dude in the class that learned one word from tv and repeats it in class in the wrong context.
@Sure_Sir8 ай бұрын
He got tired of saying "mane" so this is it's replacement.
@jossecoupe4468 ай бұрын
Isn't that term in reference to the function/forms of verbs in grammar or some shit? Googling now... Edit: yes, but no, but also yes...
@stickshiftt91277 ай бұрын
I'm a black aerospace engineer ... born and raised in the hood ... I cant tell you how many arguments Ive had with pseudo intellectuals in the barbershop! 😂😂😂😂. I had a guy tell me that concussions are caused by steroids and not the repeated banging of ones head into another person or a wall. 😂
@ScagAteHer7 ай бұрын
Omfg the barbershop is the worst. I just let my barber go cuz I couldn’t even begin to correct him. Just fallacy after fallacy.
@Methodizations7 ай бұрын
Last year when I moved back to my home state - I decided to go by the old barbershop I hadn't been to since I was a teenager - I don't know how I ever sat there for an hour without laughing hysterically before! It was one of the goofiest things ever and I couldn't even believe that I used to think this shit was normal. Still love that place though.
@MetaVerseTechy7 ай бұрын
As a former Network Engineer, who use to work in cellular. Having to explain the 5G upgrade during the pandemic to black folks almost took me out of here.
@DustinAxelson7 ай бұрын
LMAO Sounds like they've suffered a few concussions themselves.
@suprememedjai44337 ай бұрын
While I lack the education and expertise you have, I hear a lot in the barbershop.
@ColeRees7 ай бұрын
“I’ve been able to rebuild Saturn, without gravity” has got to be one of the funniest things I’ve ever heard. What does that even mean?!
@feliciascorner97957 ай бұрын
Dude also said elements produce a tone. Like Carbon produces the "key of E." I studied music in college Key of E is a series of notes, not a single "tone." If you played all the notes at once it would sound like a car accident.
@magicmulder7 ай бұрын
He means he saw an animation where a planet looking like Saturn formed even though the animation does not simulate gravity. Yeah, it’s that dumb. A computer animation proved to him planets can form without gravity. It’s like saying Mickey Mouse proves mice can talk.
@ColeRees7 ай бұрын
@@magicmulder bruh 🤣💀
@Σατανας6667 ай бұрын
I think he means a styrofoam ball and some paint from Michael’s. That’s where my math leads me… …but what is math?
@matturner68907 ай бұрын
@@feliciascorner9795 it really irks me when people who know nothing about music start misusing terms like that. It's not even that hard to learn the differences between pitch, tone, key; he can't even do that!
@seaoftranquility72287 ай бұрын
‘The social currency of being smart rather than the actual value of it’ Boom
@LiberalSquared8 ай бұрын
"Smart dumb" is a great way to say it. I've met so many of this kind of person, and they're all soooo convinced that they're "enlightened," yet if you ever really listen to what they have to sat, it's nonsense. But they use language that can fool people.
@ComicXanz8 ай бұрын
I had this phase when I was like 5 or something. I had the smartest theory about how Mickey Mouse and Tom & Jerry were in the same universe…
@itsmedjoom9878 ай бұрын
There was this dude in high school which was very similar to me, but fits what u point out. He would read books that were famous for being “smart ppl books” and would be very condescending. Never found him interesting or original as he just talked like an r/atheism mod and some right wing libertarian that read Hoppe and thought they could solve the problem of representative governments.
@Meanpeagreen8 ай бұрын
reminds me of the saying about light being faster than sound so some people appear bright until they speak
@ramenaddict16768 ай бұрын
as an ex victim of the dunning krugar effect, i agree.
@The_Cadaver8 ай бұрын
It's known as "word salad." Common among narcissistic types.
@omegaXjammur7 ай бұрын
Neil's response taught me one important thing: peer reviews matter
@izzyNFT697 ай бұрын
There is a whole other issue with peer review. The journals make the money, the peer reviewers are volunteers, and there is huge bias towards big names and certain topics.
@TheGanjologist7 ай бұрын
@@izzyNFT69everything in this world is full of holes. *Especially* the man made things 😅 but that's what we've got to work with
@rabeechowdhury7 ай бұрын
I would invite you to watch Dr K and Dr Mike's debate.
@jamespohl-md2eq7 ай бұрын
@@supasaba1842Derp
@jamespohl-md2eq7 ай бұрын
@freindlyghost4829Who bought and paid him?
@satyasyasatyasya57468 ай бұрын
*They wanna do the talking and sound smart,* *but they won't do the reading to be smart.*
@RevengeOfThaNerd7 ай бұрын
Says me to my teens on a daily.
@GreenNectarines7 ай бұрын
I have a cousin like this. He said women float better because they “don’t work” 🤦🏾
@teresaamanfu74087 ай бұрын
@@GreenNectarines😂😂😂
@SUNROSE78787 ай бұрын
He would never do the reading because he would be up against really smart people. He feels safe among people he deems dumber than him. He needs to go somewhere and sit down and shut up
@Ultralined7 ай бұрын
@@SUNROSE7878he needs money and attention. This is just part of his acting resume, he’s still not over Tony Stark. This is just a way for his body to come to terms with his anger so he pretends to be a genius for a cheque just like Rob Downey😂😂except Robs pay is still much bigger because Terry is just going for interviews and conferences😂😭 Either way, his public speaking is what his agent and manager will use to help cast him into acting roles, I swear on my mamas foot.
@PatDurkinMusic7 ай бұрын
"They don't even have the shame to feel insecure about how wrong they are about something" bro deep facts
@RNNNPTH8 ай бұрын
I hate that I know enough about Shannon Sharpe to make this correction, but he's actually a three time Super Bowl Champion.
@jjww308 ай бұрын
He earned those SB wins, even if he now has to be the loudest guy in the room.
@ellemarr72347 ай бұрын
Just came from a Nightcap video 🤣
@hollister23207 ай бұрын
@@jjww30 wait we turnin on Shannon? When was this? Lemme get my suit😪
@SilkyLew7 ай бұрын
I will not take any unk slander lol
@EquinoxGate7 ай бұрын
@@hollister2320sheep
@JawnLouis8 ай бұрын
Remember on the cartoons Willi E Coyote carried a business card around that said “genius”… that’s Terrance Howard
@efef68537 ай бұрын
Where are your 97 patents? Why do some people love to dismiss things or knowledge they don't understand as CRAZY. Can you disprove without a doubt what Terrence was saying? If not then you shouldn't be MOCKING. Throughout history numerous scientists were dismissed as CRAZY by their small minded contemporaries because the knowledge or discoveries those scientists shared were not understood by the MOCKERS of those times. Ignaz Semmelweis discovered in 1847 that hand-wash with a solution of chlorinated lime reduced the incidence of fatal childbed fever tenfold in maternity institutions. However, the reaction of his contemporaries was not positive; Semmelweis’s critics claimed his findings lacked scientific reasoning. History has proven that he was right about the dangers germs pose but he was dismissed as a CRAZY person at that time by those who didn’t have the mental capacity to understand the importance of cleanliness. If you are too ahead of the curve those with small minds often tend to dismiss you as CRAZY. Those who are MOCKING Terrence are showing themselves to be small minded individuals. Try to understand what Terrence is saying. Prove him wrong if you think what he is saying is not true. Don't be a small minded MOCKER.
@prettynikky20977 ай бұрын
Lmao
@preciousone93777 ай бұрын
A “genius” card from ACME…😂😂😂
@KEVINALI7 ай бұрын
Wyle -E-Coyote....... Sooooouuuuuper GENIUS !
@melissacross55257 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂
@pixelbomb978 ай бұрын
I love whenever fact-checking is viewed as an attack. It genuinely isn't. Anyone who wants to be informed will thank you for a fact check. But egocentric people just don't like to be wrong. It's an exercise in branding. I'm selling myself, so I can't be questioned. Every intrusive thought that comes out of my mouth must be correct because I believe it.
@dominicparker61247 ай бұрын
Debate bros in a nutshell
@Cnichal7 ай бұрын
A word.
@mdstevens06127 ай бұрын
Thing is, it does feel bad. Being emotionally honest is important, it's embarrassing to be wrong, especially if you're being wrong very loudly to a large group of people. But how you deal with that embarrassment will define you as a person. You can either feel it, go home, have a lie down and work through that emotion, or deny deny deny until it's other people who are wrong. You have to learn to take it in stride. For me the phrase "egg on my face" has helped a lot, because I can say, well that's embarrassing, got caught with egg on my face, well, now I know. If you don't find a way to cope with being wrong, you end up like Howard, trying to convince a room full of science students that 1x1=2.
@katyungodly7 ай бұрын
A good way to identify a narcissist is to ask them to tell you about a time they were wrong.
@Trynatostayalive12342 ай бұрын
@@mdstevens0612I think at first it can feel wrong, or shameful or whatever, but if you’ve been a learner you’re whole life, idk, you can get used to it. Especially because I don’t expect myself to just know shit 😅 But also everyone is very different. Me, personally, I’ve always found it kinda of exicitng to learn new things or like when something I thought was right feels uncomfortable, it’s like a whole new world I could learn! But maybe I’m insane lol!
@donyakusa91877 ай бұрын
Someone once said “The greatest enemy of mankind is ignorance.” What terrifies me is the vast number of followers people like a Joe Rogan have amassed within a short period of time and the platforms that allow them to continue to amplify their beliefs.
@cv84997 ай бұрын
That worries me too. Every time my brother defends that dude to me, part of my spirit dies.
@CMStrawbridge7 ай бұрын
I don't think Joe's evil or bad, just stupid, and thinks giving everyone a platform is what's fair without thinking if it's always responsible
@n.speezly14677 ай бұрын
Doesn’t it just suck when freedom of speech applies to people you don’t agree with? Maybe if we amended the amendment so we can censor those we don’t agree with, what could possibly go wrong?
@JamesGriffinSpiteHouse7 ай бұрын
Yeah, I’m not gonna say Joe Rogan is bad. He gives a platform to some very unorthodox thinkers. This can be good, bad or neither.
@cv84997 ай бұрын
@@JamesGriffinSpiteHouse I'm going to say he is bad for all the reasons I mentioned above.
@ricopena20538 ай бұрын
I have my degrees in ecology and zoology, but outside of that I am a big dummy.
@DDNEV8 ай бұрын
Staying in your own wheel house of expertise is a big flex nowadays!!! Look at Peterson talking about a whole bunch of shit he knows nothing about lol
@berickslime67188 ай бұрын
People with actual credentials wouldn't dare speak on topics that they have limited knowledge of. Or at least always qualify with the fact that they don't have strong expertise. And always give nuance when answering questions. The number one way to spot a fraud is if they speak confidently in fields they have no knowledge in.
@Undecided08 ай бұрын
@@DDNEVI don’t know about that. I graduated college in 2003 & didn’t start working in my field of study until about 2017. I have a degrees in Math & Computer Science. I worked as a camera person for a talk show, a music studio engineer, a music tour sound engineer, a freight train conductor, an assistant to a magazine editor, & in advertising. I became a data analyst in 2017.
@spEAMerNation7 ай бұрын
Quick! Name every agamid!
@ricopena20537 ай бұрын
@@spEAMerNation herps weren’t my specialty, but I think calotes, sitanas, and the Chinese water dragon fall into the agamid phylum
@DrBrule-mv4ir7 ай бұрын
He wants to be seen as an academic so badly but when Neil tries treating him like one with a peer review he gets all sensitive. This is what “I did my own research” looks like when one lacks the tools to know what sources aren’t legit science.
@SenorCircuit7 ай бұрын
It's also this type of person has this weird thing where "I did my research" usually means they looked something up once or twice and then stopped. Real scientists never stop learning. They don't just state they've discovered something brilliant and then that's it. They also don't cry that they've been "attacked" when a peer says their stuff is incorrect or flawed.
@cynthiawilson45007 ай бұрын
Well said
@JasRoss7 ай бұрын
Neil was low key hilariously slamming Terrance's "paper". Neil basically summed it up with: "This is factually incorrect, but you draw pretty pictures!"
@underdarkness76926 ай бұрын
@@SenorCircuit ehhhh EHHHHHHHHHH let's not overstate how smart and humble scientists are. scientists absolutely can be overly sensitive to critique - theres been some dirty shit between academics who otherwise produce good research based entirely on "critiqued my work in a way i think is stupid". and scientists absolutely can get caught in research silos where they understand a single topic *extremely* well, one based largely on their own work, and then it turns out that topic's core principles arent even correct - and then they double down. this has happened in physics a couple times, and its happened regularly in the history of biology when research starts to intersect with partially-or-wholly-sociological ideas like race, ethnicity, sex, and gender. even neil degrasse tyson has had some insane hot takes about topics he's just not educated on and gets defensive when called out. in general he often views his education as meaning he's a "smart person" and not just "a smart science communicator in the niches he's most educated in". to the level of terrance howard? oh god no, but the point is more that people are complicated and can manifest pseudo-intellectual tendencies in some fields while maintaining rigor and curiosity in others. very, very few people (if any) are really "intellectuals" in a holistic sense, but theres definitely a spectrum of how often a given person lets critique and curiosity win vs ego and defensiveness in various contexts. science on the whole is more reliable as a process, but its still a communal process with the same dynamics and problems that can manifest in any other community, filled with people who are still people with all their hubris and flaws and disagreements. that it mostly produces good and useful results despite that is a testament to its resilience as a process (even when it has significant blindspots), but scientists are not particularly special. especially not when we exist in an academic system that selects for workaholics that enjoy playing office politics and taking the maximum amount of credit they can convince people to give them for any work they contribute to, that also have the money and personal/professional connections to attend top universities (which isnt to say most, say, MIT graduates arent smart, but that is absolutely a large part of the process - and the vast, vast majority of career academics come from top universities).
@sagelovee6 ай бұрын
That’s not what happened. Neil ignored him asking to have a convo with him on his show then dropped his video
@twistedconversations7827 ай бұрын
The fact that Neil went though the process of giving him a peer review is a big deal for any other person in physics.
@MrJuot2347 ай бұрын
He read his hypothesis and dismissed his whole theory. He didn’t really go through anything.
@trevorandrew87267 ай бұрын
@@MrJuot234what exactly do you think peer reviewing is, if not going through a thesis and using known and proven information to asses and either prove or disprove said thesis?
@Kj16V7 ай бұрын
@@MrJuot234 Have you seen NDT's recent video on this? He explains his peer review and goes through some of the responses he made on Howard's paper.
@antonc817 ай бұрын
@@MrJuot234no he went through and actually made comments on every page.
@MrJuot2347 ай бұрын
@@trevorandrew8726 From what I saw, he only looked at his initial premise and basically shut it down. He didn’t observe his work completely. It’s a such thing as humanity and having basic conversation. You see how Joe Rogan sat and talked to him. It could have been a better exchange.
@totallydougie93867 ай бұрын
Puttin Jordan Peterson and Aaron Rodgers in the background at the beginning brought a little joy to my day
@ignorantenlightenment8 ай бұрын
Sometimes I feel like I’m in bizzaro world, I saw people I grew up with online acting like Howard was a genius
@BoutiqueLaTrice8 ай бұрын
It’s terrifying!
@Juwellz187 ай бұрын
Same, and that let me know that people will listen to whoever as long as they're a little charming/charismatic.
@efef68537 ай бұрын
Where are your 97 patents? Why do some people love to dismiss things or knowledge they don't understand as CRAZY. Can you disprove without a doubt what Terrence was saying? If not then you shouldn't be MOCKING. Throughout history numerous scientists were dismissed as CRAZY by their small minded contemporaries because the knowledge or discoveries those scientists shared were not understood by the MOCKERS of those times. Ignaz Semmelweis discovered in 1847 that hand-wash with a solution of chlorinated lime reduced the incidence of fatal childbed fever tenfold in maternity institutions. However, the reaction of his contemporaries was not positive; Semmelweis’s critics claimed his findings lacked scientific reasoning. History has proven that he was right about the dangers germs pose but he was dismissed as a CRAZY person at that time by those who didn’t have the mental capacity to understand the importance of cleanliness. If you are too ahead of the curve those with small minds often tend to dismiss you as CRAZY. Those who are MOCKING Terrence are showing themselves to be small minded individuals. Try to understand what Terrence is saying. Prove him wrong if you think what he is saying is not true. Don't be a small minded MOCKER.
@zucchinigreen7 ай бұрын
He uses big words and is attractive. The grift sells itself.
@joeavreg22547 ай бұрын
@@zucchinigreen but he also has the crazy eyes "looking into another universe" people think comes with being a genius and not being a person untethered from this reality. You can see it in cult leaders (religious, cultural or personality).
@RK-dc2es8 ай бұрын
It's the worst because the pseudo-intellectuals will fully take advantage of your healthy sense of self doubt to make you waver and think "...Well, hell, I could be wrong, maybe I should double check". My dad is the worst with this. He once ridiculed me for a straight hour for telling him the US spent the latter half of the 20th century orchestrating foreign coups because he, personally, had never read that. Then I watched him try to subtly google it on his phone under the table, read the results, find out he was wrong, scowl, close his phone and PROCEED TO DOUBLE DOWN HARDER. It almost gaslights you.
@AlloftheGoodNamesAreTaken7 ай бұрын
I’m glad you had the conversation with your dad. I hope he comes around. It’s difficult when you’ve been raised in this “America is the pillar of truth and justice in the world” bs, and then you learn the truth when you’re older. But many of us did and we are grateful now for the people who kept speaking the truth.
@tfaddict82547 ай бұрын
OOO THAT IS AN EXCELLENT POINT!!!!!
@caiden33967 ай бұрын
I thought it might've just been me😯
@DizzyBusy7 ай бұрын
Americans watching Star Wars thinking they're the Jedi is always so fascinating to see. America is the Empire.
@Sleipnirseight7 ай бұрын
Bro, that's just toxic insecurity. Which, to be fair, a lot of pseudointellectuals suffer from.
@5r2488 ай бұрын
Dame Dash said it best when he told DJ Envy: “You sound smart to someone stupid”.
@brianjones47447 ай бұрын
Dame should’ve said that to himself as well 😂😂😂
@preciousone93777 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂
@krusnik94Ай бұрын
"It's hard to win an argument with a smart person, it's almost impossible to win an argument with an idiot." -Bill Murray
@BabySwearWords8 ай бұрын
Imagine arguing with a man who doesn’t know 1x1 is 1. Could never be me.
@kendrojr8 ай бұрын
Imagine not being able to successfully argue somethin thats supposed to be right. I’m not even saying he’s right but refusing to engage in his pushing back of the status quo just makes everyone look close minded just saying “this is obviously wrong I’m not even gonna try to explain why it is” just martyrs and validates the conspiracists initial claim.
@KingJT808 ай бұрын
it'll be like arguing astrophysics with a wino
@alexbassett69678 ай бұрын
I mean engaging with an argument so fundamentally bad faith is far from the solution. basic arithmetic is not something that can be debated, it has independently emerged across a multitude of historical sources, and to respond with anything other than "no" is to acknowledge the false claim that there is a status quo to be argued about for something so fundamentally ingrained in humanity as simple math.
@alexbassett69678 ай бұрын
engaging with bad faith arguments isn't open minded, its just foolish
@calebbridges47488 ай бұрын
@@kendrojr someone in that position has done a lot of work that has nothing to do with reasoning. You won't reason them out of it. If you wanna fill the air between you and them, fine, but don't pretend you're "arguing with somebody." They ain't hearing you. Explaining why 1x1 isn't 1 isn't useful to them. Them knowing it would be useful, but mere argument is not capable of that path.
@Clarkester4508 ай бұрын
"A fool may think himself wise, but a wise man knows himself to be a fool" - William Shakespeare
@cameronfox43937 ай бұрын
That's actually a Terrence Howard quote
@zucchinigreen7 ай бұрын
@@cameronfox4393😂
@Usulutan19787 ай бұрын
This proves my point , you believe whatever you have been told. Amelia Bassano Lanier wrote that, research it. Just like your fake globe You believe what you have been told and never questioned it
7 ай бұрын
@@Usulutan1978is this satire
@lindakelley26767 ай бұрын
When I hear people speak like that I suspect they injested mushrooms prior to the interview.
@Undecided08 ай бұрын
Whenever people say that I’m smart. I tell them “I’m not smart. I’m just good at retaining information”.
@Shinji_Dai7 ай бұрын
Same. I remember a lot of different things, but I don't consider that smart. If I was smart, I'd be able to use what I memorize in some way.
@michaeljmyers19957 ай бұрын
In general not specifically to you, I think most of the information we memorize isn't useful we just memorize it to pass to the next level unless you're in a lab cuz that's where you actually have to use the information you memorized but this is just my opinion
@aielianna7 ай бұрын
When people used to say how I got good grades I would tell them the same thing lol
@Russelshackleford7 ай бұрын
I’m smart enough to recognize that I’m stupid.
@kezia80277 ай бұрын
@@Russelshackleford I'm smart enough to know that the REAL smart people are so smart it would sound like they were speaking a different language to me lmao
@danijean47887 ай бұрын
T Howard is the human embodiment of the Dunning Kruger effect.
@julianbufarull76025 ай бұрын
Did you know the Dunning Kruger effect is not the way we all think it is? Which means the more we know about the Dunning Kruger effect, the more we know it's not the way we think it is. I mean the line that goes up, down, then up again, that's not how the Dunning Kruger effect looks like. That graphic came out of nowhere.
@TheLlaura908 ай бұрын
I need someone to investigate and explain how he was invited to speak at Oxford. That legitimized him in a lot of people's eyes
@xqueenfrostine8 ай бұрын
He wasn’t actually invited by the University, he was invited by the Oxford Union Society which is a private/independent debating club at the university. They invite all sorts of guests to spark debate, and I assume they chose Terrance for some lulz. Having him speak is like a sillier version of inviting a creationist to debate an expert in evolutionary biology.
@mike045748 ай бұрын
I think it’s a good thing, made him look like a bigger fool
@samsed68558 ай бұрын
@@mike04574idk mike, i remember when that happened, made rounds on youtube, everyone was dunking on it....and here we are again, now that he got platformed on rogan
@efef68537 ай бұрын
Where are your 97 patents? Why do some people love to dismiss things or knowledge they don't understand as CRAZY. Can you disprove without a doubt what Terrence was saying? If not then you shouldn't be MOCKING. Throughout history numerous scientists were dismissed as CRAZY by their small minded contemporaries because the knowledge or discoveries those scientists shared were not understood by the MOCKERS of those times. Ignaz Semmelweis discovered in 1847 that hand-wash with a solution of chlorinated lime reduced the incidence of fatal childbed fever tenfold in maternity institutions. However, the reaction of his contemporaries was not positive; Semmelweis’s critics claimed his findings lacked scientific reasoning. History has proven that he was right about the dangers germs pose but he was dismissed as a CRAZY person at that time by those who didn’t have the mental capacity to understand the importance of cleanliness. If you are too ahead of the curve those with small minds often tend to dismiss you as CRAZY. Those who are MOCKING Terrence are showing themselves to be small minded individuals. Try to understand what Terrence is saying. Prove him wrong if you think what he is saying is not true. Don't be a small minded MOCKER.
@MiqelDotCom7 ай бұрын
It's kind of like when the TIME CUBE guy was invited to speak at MIT. 😄
@TheVoidisEternal7 ай бұрын
i went to school and earned my masters in physics. My friend sent me Terrance talking about his "work" with Joe Rogan and asked me what I thought. "He needs some help," I stand by that.
@bobbyologun15177 ай бұрын
accurate and succinct
@Cherrypi3937 ай бұрын
I don’t even need a masters in physics to know that
@charondesousa88687 ай бұрын
@@Cherrypi393 You lot make me happy to know that there are still plenty of folks that use their brains properly 👏🏿🤣
@odinata7 ай бұрын
Gish Gallop MAGA Qnon
@caitlankelly43677 ай бұрын
Said with such “vitriol” 😂
@somedude152318 ай бұрын
I have an MA in Math Education (shoutout to FD and other fellow teachers. Hang in there, everyone), and listening to Terrence talk about 1x1 gives me a feeling that I can only describe as stroke-like symptoms
@creatrixZBD7 ай бұрын
I have a decent senior high graduation score in maths (many years old), and same. (Not saying I am your equal, just that I’m kinda glad for the validation of what was in truth, little more than my intuition lol)
@M.H.Paperstacks7 ай бұрын
Wait a minute if 1×1 doesn't equal 2, why does 2×2 equal 4?
@benj10087 ай бұрын
@@M.H.Paperstacks Because multiplication is defined as repeated addition. 2x2 = 2 + 2. 2x3 = 2+2+2. 1x a number is just that number. So 1x1 = 1 and 1x2 = 2
@yoursalwaysliyah7 ай бұрын
@@M.H.Paperstackshas your school ever taught you the groups way of multiplying? four times four for example is four groups of four. one times one is one group of one. two groups of two would be four. hope this helps
@M.H.Paperstacks7 ай бұрын
@yoursalwaysliyah yes I was taught that way but I don't think people are understanding what Terrence is saying. If you take 1 penny and times it by one penny how many pennies are in front of you 2 not one, if you take 2 pennies and times it by 2 pennies how many are in front of you 4 not 2,so he is saying in this case number 1times itself cannot equal its initial self it equals more, addition is relative to multiplication as subtraction is relative to division
@theanigman7 ай бұрын
whenever i see the clip of him saying 1x1 isnt 1, i can only think of winston smith being tortured to admit 2+2 is 5
@blackcoffee9470Ай бұрын
Lol... Except BB isn't responsible for this torture. Terrence tortured himself.
@theanigmanАй бұрын
or becomes BB send out an army of his 8 5D axis drones to reeducate us all in terrylogic speak
@yuriajones8 ай бұрын
This Terrence Howard episode showed me just how dangerous these contact platforms are. I've seen upwards of 20 videos (on KZbin alone) that either praise or support his weird positions. I'm no scientist, but I know BS when I hear it. And Howard was talking a whole lot of BS on JRE. But between FB, TikTok and KZbin, all sorts of commentators popped up to cosign his rhetoric and add to the misinformation. On the other hand, I've seen only 3 KZbin videos pushing back against what he said, and that includes this one and the one by Neil deGrasse Tyson. And it's not just the videos, but the comment threads beneath them! Thousands of regular John and Jane Doe's support his BS too! it's a sad state of affairs.
@alyssaakabob8 ай бұрын
if you are interested, Kyle Hill also does a good video on the subject.
8 ай бұрын
It’s part and parcel of the fascist moment we’re in.
@Sangerrosun7 ай бұрын
I think part of the issue with pushing back on a lot of these folks is that they’ve amassed such a large audience that takes what they say as gospel. There is little in the way of pushback because people would get swamped with replies regurgitating the same information or rude and nasty comments that don’t address the issue. Unless someone has a decent sized platform or is able to handle the BS that comes from breaking down the flawed arguments of a revered public figure it’s difficult to tackle the BS espoused by professional pseudo intellectuals.
@leonscott5437 ай бұрын
Misinformation isn't dangerous. What's dangerous is people claiming something is misinformation without actually providing a clear rebuttal against said argument....
@yuriajones7 ай бұрын
@@alyssaakabob thanks.
@djsupadupa46908 ай бұрын
Bro said he rebuilt…. A planet. Stone sober.
@efef68537 ай бұрын
Where are your 97 patents? Why do some people love to dismiss things or knowledge they don't understand as CRAZY. Can you disprove without a doubt what Terrence was saying? If not then you shouldn't be MOCKING. Throughout history numerous scientists were dismissed as CRAZY by their small minded contemporaries because the knowledge or discoveries those scientists shared were not understood by the MOCKERS of those times. Ignaz Semmelweis discovered in 1847 that hand-wash with a solution of chlorinated lime reduced the incidence of fatal childbed fever tenfold in maternity institutions. However, the reaction of his contemporaries was not positive; Semmelweis’s critics claimed his findings lacked scientific reasoning. History has proven that he was right about the dangers germs pose but he was dismissed as a CRAZY person at that time by those who didn’t have the mental capacity to understand the importance of cleanliness. If you are too ahead of the curve those with small minds often tend to dismiss you as CRAZY. Those who are MOCKING Terrence are showing themselves to be small minded individuals. Try to understand what Terrence is saying. Prove him wrong if you think what he is saying is not true. Don't be a small minded MOCKER.
@uprightaardvark7 ай бұрын
Someone should've quipped back about rebuilding Uruanus since it's now occupied by his whole head.
@writehse7 ай бұрын
Lmao good one
@amw68467 ай бұрын
I mean...there is the Banach-Tarski paradox, but we call it a paradox for a reason, and it's not going to replicate the makeup of a planet. When we say we can turn a pea into the sun, that's not what we mean. 😂
@edwinismail94017 ай бұрын
jupiter 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣how can he rebuild jupiter
@Purpletrident8 ай бұрын
A line I really like from NDT's response was "if you're the smartest guy in the room, change rooms" You should always be trying to challenge yourself
@KyoAWare7 ай бұрын
This. I started to understand for myself after a while that I WANT to be wrong and I want to find more informed peers, because that lends itself to an opportunity to enhance that knowledge and to deepen that pool. It’s also humbling in a way that is the absolute best.
@Purpletrident7 ай бұрын
@@KyoAWare Completely agree! It's very easy to tell when you're surrounded by not-so-smart individuals, and it only makes me want to be surrounded by people who are far smarter than me (not that I'm very smart, people, americans especially, are just dumb). I love to learn from actually educated people
@magicmulder7 ай бұрын
Yeah but TH literally believes himself to be the smartest guy on the PLANET.
@vibez28064 ай бұрын
@magicmulder maybe in his field but not in everything. But where are you getting this from?
@magicmulder4 ай бұрын
@@vibez2806 He literally claims he solved problems nobody could solve before *and* that the entirety of physicists on the planet is wrong.
@ovandocarter63777 ай бұрын
deep, some people think intelligence is about performance rather than the persuit for knowledge.
@zeframmann16418 ай бұрын
Starting to think his salary demands were just a convenient excuse for the Iron Man producers to replace him after finding out he's a bit of a nutter.
@nenep18727 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂
@unerevuese8 ай бұрын
Neil DeGrasse Tyson simply did what scientists do. We give feedback. I got comments about my research all the time. As I got confident in my work I started taking those comments and strengthening my work.
@ambergustafson63457 ай бұрын
The inability to accept criticism/critique of one’s ideas is usually a dead giveaway that a person has not spent any meaningful time in academia.
@The_Gallowglass7 ай бұрын
Tyson even did it respectfully and gently. He's like bro I love you but you wrong.
@NimLeeGuy6 ай бұрын
It's pretty flattering that Tyson responded at all. Or maybe shows that he is susceptible as the rest of us. And actually read the stuff because it was sent by a name he had heard of.
@BlackZynfyndel8 ай бұрын
I saw a comment somewhere where a person was lumping Terrence Howard’s comments in with Kat Williams’ “Year Of Truth” and I got physically tired.
@asmodeusguys44728 ай бұрын
Physically tired? Couldn't be me. I would've thrown up at this type of comment.
@AlexRoberts-tk9qh7 ай бұрын
Thank you KZbin algorithm. Not sure how I ended up here but you had me hooked within 30 seconds and kept me riveted for the entire video. Earned my sub.
@ginabeena67576 ай бұрын
Same
@FortressOcelotAlpha8 ай бұрын
I had a bad habit of talking on a topic I was familiar with and not being able to register when I ran out of stuff "knew" and when I started making educated assumptions. I never was an outright liar, but sometimes conversations veer into directions I wasn't informed on, and I still would speak on it as I was. Never out of malice, I just wasn't good at stopping myself in the moment when I felt like I knew a topic well enough. So I started a small mantra that I usually just say in my head and occasionally out loud: "I don't know anything, but here's what I do know:" I'd say that to myself before speaking, it helped me in the moment remind myself how little I (as an individual) could know on any topic, but respected how much I would research before speaking. It was a little gut check to make sure I didn't mix the things I knew and had researched and fact checked with the natural assumptions, patterns, and predictions we all make.
@rae-everything8 ай бұрын
Good advice. I need to start doing this as well.
@leonardocarvalho73067 ай бұрын
Lmao I have something similar, I call it "adverbial speech". Whenever I talk about something I'm not 100% sure about, I'm sprinkling some adverbs in my phrases like "maybe", "probably", "most frequently" etc
@creatrixZBD7 ай бұрын
That’s a good one, cheers for passing it on 👍🏼
@soorian64938 ай бұрын
I've heard some nonsense, but I've never heard someone claim to have patented the idea of a 1x1 square.
@fluidthought428 ай бұрын
Math literally falls outside of US intellectual property law, it was explicitly carved out from being held to such laws. Trying to copyright/trademark that is nonsense.
@henrikleppa76327 ай бұрын
@@fluidthought42 It is supposed to work like that, but in the US there are also software patents, which are basically patenting math; and there's also Oracle's API copyright claims, that their army of lawyers gas been able to get some courts to recognize.
@fluidthought427 ай бұрын
@@henrikleppa7632 Ehh, no, that'd fall under the same kind of laws as like a written book. I don't agree with that kind of reading, I do think that coding ought to fall under the same kind of reading as recipes (mostly unprotected).
@henrikleppa76327 ай бұрын
@@fluidthought42 Sorry I was unclear: Oracle claimed to have copyright over an API no matter how you re-wrote it -- basically like claiming to have a right to not just the specific wording of a recipe, but all wordings that contain those ingredients. You can find the court case(s) with: "Oracle Am., Inc. v. Google"/"Google LLC v. Oracle America, Inc.", it basically ran a decade (2010 to 2021).
@davruck17 ай бұрын
You do realize the patent system was just colonizers way of stealing intellectual property right? I thought y’all were the smart ones.
@dahee17 ай бұрын
"The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts" Bertrand Russell.
@encouraginglyauthentic437 ай бұрын
Wise people know there is a time and place for everything, only intellectuals doubt all the time.
@kuidaorekitchen58507 ай бұрын
And everyone will believe the one making the most noise. A certain political candidate is a good case in point.
@foxforpeace73517 ай бұрын
Just found your channel, it came up in my feed after I watched Neil deGrasse Tyson’s video on Terrance Howard’s theory. As a scientist myself, I found unfortunate that Howard did not know about peer review. As a white woman, I can honestly say that pseudo-intellectualism is not restricted by race. I have worked with physicians for much of my career and can tell you that many of them think they know it all. My area of expertise is Immunology and I can recall so many times that doctors called me to challenge my work, usually because they were not up on the recent research. Of course, in my early career, most doctors were men and how dare a woman think she might know more than them! Your comments are 😊on the money and I appreciated your insight. You have a new subscriber…
@joshualogan848 ай бұрын
I'm 40 in two weeks and the one thing I've truly come to understand is I know very little about the world and it's made the process of understanding the world so much more engaging, entertaining and all around an awe inspiring place to be.
@tigerlike74728 ай бұрын
"..every race..." - immediately cuts to a clip of Jordan Peterson lol FD, I truly appreciate you!
@crasyman1018 ай бұрын
Unc Imma need you to finish that dissertation
@christineherrmann2058 ай бұрын
I wonder if he'll become FDr. Signifier. 😂
@roby.killjoy22 күн бұрын
Soon to be Dr Unc
@mzdrea94687 ай бұрын
This title is all I needed to see. I’ve been trying to figure out how to categorize this tomfoolery. This is it😂😂😂
@AlatheD8 ай бұрын
"We need to stop referring to these types of folks as insert psychological disorder here ... These are just assholes." Had me literally pointing my finger at the screen going "Yes! Yes! Yes!"
@anthonyrowland90728 ай бұрын
It becomes real easy to dismiss mental illness then though and we already don't take it seriously. Like, I never really like Kanye's music so don't think I'm a stan, I'm even a fan but he's just been in unchecked mani for liken 8 years now. He needs to be in a Britney conservatorship but people wanna meme or take him face value like he's not literally crazy instead.
@tiffanyanderson94377 ай бұрын
@@anthonyrowland9072Right. Scientists have said narcissism is not a clinical diagnosis, they are just assholes. It's also clear TH has some other things going on. While I am not a scientist by profession, I do know that if I read his paper, I would have informed the nearest mental health professional.
@KEN_26587 ай бұрын
Can a person who's mentally unstable be cured I'm asking for myself @@tiffanyanderson9437
@desperson8 ай бұрын
Man, I have been thinking about this so much lately. It's like charisma gives you a pass to say anything you want with authority and many people will eat it up because it was said by a charismatic person.
@FluffyBunniesOnFire7 ай бұрын
I grew up thinking the world runs on facts. So much of it is really just a confidence game.
@knylvable7 ай бұрын
Yep. Yet people will swear up and down that they could never get caught up in a cult. Charisma gets some folks caught up every time.
@dankrigby56217 ай бұрын
its not just that, its also clout. if terrence wasnt being interviewed by joe rogan, nobody would bat an eye about his theories. this all started bc joe rogan had him there and gave him a stage to talk. people just believe anything a "celebrity" says without really questioning it. "they got money so they gotta be right" lol
@lasagnahog76958 ай бұрын
A solid case of money being what separates "crazy" from eccentric. There's a horde of these dudes emailing maths professors but none of them were in Iron Man.
@Geek376644 ай бұрын
At 8:55, you have the right to say you’re smart. I watch your magnum opus about “the feud” and it was riveting and well-reasoned.
@JimmyNuisance8 ай бұрын
This is how Jordan Peterson sounds to actually smart people… Just a guy saying shit.
@waynewayne84198 ай бұрын
Lemme guess, you’re the smart person?
@xant83448 ай бұрын
@@waynewayne8419 Why are you here
@CharlesH-t9r8 ай бұрын
Him and Elon Musk
@darkblader068 ай бұрын
One doesnt need to have a college degree to know catch Jordan B Peterson's bullshit. You just need to be open minded.
@rpiechart52528 ай бұрын
😂
@jarrettjackson36778 ай бұрын
I met Terrance Howard, randomly, the day of my high school graduation and am still in shock at that short conversation (I’m 35) truly a strange conversation
@spicy.srokasauce79628 ай бұрын
oh God, please elaborate
@erickennedy85347 ай бұрын
Ya need to know this convo
@MasoTrumoi8 ай бұрын
I was this guy in high school. Then I went to University and went "oh shit I'm dumb" and been working on becoming not dumb ever since. I was never a genius, I was just a strong communicator and decent improviser.
@fluidthought428 ай бұрын
I think it's expected and forgiven when you're a literal child, it's when you're a grown adult and you're still doing... that when people are gonna judge you for it more harshly.
@sabbathjackal8 ай бұрын
Wrong your better than this guy because you can recognize your shortcomings
@KoffeeKiwi8 ай бұрын
Saaaaaaammmeee😭😭🤣🤣 especially with the good improvising part
@AlloftheGoodNamesAreTaken7 ай бұрын
Well, since our society believes that good verbal communication skills = high levels of intelligence, you can definitely be forgiven. I have to be careful myself. I can get caught up in other people’s admiration because I can “speak well,” even when I probably don’t know what the heck I’m talking about. University was definitely helpful in opening my eyes to that.
@tristanband40037 ай бұрын
@@fluidthought42 A university student and 20 year old isn't a child. I'm not even sure high schoolers are children either.
@lcmlcm24607 ай бұрын
You pretty much just described 90% of YOU TUBERS. I believe you’re in the 10% . Great video ❤
@gregorybertrand6458 ай бұрын
I have never mumbled "what?" to myself more than when I'm listening to Terrance Howard explain his "theories."
@melissacross55257 ай бұрын
Mumble? I yell it😂😂
@TheSapphireLeo6 ай бұрын
Colorful sacred geommetry, symbology symmetry and mandala, which you can see with your eyes closed and via frequencies you can hear in your ears and/or head and body from the pineal gland/"third eye"? It also helps design?
@paulomilan5157 ай бұрын
I love how you narrowed it down to parenting. My mother was really into questioning everything and nurtures that. She passed away in my teenage years but my grandmother was like alot of my fellow African Americans, bullying you into believing they are right by talking over you. Then getting violent when you question them to hard. My sister is the same way as her. I am so glad that I was closest to my mother who didn't think her children should view her as the ultimate authority because of her position.
@hozier_hoser_hoe7 ай бұрын
Aww, your mother sounds like she was an amazing woman😔
@kev1257ful8 ай бұрын
If there’s anything growing has taught me is that smart people can still be dumb
@janjanfollower8 ай бұрын
being in grad school, i keep saying that not nearly enough people call academics dumbasses
@mediumvillain8 ай бұрын
Getting older and being on Twitter for ~10 years showed me that frankly, most ppl in media, entertainment, politics, business, finance, all of it, most public figures, especially authors for some reason, are actually pretty dumb if not completely full of shit
@DrunkenHotei8 ай бұрын
@@janjanfollower The real problem is that most who do have no idea what they're talking about. Academics can be dumb about life, but they are rarely dumb about the subject they specialize in.
@coyoteblue40278 ай бұрын
Smart people are the BEST at being dumb GIFTED KIDS GANG RISE UP!!
@coyoteblue40278 ай бұрын
@@DrunkenHotei unless their pocketbook depends on their being dumb about it (I'm looking at you, Thomas...)
@jackkingsby1166 ай бұрын
It took my mother around 3 years I think for her dissertation, and did so while raising two kids and taking care of her autistic sister by herself. Take your time with it, if she could do it then you can too!
@EstebanDonJuanCarlos7 ай бұрын
A Psuedo Intellectual's STRONGEST tools are ego & confidence.
@JosephLeasure8 ай бұрын
Im finishing my PhD in Molecular Genetics. We got this FD!
@shyb78478 ай бұрын
That's dope. I admire folks who get their master's and doctorates. Getting my bachelor's was the most stressful time of my life. I couldn't imagine more schooling. Shout out to you!!
@jonathon50758 ай бұрын
Congrats! (In advance!)
@abrashio8 ай бұрын
That sounds super interesting, how would that be utilized? I am thinking mainly medicine right?
@brinnd3308 ай бұрын
Congrats! Do you have a specific dissertation topic yet?
@geekylove36038 ай бұрын
Joseph. Did you believe that the covid vaccine would 100% stop the spread of covid when we first told by medical professionals, politicians and mainstream media?
@WelfareChrist8 ай бұрын
if the Dunning-Kruger effect was a person
@716pfeast7 ай бұрын
Terrance Howard math: 1x1=2 2x1=2 1=2 Congratulations, you have now created Saturn without gravity.
@jifeak7 ай бұрын
Under-rated comment!
@JohnThomas-yy8sx7 ай бұрын
That really hurts my brain, as it should.
@atticuswalker7 ай бұрын
concensus math 1×1 =1 + dark matter. time is an illusion. gravity is a particle. Light scatters on transparent mass. science works in mysterious ways. have faith in the beliefs.
@KSharpIAm7 ай бұрын
Lmao I wonder if anyone ever just presented this to him before. What does he have to say about 1*2? I'm not super familiar with all he says because I don't want to get a headache
@KSharpIAm7 ай бұрын
Hahaha. Do you know what he really has to say of 2*1? How does that work for him?
@daveblairmusic7 ай бұрын
Perfect example of Dunning Kruger effect. “The fundamental cause of the trouble in the modern world today is that the stupid are cocksure while the intelligent are full of doubt.”-Bertrand Russell.
@TheDwightMamba7 ай бұрын
Now look up Hubris Syndrome and try not to see Terrence in your head.
@Unedited437957 ай бұрын
He's not stupid, so no Dunning Krueger doesn't make sense. I think you just hear that a lot now days. He could be intellectually mixed up, disabled, in crisis. But he's calm and organized.
@daveblairmusic7 ай бұрын
@@Unedited43795Well Dunning Krueger can still apply to very smart people who overestimate their understanding of a specific field. It’s not about intelligence as much as expertise in a specific field. Actually smart people can be very susceptible to DK because they are so used to being the smart one in the room on many subjects that the can get overconfident in areas that they are less qualified in. IMHO
@estebandiaz27727 ай бұрын
@@Unedited43795I don’t think Dunning-Kruger applies only to stupid people though. It’s a common psychological effect that can happen to anyone really. It just happens to be greatly exacerbated by being stupid.
@declaringpond22767 ай бұрын
@@Unedited43795of you think what he is saying is smart, that might be a you problem. Brother he introduced BLENDER a 3d rendering software as a "Harvard simulation" Blender renders objects using the same math he says is incorrect
@hellboy300988 ай бұрын
Thank you for this vid, as a scientist it burns my soul to see the same people who said "we won't use this stuff (math and science) in the real world" to completely accept Terreology (or whatever it's called) SIMPLY because people are saying how wrong it is and that he can fit nonsense words in sentences. While there are people pouring their lives out to make new discoveries that get no air time
@samsprague31588 ай бұрын
This is the hardest part for me to take as well. I’m not a scientist (yet) and I’ve learned a lot about the historical and ongoing issues with academia, but that doesn’t change the fact there are literally hundreds of thousands of thoughtful, passionate people who dedicate decades if not their entire lives to understand just one thing a little bit better than anyone has…and people just spit in their face, call them nerds, and confidently assert some absolute nonsense they just made up to protect their own fragile egos.
@notarabbit17527 ай бұрын
My dad worked with a guy overseas who suddenly started talking like this. Turned out he hadn't slept for like 6 days and it was a whole big thing where they had to get him back home to get help
@shtboxgarage7 ай бұрын
Yeah manically staying awake for over 4 days is like psychosis. Its pretty terrible
@shemianderson38307 ай бұрын
I'm a first time viewer of the channel and all I have to say is, amen to all of this.
@pianist1507 ай бұрын
One thing I’ve noticed about popular media is that we love characters like Tony Stark or Sherlock Holmes or Batman because of the way they treat genius. In movies genius just means genius. Tony Stark is an engineering genius, that’s his whole thing but that also means that he is a genius in every field of science, everything technical, if it is even remotely tangential to math he is the best in the world at it because he’s a genius. In reality being a great engineer doesn’t make you the authority on bioscience but we want to believe that someone smart in one thing makes them smart in all things. It’s why we elevated Elon Musk so much before he kept talking
@mdstevens06127 ай бұрын
The Sherlock Holmes thing is actually quite recent. The novels painted him far more evenly, he was very skilled at pretty much one thing; Deductive reasoning. And he wasn’t infallible, people regularly got one up on him, he'd have cases where he was always one step behind. But Holmes has been flanderized to the point of absurdity. The BBC show has him go to a mind palace where he throws around infographics instead of looking at information and making deductions from what is and what can and cannot be. At this point, Knives Out and Glass Onion are better Sherlock adaptations than some of the most recent Sherlock adaptations.
@TacticusPrime7 ай бұрын
It's bad writers who see genius as basically magic.
@dahliaherrod43017 ай бұрын
It's also interesting to me that the characters you named are all a**holes. People swallow their rude and downright cruel behavior at times simply because they are "geniuses" as if the world needs them to survive. Tony's the best about playing with others but the other two were really terrible about this with mixed results.
@AzaleaJane7 ай бұрын
When dumb writers try to write smart people we end up with fast-talking jerks who know everything all the time
@pianist1507 ай бұрын
@@dahliaherrod4301 we like and accept that trope so much that when media actively indicts a character for fitting into that trope, huge groups of the fanbase refuse to see it and continue to idolize the smart asshole (ie Rick and Morty). And in real life how many people say things like “yeah he’s harassing his wife, yeah he’s a bigot, yeah he’s a piece of shit but Kanye is a genius” because I’ve heard that a lot
@redacted-x2d8 ай бұрын
I think Terrence Howard is a very talented actor and I hope he excels in that field
@victorybeginsinthegarden8 ай бұрын
A very diplomatic way to put it
@caiden33968 ай бұрын
@@victorybeginsinthegarden This made me laugh.🤣Josiah's comment almost feels like a backhanded compliment yet still feels polite, supportive, and respectful.
@victorybeginsinthegarden8 ай бұрын
@@caiden3396 I do what I can to bring a bit of humor to the internet lol
@vidmuncher8 ай бұрын
B R U T A L
@biharcourt8 ай бұрын
He's incredibly talented
@anachronismic8 ай бұрын
The cat version of Girl from Ipanema during the nonsense was the right call lol.
@anachronismic8 ай бұрын
(Terrence Howard and Graham Hancock debunks have come across my feed in the week before you put this out, so seems timely lol)
@CharlesH-t9r8 ай бұрын
@@anachronismic glad to see Fd and Milo (Minuteman) calling these people out
@TaffyGreeZay7 ай бұрын
Thank you for this. I learned quite a bit!❤ The sigh and jump cut you did after you made the statement about the orange man was very striking to me. I felt it, and it made me sad because I know! That single sigh encompassed all the frustration that so many of us feel because we can't wrap our heads around how this can even be possible. That collectively, we are so stupid. I know it was just a sigh and a jumpcut but I feel you and I'm right there too. I know the video wasn't about him but to me it was very powerful. I'm glad I'm not alone feeling his evil.
@thedarknessthatcomesbefore42796 ай бұрын
Agreed 👍
@rangerred90228 ай бұрын
Neil had a beautiful response to Howard.
@arnoldkotlyarevsky3838 ай бұрын
As a representative from the jewish delegation, we have our own version of PINN - it is called Zionism.
@TheJadedJames8 ай бұрын
Wow! That tracks
@rae-everything8 ай бұрын
Man... you're not lying.
@maybemablemaples21448 ай бұрын
Bars.
@Sam_on_YouTube7 ай бұрын
I disagree. Zionism is not remotely the equivalent. It is a totally different problem. I'm not arguing about it being a problem, but it's a totally different one. The Jewish equivalent is kho-khem in di yaykhl (wise in the mind). I had to use Chat GPT for that. Schlemiel (fool) and mishugas (craziness) were the closest I could think of among the more common phrases.
@courtneywitherspoon85847 ай бұрын
BLOOP! 😂
@Cevidence7 ай бұрын
This reminds me of the phrase "expertise creep." I use it all the time. A person is an expert in X, so they act like they are an expert in Y. It drives me right up a wall every time.
@Massangler18567 ай бұрын
Funnily enough, Neil deGrasse Tyson is actually a pretty bad offender. He's constantly speaking confidently and wrongly about things like philosophy, biology, and even fields of physics he didn't study.
@jenster297 ай бұрын
@@Massangler1856yes he is😂 but when he talks about his own field he's unmatched. Howard has no credentials and is just lost in his arrogance
@myguykaikai92157 ай бұрын
@@Massangler1856if you were given the task of creating a list of things Neil was wrong about, I’m sure you probably couldn’t come up with more than a small number of insignificant details. For example, you mentioned philosophy, despite the fact it’s almost entirely subjective. Do you not understand the basic premise of philosophy?
@StrangeFacinations7 ай бұрын
@@Massangler1856usually that's when someone asks an unrelated question. He will always try to give them an answer.
@Massangler18567 ай бұрын
@jenster29 definitely. Just interesting how it isn't limited to people who are dumb across the board. I think there's even a name for it in hyper-educated people called Nobel Syndrome I believe where guys like James Watson who helped to discover the structure of DNA can simultaneously believe batshit insane things about race.
@TJJones-ck7gj7 ай бұрын
This has for the most part elucidated exactly what my misgivings were with that interview. Again, thank you and bravo.
@jamesrichie78448 ай бұрын
I'm an ABD student who works on film studies. I was giving a presentation on the Denis Villeneuve film Prisoners, in which Terrance Howard plays a minor role, at a conference. I was responding to a question and talking about Terrance Howard's character, and I had to fight every urge to bring up Terriology becuase it was something I had known about.
@DrBeauHightower7 ай бұрын
Joe Rogan just had Billy Carson do the same thing. He's laughing all the way to the bank
@lalabeauty7 ай бұрын
I think Billy Carson is at least entertaining in his tinfoil hat theories. After all, it’s a big universe. Joe is a huckster but then again so was PT Barnum.🤷♀️😉
@zenja65337 ай бұрын
Half of my daily anxiety is hoping I'm never coming off as a pseudo-intellectual.
@MrBlaqgold7 ай бұрын
If you're black I get that. As you can see we are all too ready to tear down and label non-linear intellectuals as 'lost the plot' and pseudo... like this channel is doing. Denigrating and putting down non linear intellectuals as kneegrows... its really sad.
@loopedchopped7 ай бұрын
@@MrBlaqgold the things terence Howard says objectively make no sense. y'all wanna hear him out but those who are smart enough to try to break down what he says have found that it doesn't mean anything
@matturner68907 ай бұрын
@@MrBlaqgold what on earth is a "non-linear intellectual"? That doesn't make any sense, you're just stringing two "smart sounding words" together. Is this Terry on an alt account??
@MrBlaqgold7 ай бұрын
@matturner6890 smart sounding words? Like pseudo intellectual? It's a called a phrase, you don't need a license to join words together, it's a basic linguistic customisation technique. Non-linear intellectual is pretty self explanatory. Or would you like me to explain it, or would that make me an 'excessive didactic' ?(there I did it again)
@MrBlaqgold7 ай бұрын
@loopedchopped actually, there are many qualified astrophysicists who whilst they disagree with his conclusions and some of his approaches have rebuttalled his work in a respectful and even congratulatory manner. He's not insulted or hurt anyone, and as such should not be attacked. Even NDT debunked, but didn't ridicule him, but you less educated content creators and commenters are the ones full of insults and denegration. It's unnecessary and the overreaction is symptomatic of deep rooted self hate. Calling his views kneegrow nonsense is the type of language used against many of your ancestors when they had non-submissive ideas. Always celebrate original and freethought... even if you don't agree with it, celebrate it.
@WisdomThumbs7 ай бұрын
The hardest part of being an adult is realizing when I'm being a sulky, sullen asshole, and need to listen to the person who's right. The *real* hardest part is citing all the sources and remaining calm, but a friend or family member refuses to engage and constructs a narrative where reliable evidence can be dismissed for years and years. And it's even harder when you have to listen to your dad badmouth other family on a road-trip, including your dead brother, while using the *"hard R"* ten times a minute like an edgelord, when all you wanted was bonding and a history lesson about real names whose deeds and misdeeds he researched well. But channels like this help like a salve, by reminding me that I don't know what I want to know, reminding me to brush up before talking, and doing it all with humor and a good dose of charity.
@AGuyNamedDan798 ай бұрын
I took an intro course on mass communication and it realizes how insane and scary that topic is.
@MySqueezingArm8 ай бұрын
8:30 PREACH. Imposter syndrome only gets worse once you learn about how much you don't know.
@Praisethesunson8 ай бұрын
So instead of grappling with that reality. I just quote pop science mixed with conservative reactionary talking point. -Way too many talking heads.
@eliasmg91448 ай бұрын
I don't know if this happens to everyone, but in my case it's specially frustrating when I'm aware of the stuff I actually know but aren't as good expressing because "what if I'm wrong tho", only to see some jackass who knows next to nothing about a certain topic being able to say the wrongest thing one might ever heard, and get away with it just because they show confidence.
@leodisivsmith66958 ай бұрын
I have gotten so many certificates and learned so much and read so much. And I am still convinced I am the dumbest guy on the planet with each new thing I learn.
@LittleZee-f4l7 ай бұрын
@@eliasmg9144 I absolutely know what you're talking about. I'm so careful to word things in a way to let people know that its possible my info could be wrong, or that it could have changed since I read it, but then some idiot with more confidence than sense will belt out the dumbest thing in the world without a shred of doubt. Its incredibly frustrating.
@CED.Dweller8 ай бұрын
hotep voice (lower cased intentionally) is appropriate, sir. I want my people to enjoy confidence in learning and not in sounding learned.
@oso1165Ай бұрын
Conspiracies are popular with a certain crowd because they make them feel like theyre smarter than everyone else. It feeds their ego that they think they know something that no one else but them does.
@RettyBoop8 ай бұрын
I haven’t laughed this hard in a long time. The Always Sunny title card is so spot on hilarious.
@caiden33968 ай бұрын
Terrence Howard sounds like that one friend who smoked too much weed.
@SpikeTheNeuropsych7 ай бұрын
Indeed, the difference being that our friend sobers up and realizes how idiotic he sounded when you play the recording.
@migomontana42707 ай бұрын
Too much LSD*
@gouryu27 ай бұрын
I knew somebody else had to say it before me. Other than ego and confidence, the main culprit responsible for these wild claims is probably weed. You already know how a 🥷🏽 will hit the blunt and say something they think is profound, only to be co-signed by whoever they're sharing the ganja with
@mawprints7 ай бұрын
"it's the social currency of being smart vs the actual value of it" is a perfect summary of psuedo-intellectualism. I couldn't phrase it properly but it's a large part of what pushed me out of the twitter sphere. I felt it start to drive so many of my interactions with others and it made me feel like I was killing off my braincells
@abaren7307 ай бұрын
For sure. Though, I can deal with the street corner sages because absolutely nothing they say should be taken seriously. You don’t take them at face value and you don’t try to disprove them - both actions give them unearned credibility. If you want to expose them, just ask probing questions. They’ll destroy their own persona if you question them long enough, especially if they think you’re genuinely curious about it lol. For me, it’s 100% the “educated pseudo-intellectuals that grind my gears. Just because you got a degree in economics doesn’t mean you’re qualified to speak on social injustices (or economics tbh). The thing about science is that it isn’t objective truth - it’s the evolving catalogue of what we’ve learned. Ideally backed by rigorous and reproducible research and experiments, but even then we can (and often do) learn things that are wrong or incorrect. That’s the odd beauty of it, really. There’s always something new to learn, even about things you thought you knew all about. Unfortunately, there are too many people who define science generally as exclusively fact. Actual scientists define that boundary as a profession, while these guys just regurgitate facts without nuance, comprehension, or interpretation. Even facts which are built upon circular logic and postulates. Facts which are more general consensus than tested and proven hypotheses. Basically, they might recognize that they don’t know everything, but they think they do by proxy. The key issue is that they’re still more concerned with appearing smart than actually understanding anything.
@dubzy44854 ай бұрын
0:40 get on it brother!! the world needs dr signifier
@missp4988 ай бұрын
wisdom is chasing him but he is faster
@nenyeo60907 ай бұрын
😂😂
@carapo667 ай бұрын
Ha ha. Are you Nigerian?
@walkinthewoods9817 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@benjonyc7 ай бұрын
going to use this!
@davidvaughnstraughn7 ай бұрын
Love how FD finally flexed all his credentials like 'y'all better take this free game'
@SilortheBlade8 ай бұрын
The more I learn, the more I realize how much I don't know. Which is the exact opposite of this type of person.
@doclime47928 ай бұрын
Gaining proficiency in talking to a general audience is a full time job. Being an expert or making breakthroughs is a completely different job. These guys just want to jump to "intellectual celebrity." Embarassing! Poking fun at your fields "intellectuals" is healthy and in good fun in my opinion but a charlatan tries to step on my toes, all they'll receive is genunine maliciousness. Wanting to be perceived as "genius" to non-experts is embarassing! Most people with that tendency get over it once they realize what they really want is to be recognized for their actual work. I blame the media, trying to make everyone into some ridiculous character.
7 ай бұрын
It's like climbing a tower. Every step you climb you see further and more.places you have never been.
@karminyates32615 ай бұрын
if y’all wanna know, the term is called, the Dunning Kruger effect is when a person believes that they know more than they actually do about a subject. It’s super common. People often with big egos.