Why Did Time Start Going Forward?

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History of the Universe

History of the Universe

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 2 300
@HistoryoftheUniverse
@HistoryoftheUniverse 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching folks! Next video in two weeks...
@GameTimeWhy
@GameTimeWhy 3 жыл бұрын
Great job guys!
@gtbkts
@gtbkts 3 жыл бұрын
Ill be waiting!! Love the content!!
@TowerArcanaCrow
@TowerArcanaCrow 3 жыл бұрын
This is some great content, especially seeing as these are your first vids. I'm glad to be seeing the beginning of your channel, no doubt its gonna get a lot bigger soon!
@gaslitworldf.melissab2897
@gaslitworldf.melissab2897 3 жыл бұрын
🏆 Par excellence. ⏰ Speaking of time and English railroads, London was the ultimate in time keeping. Professionals everywhere carried pocket watches. Train conductors, bus drivers, everyone moved to the precision ticking of a clock or watch and would instantly rebuke latecomers. I wonder if they still operate with the same care and efficiency. Ah, that was "merry old England."
@chrisbrown8640
@chrisbrown8640 3 жыл бұрын
I'd like to see more , but frankly I just don't have the Time......
@coachingfortoday7143
@coachingfortoday7143 3 жыл бұрын
I find it fascinating that the chemical organization of life (regardless of it's as yet unknown frequency) has such a built-in drive for survival and pro-creation in a universe where entrophy seems to be one of the most dominant laws. We are, in effect, each raging against that entrophy for the briefest of time... organizing into more intelligence to the point that we can understand much of our entire universe. How can it be that life has been given these moments that would seem to be the consciousness of the universe itself, and yet seem to inhabit an existance for such a miniscule percentage of the universe's lifetime? From the big bang to the moments of the evaporation of the last black hole, it is estimated that life will have only been chemically possible for 0.0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000001% of the life of the universe. We are each the winners of a lottery ticket so rare in time that our unique value is almost incomprehensible. Please, try to appreciate and enjoy each moment of your time.
@evolved01123
@evolved01123 2 жыл бұрын
Exactly
@EmeraldEyesEsoteric
@EmeraldEyesEsoteric 2 жыл бұрын
We are all just sperm that got very lucky. Perhaps we are still just sperm and death is the same as life, with a few of us being reborn into something else.
@jatinbangar4371
@jatinbangar4371 2 жыл бұрын
Agreed. universe is completely anti-life and yes, the probability of existing (on top of being this intelligent) is astronomically small. That's why I believe "someone " helped create life or at least created a small favourable condition for life to take over. Even after sending the strongest telescopes we don't find anything, we might truly be alone. Maybe alone only in this time period considering the large time scales of the universe
@DevinDTV
@DevinDTV 2 жыл бұрын
life couldn't possibly evolve to do anything other than reproduce. it's the opposite of remarkable. and that we exist in this moment is not remarkable either, that's just the anthropic principle
@michaelking9818
@michaelking9818 2 жыл бұрын
Leave the weed alone
@hellskitchen10036
@hellskitchen10036 2 жыл бұрын
One dark night in 1956... I woke up in horror realizing that I was going to die some day. Ever since I have told everyone I know to be grateful for being here in this time and space, it is an amazing gift to be alive on earth. Appreciate it!
@markwilliamson2795
@markwilliamson2795 2 жыл бұрын
The real nightmare is having a dream you would be born into a world like the one we are now in...
@hellskitchen10036
@hellskitchen10036 2 жыл бұрын
@@markwilliamson2795 I had a rough start ,even had a lung blasted out of my chest in Vietnam, but except for that I've loved every minute of my existence on earth.
@SStupendous
@SStupendous 2 жыл бұрын
@@hellskitchen10036 A lung blasted out of your chest? How is that possible? Are you related to Clement, by any chance?
@markwilliamson2795
@markwilliamson2795 2 жыл бұрын
@@hellskitchen10036 It's not done with you yet....but I think you're tougher than this world..
@hellskitchen10036
@hellskitchen10036 2 жыл бұрын
@@SStupendous A VC rocket sent shrapnell into my chest and tore through my thoracic cavity, as a corpsman I kept from bleeding out but had to have the rest of my lung removed....and yes Clement is my great 4th grandfather.
@ArealMrsSmith
@ArealMrsSmith 3 жыл бұрын
Ah yes... my daily dose of existential dread. KZbin and quantum mechanics have not failed me.
@ImmortalIdeas
@ImmortalIdeas 3 жыл бұрын
👍
@meyerjac
@meyerjac 3 жыл бұрын
My terror and my fascination are in superposition.
@Dybbouk
@Dybbouk 3 жыл бұрын
Try Bible criticism too. Some good stuff on KZbin.
@robertcronin6603
@robertcronin6603 3 жыл бұрын
Lol...nice 🔥
@AnonyMissOCSec
@AnonyMissOCSec 3 жыл бұрын
🤣🤣🤣🤣
@artdonovandesign
@artdonovandesign 8 ай бұрын
Its the small, background touches, like the _wondeful_ music during the intro of this episode, that gives this channel such a unique personality and makes it so academically auhoritive and enjoyable. I watch these videos again and again. Thank you, Hisory of the Universe! 😊
@BeatlesBowieKrimson
@BeatlesBowieKrimson 25 күн бұрын
I disagree. I can't hear his words because that music is so distracting.
@Sobek-khufu
@Sobek-khufu 2 жыл бұрын
Ah yes. One order of science with a side of psychological horror and a dash of existential dread. Love it.
@jaylucas8352
@jaylucas8352 Жыл бұрын
I find it optimistic actually
@darrenjackson4646
@darrenjackson4646 Жыл бұрын
Where is the horror and dread?
@JamesEIvoryIII
@JamesEIvoryIII Жыл бұрын
@@darrenjackson4646 I imagine it's bc of their individualism (self) - if it even exists- is hardly a blink in all time.
@seanriopel3132
@seanriopel3132 Жыл бұрын
That is one of my favorite parts of space and cosmology. What else matters?
@K200-m7h
@K200-m7h Жыл бұрын
Lol love this comment 😂 love that people can’t understand it’s a joke!😂
@296jacqi
@296jacqi 3 жыл бұрын
I’m dismayed that you haven’t gone from 30K subscribers to 30M in the month since this video came out. Absolute quality here on this channel. People are missing out!
@LEEOC
@LEEOC 2 жыл бұрын
Goes to show how much the majority of ppl value knowledge. If it was a Justin beiber video on the other hand... 🙄😆
@L3r4k
@L3r4k 2 жыл бұрын
Isaac Arthur's channel took a few years to get to where it is today.
@neverdemagain6043
@neverdemagain6043 2 жыл бұрын
Not every one. Good narration. Great sleeping voice.
@jakeh2049
@jakeh2049 2 жыл бұрын
@@LEEOC This is big tech’s algorithms’ fault. I mean we could collectively decide to still preferentially show people what they individually prefer and tend to click on, but make that from a bigger bucket of things that are preferentially shown such as things like this, educational things, and things that are more beneficial to society. Instead the algorithm gives people fail videos, tiktok lululemon dances, and whatever other useless nonsense not to mention the actual negative stuff that increases fear, anxiety, anger and polarization
@voiceofreason1829
@voiceofreason1829 2 жыл бұрын
Chill
@adalbertoklein8725
@adalbertoklein8725 3 жыл бұрын
I can't express how much I liked this channel, putting cosmology and physics in a timeline through out our history with the most updated theories. It has been a long time since I saw a science channel for the layman so clear in the explanations and with such a high quality. I watched each video twice, at least, and it seems that I will keep doing so. Congratulations.
@kx4532
@kx4532 Жыл бұрын
It beats TLCscovery and the fat people show
@verhuzz
@verhuzz 3 жыл бұрын
So glad KZbin recommended this channel, it's a treasure
@ArealMrsSmith
@ArealMrsSmith 3 жыл бұрын
Check out their related channels, just as great.
@bigdoggo5827
@bigdoggo5827 3 жыл бұрын
Same here. I love this channel
@bukar6199
@bukar6199 2 жыл бұрын
I really admire your writing, Leila, and the unique way you create this short almost-novel for every topic. Thank you for wonderful videos on both channels!
@stuartgrier5605
@stuartgrier5605 7 ай бұрын
What a brilliant video. When I was at school, I studied Physics. The teacher asked what time was, just as you did. I thought of a comical answer, I got a few laughs. "So", said the teacher. "What is time?" I thought for a moment, then I put my hand in the air and said, "Time is the force which stops everything from happening at once."
@straighttalk9999
@straighttalk9999 5 ай бұрын
brilliant answer,that pretty much explains the big bang
@eman85mph
@eman85mph 5 ай бұрын
Ohhh a time particle just waiting to be discovered and add to the theory of everything 🤔🕐⚛️
@bryandraughn9830
@bryandraughn9830 5 ай бұрын
So you're Richard Feynman! I've heard about you.
@nicklasdincer6720
@nicklasdincer6720 5 ай бұрын
Maybe time and the universe happens instantaneously, and its just us perceiving it flowing
@stuartgrier5605
@stuartgrier5605 5 ай бұрын
@@nicklasdincer6720 Maybe, or we are past the event horizon of a blackhole or this is some beings dream. Until we have evidence for the reverse, I would say not.
@curiodyssey3867
@curiodyssey3867 3 жыл бұрын
This is an absolute masterpiece. This channel is just simply fantastic
@TehMoep
@TehMoep 3 жыл бұрын
Very well written, produced and going surprisingly deep in 30 minutes while having anecdotes for the flavor. The narrator is a gift too. This is great, good job guys!
@Baughbe
@Baughbe 3 жыл бұрын
"We could only be the imagination of a single Boltzmann brain, floating in the cosmos." - In that case... I want to talk to the manager.
@Johnc259
@Johnc259 3 жыл бұрын
Yes. I have a few suggestions of my own. Peace
@suckablowfish
@suckablowfish 3 жыл бұрын
Don’t get your panties in a wad Karen..
@philochristos
@philochristos 3 жыл бұрын
You are the manager.
@michaelh.1262
@michaelh.1262 3 жыл бұрын
@@philochristos REEEEEEEE
@robertbrown3413
@robertbrown3413 3 жыл бұрын
Perhaps Boltzmann topped himself to find out if he was living in the imagination of his own concept... we will never know!
@Ihab.A
@Ihab.A 2 жыл бұрын
I became addicted to your videos. When I have time during my work, instead of having a pause at the coffee machine, I watch your videos. Very interesting and well put
@alcyone1349
@alcyone1349 Жыл бұрын
The existential thriller at the end was quite exactly what was needed to keep me thinking about the cosmos until the next video. Excellent work.
@mikedrop4421
@mikedrop4421 3 жыл бұрын
These videos just keep getting better and better. This channel is going to expand faster than the universe has once a few more people discover it and the algorithm picks it up. Keep up the great work guys
@rayzorrayzor9000
@rayzorrayzor9000 3 жыл бұрын
The best line in this vid “The arrow of time points to a direction that time travels in but not the speed it travels at” Brilliant !
@russianbot8423
@russianbot8423 3 жыл бұрын
water is wet
@paulojrmsantos8
@paulojrmsantos8 3 жыл бұрын
@@russianbot8423 Not all the time....
@michac.8283
@michac.8283 3 жыл бұрын
@@russianbot8423 or is it? First let's define what 'wet' means...
@TehUltimateSnake
@TehUltimateSnake 3 жыл бұрын
wow deeeeep
@imnotacat5299
@imnotacat5299 3 жыл бұрын
@@michac.8283 "Covered or saturated by water or another liquid" Liquids can't be wet, they do the wetting. Have a good day, sir.
@kr1ptyk137
@kr1ptyk137 2 жыл бұрын
This is the first time i have understood entropy. This content is genuinely my favourite to listen to while i do mundane tasks. I learn so much and it fuels the philosophical parts of my brain that i never knew existed.
@thecatsman
@thecatsman Жыл бұрын
In stead of doing 'mundane tasks' try understanding what you are listening to, and creating useful bits of memory. New philosophy is created only with thought NOT doing mundane things. Do you agree?
@user-lm2ix1xd4c
@user-lm2ix1xd4c Жыл бұрын
@@thecatsman where was it said that one cannot both 'do mundane tasks' while also deeply understanding what is being listened to? is that your experience and thus why you have projected it onto the other? it is not mine. when i do 'mundane tasks', i comprehend on an even higher level. the information flows into my mind and fits itself right where it needs to be when i am performing mundane tasks at the same time. small things which i have been doing for years and years. which don't require logical problem solving or complex thought. think.. driving. where your mind goes when you drive! i find your interjection lacking sense in the true meaning of the word and lacking objectivity which we all require when asserting that one's way of doing is somehow worse than ours.
@thecatsman
@thecatsman Жыл бұрын
I did not say one could not think while doing mundane tasks , but learning or memorizing usually requires ALL the mental effort one is capable of while retaining general awareness. The brain often learns with no effort or thought at all, but the intellect is more difficult to build up. Personally I found the original content we are referring to quite difficult. (We don't know the age of the commenter 'jrk1--' but I certainly respect his/her apparent desire to learn.) Also, to 'understand what is being listened to' is something different - the effort of learning has already been done.@@user-lm2ix1xd4c
@fluxions3710
@fluxions3710 2 жыл бұрын
8:49 What this video fails to mention is that, while the general entropy of the universe always has to increase for a spontaneous process to occur, it doesn't necessarily have to increase in an arbitrarily defined system. This is why humans do not suddenly dissipate into a sludge of cells and organic molecules - because we maintain our low internal entropy by expelling more and more out of our system and into the universe. We can also observe this defiance of entropy in the haphazard and brutal system of evolution/natural selection; and also in the technological and social progress of society over the centuries. So, unless there's no one maintaining it, the train doesn't necessarily have to degenerate into its constituent components.
@MacSvensson
@MacSvensson 2 жыл бұрын
so I was wondering (I'm a total noob on this subjecct, forgive me)... is that the reason why - for example - a star being born doesn't violate this 2nd law of thermodynamics? Because, on the surface, it looks like the entropy in that part of the universe certainly decreases. Sorry if this sounds ignorant. Just trying to understand the basics. Thx. edit: nvm, I should have watched the entire video before asking silly questions. :-)
@Hundredyacrewoods
@Hundredyacrewoods 2 жыл бұрын
The law is Entropy always increases in a closed system The earth is not a closed system nor are nebulae (where stars are born) the only closed system that we know of is the universe BUT if there are other closed systems then the second law would apply there too
@YogiMcCaw
@YogiMcCaw 2 жыл бұрын
Energy always wants to dissipate, but you can, in some cases, capture some of the energy while it is dissipating and use the captured energy to create something. This is how combustion engines work. Or, for example , the energy being released by a river which is dissolving the ordered ice crystals of a glacier back into free-flowing water molecules can be captured to produce usable electricity. We are, actually, grabbing some energy in the process of entropy, and TEMPORARILY using it to build something, giving a momentary illusion that we are creating order from disorder, but in reality, even our efforts to do so burn more energy, and eventually (actually almost instantaneously - it just seems like a long time because our lives are so short) our creations which we thought were so marvelous and eternal succumb to the very same entropy as everything else does. The pyramids of Egypt will eventually be smashed into a near-microscopic sliver of compressed ancient rock. The whole of industrial civilization will someday just be a super thin layer of stratigraphy which, if we're extremely lucky, may be discovered by some future (and more evolved) form of hominin geologist. 10, 000 years - which is the entire lifetime of all human civilization as we know it - doesn't make more than a very very thin layer of stratigraphy, after the Earth gets done processing it for another couple of billion years. The fact that you can build a car from spare parts is certainly not proof of defying entropy, but rather more evidence of the truth of the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics.
@fluxions3710
@fluxions3710 2 жыл бұрын
@@YogiMcCaw I never claimed that building a car out of spare parts is defying entropy *if we consider our system to be the universe at large*, since, for those processes to even take place, they must by necessity increase the entropy of the universe. However, yes, if we define the thermodynamic system as some arbitrary local bubble, it is absolutely "defying" entropy. Also, the former half of your argument in no way substantiates the latter; if, somehow, preserving the pyramids of Egypt was more thermodynamically beneficient than their succumbing to the natural processes of the Earth, ie perhaps the processes we use to do so might reduce local entropy at the cost of increasing the overall entropy of the universe, then they wouldn't necessarily crumble.
@sethrenville798
@sethrenville798 2 жыл бұрын
​@@Hundredyacrewoods and how exactly, do we know that the universe is a closed system? we are observing through an electromagnetic spectrum that we just recently came to fully be able to observe, and don't even fully understand the fundamental laws of what appears to be our universe, let alone want me to be the entire universe, or multiverse, at Large. I fully believe we are significantly far away from fully comprehending the true nature of the universe, and, my personal understandings of the potential implications of the understanding of quantum physics we currently have a side, there is literally an untapped power source in the form of zero point energy, or, if you prefer, the vacuum energy of the universe, that could potentially allow us to exist in a cold, dark, universe, not if, but WHEN we tap it (if we manage not to accidentally destroy ourselves first, and that isn't even counting the ridiculous rate at which the evolution of our intelligence and consciousness seems to be exponentially, or maybe even logarithmically, increasing, over time.
@unoqualsiasi7341
@unoqualsiasi7341 Жыл бұрын
i think this is the best and easiest way i found until now to explain the concept of entropy. You guys rock hard!
@booradley4237
@booradley4237 3 жыл бұрын
I love the little details that one would normally only get from deep dives into long books, like Eddington and his passivism feather
@stevew278
@stevew278 6 ай бұрын
I don’t understand what the feather was supposed to mean
@sleepercel
@sleepercel 3 ай бұрын
@@stevew278Me neither tbh
@abrahamschuman1692
@abrahamschuman1692 3 жыл бұрын
Some of the highest quality content anywhere.
@apextroll
@apextroll 3 жыл бұрын
Imagine those who disliked this video.
@harriettemacy7399
@harriettemacy7399 3 жыл бұрын
I love it too...I only wish I were smart enough to understand it😻
@jcb1316
@jcb1316 3 жыл бұрын
@@apextroll who possibly could?
@mikesamovarov4054
@mikesamovarov4054 2 жыл бұрын
Yet full of theories, not one fact.
@lockandloadlikehell
@lockandloadlikehell 2 жыл бұрын
It's a video, not content
@miinyoo
@miinyoo 2 жыл бұрын
All of these are absolutely brilliant writing and the delivery just fits like a glove.
@zackgillespie7451
@zackgillespie7451 7 ай бұрын
Yet the entropy of the universe itself came to create life....such an astonishing fact that if life didn't actually exist you'd never be able to prove that life is possible, yet here we are just trying to figure out how we got here. Life is so beautiful and to have this consciousness is nothing short of a blessing. Love the channel!!!
@brianalspaugh3225
@brianalspaugh3225 Жыл бұрын
This has to the best series of science-based astronomy / Cosmos and physics I have ever come across. In my y opinion it is very well written, produced and narrated. It is not pompous or condescending and I learn something new every time I watch it. Thank you
@Merennulli
@Merennulli 3 жыл бұрын
It's worth noting that the Boltzman Brain doesn't float through space continuing to think about things. It comes into existence with memory of all past thoughts, instantaneously has whatever thought it's created in the middle of having, and then dies. The only moment that's real is the last one the Boltzman Brain experiences. In a sense, they also are without time, only existing as a coherent consciousness for that instant. It's also worth remembering that a Boltzman Brain is only more likely to come into existence than the experience we believe ourselves to have. Everyone who buys a lottery ticket is more likely to lose than to win, but someone has won nearly every lottery that's ever been held. Statistically, you know a random lottery ticket you hold is ALMOST certainly a losing ticket, and the Anthropic Principle says that we should assume we are in the most likely situation that could create a consciousness to be having the experience we have. The relevance of the Boltzman Brain is exclusively through the Anthropic Principle - it doesn't preclude the existence of humans the way we believe ourselves to live, but it means the safest assumption is that you're a Boltzman Brain. But the safest assumption is not the safest bet. If, hypothetically, you played "Russian roulette" with 5 rounds in 6 chambers, your safest assumption is that it will land on one of the 5, but you can't collect unless it's the empty 6th so that's your safest bet. The Boltzman Brain has a meaningless existence, only having one thought before dying, so the wisest bet is on being a real human whose actions have consequences. A Boltzman Brain doesn't have to flush the toilet because it isn't real, but a real human will find the house smells rather badly soon if he or she doesn't. Logically, we have to act as if we're real humans, regardless of the statistics. If we're a Boltzman Brain, it doesn't matter if we were wrong for the instant we thought about it. Now if you want a real headache, stop and consider why the Boltzman Brain is more likely - it has infinite time to repeatedly be created by random chance. But so does the observable universe - every distant redshifted photon heading towards our planet, every gravitational mass that will ever effect us, the Earth, and everyone on it could spontaneously come into existence many times over the same infinity. The level of complexity means it's going to happen a lower multiple of infinite times than the Boltzman Brains, but a "Boltzman Observable Universe" would still happen an infinite number of times in an infinite number of varieties but also an infinite number of repetitions and starting at an infinite number of moments. Our observable universe could have just come into existence now with all your memories of it and it will be just as "real" as if it was the observable universe we think we exist in. 24:13 is referring to this as a source for our "big bang", but it would also produce everything as it is right now, just this instant, with every human having memories of everything we think of as history, but things we think of as history never happened. For example, all the things could have come into existence, including photons heading towards Earth, except for a 2 day gap in the photons from Alpha Centauri that would confuse the hell out of us when those photons reached us. Or you could come into existence with the memory of having a full bag of chips at your desk but in reality an empty bag of chips came into existence at that same moment. Hearkening back to the "Russian roulette" analogy, it's once again the wisest bet to assume we're not in a Boltzman Observable Universe for the same reason - everything we observe may be a pointless illusion in a Boltzman Observable Universe, so the only useful bet is to proceed as if we're in a universe with meaning. Yes, you may open the door to find you've come into existence in a world that in no way fits your memories you were created with, but the only existence you can prepare for is the one that fits your memory. Personally, I think we're going to find that quantum tunneling has limits, so no Boltzman pebbles, let alone brains. The Boltzman Brain idea relies on quantum tunneling being able to instantly transport energy across any arbitrary distance, but we have never observed it do that over the highly improbable distances, we just assume it can.
@OutdorsDanny
@OutdorsDanny 3 жыл бұрын
🥲
@sash1ell
@sash1ell 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the incredible read.
@rga1605
@rga1605 3 жыл бұрын
That was quite the trip, but therefore is it correct to say that the idea of a Boltzmann Brain is the same/similar to Last-Thursdayism?
@Merennulli
@Merennulli 3 жыл бұрын
​@@rga1605 I never could get the hang of Thursdays. Yes, there is a very similar concept at play in both. Our experience is completely information sent to the processing part of our brain. Whether that information is from sensory organs, the memory portion of the brain, or is entirely artificial, it's just information and we have no way of telling it apart. With both Boltzman Brain and Last Thursdayism, false memory and sensory data is produced as if it had existed previously. The main differences are that a Boltzman Brain only exists for a moment and is due to the quantum randomness expected across infinite time; meanwhile Last Thursdayism is just reality coming into existence with pre-formed memory and it is intentional.
@Merennulli
@Merennulli 3 жыл бұрын
@Train 2noplace I'm afraid psychology isn't something I know all that well so I'm probably not him. Glad you enjoyed my comment.
@gavinomalley7099
@gavinomalley7099 3 жыл бұрын
Life passes by like a warm summer day. Live a life worth remembering.
@GoldReefCity
@GoldReefCity 2 жыл бұрын
Oh man. This channel is amazing. I’m so addicted to it. I’ve watched the content it has, over and over again. Thank you for posting
@michaelbirbeck9554
@michaelbirbeck9554 2 жыл бұрын
The quality of these videos lights up the internet. Thank you for this wonderful resource.
@pandugeet
@pandugeet 2 жыл бұрын
Addicted to this series, fallen in love with physics and astronomy again
@almcdonald8676
@almcdonald8676 2 жыл бұрын
This is superb writing and really compelling narration. The quiet presentation is both authoritative and comfortingly familiar.
@UserAnonymus1995
@UserAnonymus1995 3 жыл бұрын
This channel is a masterpiece and it's exactly the kind of content I've been wanting to see for a while
@UserAnonymus1995
@UserAnonymus1995 3 жыл бұрын
It's probably a very specific thing to mention, but a lot of documentaries annoyed me with their audio work - they had loud noises or anxiety-inducing music out of nowhere right after quiet parts. But the videos here have been perfect in terms of audio.
@UserAnonymus1995
@UserAnonymus1995 3 жыл бұрын
@Nelson Swanberg thanks
@pbujnowicz9124
@pbujnowicz9124 3 жыл бұрын
I see the correlation between the arrow of time and entropy, since when time goes forward, tornadoes don't create homes, and dough wont separate into flour, water, eggs, yeast and salt. But is it a constant? I don't know. Plus, when you get to the quantum nature of particles, since everything is conserved, there appears no difference between a particle going back or forward in time, as long as energy and momentum is conserved. It seems like entropy = times direction, since things go from high to low energy, ordered to mixed up.
@mikesamovarov4054
@mikesamovarov4054 2 жыл бұрын
Careful. Theories are not facts! These guesses could be totally wrong, just like Greek mythology was. We are dumb apes, open your eyes. We have no clue, none of us.
@johncraft6603
@johncraft6603 3 жыл бұрын
This is the kind of content I want but do not often find. Brilliant and please keep it coming.
@braedenwilliams6339
@braedenwilliams6339 3 жыл бұрын
Lex Fridman's podcast has enough intellectually stimulating, rich, and thought provoking content to lead to quite the binge as well- If you've never checked him out, you're welcome!
@EnderProGaming
@EnderProGaming Жыл бұрын
This video made me finally understand entropy and how it relates to time. Absolutely eye opening. The forward flow of time almost seems like a statistical necessity.
@nickharrison3748
@nickharrison3748 3 жыл бұрын
What a graphics. What a good soothing voice ..good soothing background music and a solid explanation of scientific phenomena as simple as possible. perfect presentation.
@THEoldy
@THEoldy 3 жыл бұрын
Seeing smoke dissipate out to a higher entropy state is fascinating. In the beginning it's one big clump, at the end it's diffused evenly. But in the middle, amongst those swirling tendrils, the beauty of life is found.
@owfan4134
@owfan4134 2 жыл бұрын
my favorite thing about the process is tending to it, and prolonging the inevitable decay by supplying new order and structure for the swirling tendrils to devour. the inert state of matter chosen as fuel is relatively stable, and can be considered for all intents and purposes already in an unchanging steady state... until the blazing, yearning maw consumes it. sometimes over the span of seconds, sometimes minutes, sometimes hours, the newly deposited fuel source is torn asunder as the sustained chain reaction of entropic decay slowly consumes the system in a glorious blaze of inevitability. nothing I can do will change the thermodynamics at play, i can hardly change the direction the smoke drifts let alone how much is produced or how quickly. the one who tends the flame does so only as adjutant and passive observer; to wield the fundamental forces as a weapon is no more feasible for mortal beings than to attempt to conquer death itself. so it is that as each freshly chopped log falls into the crackling pit in my care, i behold a system of primordial beauty in it's simplest and most readily available form. i stare into the microcosm which foretells the collapse of star systems and galaxies; the sputtering flames of a dying star may yield a cataclysmic eruption of scales unimaginably greater than the simple flame before me, but inevitability and the constant procession of time towards an eventual new steady-state remains identical. each log added extends the inescapable singularity that is maximum entropy, when cold silence takes over and the once roaring flames become energetic ghosts shrouded in clues by the inert ashes scattered about. it is a fascinating and beautiful process, one that keeps me captivated and always eager to experience again, that i might serve as guide and caretaker to the sacred ritual. i really think i understand why our ancestors found such spiritual meaning in fires, and not just because of the obvious paleolithic association with basic survival and food preparation. it's a window of introspection and insight into our shared fate with all aspects of creation, and an opportunity to render respect and compassion to all who find themselves caught in the endless march of time. you cannot avoid death, nor stave off suffering and disorder, but you can act pre-emptively and guide the process towards that inevitable conclusion with grace and mercy. death need not be a looming specter we flee from in adrenaline fueled frenzy as the internal wave-function of our perception collapses into a hyper-dense psychological black hole of fight or flight due to the catalytic gravity of fear. with each crumbling, ash-covered log breaking apart to yield ever more of it's stored potential energy to the licking flames, the heat generated can be harnessed and used for compassionate purposes- it is equally life-giving as it is destructive. how beautiful! I feel such gratitude and peace when i behold the self-devouring serpent, the ouroboros coiled neatly in the confines of the little altar erected to contain it; the blazing heat of it's presence drives away the supplicant, for none can penetrate the wall of radiation both created by and sustained in the teleological pull of the snake's relentless pursuit of reunion and self-annihilation. the architect of the snake's journey are the same fundamental forces which are brought meaning by it's eternal dance. though, perhaps if this video and indeed many modern physicists are to be trusted, the dance is not eternal at all, but has an end and final conclusion from which no order can ever be formed ever again. when the orange and yellow hues dance and flicker across the outline of smoldering logs in the flame under my care, i never doubt for a second that the flame will eventually succumb to it's fate inscribed by the immutable laws of entropy, but neither do i perceive a void from which the absence of meaning is pulled backwards out of the screaming abyss of un-creation. yes, death is sad and scary, this is just as immutable as any other natural or physical law; our egos and the psychological infrastructure that gives them purpose and definition will always regard their own dissolution and collapse as being the icy embrace which seems to be the fate of all creation in the coming trillions upon trillions of years yet to come. but the collapse of matter into a lifeless, inert state is not the true absence of meaning at all. the illusion of meaning based on corporality is rooted firmly in control and domination, which are aspects of our physical consciousness long since evolved to protect us from the ravages of a seemingly uncaring natural world devoid of compassion and mercy. to see existence in such a way is natural, and by no means illogical or short-sighted. we are, in fact, programmed to perceive the world in that exact manner, and the subsequent causal gravitas serves as sufficiently compelling force to set all manner of human behavior and activity into the combusting state- the flames travel across the whole breadth of our physiological and psychological bodies, slowly eating them away as the old is unshackled and the new solidifies into place. the weight of our decisions carry causal impact that knocks billiard balls of innumerable consequences into motion that cascade forever into newer and more alien states to what had come before. from life there is death, and from death there is life- perhaps not for us to claim or dominate, but to be inherited implicitly by whatever comes after nonetheless. thanks for coming to my TED talk, i hope it was pleasurable to read, haha. I'm going to stop here before i keep writing this story for the next hour, peace.
@YogiMcCaw
@YogiMcCaw 2 жыл бұрын
I think you go the memo on that one!
@lilhotdog7011
@lilhotdog7011 3 жыл бұрын
Out of everything in this universe, time intrigues me the most and this video was utterly brilliant. Thank you for this.
@bntagkas
@bntagkas 2 жыл бұрын
time is simply change. stop change and you cant tell if time exists anymore, thats because it doesnt
@johngreenwood1610
@johngreenwood1610 2 жыл бұрын
@@bntagkas But you cant stop change. Even the universe will fall Dark for all Stars will die. You can never stop change because you can never stop Time.
@lawrencenaickeryfyt5570
@lawrencenaickeryfyt5570 3 жыл бұрын
Excellent work. Thanks for consolidating a complex subject into a timeless treasure.
@Sharperthanu1
@Sharperthanu1 8 ай бұрын
Time did not start "going forward." Physics unfolds and gives the ILLUSION of time going forward.There is just one eternal now.
@VapidVulpes
@VapidVulpes 2 жыл бұрын
I cannot stress enough much I appreciate how amazingly beautiful and well made your work is. These are probably my favorite cosmos-esk documentaries of all time (eyooo that's kind of a time pun lol) It's like these videos are a kind of spiritual text. Like, this is how you're supposed to revel in the majesty of reality. Not to imply anything about the existence or non existence of deities. It's just the feeling of wonder and fascination, of glory and beauty of the world around us as best as we can truly try to know it is so well communicated. Thank you so much for what you do.
@roycefruciano5418
@roycefruciano5418 3 жыл бұрын
This channel is my favourite ever.. Incredible informative whilst being a poetic masterpiece. Your videos are amazing ♥️
@voiceofreason1829
@voiceofreason1829 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks
@chrisd6287
@chrisd6287 3 жыл бұрын
Why has YT not recommended this sooner? Bravo Sir, Bravo
@christopherwalsh7700
@christopherwalsh7700 3 жыл бұрын
It was uploaded only 8 days ago.
@chrisd6287
@chrisd6287 3 жыл бұрын
@@christopherwalsh7700 8 days too many. Also, I was speaking in terms of the channel
@Davivd2
@Davivd2 3 жыл бұрын
The entropy levels of the KZbin algorithm are too high for it to recommend this video sooner.
@mattenfeld
@mattenfeld 2 жыл бұрын
As someone that bases his entire career on the laws of thermodynamics….this has to be the most beautiful way it’s been explained.
@mikesamovarov4054
@mikesamovarov4054 2 жыл бұрын
Not one ape knows much about reality and laws of nature. Only whatever pathetic info we can understand with our extremely underdeveloped brain. Your ego is too big, we actually have zero clue.
@seanaugagnon6383
@seanaugagnon6383 Жыл бұрын
This is one of the best science/philosophy channels on KZbin.
@darrenmillar2201
@darrenmillar2201 4 ай бұрын
Wow guys what an epic start, so we'll written. I've nearly watched every video of this group, some of them twice or more. It's truly next level and calms my mind.
@nickhowatson4745
@nickhowatson4745 3 жыл бұрын
The arrow of time appears to us because of the continuing entanglement of particles and systems to its environment. The wave function is spread out and correlated more and more with the environment with each interaction.
@ShortsHound
@ShortsHound 3 жыл бұрын
TIME : Flies like an arrow .... Fruit Flies like a Banana
@ahuman5150
@ahuman5150 3 жыл бұрын
Nooooooo! Lol
@illiakailli
@illiakailli 3 жыл бұрын
good one. thinking by analogy is a double-edge sword that sometimes lays on its flat side, so don’t try too hard or else ...
@ranthlee
@ranthlee 3 жыл бұрын
I think someone attributed that to Groucho Marx.
@lassoatrain
@lassoatrain 3 жыл бұрын
Fruit stand but we remain seated.
@alfredogomez4714
@alfredogomez4714 3 жыл бұрын
I see what you did there ☺️
@Nimish204
@Nimish204 3 жыл бұрын
This is one of the best channels ever. Congrats on creating this masterpiece
@2WaveCrestcents
@2WaveCrestcents 11 ай бұрын
This video is an absolute masterpiece, really encompasses the existential dread but also beauty of the universe.
@shaunandrews1197
@shaunandrews1197 11 ай бұрын
I like the fact you added the bit about the white feather being given to cowards after talking about Arthur Eddington, just show's that some people do a lot of thinking but about the wrong things and with a complete lack of knowlege, I love the videos you make, they are truly amazing to watch.
@thakyou5005
@thakyou5005 3 жыл бұрын
I like your accent, it's so clear and scholar like. Also calming. Now... why have I watched this at 1 am?
@anantharamanmr
@anantharamanmr 3 жыл бұрын
I'm in love with this channel. Not only is the content of high quality, the comments section is hygeinic too.
@SteveCarras
@SteveCarras 2 жыл бұрын
Ana tha, very nice name by the way, completely 500 per cent agreed!!
@TheDeadmanTT
@TheDeadmanTT 3 жыл бұрын
Imagine just chilling at the end of time and suddenly the big bang happens and the entire universe kills your vibes for the next trillion years.
@TheDeadmanTT
@TheDeadmanTT 3 жыл бұрын
Acutally 100 billion trillion years.
@jonathanchalmers7844
@jonathanchalmers7844 3 жыл бұрын
@@TheDeadmanTT glad i brought a book with me
@devinmoran59
@devinmoran59 3 жыл бұрын
Wack
@Krystalmyth
@Krystalmyth 3 жыл бұрын
Imagine staring at the end of everything you've ever loved, everything that has ever been... ... and instead of fading away, it says - no.
@icemanmwk
@icemanmwk 3 жыл бұрын
I know, I hate that.
@EmeraldEyesEsoteric
@EmeraldEyesEsoteric 2 жыл бұрын
Fascinating. I never imagined we could all just be floating dreaming brains in an empty eternity. It still doesn't make any sense to me.
@catpoke9557
@catpoke9557 2 жыл бұрын
I have thought about this a lot for pretty much as long as I can remember. At first it was just based on the thought that if we can dream, how do we know this isn't a dream? But as I got older it changed to thoughts about how ultimately, every sense you have is just information being processed into something tangible by your brain. Which means all it takes is a brain that THINKS something exists, for you to feel every sense imaginable. Pain, smell, sight, hearing, and more. We have no way of knowing that we are in the universe we believe we are. We may have bodies elsewhere. Or we may just be brains. Or we may be computers. Or we may be something that we, within this universe, can't even comprehend. After all, different realities follow different rules. We're even superimposing our own rules to even use words like "reality" and "existence." Existence is a circular thing. It's a concept that can only exist if anything exists at all. Existence must come into existence... in order to exist. It's possible that if there is, was, or will be something else other than our own universe, it wouldn't actually EXIST. As that is a concept unique to our reality.
@user-florin
@user-florin Жыл бұрын
The intro song is "Tell You Something" by Rune Dale if anyone is wondering
@Alex55072
@Alex55072 3 жыл бұрын
I was expecting a mention of the transformation of matter into waves and the overall tendency of the universe to reach towards the base energy of the quantum fields that permiate it. (because of space expansion via dark energy). Now I wonder if the random quantum fluctuations that give rise to particle /antiparticle pair could give birth to a new pocket universe in timeless parent universe.
@neon_dex42
@neon_dex42 2 жыл бұрын
I think Lee Smolin has an idea like that.
@EmeraldEyesEsoteric
@EmeraldEyesEsoteric 2 жыл бұрын
If the universe is electric you can get rid of dark matter and dark energy completely.
@Rockzilla1122
@Rockzilla1122 Жыл бұрын
@@EmeraldEyesEsoteric it's not.
@SonnyBubba
@SonnyBubba 3 жыл бұрын
“ There is a theory which states that if ever anyone discovers exactly what the Universe is for and why it is here, it will instantly disappear and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable. There is another theory which states that this has already happened.” - The hitchhikers guide to the galaxy And to think Douglas Adams might actually be onto something.
@darionirwin4138
@darionirwin4138 3 жыл бұрын
yea bc it's all on the individual level, to see the truth is to wake up from a dream you can't fall back asleep to. and "the truth is stranger than fiction".
@cjmacq-vg8um
@cjmacq-vg8um 3 жыл бұрын
OH, another "hitchhiker's" afficionado. these people claim to be so smart but they don't know the TRUE answer to everything is 42! so what's the big mystery? i love these shows and this subject. and i have a different take on it entirely. (well, not entirely.) entropy doesn't indicate the "arrow" of time. there's no absolute, single direction of time. time is indicated through physical motion; movement. and the motion can be percieved in "reverse" as well as forward. ask yourself this question: which came first, the big bang or the start of time? the answer is simple - time started BEFORE the big bang. the big bang was merely the physical expansion of the universe. expansion is motion/movement and without time motion is impossible. so who's to say the big bang isn't the beginning of the universe but its end. if we experienced time in the "opposite" direction we wouldn't know it was moving backwards. maybe we don't realize its moving backwards now. we adapt to our perceptions of reality rather than to reality itself. if we lived in such a universe, where backwards time is "normal," our physics would indicate our "cause" as their "effect." and vice versa. or, we'd conclude that its normal for effect to precede the cause. its my contention that time has no arrow. its moving in all directions at once. just like the universe itself. (it may be possible for time to even move sideways.) its that, for whatever reason, nature has decided for our species to percieve the passage of time moving in this direction. so, put that in your pipe and smoke it till the end of time - which just may be BEFORE the big bang itself, where all movement and all trime ceases to exist.
@cjmacq-vg8um
@cjmacq-vg8um 3 жыл бұрын
@@darionirwin4138 ... man, sounds like fun. reincarnartion really sucks uh? how do you know you're not being reincarnated backwards, towards the beginning of time rather than towards its end? you just demonstrated the end is just a new HORRIFIC beginning. like an endless circle. how do you know where the circle begins or where it ends? or, what direction its going. naw, i like my fantasy better. its at least logical rather than fanciful.
@darionirwin4138
@darionirwin4138 3 жыл бұрын
@@cjmacq-vg8um because how could you be anyone but yourself
@darionirwin4138
@darionirwin4138 3 жыл бұрын
@@cjmacq-vg8um it doesn't have to be horrific if you can just positively embrace the moment fully, that' why its a circle you're trying to learn to live fully as a human without thinking so much
@cyohg2660
@cyohg2660 3 жыл бұрын
I've watched the first 3 episodes, and wow, that's impressive !
@ThuyTran-ci2et
@ThuyTran-ci2et 2 жыл бұрын
My favorite You Tube channel ever !!!!! Informative, entertaining, thought provoking, infinitely mind scratching
@twosongs7396
@twosongs7396 Жыл бұрын
Yet another brilliant documentary. Much gratitude to you and your team.
@BastiVC
@BastiVC 3 жыл бұрын
This is propably the most brutal description of boltzmann brains I ever heard. Seriously, im afraid right now that everything I know is just an illusion, and I float through eternity, all alone. Mommy!
@DevinDTV
@DevinDTV 3 жыл бұрын
no worries, if you are a boltzmann brain you only persist for a single moment. the way he described it was slightly strange. you wouldn't be a fully functional human brain. you'd just be the electrochemical relationship that a human brain would create to have your current experience. your memories and perception of the current moment would be an illusion of your configuration, and in the next moment you'd dissipate and cease to be conscious
@BastiVC
@BastiVC 3 жыл бұрын
@@DevinDTV You forget infinity. It is astronomical unlikely to form a Boltzmann Brain in the void for just a single moment. It is even more unlikly that this brain would persist for several moments. But, infinite time...
@perrynnlynch3811
@perrynnlynch3811 3 жыл бұрын
Great comment. Unsettling thought.
@poll-lie-ticks1776
@poll-lie-ticks1776 3 жыл бұрын
@@DevinDTV It's actually worse than that. If Boltzmann Brains are an inevitability and far more likely than the existance of evolving life in a universe, then the existance of Boltzmann Brains within a sealed cacoon of sorts, together with warm flowing blood and an external but attached heat source, say decaying uranium isotope, is also inevitable. They would be less likely than a Boltzmann Brain appearing within a vacuum, but still inevitable. Such Boltzmann Brains could live for hours, days or weeks and experience an array of thoughts and emotions.... It's crazy stuff!
@catpoke9557
@catpoke9557 2 жыл бұрын
It doesn't matter. If reality is an illusion, it's still reality. It's the same thing you've come to know. Let me put it like this... What if you spent your entire life believing reality was an illusion. What if you spent your whole life believing that reality is the result of a brain floating in a realityless plane, but then one day, you found out that's not the case. Instead, reality is inside the plane you believed you were floating through, and is not the result of your brain, but rather your brain a result of it. In otherwords.. what if you found out that reality was exactly as you in this reality believe it to be? If you spent your whole life believing your reality requires a brain making an illusion in a space where reality does not exist, you'd say the same thing. "So reality isn't real? I don't exist?" But it is real, and you do. It is just not in quite the same way you previously thought. As long as things are perceived, things are real. As long as they are real, they are reality. Whether your reality is a result of a brain somewhere else, or your brain is the result of a reality right here... It's just as real either way.
@nb9403
@nb9403 3 жыл бұрын
Moreee please.. Who ever writes these scripts is a GOAT
@Niveden1
@Niveden1 3 жыл бұрын
Why do Boltzmann brains have to be human? Now I'm imagining a Boltzmann dog brain, drifting through the cosmos alone, wanting belly rubs but getting none. :(
@willywonka3050
@willywonka3050 3 жыл бұрын
**sad woof**
@CrimsonA1
@CrimsonA1 3 жыл бұрын
Give the universe belly rubs y'all! :D
@dokidokideathproof
@dokidokideathproof 3 жыл бұрын
Dude NO! I had a close call with my pup last night and I put on some soothing music and just stared in her eyes as the meds the vet gave her for pain took over and I felt like we both had this out of body experience that I could not even begin to explain, I finally snapped out of it and just felt at peace for whatever was going to happen. It was probably just my brain trying to get me to cope with everythings inevitable end or beginning. P.S. she is doing better she had a false pregnancy, still not 100% but way better than she was.
@296jacqi
@296jacqi 3 жыл бұрын
Made me lol. 😆
@TrainerFromUnova
@TrainerFromUnova 3 жыл бұрын
Boltzmann brains just refers to a super advanced civilization that even the term "Magic" doesn't do justice to what they are capable of doing. They can alter the laws of physics on a whim, create universes, multiverses, etc,. If that theory is true, that means our universe is jusf one of many universes that the Boltzmann tremendously advanced society is experimenting on - for their own goals; and honestly - for their entertainment.
@mozartiano123
@mozartiano123 2 жыл бұрын
This channel is a jewel.
@maxmcallister49
@maxmcallister49 2 жыл бұрын
One of the best and easy to follow descriptions of entropy I have ever heard. A notoriously hard idea to grasp and even harder to explain. Amazing work on the video ❤️
@artdonovandesign
@artdonovandesign 2 жыл бұрын
Well said, Max!
@DelftTrains
@DelftTrains 3 жыл бұрын
This channel will have millions of subs pretty soon, this is so cool 🙌
@bamcr1218
@bamcr1218 2 жыл бұрын
I’m only 3 minutes in and already i can clearly tell how much time and effort you put into this video as it is truly a beautiful piece so far. This may be considered trivial but I have to ask. At 1:50 you speak of St.Augustine contemplating the passage of time and envisioning the stars inevitably blinking out of existence. But I thought it was many centuries later that humanity discovered and accepted that all the lights in the sky were stars like our own. Am I wrong on this?
@ilduce5874
@ilduce5874 2 жыл бұрын
Saint Augustine wasn’t alone over the centuries as a man of the cloth and a man of science *and* a philosopher all in one guy. One example is monk Mendel who figured out rudimentary genetics by crossbreeding peapod flowers. The Church in its former position of power over almost everyone, strenuously opposed Galileo because he had the audacity to suggest that Earth is *not* the center of the universe, nor is the Earth’s sun. That certainly seems more driven by human ego than an unfalsifiable divine fiat.
@domdos2264
@domdos2264 Жыл бұрын
Beautifully presented and narrated. Really enlightened me on the subject. Thank you.
@sondang4154
@sondang4154 Жыл бұрын
This is the best video I have seen so far my whole life.
@paulojrmsantos8
@paulojrmsantos8 3 жыл бұрын
Time is a concept humans came up with while trying to explain the interval between A and B. It exists only in our imagination.
@odnewdylee
@odnewdylee 3 жыл бұрын
@Pouty MacPotatohead Time is a vector, space has no properties. Time and space are measures of magnitudes. Space Time is a delusional explanation of mathematical equations. Equations are not explanations.
@odnewdylee
@odnewdylee 3 жыл бұрын
@Pouty MacPotatoheadspace keeps nothing apart, thats an attribute that depends on other objects to be an attribute, like a shadow. Again space has no properties. Equations do not describe anything they project outcomes. The incas had fantastically advanced ways of calculating movements of celestial bodies, their explanations for the movements are comical now. Math is not an explanation, space has no properties, time is a vector.
@odnewdylee
@odnewdylee 3 жыл бұрын
@Pouty MacPotatoheadI did and am arguing my case. Magnetism is what gives magnitude to everything, magnetism is what creates space and keeps things apart. Space is not a thing. We have atmosphere between us here, but in the nothingness of space there is nothingness that impacts nothing. That's why objects will go at a continuous rate in space, space has no properties to act upon said object.
@odnewdylee
@odnewdylee 3 жыл бұрын
@Pouty MacPotatoheadmagnetism is what keeps celestial bodies apart. When the flip side dielectric is in effect we observe gravity.
@odnewdylee
@odnewdylee 3 жыл бұрын
@Pouty MacPotatoheadnah that's all c.p. steinmetz I'm not that smart. Science is a religion now. Like how space has doesn't slow down an object in motion yet it keeps objects apart. We're not allowed to even question it or we're deemed weird, conspiracy theorists, or ignorant. I am willing to learn though. I got a lot of what I believe from steinmetz book on light and radiation, if you have any suggested readings please drop the titles.
@misselnora
@misselnora Жыл бұрын
This is just amazing. I never understood these topics growing up, I always felt excluded somehow. But this is opening up that world to me, it's amazing! Thank you! I wonder if there was a state of even more order, before the big bang... Would time stop going forward at maximum entropy? Also I heard about the big bounce in another one of your videos, I wonder how that theory explains the entropy of the universe.
@rishiparitala88
@rishiparitala88 3 жыл бұрын
YESSSSSSSSSSS this is the best series
@Lopfff
@Lopfff 2 жыл бұрын
Cannot. Stop. Watching. These. Videos.
@rockyraccoon8270
@rockyraccoon8270 2 жыл бұрын
I once had someone give me a hard time because I was talking about this kind of stuff. He said how do you know ? You talk like you know but you are not a scientist or anything. I then explained him that he talks about baseball but is not a player or a manger or an owner or work for a baseball team. I then explained that in the same way that he knows baseball I know astrophysics and physics and science , because I listen to the peolple who do know.! Great channel by the way. I love to listen to this before bed then drift away to sleep thinking about this . Thank you
@schmetterling4477
@schmetterling4477 2 жыл бұрын
So two idiots were talking to each other about things they are completely clueless about. That's everyday life, kid. Why are you telling such boring stories? Don't you have better ones? ;-)
@catpoke9557
@catpoke9557 2 жыл бұрын
The good thing about theoretical physics is that you don't need to be a scientist to have a fun conversation about it. Even if you have no idea how the world works, you can still try your hand at figuring it out. I like to think I'm decently knowledgeable on physics, but honestly, I'm probably not. I probably get most of my facts wrong. But that's okay, because I have fun thinking and talking about it, and the people around me often do too. I come up with my own ideas of how many things may work... and probably, none of them are correct. That's fine by me, because that's the whole wonder of science. There's always so much to learn. It never ends, no matter what level you're at.
@schmetterling4477
@schmetterling4477 2 жыл бұрын
@@catpoke9557 Armchair players are always the greatest. They win every game. ;-)
@catpoke9557
@catpoke9557 2 жыл бұрын
@@schmetterling4477 Haha... Well, that's why I wouldn't bother getting into a debate with someone if they're actually qualified. I suppose if it's two people who don't know what they're talking about it's fine... if a little pointless... but at least you're on an even playing field. I don't think 'armchair scientists' should be debating actual scientists. 9 times out of 10, the scientist is going to be correct and you're just going to be sitting there believing you're right.
@danpierce8862
@danpierce8862 3 жыл бұрын
I get that we are designed to percieve and experience time in a linear manner. But time does not do the moving, we do.
@Vohasiiv
@Vohasiiv 2 жыл бұрын
I first heard of the Boltzmann brain yesterday while watching Star Trek, I was intrigued and looked it up. Now I'm watching some random documentaries and was surprised to hear the name Boltzmann.
@petrossotsos3403
@petrossotsos3403 Жыл бұрын
also starlord's father was a boltzmann brain
@iamise
@iamise 3 жыл бұрын
Really enjoying your videos. Hello from the past to the 1 millionth subscriber!
@communist-hippie
@communist-hippie 3 жыл бұрын
This channel is good for me as a medium talented brain. Always get lost on other channels when hjey bring up formulas etc. Well explained here
@ITisandiamIT
@ITisandiamIT 2 жыл бұрын
I have watched many of these Videos, and many others. And, this is the first time I have read comments, and commented. Why it took me so long, I have no idea. To see others who enjoy the same thing, is AWESOME! Hello to all of you guy's, an I thank the Video Creator, an all of you who have left such fantastic Comments! It is so refreshing. I spend most of my time working on websites, and trying to figure out how the Search Engines are working. Now, it is time that I enjoy the internet for what it is FOR! I can hit replay on any of these Videos, and watch them over, an over. Yet, I could do it all over again, tomorrow. I find it amazing how we all know we are all destine for the same FATE, yet we still strive to build something, within this world. Mostly doing things, that none of enjoy. Now, I can not say that for myself. For I enjoy everyday!
@egonieser
@egonieser 3 жыл бұрын
Ever since I learned about the death of the universe when I was 9, I spent years contemplating what does it mean for us, any of us and our distant future predecessors. Also it answers the question of what's the meaning of life. It's very clear there is no meaning of life, there is no achievement or legacy that will be eternal because sooner or later everything, everyone human or alien has done, achieved or left behind will be gone without a trace. The very powerful words of: "The very last hug, last kiss, last embrace, by the very last humans before the universe ends..." They will forever haunt me. Everything we do is meaningless. Everything anyone or anything, human, animal or Alien does is meaningless. Unless we can reverse the heat death and cosmic expansion, what's even the point? Why leave a legacy when there will be nothing and no-one around to appreciate it? Well there will be no legacy left in the first place because there will be nothing left. Not even an atom. I can somewhat see why people turn to religion because reality and science is nothing but miserable news.
@JohnnyArtPavlou
@JohnnyArtPavlou 3 жыл бұрын
And yet, we must live. Is love real? Or kindness? Or humor? Or beauty? Maybe these are all coping mechanisms. Or tricks of our biology. I mean it seems as if you were asking for an eternal witness to what we have accomplished and what we will have accomplished before it’s all over. I mean why be upset that it’s all going to return to nothing if we can agree that it all came from nothing. Let’s just except that as part of the rules of the game. And enjoy the wonders and mysteries of the whole thing. Anyway it’s not going to die before you die. Maybe you’ll find some consolation in that. Maybe you can leave a really good temporary legacy that makes a difference to the future of mankind. Even if that future is only another billion years. Or million years. Or 100,000 years. 🌞⭐️🔥❤️💎
@robertstevensii4018
@robertstevensii4018 3 жыл бұрын
You have no idea if the universe will end. You only know what a bunch of experts have told you to believe. You're no more enlightened than anybody else. Come watch some tv.
@billyumbraskey8135
@billyumbraskey8135 3 жыл бұрын
Only atheists arrive at this (faulty) conclusion. Those of us who know that this universe was CREATED know better. If you really believed this then what stops you from just going full hedonist and morals, ethics, consequence be damned? It's precisely because, written on your heart, you know this is wrong. You know that the meaning is derived thru reverence and effort.
@billyumbraskey8135
@billyumbraskey8135 3 жыл бұрын
@@--Singularity-- without an independent, objective arbiter, all human morality is relative. an objective, universal morality requires God. otherwise, a society of pedophiles can all just agree that their proclivity is perfectly moral. you can't have objective, universal morality without a universal, objective judge. That's God. *TIPS FEDORA*
@joni8090
@joni8090 3 жыл бұрын
Before You was you were but Not in Reality until Birth then your constitution changed to Consciousness written in a Code called DNA of which you are it's Conclusion but this is only an epoch of your Spiritual Incarnation to be for in the Twinkling of an eye you will be Changed when that Seed falls into the ground and you are born again but lacking " Awareness " how could you know this Destiny for everything has its Beginning Born for Eternity on bended knee head bowed I bet you will say Thanks and mean it !! Jesus is the Key 💖
@travissheard6425
@travissheard6425 3 жыл бұрын
Because someone pointed one way and everyone followed. While the animals and cosmos danced in all directions.
@namehere4954
@namehere4954 3 жыл бұрын
Exactly! Time is a man-made concept - this is why physics can't find the opposite direction when it should be able to. I also don't believe in entropy as it is merely ordered decay but we assume the decay isn't organized because we can't see the patterns or the patterns are too complex.
@thelanguageofthebirds
@thelanguageofthebirds Жыл бұрын
I have a book called “timekeepers” that divulged into the history of time keeping. It infuriated me they could make it illegal to have the clocks not aligned to the desires of Julius Ceaser (according to this book). So I could never overlook that, this is compelling me immediately due to the invocation of fire as a way to explain the process of entropy, energy and thermodynamics. ❤
@lunam7249
@lunam7249 9 ай бұрын
"the annals of rome"- TACITUS = lifechanging
@ronjon7942
@ronjon7942 2 жыл бұрын
I hope this guy is making money on these, his presentations are priceless.
@ronjon7942
@ronjon7942 2 жыл бұрын
Oops, and gal..sorry, Leila.
@PabloAfroSamurai
@PabloAfroSamurai 8 ай бұрын
I had never heard of Boltzmann or his brains before, I am now shaken but also kind of excited
@jubbardtheflubbard4380
@jubbardtheflubbard4380 3 жыл бұрын
The odds of a boltzmann brain accurately believing in the laws that dictate it's though are probably pretty low. I would imagine if I was a boltzmann brain created from a random soup of energy that what I believe about physics wouldn't reflect how my boltzmann brain actually works.
@vauchomarx6733
@vauchomarx6733 3 жыл бұрын
If you actually were a Boltzmann brain, it would be infinitely more likely that your conscious experience made much less sense than it currently does. Rather than something coincidentally so consistent with an ordered material world, your experience would more likely be like a weird, random dream. Also, most Boltzmann brains would just disassemble faster a blink of an eye.
@RichWoods23
@RichWoods23 2 жыл бұрын
I don't see the existence of humans as necessarily being more improbable than Boltzmann brains either, as contended on the basis of the number of particles which make up a human body. Biological life has organising principles, primarily reproduction and descent with modification, such that it's taken 3.8 billion years for us to turn up in a comparatively more benign environment than the vacuum of interstellar space. A Boltzmann brain is just a randomly appearing association of particles which happens to function as a conscious entity for a period of time (and usually as short as you suggest), having to be held together by the fundamental forces in the face of all the background noise of its particular environment. I would say that it will be far easier for Boltzmann brains to exist trillions of years in the future, when all the clutter and heat in the universe is further apart and less energetic, giving the brain more time to learn how to maintain and reproduce itself before being ripped apart by the onslaught of external particles or losing the ability to function as a conscious entity through its own inevitable quantum fluctuations.
@SwordQuake2
@SwordQuake2 3 жыл бұрын
19:21 is that a real nebula? If yes, what is it called? If not, what's the picture?
@esk8er900
@esk8er900 Жыл бұрын
Each of these videos is a masters thesis in modern science communication & should certainly be on the corresponding streaming services my friends!!!
@darthjarwood7943
@darthjarwood7943 Жыл бұрын
Time is relative...what we know as a minute is only a minute on earth ...a construct of the human mind that evolved to help us understand and survive the world we live on.
@vanhovemare
@vanhovemare 3 жыл бұрын
I must say, a disembodied brain beyond time and space trillions of years from now is the absolute least of my worries.
@moncef2733
@moncef2733 2 жыл бұрын
Except if we are thinking right know that we are in our universe but in reality we are a boltzmann brain and the universe is already at its heat death state
@colonelgraff9198
@colonelgraff9198 3 жыл бұрын
The last time I was this early Time was just beginning
@ImmortalIdeas
@ImmortalIdeas 3 жыл бұрын
Time never moves. Only mass stretching perspectives. ;))
@Ryan_Harkin
@Ryan_Harkin 3 жыл бұрын
There is no Time, only movement.
@bentationfunkiloglio
@bentationfunkiloglio 3 жыл бұрын
Enjoyable, but mostly of a history of time. Still worth watching.
@fellsmoke
@fellsmoke 2 жыл бұрын
"Now" is a sweet spot in entropy from which we can appreciate it. Enjoy "it" while possible.
@SilverGreeneye
@SilverGreeneye 3 жыл бұрын
You and Kurzgesagt, conspiring to ensure I never miss my dose of existential dread… Keep up the good work 👍🏻
@freya7084
@freya7084 2 жыл бұрын
My toxic trait is believing I understand this. Signed: astrophysics student
@julianhallola
@julianhallola 6 ай бұрын
True story?
@alanmassoli5989
@alanmassoli5989 Жыл бұрын
Hi, I just want to take a moment and tell you how much I've enjoyed your docu+series History of the Universe. It is by far the best of the best imnsho of docs about our universe and our place in it. Thank you, thank you, thank you! Sincerely Al Massoli
@scottspoerry2761
@scottspoerry2761 Ай бұрын
You do deserve far more than 917k subscribers. Multiples of a million seems appropriate for such great content and so much of it.
@iaw7406
@iaw7406 3 жыл бұрын
If time was going backwards we would still regard it as going forwards.
@bazsnell3178
@bazsnell3178 3 жыл бұрын
If time was going forwards we would still regard it as going backwards.
@pastlife960
@pastlife960 3 жыл бұрын
But what if we went... sideways?
@loki6626
@loki6626 3 жыл бұрын
.gniht egnarts a si emiT
@paulojrmsantos8
@paulojrmsantos8 3 жыл бұрын
@@pastlife960 There you go, joking all the time...
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