The Problems With Dune's Science that Everyone Ignores | Arrakis Explained

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Astrum

Күн бұрын

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Пікірлер: 998
@brendanjones3235
@brendanjones3235 13 күн бұрын
I disagree. Eating a Magic Mushroom on a spaceship can lead to lightspeed travel... for the user.
@ZEROmg13
@ZEROmg13 13 күн бұрын
.....I concur.
@mrraamsridhar
@mrraamsridhar 13 күн бұрын
Time is relative after all. And since speed depends on time, speed must be relative too. So indeed the user could be experiencing lightspeed.
@monad_tcp
@monad_tcp 13 күн бұрын
well, if the spice gives you youth or accelerates time for your brain so it can predict the future better by having more processing power, that's literally light-speed travel in a very indirect way. brains don't need to see the future, they're literally there to predict it, the more awareness you have, aka, the more data you have, the more you will be able to actually predict the future. so it doesn't matter much if time passes slowly for you when you're basically biologically immortal and can be kept in stasis
@gammaraygem
@gammaraygem 13 күн бұрын
there is a school of thought that assumes that the alien spacecraft in US posession are indeed partially powered or steered by the mind. And that for humans to be able to control them, they need a further step in evolution, implying what yogis have shown for millennia: mind over matter. This is in line with the teaching of Sri Aurobindo, who suggests that humans1.0 are not the final product of evolution. The work of Michael Levin has shown that a force of as yet unknown source powers evolution. Not just randomness. Not DNA. There are layers of determinism. Causality as suggested by Alex is the primitive current human state of consciousness. Time is an illusion. Thus is space. Everything is possible.
@MichaelWinter-ss6lx
@MichaelWinter-ss6lx 13 күн бұрын
It is possible to predict the future. It took me a very long time to stop this. And no, it's not like seeing the newspaper in advance so you know the races or lottery. You cannot decide yourself when and what future is seen, but it is scary when it then happens in real.
@esnevip
@esnevip 13 күн бұрын
The spice doesn't make the faster than light travel possible, it makes it navigable.
@erikjessup4495
@erikjessup4495 10 күн бұрын
And even then, the spice isn't strictly necessary. It doesn't show THE future, it shows multiple possible futures. The navigators then take the action needed that results in a safe arrival. Computer simulation could do the same thing (if perhaps with less certainty). But, for sociopolitical and religious reasons, no computers are in use.
@esnevip
@esnevip 10 күн бұрын
@@erikjessup4495 or you could just fire the drive up and cross your fingers that you don't hit anything.
@nathanielacton3768
@nathanielacton3768 10 күн бұрын
@@esnevip That had a 90% success rate apparently. So much of a battlefleet never made it there and less made it back.
@PlebstersPictionary
@PlebstersPictionary 8 күн бұрын
11:20 - 11:35
@h3lblad3
@h3lblad3 4 күн бұрын
@@erikjessup4495, no computers are in use for historical reasons. Thinking machines were banned after an AI uprising.
@stcredzero
@stcredzero 13 күн бұрын
A point you missed from the books, is how the Sandworm lifecycle also acts to sequester water away from the ecosystem. The Sandworms effectively de-terraform planets, instead Arraki-forming them. By causing an environmental shift, you reduce the population of Sandworms and their other forms, thereby reducing the proportion of sequestered water, which further increases water in the environment, further reducing the population of Sandworms. Eventually, you get an exponential S-curve transition back to an ocean-covered terrestrial world.
@pirojfmifhghek566
@pirojfmifhghek566 12 күн бұрын
I think that's a detail easily missed because you don't learn about it until after Children of Dune. Most people stop reading the series after that part because it gets... _real weird._
@brothergrimaldus3836
@brothergrimaldus3836 11 күн бұрын
That's putting it mildly ​@@pirojfmifhghek566
@iRossco
@iRossco 11 күн бұрын
​@@pirojfmifhghek566 "really weird" would be an understatement. Not sure if I got through God Emperor
@thureintun1687
@thureintun1687 11 күн бұрын
stupid stuff 😂 So stupid. No wonder it is a science " *FICTION* " , not scientific peer reviewed research paper😅
@stcredzero
@stcredzero 11 күн бұрын
@@thureintun1687 The "stupid" to look out for in fiction is cringey bad story telling. The Dune books by Frank Herbert are mostly good storytelling. Also cringey: Applying scientific paper standards to works of fiction. But that's only cringey if you don't realize it's all supposed to be for tongue in cheek fun.
@itzhexen0
@itzhexen0 13 күн бұрын
The problem with it's science is that it's science fiction.
@CalmSnow_
@CalmSnow_ 13 күн бұрын
I agree with you, but I would not be surprised to know there are some neck bearded mfs in Reddit arguing that it's true and possibly.
@eerohughes
@eerohughes 13 күн бұрын
No
@eerohughes
@eerohughes 13 күн бұрын
Only if you're incompetent
@landsman420
@landsman420 13 күн бұрын
The best kind of science fiction is one or two fictional elements, that interact with real science. If everything is fictional, nothing is.
@navret1707
@navret1707 13 күн бұрын
@@landsman420👍
@HCG
@HCG 13 күн бұрын
The lore is very clear about why the shield allows slow moving things through. It’s so air can pass and so you can interact with objects
@lu-uf8zj
@lu-uf8zj 13 күн бұрын
so it's by intelligent design rather than an inherent property of the field?
@HCG
@HCG 13 күн бұрын
@@lu-uf8zj Exactly
@brisingr12
@brisingr12 13 күн бұрын
​@@lu-uf8zjthe feild has been tuned by intelligent design
@Jaded_AF
@Jaded_AF 13 күн бұрын
If that was the case, why not strap on an oxygen tank, crank up the shield, and make yourself invincible.
@sjc4
@sjc4 13 күн бұрын
But the lore is not scientifically infallible, which is only what Alex is trying to point out. Our current understanding of the universe will not align with a sci fi work that uses magic dust for space travel.
@MrQuantumInc
@MrQuantumInc 13 күн бұрын
Dune is definitely more concerned with sociology/anthropology than physics. The physics of the shields and faster than light travel or prescience are ignored in favor of long discussions of how they affect society and how people think. There is also some discussion of biology on Arrakis. It is a plot point that some people smuggle a sandworm to another desert planet only for it to immediately starve. It is possible to transport and replicate the entire ecosystem, but not fast enough to counter the spice monopoly.
@alexsdarkclubband
@alexsdarkclubband 13 күн бұрын
I really enjoyed the focus on social/political/religious topics. It adds so much complexity to the story Interestingly, climate change is a huge problem in the later books. The fremen dream of turning arrakis into a green paradise, but the sandworms would go extinct and society would collapse without the spice.
@patrickday4206
@patrickday4206 11 күн бұрын
Exactly I always said Herbert at heart was an anthropologist
@andyelliott3198
@andyelliott3198 13 күн бұрын
Denis Villeneuve's Dune changes how FTL is depicted, he visualises the Heighliners as gateways whereas in the books and David Lynch's Dune, a Heighliner is a giant vessel housing thousands of passenger vessels. The Spice is used to evolve Guild navigators into mutated humans with the ability to see across space and time using prescience, which allows them to plot a safe route before the Heighliner folds space. The Spice does not create folded space, that is all done by the Holtzman Interstellar Engines which use an unknown energy source most likely Nuclear Fusion but the Spice does allow humans to use the Holtzman effect for Interstellar travel or "Travelling without moving".
@autopartsmonkey7992
@autopartsmonkey7992 13 күн бұрын
thanks.,,,you saved me a bunch of typing. lol. so this is all correct. its sad that they did such a poor research job. i understand its a big universe, lots of lore. but come on, he gets so much basic stuff just wrong.
@MichaelWinter-ss6lx
@MichaelWinter-ss6lx 12 күн бұрын
Very good. You just revealed why this video made me feel so strange. And reminded me why I always prefer reading the book over watching a film. 🚀🏴‍☠️🎸
@russelljazzbeck
@russelljazzbeck 12 күн бұрын
Nice, this makes sense
@sysbofh
@sysbofh 12 күн бұрын
And, strictly speaking, You don't need spice to travel. It's just incredibly risky, due to collisions. You could roll the dice, You could use advanced computers (the Butlerian Jihad closed this avenue) or... You could use Spice. And as we all know, the Spice must flow. :D
@BroadwayJosh
@BroadwayJosh 12 күн бұрын
That"s the problem with sci-fi tales of galactic civilizations: one has to ignore Einstein's theory of relativity for any of this fiction to make any sense. The exteme time effects of relatavistic velocities would blow up any possibility of a connected civilization. Don't even get me started on "faster than light."
@kento7899
@kento7899 13 күн бұрын
The Sand Worms have a larval form called a Sand Trout. They abhor water and use their bodies to sequester it. I think the idea is that besides the Fremen's underground water stores, the Sand Trouts themselves may have sequestered an ocean's worth of water deep underground. They could have released this water to transform Arrakis back into a more watery world. That would destroy spice production so no one wanted to do it.
@johannageisel5390
@johannageisel5390 12 күн бұрын
If I were them, I would use the sand and the solar energy to make lots of glass and build large greenhouses. There they could have their lush greenery and also keep the water in them from simply evaporating. Outside of the greenhouses the sandworms could to their thing. The greenhouses could be build on the rocky outcrops, or even partly into them. The sieches already have underground dwellings, so either you build the greenhouses simply over the sieches or you make similar underground dwellings under the newly erected greenhouses.
@kento7899
@kento7899 12 күн бұрын
​@@johannageisel5390 I agree. It would be super easy with their technology. I think keeping the poor masses poor and miserable fits with the feudalistic theme of the Dune universe. Plus, the Harkonnens were evil slave masters so you know they wouldn't have improved the lives of the poor masses. A former Bene Gesserit with the Harkonnens had a small tropical greenhouse built for her in the royal house. They had to keep it secret I think because an audacious use of water like that would offend the desert dwelling natives.
@kento7899
@kento7899 12 күн бұрын
@johannageisel5390 I agree. It would be super easy with their technology. I think keeping the poor masses poor and miserable fits with the feudalistic theme of the Dune universe. Plus, the Harkonnens were evil slave masters so you know they wouldn't have improved the lives of the poor masses. A former Bene Gesserit with the Harkonnens had a small tropical greenhouse built for her in the royal house. They had to keep it secret I think because an audacious use of water like that would offend the desert dwelling natives.
@kennethferland5579
@kennethferland5579 8 күн бұрын
The amount of water could never be an 'oceans' worth of water, unluess folks want to claim that their are Sandtrout bodies 3 miles thick under the sand.
@hlalakar4156
@hlalakar4156 7 күн бұрын
Yup. Over time the waste from the sand trout mixes with the water and forms the spice and a large amount of CO2. Yes, spice is worm poo. Anyway, once the CO2 builds up enough it causes the mass of sand trout encapsulating the water to explode, spraying spice and water all over the place. The water quickly evaporates leaving behind dry spice and a few surviving sand trout that then go on to grow into sandworms. The fremen have built special devices that can condense this water out of the air, which they add to their underground cisterns.
@PhilRounds
@PhilRounds 13 күн бұрын
Guild Navigators are navigators. They don't fold space, they allow for the guidance of the ship so it goes where they want it to. I believe Heighliners are built by Ix, a planet that is responsible for most of the advanced technology in the Dune universe.
@weirdkitty07
@weirdkitty07 13 күн бұрын
When Herbert wrote Dune, he didn't know the orbits of exoplanets. It was the 1960s. He picked Canopus, Alpha Giedi, Menkar and other bright stars because they were bright, not because any of them made sense for planets. Earth Star Trek at the time also did this. But the 'black sun' was added for the film, as the real Alpha Giedi would indeed be blindingly bright, not black. It means none of them can go outside, or have their eyeballs melted and go blind. It is also possible he was thinking of Sirius, which would be much closer, so he picked A Giedi.
@reidflemingworldstoughestm1394
@reidflemingworldstoughestm1394 13 күн бұрын
Eyes melt; skin explodes; everybody dead!
@heyheytaytay
@heyheytaytay 13 күн бұрын
Also, it's science "FICTION" for a reason...
@MichaelWinter-ss6lx
@MichaelWinter-ss6lx 13 күн бұрын
Exoplanets in the 1960s was pure science fiction.
@supersleepygrumpybear
@supersleepygrumpybear 12 күн бұрын
Either way, the thermal camera technique they used for Dune: Part 2 was incredible.
@platylobiumobtuseangulum1607
@platylobiumobtuseangulum1607 11 күн бұрын
@@MichaelWinter-ss6lx Not quite pure SF sicne astronomers were looking for them and there were claimed discoveries eg around Barnard's star that later turned out to be false detections but still.
@TSBoncompte
@TSBoncompte 13 күн бұрын
magic mushrooms won't accelerate you to lightspeed, but the in-universe logic is that the hard part is not acceleration, but navigating without crashing into a star or into whatever obstacles exist in the folded warpspace or whatever medium they move through iirc.
@MichaelWinter-ss6lx
@MichaelWinter-ss6lx 12 күн бұрын
There also exists the possibility that FTL twists your mind: warped space, hyperspace or whatever. This is used in some SciFi. Passengers get doped or otherwise go to deep sleep. The pilot or navigator must be awake and gets special dope. Some times the aliens drop out in FTL and need time to recover. One day we will discover that ganja only grows so we can stay sane in FTL.
@MrCovi2955
@MrCovi2955 8 күн бұрын
The way the visions of the future are explained in the book is less "Oh I predicted the exact events that will happen" but as a sea of probabilities, with hills that block your view in some places because there are variables you don't know. Its less about prophetic visions and more about opening your mind to fully calculate everything you know to be able to see what could happen, what probably will happen, and what might happen. You aren't "seeing the future" when you lift your arms to catch a frisbee in flight, you're simply expecting that it will be in front of you in a moment. But if a dog jumps out from your blind spot and catches it instead, your prediction was wrong. Thus is the prescience that the Spice imparts in Dune. So this actually doesn't conflict with causality or information conservation.
@dbuck5350
@dbuck5350 13 күн бұрын
As I remember it from reading all the Dune books in the 70's to 80's (my years of reading them), all water on Arrakis is sequestered by the sand worms to be used in their reproduction cycles and spice is the by-product. I think is comes in later books when Paul Atriedes and his son are the rulers.
@ecbrown6151
@ecbrown6151 13 күн бұрын
Water is toxic to the sandworms, they might actually be a silicate based life-form.
@MichaelWinter-ss6lx
@MichaelWinter-ss6lx 12 күн бұрын
The baby worms live in water, I believe to remember. The protective skin Leto put together, becoming a symbiont if wearing it too long. But it was found out only later, that these were the babies of the worms.
@supersleepygrumpybear
@supersleepygrumpybear 12 күн бұрын
And for the science fiction books written in the 1960s, 70s, and 80s (more if you include Brian), it's very poignant and topical today with its environmental themes. Apparently, Herbert was supposed to write a piece about the Oregon Sand Dunes, which is what inspired him to write Dune. Today those dunes are degrading due to the Forest Service effort to suppress the sand dunes in the 1960s by planting European Grass. Also, the Sand Worms might or might not be a metaphor for ATVs (Oregon has a video about it on KZbin, but I'm not brave enough to post the url)(The Terrible Purpose of social media;)
@stephanieparker1250
@stephanieparker1250 12 күн бұрын
Spoilers!
@TestUser-cf4wj
@TestUser-cf4wj 11 күн бұрын
Spice Is the byproduct of the adult worm's digestion. Spice Is literally worm poo.
@legendaryrat
@legendaryrat 13 күн бұрын
The way prescience is explained in the books and hinted at in the film, is less pure precognition and more glimpsing quantum uncertainty. Paul describes the experience in the book like gazing at a branching river or a tree, with each branch representing a possible outcome. I think what Herbert was going for was akin to being able to see how time unfolds in the events that Schrodinger's Cat was both alive or dead. Almost like the math used to calculate quantum physics made manifest.
@Hoganply
@Hoganply 13 күн бұрын
Makes as much sense as a naturally occurring stable wormhole, but sure.
@Unmannedair
@Unmannedair 13 күн бұрын
Yes, exactly this. This is also how the mentats achieved their functionality of human computers.
@legendaryrat
@legendaryrat 13 күн бұрын
@@Hoganply it takes place 20,000 years in the future, so that's enough time to just handwaved and say "They figured it out."
@osasunaitor
@osasunaitor 3 күн бұрын
​@@Hoganply stuff like internet or vaccines also made zero sense to people barely 200 years ago. Yet here we are. Dune is set thousands of years into the future. You can only enjoy it if you suspend your disbelief for a moment and try to imagine all the possibilities that technology and knowledge will open in such a vast timelapse. If you want to stick to the things that we know for sure at the present time, these are not the novels/films for you, I suggest you move on.
@OZtwo
@OZtwo 12 күн бұрын
Before Chuck Yeager broke the sound barrier in 1947, people believed that breaking the sound barrier would destroy an aircraft. Some researchers even thought that it was physically impossible for an object like a car or airplane to go supersonic.
@GothBoyUK
@GothBoyUK 12 күн бұрын
People thought the first steam trains were so violently fast (at 50mph) that women should never ride them in case their uteruses were ripped out. 😮
@britishrocklovingyank3491
@britishrocklovingyank3491 12 күн бұрын
That isn't true at all. If people believed that they wouldn't have tried to do it. People who didn't understand flight thought that.
@philsmith2444
@philsmith2444 12 күн бұрын
@@britishrocklovingyank3491Some of the Manhattan Project scientists were concerned an atomic bomb detonation might ignite the atmosphere. That wasn’t because they didn’t understand the fission process.
@britishrocklovingyank3491
@britishrocklovingyank3491 12 күн бұрын
@@philsmith2444 The difference between a bomb and a plane is vast. Some would say not even comparable.
@philsmith2444
@philsmith2444 12 күн бұрын
@@britishrocklovingyank3491 The point is, understanding how nuclear fission works doesn’t mean you know all the possible effects, and knowing how an airplane flies doesn’t mean you know how it’ll act at supersonic speeds. Especially when all your testing had to be done in wind tunnels, and there were no supersonic wind tunnels at the time. Do you know why many thought an airplane would be destroyed breaking the sound barrier?
@chadevans4922
@chadevans4922 13 күн бұрын
There is one other source of water on Arrakis: the north polar icecap. There are no worms there and no spice. Why don't the fremen mine ice for water there? The books hint that it is very cold there and ice mining is extremely hazardous.. And since the main draw of Arrakis is the spice, the vast majority of people simply don't go to the north pole.
@FrikInCasualMode
@FrikInCasualMode 13 күн бұрын
In the first book ice mining was indeed mentioned. But it was done by city people - those living in areas naturally protected from Sand Worms. In those "civilized" areas Fremen are not welcomed kindly.
@savage5757
@savage5757 13 күн бұрын
7:45 even a knife cannot enter this field too quickly. Hand-to-hand combat in Dune involves slowing down the hand before striking the blade
@MolotDET
@MolotDET 6 күн бұрын
yes this was poorly represented by Deni
@innercityprepper
@innercityprepper 13 күн бұрын
Don't forget that the shield technology also has another plot device: Interaction with lasers causes nuclear explosions.
@patrickm.4469
@patrickm.4469 13 күн бұрын
Randomly too, which is always nice lol
@stazeII
@stazeII 12 күн бұрын
Which was changed in movies to use actual atomics, which in books was brought up as not possible since it would incur retaliation from other houses (if I recall). Shields also drove worms into frenzy.
@marksnow7569
@marksnow7569 12 күн бұрын
@@stazeII I think you're misremembering the book. Atomics as a weapon were banned, but using them for civil engineering was OK, so Paul did a very rapid and large-scale bit of landscape redesign to create a passage for sandworms.
@the_exegete
@the_exegete 12 күн бұрын
@@stazeII Atomics are used in the attack on Arrakeen in the book as well. And of course in both the houses weren't too happy about it.
@stazeII
@stazeII 12 күн бұрын
@@marksnow7569thought they had a shield generator on the wall and hit it with laser (which gave atomic like blast)
@StEvEn-dp1ri
@StEvEn-dp1ri 11 күн бұрын
One thing, Alex, you didn't even touch on, is where does the planet get all of its oxygen from in the first place? Zero greenery to speak of, no oceans for plankton, and absolutely nothing for photosynthesis. What on that planet produces oxygen? Never mind an atmosphere very Earth-like. That's always been my biggest question.
@vileluca
@vileluca 9 күн бұрын
there's tons of plankton in the sand. Its what the worms eat.
@StEvEn-dp1ri
@StEvEn-dp1ri 9 күн бұрын
@@vileluca yeah, I know about that plankton. Of course I take issue with that as well. Plankton require water to survive too and on the surface in the sand where they live is dry as well. At any rate, thanks for the reply.
@disconnected22
@disconnected22 7 күн бұрын
The sand worms exhale Oxygen. It’s a byproduct of their chemical cycle
@missedpenguin
@missedpenguin 6 күн бұрын
the worms and all it's stages create oxygen
@MolotDET
@MolotDET 6 күн бұрын
Dune was once a lush jungle planet and the remains of the desiccating plants buried under the sand produce gasses which are processed by the sand plankton and produce o2.
@gabe_0x
@gabe_0x 13 күн бұрын
It baffles me that KZbinrs STILL take betterhelp sponsorships...
@yaldabaoth2
@yaldabaoth2 13 күн бұрын
A channel this size gets 6 figure deals for a few reads. There really is only one reason why you would take that sponsorship.
@supersleepygrumpybear
@supersleepygrumpybear 12 күн бұрын
You might say, they need better help ()
@fritz46
@fritz46 12 күн бұрын
Pecunia non olet.
@1112viggo
@1112viggo 12 күн бұрын
I think people are smart enough not to buy a product or service simply because a KZbinr they like are payed to endorse it. I mean iv seen celebrities doing commercials for Coke AND Pepsi. As Dave Chappell said; Honestly, i can't even taste the difference, all i know is, Pepsi paid me most recently, so, tastes better. You have to be Forest Gump to believe endorsements in this day and age.
@DrachenGothik666
@DrachenGothik666 10 күн бұрын
@@1112viggo Considering some of the people folks keep voting for or cheering on & buying their merch, plastering it all over their trucks, houses & persons, there are a LOT of Forrest Gumps. A lot of people fall for scams, too. Guaranteed, some of them will go for those endorsements, sadly. I was hoping Astrum was smarter than this.
@timmo971
@timmo971 12 күн бұрын
I’d just like to point out that “the spacing guild” uses spice for navigation not folding space directly. Apparently folding space is dangerous due to collisions and spice gives the navigators a level of prescience that in turn gives them a chance to “turn the steering wheel” before it’s too late kind of thing.
@MolotDET
@MolotDET 6 күн бұрын
Navigators do not in any way possess any form of prescience
@Radzood
@Radzood 5 күн бұрын
@@MolotDET They do
@MolotDET
@MolotDET 4 күн бұрын
@@Radzood unfortunately they do not. 3rd Stage Navigators (aka Steersman) possess extended awareness allowing them to know the present conditions of space in the entire universe all at once and they possess the ancestral knowledge of how all things in space interact with each other which allows them to predict how any cosmic event will cause interactions with anything along their path allowing them to manually steer a safe course across the universe. it is a fine line between prediction and prescience but there is a line. Previous to Heretics of Dune only Paul, Leto II, and Count Fenring actually possessed any type of actual prescience, and Fenring barely had any at all.
@Muritaipet
@Muritaipet 5 күн бұрын
You've missed the point of the shields, which are one of the most critical parts of the Dune universe. 1) Shields eliminate the use of all technological weapons - guns, lasguns, nukes etc etc. *You have to use knives.* 2) This creates a universe where *wars require medieval level combatants.* Their wars are fought with knives 3) This allows a feudal society to exist. "Kingdoms" with *the toughest knife fighters, from the nastiest planets, rule the universe.*
@vaakdemandante8772
@vaakdemandante8772 13 күн бұрын
A whole series on Sci-Fi realism linked with current astronomic discoveries could be nice. I'd gladly watch a dissection of Star-Trek universe in relation to the actual reality of cosmos as we know it.
@SirHeinzbond
@SirHeinzbond 13 күн бұрын
The setting of The Expanse is mostly rooted to known science, Protogene and Fusion Power beside...
@eldritchbeauty
@eldritchbeauty 13 күн бұрын
First thing that comes to mind is that Warp speed would be impossible. Our current understanding of physics says that any attempts at light speed or faster than light speed travel would break causality, including any sort of warp drives or even worm holes.
@BroadwayJosh
@BroadwayJosh 13 күн бұрын
What's all this about the variable rotational speed of Arrakis? I don't recall anything about that in the Frank Herbert Dune books, except in one of them, he wrote that the planet's rotational axis was almost perfectly perpendicular, effectively not tilted at all. Maybe all this nonsense is in the Brian Herbert/Kevin J.Anderson "heresies" (😆) of prequels, sequels, pre-prequels, post-sequels, and seemingly non-stop attempts to wring as much money as possible out of Frank Herbert's sci-fi masterpiece.
@DrachenGothik666
@DrachenGothik666 10 күн бұрын
Brian Herbert can't write to save his life. I read _one_ of his books over 30 years ago, & it was abominable. Can't even recall the title, but it was contrived, the names of things in the book were silly (something about a mud planet where the mud was called "galoo". Really, Brian? C'mon), & plot points were predictable. And I caught this as a 19 year old naïve kid who knew jack squat about the world.
@BroadwayJosh
@BroadwayJosh 10 күн бұрын
@@DrachenGothik666 I just googled Brian Herbert's books - was it called "The Race For God?" I picked up one his books at the library one time, printed in green ink, set in the not too distant future, about a "green dictator" who will be middle-aged in the 2050s - I cannot remember the title - it was awful and I couldn't finish it. His collaboration with Kevin J. Anderson on writing the Dune prequels proved more fruitful. I remember being in Sam's Club 20 years ago, walking by "Dune: House Atreides," my eyes about popping out of my head - I glommed onto it without a 2nd thought. I will never forget its opening scene of a fit and lean Baron Harkonnen being flown around in an ornithopter watching a worm devour a spice factory.
@Suiseisexy
@Suiseisexy 5 күн бұрын
Nah, he doesn't touch the lore too much, mostly just confirms some suspected stuff like that the Bene Gesserit were always capable of military conflict and goes with the Butlerian Jihad stuff as the ending big bad, who seems to be an inversion of the Baron. What he misses is the big alien bioprocess that makes people capable of FTL probably is doing that on purpose to spread through the universe, we didn't figure out FTL, we hitched a ride on another species in a way. I think we were supposed to get to that after we were done with The Political Effects of Time-Vision: Immortal Dictator Finally Emerges, it's just that the final book is written almost deliberately to suggest Duncan is going on an adventure, so that's what Brian wrote, Duncan's Excellent Adventures.
@johncogan8689
@johncogan8689 13 күн бұрын
10:30 Isnt spice red and not blue?
@Zond3r
@Zond3r 13 күн бұрын
It's blue in the books, hence the color of the Fremen's eyes
@WrenPhoenix
@WrenPhoenix 9 күн бұрын
@@Zond3r No.
@hlalakar4156
@hlalakar4156 7 күн бұрын
@@Zond3r No, it's a brown or orange color in the books.
@deadon4847
@deadon4847 5 күн бұрын
Spice is worm poop.
@melissaharris3389
@melissaharris3389 5 күн бұрын
It's both. Concentrated spice essence is blue. Hense the blue within blue Eyes of Ibad of Fremen and spice addicts. The mature spice becomes redish after it erupts from deep beneath the sand; it's then oxidized and dessicated by Arakkis's intense sunlight and dry atmosphere. It's at that stage it's granular, redish, and smells vaguely of cinnamon.
@williamzame3708
@williamzame3708 13 күн бұрын
The Guild navigators do not fold space; the Holtzmann effect does that. The Guild navigators only see the path.
@sailorgeer
@sailorgeer 12 күн бұрын
Regarding the force fields that block fast moving objects but allow slow ones through, I always imagined it similar to the properties of rheopectic fluids, a non-Newtonian fluid that increases in viscosity when shear stress is applied (ie the opposite of thixotropic fluids where viscosity decreases under stress. An example from grade school science is a mixture of cornstarch and water, often called “Oobleck” where you can form it into a ball in your hands but when you stop applying stress it magically oozes away through your fingers.
@OOTurok
@OOTurok 12 күн бұрын
To clarify the association of Spice with FTL travel in the Dune Universe..... it has zero effect on the ship & its ability to move faster than light. The Spice is not used to run the FTL engines at all. The ship's FTL engines do all the work of folding space, & function completely independent of the Spice. The Spice only gives the Navigators the ability to see different possible futures... so they can predict the safest path of where to fold space & how much space to fold between jumps. Prescience is required for this, otherwise the ship might jump into an asteroid, rogue planet, or other celestial object that would destroy the ship. By consuming Spice... Navigators are able to see all these obstacles before hand, where they will be & when they will be... thus are able to navigate around those obstacles. The Spice essentially gives Navigators a mental map, by which to navigate the ship. Before the discovery of Spice... highly intelligent computers would control the ship's FTL engines to warp space & navigate starships. But there is reason why people stopped using such computers.
@weirdkitty07
@weirdkitty07 13 күн бұрын
Paul Atredes and his going native does not lead to him becoming a Luke Skywalker type, as you might think, but rather, he becomes like Annakin, and then his son becomes the worm man Leto II in the sequels.
@tabularasa0606
@tabularasa0606 11 күн бұрын
The whole premise of the story is: "Don't worship hero's". They're only human and they have faults.
@cursive6412
@cursive6412 13 күн бұрын
Okay, Neil Tyson
@YusufPiskin
@YusufPiskin 11 күн бұрын
Hi there! I just wanted to take a moment to express my sincere appreciation for your amazing videos. The amount of effort and dedication you put into your work is truly inspiring. My 7-year-old nephew and I (I'm 44) are both huge fans of your channel. I'm writing to you today specifically to thank you for your clear and concise English. As a Turkish speaker who learned English later in life, I often find it challenging to understand native English speakers, especially on KZbin. However, I've been consistently impressed by your grammar and pronunciation, which makes it possible for me to follow your videos without even having to turn on the subtitles. I'm not sure if you make a conscious effort to speak in a way that's easy for non-native speakers to understand, but if you do, I just wanted to say thank you. It makes a huge difference! Your videos have opened up a whole new world of knowledge and wonder for both me and my nephew. We've learned so much about space and the universe thanks to you. So thank you again for everything you do. Keep up the amazing work! Best regards from Turkey, Yusuf
@weirdkitty07
@weirdkitty07 13 күн бұрын
The new Dune movies are a fair and awesome adaptation of the first Dune novel.
@jumpingman8160
@jumpingman8160 9 күн бұрын
No
@matteste
@matteste 13 күн бұрын
From my understanding from reading the second book, the future sight offered by spice follows more of a quantum model. In that you see several possible futures and can tell which ones are the most likley to occur. Basically it is about probability but not set in stone. It is difficult to change what you see as it is more unlikley to happen, but not impossible.
@GudieveNing
@GudieveNing 13 күн бұрын
As a soon to be designer of electric aircraft, and only 1:35 into the video, looking forward to your analysis of the 'ornithopters', although they are not in fact bird like, but giant dragonflies. In reality, on Earth anyway, these flying machines would explode into pieces of mechanical parts on power up if such huge wings flapped that fast against the soup of terrestrial Terran air.
@alexejfrohlich5869
@alexejfrohlich5869 13 күн бұрын
i wonder if the shields would come in handy here...? like the craft itself is protected by the shield and the strong forces just make sure that no energy is passed onto the frame? of course, when we see how they operate, the crafts should glow highly blue when they are active then, i guess.
@makeshift_battlefield_music
@makeshift_battlefield_music 13 күн бұрын
Dragonflyesque indeed. However it also reminds me of a hummingbird's flight technique. Large proportional wings, like you said, would be absurd. But perhaps you could think about a vehicle with tens of thousands of tiny mechanical hummingbird wings. Would that work?
@rdizzy1
@rdizzy1 13 күн бұрын
Not exactly, look up the youtube video "I built a simulated ornithopter and the results surprised me", it would be more viable than people think, even on earth. (And the gravity on arrakis is lower than earths, regardless of what some of the wiki information says, the planet is quite a bit smaller than earth due to the time it takes for characters to travel across the surface, based on speed)
@patrickm.4469
@patrickm.4469 13 күн бұрын
​@@alexejfrohlich5869only some of the ornithopters have the shields apparently I'm reading the first book currently
@jeffreyrobinson3555
@jeffreyrobinson3555 10 күн бұрын
Dune wasn’t always a desert, the importation of sand worms made it so, as their life cycle encapsulates water. Where ever they came from they went wild on Arakis free of what ever their natural predator was. Environmental concerns were very much a theme of Herbert.
@melissaharris3389
@melissaharris3389 5 күн бұрын
Herbert begins to imply in his last books that they may be bioenginered creatures.
@Kevinjimtheone
@Kevinjimtheone 7 күн бұрын
There are a few missing points in the video, but I’ll focus on a couple: - The shield: in the books, they described as inventions that allow slow moving particles in to allow breathing. It is not explicitly noted if that a side effect or an design choice - Planetary rotation: it was the 60s. We barely managed to put humans on the moon with the computational power of a Casio watch. I would forgive Herbert for not nailing that part, which is not really the focus of the book to begin with - Guild Navigators & Spice: Guild navigator were genetically modified humans that overused spice to be able to navigate space travel. FTL space travel was perfectly possible to achieve using machines, but “thinking” machines were explicitly forbidden after the butlerian jihad. The mechanics of spice were never explained, but I thought of it similarly to a super state of what one might thing as “in the zone”, but with numerous more data and sensory input Others have already explained the water thing. It would be fun to go over how the sand worms move, though. The most logical answer is that they “inhale” sand and “extract” it with force, like a sand jet ski.
@ClifftopTragedy
@ClifftopTragedy 13 күн бұрын
I loved the movies but I don't think they managed to get across the harshness of Arakis. They seemed fairly comfortable wandering around.
@deepashtray5605
@deepashtray5605 11 күн бұрын
The one scientific necessity ignored or not realized in the creation of harsh desert planets such as Arrakas or Tatooine is the basic biological principle of an oxygen cycle. Oxygen is extremely reactive and must have a mechanism such as photosynthesis found in plant life to make it available to breathe or it will quickly react to most all but a small handful of the other elements.
@MolotDET
@MolotDET 6 күн бұрын
Not sure about Tatooine, but on Dune oxygen is created by the sand plankton's interaction with the desiccating remains of the ancient jungles which existed on Arrakis before the sand trout were introduced. Plant biomass buried under the sand releases gases which are processed by the sand plankton and turned into oxygen.
@deepashtray5605
@deepashtray5605 6 күн бұрын
@@MolotDET Thanks for taking the time to explain that, but it still seems like a stretch. Of course giant worms that can move at 80 miles an hour through sand are also a bit of a stretch... :)
@LabRatJason
@LabRatJason 10 күн бұрын
In the books, the holtzman field is created by a holtzman generator... which frequently overheats when heavily taxed by incoming projectiles. Presumably the impacts against the shield are feeding back into the generator. Another interesting detail from the books is that the shields react explosively when hit with lasers... a fact that was not known until the shields were already heavily deployed among military personnel (turns out, lasers were an ancient weapon that wasn't very effective due to energy requirements) Someone ends up firing an old museum relic at Theo Holzman himself (the named inventor, but not the actual inventor), who was wearing a shield, and it destroys an entire city. The physics of that reaction are also not covered in the books (where does the energy come from for an explosion the size of a nuke, when the interaction was caused by a battery powered laser and a battery powered shield generator?) About the water on Dune: the water was always on the planet, but it was tied up by creatures called "Sand Trout". These creatures aggressively find water and absorb/trap it under ground. The sand trout are the larval stage of the sand worm. Once the water is trapped, some sand trout become Shaitan (Later called Shai Hulud). Sand worms cannot live in the presence of water. The terraformers eventually realized that destroying the sand trout would release the waters, which would destroy the worms, allowing water to flow on Arrakis... though even after this was done, there wasn't enough water to have full-blown oceans on the planet... but rivers on the surface did exist.
@DolgorsurenDagvadorj
@DolgorsurenDagvadorj 10 күн бұрын
By precognition I always assumed that it's a future prediction by extrapolating the current state of the universe, not some baked-in future, so it can change for sure. Paul and other future kwisatz Haderach has to actively act to shape the future. No paradoxes. Anyways, I like the Dune universe a lot, though most elements of it are there just to get the plot going. It's not a bad thing because it's pretty well worked out, but it definitely places Dune much more into the fiction/fantasy category for me.
@sayyay6230
@sayyay6230 13 күн бұрын
Spice isn't blue, the cisterns aren't wells but the collected water of generations and the terraforming of Arakis is done by billions of people from across the galaxy making pilgrimages to Arakis to pay homage and leaving behind water vapor from breathing and all the other ways people lose water.
@sebastian6845
@sebastian6845 10 күн бұрын
spice is blue in the books
@melissaharris3389
@melissaharris3389 5 күн бұрын
It's both. Normal spice harvested from the sand is redish orange due to oxidation and drying under Arakkis's sun. _Very_ concentrated spice essence like the Water of Life or Sapho, used by Mentants, was blue.
@sayyay6230
@sayyay6230 4 күн бұрын
@@melissaharris3389 The water of life was bile from new born sand worms I kinda thought it was its own thing yes similar but diffrent and I dont think sapho was spice or derived from spice at all but i could be wrong
@jareds8729
@jareds8729 13 күн бұрын
i still find it hard to believe there would be no satellites orbiting such an important planet with the most valuable resource ever
@philsmith2444
@philsmith2444 13 күн бұрын
Read the book and you’ll see there are artificial satellites orbiting Arrakis. The Fremen bribe the Spacing Guild with spice to avoid certain areas where they’re doing things they don’t want seen by the Harkonnens or Empire.
@FrikInCasualMode
@FrikInCasualMode 13 күн бұрын
In the first book it was mentioned that Fremen pay exorbitant bribe in Spice to Trading Guild to specifically NOT notice any curious things happening in the desert.
@MolotDET
@MolotDET 6 күн бұрын
there are actually weather control satellites which keep it from raining at all to protect the spice cycle
@rhenmerchant5715
@rhenmerchant5715 5 күн бұрын
FYI, if you read the books you will understand that fold space is possible without spice. The spice allows the guild stearsman to plot a safe path in fold space.
@manslaughterinc.9135
@manslaughterinc.9135 11 күн бұрын
There's a lot more water on Arrakis than is made apparent in the books or movies. You need to read Children of Dune and look for the sand trout. They are a larval phase of the sandworms, and they lock up water. They go into this further in the 6th book, where they use sandworms to terraform another planet into a desert planet by introducing the sandworms. The water isn't going away, it's being locked up by the trout.
@adamjenson9369
@adamjenson9369 13 күн бұрын
It's only a problem if the story presents it as a "rule" and is then inconsistent with it. That's how good writing works, it doesn't matter if the rules of a fictional universe are different then the real universe, what matters is if the story follows it's own rules. That's why LOTR is a well written story despite having magic, it's very internally consistent.
@_Feyd-Rautha
@_Feyd-Rautha 13 күн бұрын
Spice isn't blue. The shields allow things generally moving slower than 6 cm per second to pass through so that air can pass through so the user can breathe also so that they can handle objects like their swords
@x-iso
@x-iso 12 күн бұрын
perhaps 'seeing the future' is really just analytical/prediction capability rather than seeing/traveling to actual future.
@GamerplayerWT
@GamerplayerWT 12 күн бұрын
The shields use/issue is twofold: first, slow moving objects (like oxygen and CO2 exchange would have to take place so that the wearer didn’t suffocate). Second, the slow moving objects getting through were designed to show the limitations of technology.
@geared2cre8
@geared2cre8 13 күн бұрын
The larva state of the sandworm actually seeks out water and stores it, And actually the planet aracquest was terreformed by the sandworm larva because it was Found that the larva did not originate on dune. there's an encyclopedia
@SireDutchball
@SireDutchball 13 күн бұрын
Imagine a video like this but for the celestial objects and events of Warhammer 40k.
@JonRista
@JonRista 9 күн бұрын
I think you've missed a key point about space travel from the books. Its been a little bit since I read them myself, but the concept was "Traveling, WITHOUT moving..." The notion of space folding is not that you are traveling faster than light, not in any "conventional" sense as put forth by most Sci-Fi. You aren't necessarily even "traveling through" a wormhole (although wormholes may be involved.) The idea was that you "folded" space (which was done by the highliner itself, and its Holtzman drive, not by the navigators), in effect bringing two points in the universe together "through foldspace (which is where the navigators prescience is required, to find a safe path through this "foldspace"...and as I understand it, for the SPACE BEING FOLDED...not so much the highliner itself!!) at the SAME PLACE (the highliner). You then simply ARE at the other location...there is no speed involved, not actual movement, no conventional FTL. You simply "fold" yourself through "spacetime" and are then somewhere else. Its an odd concept, but one that is theoretically supported by Einstein's relativity (i.e. Einstein-Rosen bridge, wormholes). The Navigators, saturated with melange, are capable of a limited (compared to Kwisatz Haderach anyway) form of prescience that allows them to avoid potential collisions in the foldspace, which is what made this form of space travel safe and effective and allowed travel throughout the known universe. I don't believe that the modern depiction of this space folding in the new miniseries by HBO, is actually all that accurate. The way they show the highliners is more like they are "portals", where if you look or travel through them, you arrive somewhere else. That isn't what I remember from the book...the way the book read, you had to be within the space of the highliner when space was folded in order to "travel" and if you were not within that space, then you didn't travel. The Dune miniseries from 2000 seemed to depict this more accurately, and I guess so did the original Dune from 1984...I've been disappointed in the relatively cheap effects and approach to this form of space travel that the newer movies have taken. It seems like a copout, to avoid even trying to depict how this form of travel might look like. -\_o.o_/-
@melissaharris3389
@melissaharris3389 5 күн бұрын
You are right about how the folding space works. I think Villenuve made a mistake depicting the Highliner as he chose to. But it is a far out concept to visually depict. As those inside see nothing and the ship just dissappears and reappears. Even Herbert doesn't 'show' it. He just info dumps it on the reader as Paul's inner monologue. I think the idea was to show the ship existing at both points in spacetime at once, but it doesn’t come across unless you're already familiar with how it's meant to work from the books. Strangely enough, Star Wars (Dune's bastard child) depicts FTL via wormhole pretty well.
@josephstaton4820
@josephstaton4820 11 күн бұрын
I was hoping to see the lasgun/body shield interaction in the first movie, as mentioned in the book. It'll be interesting to see how they render the stone burner explosion in Dune Messiah. I have an old paperback copy of the Dune Encyclopedia, which was considered cannon until the prequel books came out.
@BLD426
@BLD426 13 күн бұрын
Remind me not to go to a movie with you.😁
@ZEROmg13
@ZEROmg13 13 күн бұрын
.........i went to see "Titanic" with a history buff.............worst movie EVER!!!........lol
@BLD426
@BLD426 13 күн бұрын
@@ZEROmg13 Yup..😁
@karabenomar
@karabenomar 13 күн бұрын
Considering how it's impossible to pull yourself out when you're half-buried in sand, I'd like to see a serious calculation of how much power a sandworm needs to propel itself through the sand at speed a couple of hundred meters deep. And how many calories they'd need to get that much energy.
@johngaughan9399
@johngaughan9399 13 күн бұрын
Eh, it is a solved problem. Specifically, by Tremors back in 1990. They work like a combination of snake and fish, with little fins that act like sand-oars.
@NewGoldStandard
@NewGoldStandard 12 күн бұрын
This is the first video on Dune 2 that was even slightly critical of it. I really enjoyed it, as I do all of your work. Thanks you!
@rhenmerchant5715
@rhenmerchant5715 5 күн бұрын
The Dune universe does NOT have faster than light travel. It has "fold space". No Guild ship travels faster than light.
@charleshamilton9274
@charleshamilton9274 13 күн бұрын
My main quibble with the science of ‘Dune’ is the ludicrous use of ornithopters on a planet mostly comprised of sand. 🤷‍♂️
@reignman30
@reignman30 7 күн бұрын
I would think any sort of machinery in a sand environment has to be a nightmare for the people who have to maintain the equipment. Good for the filter business I suppose though.
@wlot28
@wlot28 13 күн бұрын
Dune is barely sci fi, it’s odd to me how everyone classifies it like that when it has much more in common with fantasy
@nateroberto6239
@nateroberto6239 13 күн бұрын
It's called Sci-Fanstasy or soft sci-fi. Star wars could be considered Sci-fantasy, Dune as soft-scfi and Foundation as hard sci-fi (being that it is based on mathematical sociology). Like fantasy, there are many sub genres within sci-fi. Dune is sci-fi, just not hard, though harder than star wars. Star Trek is all of the above depending on the episode. Though there are many distinctions between these sub-genres, remember that politics and international relations are sciences. The points between certain fantasy books and soft sci-fi can become blurred if both discuss socio-political issues that relate to our conceptions of said subject. Usually one chooses the theme of magic where as the other chooses technology. Furthermore, one chooses a fictional past, the other a future. Though, again, this isn't always the case.
@GoldenMinotaur
@GoldenMinotaur 13 күн бұрын
I'm guessing you're one of those, if it ain't essentially a physics paper it's not sci-fi, folks? No judgement, just curious
@user-bh4ge1pm2t
@user-bh4ge1pm2t 13 күн бұрын
I agree with the original comment. Even by soft sci-fi standards, it comes up short. Don't get me wrong, it's a fantastically rich tale, with many fascinating concepts and intriguing thoughts on the human condition. But even Herbert himself said the science is only tangential to the plot.
@wlot28
@wlot28 13 күн бұрын
@@GoldenMinotaur Not really, but I do think science fiction as a genre is based on the exploration of scientific concepts. Dune doesn’t go in depth into anything scientific, what it does go into is only in service of its themes and narrative. Why I think it’s more closely related to fantasy though is because it hits on almost every traditional epic fantasy trope, except it deconstructs and criticizes them.
@GoldenMinotaur
@GoldenMinotaur 12 күн бұрын
@@wlot28 I respect that. To me science fiction has always been a vessel to convey controversial or sensitive concepts to a reader that might disconnect from an ego response if they feel too connected to the antagonistic aspects. But that's the beauty of books, we each own our own experience, not even the author supercedes our interpretations
@cheetored20
@cheetored20 7 күн бұрын
Dune shields don't work against slow moving objects because people were suffocating during tests. Its a programing feature, not a laws of physics one.
@victoriaeads6126
@victoriaeads6126 9 күн бұрын
The melange ESSENCE is a blue LIQUID. Spice powder is never described as blue. It is described as "glowing blue," in God Emperor of Dune, and the gaseous form is orange. "Glowing blue" could indicate a phosphorescent glow, and not necessarily refer to the base color of the material. I am currently rereading the Frank Herbert Dune novels. I am on Heretics of Dune, and so far that's about all of the descriptors used. The textiles made from "spice fiber" are described as red, and taken all together, I imagined the spice to be deep reddish brown with a blue phosphorescence. I know some are adamant that the spice is blue, but Frank Herbert consulted on the original movie, and it was cinnamon colored there. If he considered the melange to be blue, especially considering how rare blue tends to be in nature AND how often he used other color descriptions for other aspects of spice and spice products, I think it would have been blue in the original movie.
@kyoku1982
@kyoku1982 12 күн бұрын
We need to practice hand to hand combat incase the enemy is wearing a shield that can only be penetrated by epic, sexy, well choreographed knife attacks.
@philsmith2444
@philsmith2444 11 күн бұрын
Yeah, the scene in part 1 where the Power Ranger danced his way through all those opponents was laughable 😂
@dbqpr-ot3px
@dbqpr-ot3px 13 күн бұрын
love it astrum! ignore the haters this kind of content is amazing
@gstproductions
@gstproductions 13 күн бұрын
No it isn't 🤣💀
@jimhart4488
@jimhart4488 10 күн бұрын
Talk about violating cause and effect: If spice is absolutely necessary for interstellar travel, and spice is only found in Arakis, unless the fremen were the first to develop interstellar travel, how did anyone else manage to get to Arakis to find the spice in the first place?
@melissaharris3389
@melissaharris3389 5 күн бұрын
That's because it's NOT needed for the trave, only safe _navigation_ . They use sci-fi tech called a Holtzman drive to 'move' the ship (technically fold space around the ship to, "move, without moving.") The navigator has taken enough spice over their life to have developed the mental ability to 'see' all possible routes to the destination all at once and take the safe one so they don't, in the words of Han Solo, "...pass through a star or bounce off a supernova." Guild navigation by spice (and precognition) is more like using Heizenburg's Uncertainty Principle as a cheat code for predicting what is most likely to happen instead of actual prophetic seeing THE Future.
@richlisola1
@richlisola1 5 күн бұрын
The personal shields can theoretically be adjusted to block slow moving objects-However, if it was calibrated to block all moving objects then the wearer would be smothered. Death by affixation.
@willem1642
@willem1642 13 күн бұрын
If sand worms eat sand plankton, what does the sand plankton eat? There seems little or no plant life on Arrakis, so the ecology can't work.
@Iflie
@Iflie 5 сағат бұрын
Yeah nothing makes sense when it comes to food, there are millions of Fremen living in the deep desert and there is nothing to eat. You can't grow or hunt enough food to sustain such a huge population with the storms. Unlesss you have massive giant underground hydroponics but that would take a ton of water and they keep losing water in various ways when they go out. The water is very expensive so they also can't go to the villages and buy it. So many survival stories lack the food aspect, that we can't survive on a few tomatoes in asoup, we need 2000 calories a day at the very least if you are doing any sort of physical labour. Knife fighting in the heat? 3000. Galons of water. Frank Herbert describes how the Fremen have dry bodies, skinny from lack of water in their tissues, blood barely drops. If a human lived like that he'd be dead.
@albinoviper2876
@albinoviper2876 13 күн бұрын
Its a story ppl calm down
@blueboozle774
@blueboozle774 13 күн бұрын
Grow up man, this a informative video
@per619
@per619 12 күн бұрын
I never thought the Guild Navigators actually folded space. Rather, the spice allowed them to see, i.e. to navigate within the strangeness of folded space.
@deadturret4049
@deadturret4049 12 күн бұрын
Yeah. Its something along those lines. The navigators have the same kind of prescience that Paul has, allowing the navigators to avoid slamming the ship into a planet or star by changing their own future. The space folding itself is related to the holtzman effect iirc.
@melissaharris3389
@melissaharris3389 5 күн бұрын
​​@@deadturret4049Yes. The Holzmsn engine creates the wormhole the Highliner ship passes 'through'. The navigator does just that: plots the course the wormhole will take around all the gravitational obstacles. Once the safe path is 'seen' the complex coordinates are input and the _engine_ folds space around the ship to allow it to take a near instantaneous shortcut across spacetime.
@ilhanniaz80
@ilhanniaz80 12 күн бұрын
Great video as always but I think Dune is not so much about the tech but about how human societies would evolve if humans became an inter planetary species. Ibn Khaldun’s framework of group solidarity and the adaption of society to nature and culture is what provides Dune with its theme. I hope you will do another video about the sociological and historical implications of the Dune universe.
@dashdotdot
@dashdotdot 13 күн бұрын
Dune is a made up fictional story. Come on Astrum. Do better.
@carlhannah1884
@carlhannah1884 13 күн бұрын
We'll get through this together. One step at a time. One day at a time. We shall rebuild.
@eattoast6378
@eattoast6378 13 күн бұрын
This video is entertainment. He's not critiquing it seriously, you dork. It's just a device for pop Sci entertainment. Were you just born? 😂
@kadourimdou43
@kadourimdou43 13 күн бұрын
It’s a bit of fun. This is still allowed.
@Fatusbeergutus
@Fatusbeergutus 13 күн бұрын
He could always address how massive your mum is that she is slowing down our day by 1hr a week. But everyone knows that
@CalmSnow_
@CalmSnow_ 13 күн бұрын
You'll be surprised how many mentally challenged people think that could be possible.
@jeffreyrobinson3555
@jeffreyrobinson3555 10 күн бұрын
One point. The guild mastered faster then light travel, but anyone can do it. It’s dangerous. The spice gives some humans the ability to see the safe path. The spice does nothing to make it possible only possible to see the safe path.
@Live_Not_By_Lies
@Live_Not_By_Lies 12 күн бұрын
The space guild doesn’t necessarily see into the future as much as they use the spice to make the calculations. There are no computers because of the past war. The navigators of the space guild are basically human supercomputers. They also are not the same as normal humans.
@shaggycan
@shaggycan 12 күн бұрын
The shields always felt real to me. Like when you slap water, it seems hard, but if you touch it slowly you can push into it. Most real life a science 'rhymes' like this. The ships in Dune don't really move FTL. They travel without moving. They make the two points in space the same. The effect in the film is a departure from the book. Dune 84 got it better. Physics today can't really explain distance or the difference between 2 points in space.
@philsmith2444
@philsmith2444 12 күн бұрын
Exactly. The Heighliner is in orbit above planet A, the Navigator chooses the route (though probably not using beams of light from his mouth), the Holtzman drive folds space so planet B is for all purposes directly adjacent to Planet A, and when the drive shuts off the Heighliner is in orbit above planet B. From a frame of reference outside the universe it was the universe that moved, not the Heighliner.
@pirojfmifhghek566
@pirojfmifhghek566 12 күн бұрын
I know that the book series kinda leans on prescience being a sort of magical thing, but I was also able to interpret it as merely leading a person to the very edge of their ability to predict. It's not like a certainty. It's just an assumption and approximation just like one might be able to predict how a ball would bounce if you threw it. What makes the 'prescience' more profound in the story is that it's essentially built up from an outrageous amount of experience going into the memories of past lives. It's the genetic memories that I have the hardest part reconciling with science. That's even more far-fetched than the planetary orbit and day cycles. We'd have to assume that there was some kind of intentional genetic modification from millennia ago that allowed this to occur, but the story also reveals that the bene gesserit and notably Leto II are able to look back so far that they're able to revisit memories from prehistoric days. I think that was a bit of a narrative mistake on Frank Herbert's part, but then again he wrote it at a time when we were just barely beginning to understand DNA. I'm sure to him it seemed like DNA was some kind of endless tome of human history, indecipherable to all but the keenest of minds. Nowadays we know that DNA is more of a garbage pile than an encyclopedia.
@melissaharris3389
@melissaharris3389 5 күн бұрын
Yes. Genetic memory is definitely a relic of 60s thinking when DNA was a brand new discovery and no one knew a thing about it. It's all pseudo science now but back in the day it mush have seemed cutting edge and mysterious.
@Beryllahawk
@Beryllahawk 12 күн бұрын
Love how you tackle this. I would add that (as far as I know) Herbert was more educated about ecology than astrophysics; the planetary ecologies hold up fairly well even under modern understanding (and would've been fine in the 1960s probably). But there's lots of layers here as well - the biggest conflict haven't a thing to do with folding space in and of itself or with most of the technology. At its heart this is a story about politics, some VERY "long game" thinking among fundamentally opposed groups, and the power surrounding a vital but finite resource. It's obviously not an easy one-to-one metaphor for conflicts over fossil fuels, but it's possible to see the connections. So a lot of what the Spice does, all those magical powers, functions to explain WHY it's a coveted resource. Something else that gets mentioned a little in the books (and a LOT in the later books by Herbert's son) is the reluctance to use computers. We're flirting with AI and all that now, machine learning etc. - and for the universe as Herbert imagined it, "thinking machines" became an enormous problem. I can't cite any particular book but I got the impression that in a distant past, those thinking machines were the ones doing all those calculations for space travel, faster than light or not. So one of the other reasons the Spice ends up being of such major importance is how it enables space travel. But once again this is less about space and far more about human behavior, right?
@atmartins16
@atmartins16 13 күн бұрын
Can't wait until your video pops-up on my recommended with a different title
@ewill3435
@ewill3435 6 күн бұрын
Dune is likely the hardest soft-sci fi setting around, but that's what needs to be kept in mind. It technobabbles as much as star trek, but with less pretention, so it's frustrating for myself, someone who studied physics, to hear people say that Dune's technology is all based in hard science. Just because it isn't all based in real physics doesn't make it bad.
@Fearia6
@Fearia6 13 күн бұрын
Infinities in calculations are an artifact showing the physics model used is incomplete. An infinity in itself is not evidence of the possibility of something.
@Emanon...
@Emanon... 9 күн бұрын
Have you even read the books and the appendixed material? There are some pretty clear explanations given in the lore to all your points, from the effects of spice to shields to the Holtzmann engine on heighliner ships. Even the ecology cycle of worms, oxygen and water is very well described.
@Epoch11
@Epoch11 10 күн бұрын
I always thought of the shields as sort of a non-Newtonian fluid in terms of something you could compare it to. When you hit a non-Newtonian fluid it's firm but when you move slowly you can basically stick your hand right through it.
@melissaharris3389
@melissaharris3389 5 күн бұрын
That's probably the best way to explain/think about it. Oxygen needs to permeate (and CO2 dissipate) a boby shield or the wearer will asphyxiate. What's actually more interesting is that an interaction with a Holtzman field (the sci-fi tech that creates the shield) and a Lazer cannon/rifle creates an explosion similar to a nuclear blast!
@carolynallisee2463
@carolynallisee2463 8 күн бұрын
When it came to shields of all sizes, Arrakis was the exception all round, and this was thanks to the sandworms. Films, because they have to tell a story in a limited time span, tend to try to either tell the story visually, or else ignore certain parts of it. The use of shields in the known universe, combined with the prohibition against computers, meant that most projectile weapons had to be abandoned, and melee weapons were turned to once more, since almost all projectiles moved too fast to get through the shield. One exception was the hunter-seeker probe, which we can think of as a miniaturised drone, which needed a pilot. This could be made to fly at a speed slow enough to pierce a personal shield, and in the book, was the cause of Duncan Idaho's first death. Arrakis had no shields simply because of the effect they had on the sandworms. The shield generators must produce vibrations that, whilst inaudible to humans, were audible to worms for tens of kilometres, if not hundreds, and drew them in. Worse still that vibration sent the worms into a frenzy causing them to thrash around until the shield generator was destroyed. THis meant that nothing on aRrakis could be protected by a ubiquitous technology in the rest of the galaxy... and left its conurbations especially vulnerable to artillery, a form of weapon not seen for thousands of years. Then there is that matter of folding space. Alex made a very common mistake when he said the Navigators folded space. They don't- the Holtzman generators do that. What the Navigators do is use prescience, the same ability Paul has, but in a much reduced form, to literally navigate their way through folded space safely to the destination. At one point in the book, when Paul looks ahead to see the possible futures he has, he sees one where he himself becomes a Navigator.
@dd5219
@dd5219 13 күн бұрын
I’ve been wondering about this since I saw it, thanks for making this!
@TheDirtyShaman
@TheDirtyShaman 8 күн бұрын
16:20 "Crawford's gray shrew" or commonly known as "Desert Shrews" are known to sustain themselves entirely from prey, being able to survive without any additional water.
@sunrazor2622
@sunrazor2622 13 күн бұрын
If they're going to travel faster than the speed of light and essentially travel backwards through time, then the future becomes their past and the past becomes their future; they would need the spice to see the future in order to see their past, where they're going, since they are moving backwards through time. In other words, traveling backwards thru time while seeing the future has the combined effect of seeing normal.
@RogerS1978
@RogerS1978 13 күн бұрын
The holtzman field in the book folds space, so they shorten the distance, not increasing the speed. Like wormholes. They need the guild navigators to forcast where the fold will end up.
@RogerS1978
@RogerS1978 13 күн бұрын
The holtzman field in the book folds space, so they shorten the distance, not increasing the speed. Like wormholes. They need the guild navigators to forcast where the fold will end up.
@uknowbass
@uknowbass 9 күн бұрын
Holtzman engines fold space. Navigators use spice to find safe passages through space
@NavajoNinja
@NavajoNinja 13 күн бұрын
Everything past yesterday is fiction. Im a story lover, Dune is an awesome book series.
@ab-hx8qe
@ab-hx8qe 5 күн бұрын
The reason the shields only effect fast moving things is as a result of them being designed to counter firearms. That’s why blades are preferred over swords. They could program them to block anything irrespective of speed but then you would suffocate as even air would be rejected.
@arynnightshade7164
@arynnightshade7164 12 күн бұрын
I have to say, this one got me thinking about terraforming as a whole. I understand that in order to do so, or rather, if we had the ability to do so, why not fix Earth, which could also be done in the process. I really think that our solar system contains the elements needed for everything mankind dreams of. I feel like our focus should be towards how to achieve collecting these elements and, of course, ease of travel within the oort cloud. Not just how to get off our own planet, but how to sustain presence and travel between planets.
@edhikurniawan
@edhikurniawan 6 күн бұрын
If you connect the Spice to the actual spice it is inspired from, the nutmeg... Nutmeg was one key preservative for sailors during that era, without spice (nutmeg), you literally can't sail far. So nutmeg wasn't sought for its taste only. Other kind of preservatives invention later did contribute the decline of the demand for the spice.
@JohnLA80
@JohnLA80 12 күн бұрын
Great video and fun to do the science part of these fiction novels. Funny thing is; I'm a huge sci-fi fan, but I never did understand the love of the Dune books or the movies (old or new films). I get that they are loved, but for whatever reason there's nothing about them that ever peaked my interest. I slept through them both and I was a kid when the first movie was released. I tried reading the book but I never did finish and I read War and Peace! (though to be fair I had read that one for school)
@Hunpecked
@Hunpecked 12 күн бұрын
I read through the first book but couldn't understand all the fuss about it. The whole thing seemed overly contrived and implausible. I couldn't understand how the gigantic worms could glide so easily through a medium a person could walk upon, nor did I see how "sand plankton" could thrive in a "sea" where sunlight penetrated no more than a few millimeters. The whole "sand as ocean" metaphor just didn't work for me. The mysticism, monsters, feudal politics, and blade combat made it seem more like fantasy, and I'm just not into that. Never read the sequels, but was mildly entertained by all three live action adaptations.
@MrCovi2955
@MrCovi2955 8 күн бұрын
On the topic of needing to use pumps to keep the nano-porous membranes clean. It is explained in the books that the suits harness body movements to power various pumps around the suit. While the book only says this is used to move water from where its collected from the body to where it gets filtered and stored, it also does say that fremen suits are extremely superior to the common suits everyone else uses, and I would not be surprised if their suits doubled down on the pump pressure (making movement more difficult but they're not "soft people") to continually scrub their filters as well.
@michaelmcconnell7302
@michaelmcconnell7302 12 күн бұрын
very happy to see your hard work being rewarded. your content is top tier. thank you Alex and Team.
@drummer265
@drummer265 12 күн бұрын
You say eating magic mushrooms on a spacecraft wouldn't make it reach the speed of light, but I don't think we can really say that for sure. Therefore, I bravely volunteer to trip balls in space for the good of all mankind.
@atsekjoker
@atsekjoker 6 күн бұрын
the real question is: WHY is an interstellar superpower not able to bring water to arrakis? the fugg bothers me
@BobHooker
@BobHooker 10 күн бұрын
I assume all this detail on Dune comes from the Brain Herbert follow up books. Some of us don't see them as cannon.
@chocolatecake406
@chocolatecake406 13 күн бұрын
Thanks for the explanation!
@AlexandruJalea
@AlexandruJalea 13 күн бұрын
Have you thought doing the same kind of video for other such films? District 9 comes to mind as a not quite so mainstream but still interesting film. This video is quite entertaining.
@mleko23
@mleko23 12 күн бұрын
You don't need spice to fold space. You just need it to do it succesfully. 12:30' magic mushroms where never acceleration device 😊
@Fl4ppers
@Fl4ppers 13 күн бұрын
The shields could have some form of antigravity effect, but the science doesnt seem to back up that antigravity exists. It could be a non-newtonian liquid effect but with particles. That would explain why the slow blade penetrates the shield.
@MrCovi2955
@MrCovi2955 8 күн бұрын
Should have briefly mentioned the lasers in Dune. Frank Herbert's lasers aren't "Light bullets that move as slow as real bullets" like 99.99% of all other science fiction did forever. Frank Herbert's lasers are laser cutters dialed up to 11 for range and intensity. And would be the perfect weapon of war if it wasn't for the fictional interaction with the fictional shields.
@disconnected22
@disconnected22 7 күн бұрын
Yep. And that was actually one of the things that was gotten across accurately in the movie: the lasers are all straight lines
@Mistmantle88
@Mistmantle88 9 күн бұрын
It is theoretically impossible to ACCELERATE an object past light speed, but it is NOT impossible for an object to travel faster than light relative to another object. Space itself is expanding and if two objects have enough expanding space between them those objects are completely unaware of each other and can indeed travel away from one another at speeds faster than light. This is why we have a boundary between the “observable universe” and the vast majority of the entire universe. If you learn how to compress or expand space itself (which is NOT limited by the speed of light) you could indeed travel faster than light by compressing the space (between two galaxies for example) to near zero.
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