I find it hard to believe the fact that this channel doesn't have a million subscribers.
@Jueyes-vg2gb2 ай бұрын
why its just what he does for a living, science fiction, its pseudo-science for the phantasmal type, if you want real astronomy that will blow your mind you go to sky scholar who is actually pushing the boundaries and providing actually science that makes sense for what they are putting out there, not the clownish ideas of the cosmologist who waste money non stop on fairy tales. The EXACT reason science has stalled is because they introduced fairy tales
@tiberiusgracchus679 Жыл бұрын
that is a sick count chocula/black metal organ riff that hits around 33:00 for real though, JMG's content is phenomenal.
@madmattdigs9518 Жыл бұрын
One of my favorite channels. Maybe my all time favorite. Excellent content.
@Light_910 Жыл бұрын
If the universe wants to divide by 0 don't judge it guys
@briancolwill3071 Жыл бұрын
Noice!
@noxaeventide88458 ай бұрын
Nothing implies something. We are stuck on the universe, part of it, and in essence, we are IT. This adventure of experience never ends, it only changes in its infinite expression of the same "old" and "desireable" eternal and inherent fundamental principle. Your teeth cannot bite themselves. This finger can not touch this (same) finger. You are the thing in which there is no whicher.
@Jueyes-vg2gb2 ай бұрын
yeah guys if it wants to do work on itself, just go with it, who cares if it violates the laws of thermodynamics and is based on utter fairy tales like gravitational collapse.
@sabineb.56162 ай бұрын
@@noxaeventide8845, your words sound wise - but upon further examination you aren't saying anything at all. It's just word salad. If l am wrong, please tell me! But that would require a clarification of your initial statement.
@sabineb.56162 ай бұрын
@Light_910, l know someone who tried to create a new school of physics by declaring that zero and the infinite are the same. That might've given the universe something to work with 😉
@suecondon1685 Жыл бұрын
I could listen to Professor Lewis all night. He's so engaging and makes everything easier to understand. ❤
@Zurround Жыл бұрын
He is so interesting that I am actually staying AWAKE for it.
@dancingwiththedogsdj7 ай бұрын
The separation of disciplines is EXACTLY what A.I. should be perfect for, being able to find relationships in the data that we simply cannot keep up with. It'll be interesting to see what the future holds! Fantastic video! 😊🌎❤️🕺🏻🐶🚀🖥️
@galactician Жыл бұрын
+1 for The Prisoner. My parents turned me on to it as a kid. What a masterpiece.
@carlbell22265 ай бұрын
Work of genius
@jeromebarry1741 Жыл бұрын
Maybe this is why I, an integrated circuit "chip" layout designer, haven't found work since January.
@BRUXXUS Жыл бұрын
I'm so glad you asked about why physicists are so afraid of infinities. As a laymen, I can't help that infinities are something we just have to learn to deal with, even if we have no hope of comprehending them.
@rayluca123 Жыл бұрын
If the universe was infinite in size and age the nightsky would be brighter than day. physicist use math to try to discribe the reality they observe and math doesn't really works Well with infinities.
@philharland Жыл бұрын
The singularity of a black hole is described as infinite mass & density and infinitely small.
@duran9664 Жыл бұрын
Infinity = uncertainty The world has always been gray & uncertain. Learn to look at the world in gray🤏
@100percentSNAFU Жыл бұрын
@@rayluca123Not necessarily, because infinite or not, we still would only be able to see up to the universal horizon, the observable universe would look the same to us regardless of if an inch existed beyond it, or infinity.
@wmpx34 Жыл бұрын
@@rayluca123 Is that true? Seems like the inverse square law would prevent most of it from reaching us. I mean there’s already light that’s so faint or red-shifted that we couldn’t see it until more powerful sensors like JWST were created.
@robbabcock_ Жыл бұрын
Terrific episode! I'm always stoked to hear Dr. Lewis. If he's reading the comments, please give us another episode of Alas, Lewis and Barnes! ☄🌌🔭😎🙌
@Fusion991 Жыл бұрын
Dr Lewis here! Just want to say SMD! 😘
@francb1276 Жыл бұрын
The TV story mentioned at 55:30 is from a book of short stories I read many years ago - it may have been Asimov (because it was about robots), or someone like Poul Anderson (because i read lots of his stories), but the conclusion was excellent - the hero, despite being afraid of punishment if discovered, got his domestic robots to do the consuming for him. What he hadn't considered was that all the robots shared information. Happily, the authorities recognised it as a brilliant solution they hadn't thought of and he was well rewarded!
@steviegee8747 Жыл бұрын
I used to read those as a teenager in the 70's but can't recall that particular one - BTW if he was sick of over-consumption how was he rewarded? A cave, peace and quiet and a tatty old paperback?
@zrebbesh Жыл бұрын
When I think of a metaphor for our expanding universe, I think of an air bubble rising through the water. As the pressure of the water decreases the volume in the bubble (and therefore the area of the surface of the bubble where we live) expands. But this leads to disquieting thoughts about what happens when the bubble reaches the surface of the water.
@theobserver9131 Жыл бұрын
Funny, ideas like that don't bother me at all. If the universe goes poof, I can't do a thing about that and it would be the end of all my troubles. It's all the dumb, destructive, and avoidable things that humans do that bug the heck out of me.
@AnthonyGiallourakis Жыл бұрын
Great episode and wonderful interview. I like how you moved from the topic of the Universe's characteristics to other realms of physics and then ended up discussing AI. It not only flowed well, but it was very easy to digest. Excellent presentation all around John.
@almcdonald8676 Жыл бұрын
Totally agree. Takes someone with a good working knowledge to get the best out of an expert
@MrFoolingyu Жыл бұрын
Galactic cannibalism!?
@chuckystein3103 Жыл бұрын
Yes a good one.
@Oshidashi Жыл бұрын
I very much enjoyed the part about how Lewis and John keep their knowledge up to date. It inspired me to be more methodological about how I keep my own professional knowledge up to date. Thanks Event Horizon, for the rest it was all very entertaining as always.
@edvinboskovic9963 Жыл бұрын
Really great episode and fantastic interview. Hope we get Prof. Lewis again in EH , in nearest future. Thank you.
@jedgould5531 Жыл бұрын
19:01 || I think the prerequisite of being a professor of astrophysics is saying you have to be careful. I don’t think it’s a science of caution: I have no problem with the infinite. Raised a Christian Scientist with the emphasis on science. Visible and Invisible Quantum Oceans / Waves breaking at irregular universe boundaries. If oceans are flat, Quoceans are at minimum 3D. The universe is still creating itself. [I thought of this at age 12 (1967), and I have changed my mind very little since then. I’m not saying why or what it is, I’m just saying what it looks like. It’s gorgeous! The biggest surprise is it moves gasses - possibly air - some within the human hearing range]
@linesided9 ай бұрын
Oh I love it when a rational mind takes dark matter out behind the woodshed.
@Mandrak789 Жыл бұрын
I was enjoying every second of this interview. Great discussion.
@arvid978 Жыл бұрын
Thank you both for a splendid interview.
@youtopiastorm8373 Жыл бұрын
So what ideas do you have to offer to the conversation in this comment section, besides thanking them, hoping they'll see your comment.? I'm genuinely curious on your take. There's a reason it's called a comment section. You comment on the subject of the video or conversation. Not thank them. The like button does that perfectly fine. Not trying to be mean so please don't look at it like that. Just tired of not getting any insight from anyone in the comments.
@FesteringGhoul9 ай бұрын
I love the idea that we should not like the word "infinity" in any astrophysical and cosmological contexts. It just firmly pushes back on any legitimate speculation the universe might go on infinitely.
@nedoran5758 Жыл бұрын
That bit at 47:20 when the guest is talking about the Douglas Adams's Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy supercomputer "Deep Thought" and it kind of goes over Mr. Godier's head made me giggle
@AndrewBlucher Жыл бұрын
I'm sure that John understood. Did you understand the joke he made in response?
@nedoran5758 Жыл бұрын
@@AndrewBlucheryeah, yeah maybe. Lol
@khalebdaarke7809 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating to listen to Prof. Lewis from my home country. Great interview, good job.
@dancingwiththedogsdj7 ай бұрын
Every time someone says impossible, someone else says, "Hold my beer!". What is impossible today might be taught in Kindergarten in a few years. The moment you come to a point you don't know, you don't know if it's impossible either. I don't understand why people question the costs of learning basically. Learning will always pay off. 😊🌎❤️🕺🏻🐶
@pavel96526 ай бұрын
Some things are likely impossible, for instance what lies behind observable universe or what was before the big bang, if this question even makes sense or if there are other universes. Some particle physics require insane amounts of energy and colliders of the size of entire star systems if not galaxies. These things are functionality impossible and without data we will never know.
@nikolodeon55 Жыл бұрын
commenting for the algorithm. great vid as always. appretiate the commitment and work you put into all these vids
@duran9664 Жыл бұрын
💭 A thought to sleep on 💭 If Ai is truly dangerous, this should mean our current reality is either or: [ 1 ] We still exist, thus Ai will never win. [ 2 ] Ai is already won & we actually live in a matrix🤏😳
@ulicadluga8 ай бұрын
53:40 - Imagine AI being asked to save the planet! The first thing it would do, if it were fully autonomous is try and remove all the people not required to keep AI alive! 😮
@PlanetXMysteries-pj9nm Жыл бұрын
Very impressed with this video. I have always been interested in astronomy and physics. It was things like this that drove me to enter those professions. Thank you for feeding my insatiable curiosity about the universe and the wonders that we discove
@theobserver9131 Жыл бұрын
...he was almost done! He was about to type "r.", and he fell through a rip in spacetime....
@nutterbutter1133 Жыл бұрын
Guys, this isn't really that complicated. Gravity does not exist in its full form in our four dimensional universe. It "bleeds" through, about at 1/10,000th strength, from the 5th dimensional bulk, from where it is native. Mass objects in space do not "generate" gravity any more than a flag generates its own wavy motion in a breeze. The rotational motion of celestial objects acts as a reference frame for the gravity to weakly interact with our universe. If astrophysicists were to create a massive object in space (1/2 lunar mass), and prevent it from rotating, it would literally generate no gravity. Every celestial object rotates, and therefore has gravitic properties. I suspect that if that 1/2 lunar mass were to stop being prevented from rotating, that it would rotate on its own. Then, at that point, gravitic properties would manifest. Gravity needs mass to interact with the universe in a meaningful way. Electrons in orbitals around a nucleus have very complicated properties. They don't rotate like hands do around a clock, or a satellite in orbit around Earth....
@GeorgeStar Жыл бұрын
I can hardly wait.
@protocol6 Жыл бұрын
Space is expanding. Space-time isn't... necessarily*. In GR, the volume element (hypervolume of proper time and space) is invariant. Space and proper time always change inversely to one another. * I say not necessarily because it comes down to the philosophical issue of presentism vs growing block time. I find the latter linguistically problematic along with its non-expanding cousin, eternalism. Whenever you ask if something exists, implicit in that is that it exists now. The future will exist, and the past existed but neither of them exist and it's not even clear what that could possibly mean if they did.
@thomasjamison2050 Жыл бұрын
I am puzzled. The Universe is very strange as compared to what other universe?
@Zach2Wheels Жыл бұрын
I always think about the event that may end the universe already happened, and it just hasn't gotten here yet. I also think about The Great Attractor a lot.
@ocalicreek Жыл бұрын
These days I find it easier to believe in UAPs than dark matter. We have collected data on UAPs! Still not convinced these mathematicians didn’t come up with all this “dark” stuff after one too many down the pub as your guest suggested. I’m with him on that!
@friscostreetstories5403 Жыл бұрын
We can see "dark matter", for a lack of a better term, affecting planets through gravity. So there is something there.
@intomusicable Жыл бұрын
@@friscostreetstories5403 gravityis a theory , you first need to prove that one ,before you use it to prove another point . whatever is up there who knows..but it is all theory and assumptions in the model this professor is talkin about , and theyre running into bigger problems every time becouse theyre using the wrong model , earths pressure system coexisting next to the vacuum of space is a violation of the second law of thermodynamics .,and that is a natural law!!! we need models that dont violate natural laws imo : ) cheers..
@EinsteinsHair Жыл бұрын
@@intomusicable Flat Earth Alert! A man took a small submarine to the bottom of the ocean. A mermaid was swimming around, observing. That submarine was so dangerous, she thought, because if there was any failure then high pressure water would slam inside the submarine, killing the man instantly. And how did he get the craft through the barrier? Any hole in the barrier between the sea and the air would instantly result in high pressure water rushing into extremely low pressure air, killing many land creatures. The different pressures coexisting next to each other would violate the second law of thermodynamics, a natural law. I wrote this little parable for the next person who reads it. I am sure that you will understand why the mermaid is wrong, but will still be convinced that you are right. But the mermaid is wrong for the same reason you are.
@spiritualanarchist81625 ай бұрын
@@intomusicable Gravity as such is not a theory .It's measurable . What gravity actually is ,those are theories.
@intomusicable5 ай бұрын
@@spiritualanarchist8162 its not measurable.., complete nonsense..: ) , put the proof in next time..tc
@IHWKR Жыл бұрын
Seeing how it takes so long for even light to move through the universe, i still think itd take just as long for a catastrophic event to end the whole universe. Maybe in some part of the universe the true end may already have started.
@mitseraffej5812 Жыл бұрын
The rate at which I am aging is most definitely accelerating (just like the expansion of the universe) and I know for sure my personal universe could end any day now.
@stevedriscoll2539 Жыл бұрын
Nice 👍
@billsybainbridge3362 Жыл бұрын
19:00 - Interestingly, the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics presumes an infinity of what?.... ORDER! 25:00 - Hyperspecialization has its limits, particularly in fields that are stalled between Domain Epochs. I would argue that Generalism is required to "break up the constipation" of a few too many comfortable ideas. 40:11 - The reference from the film "Contact" was that the Alien Transmission Frequency was at "Hydrogen times Pi".
@pavel96526 ай бұрын
40:11 did anyone account for the Doppler shift?
@cykkm Жыл бұрын
When I try to formulate a question “what dark energy _really_ is?” but I've inevitably stumbled over an apparently innocent question: “what ‘normal’ energy _really_ is?” I have no answer to the latter. Wikipedia gives the same explanation that undergrad text books do; on the grad level, no one even tries. Its, like, ¯\_(ツ)_/¯, it's (waving hands), energy. In GR, all form of “normal” energy converge into a single tensor; there is no unique division into the body's rest mast-energy, kinetic and potential energy: it's coordinate-dependent. Energy arises as a conserved quantity in classical physics, and that's all to it, IMO. We like nice equation, and come up with those that make them nice. (Wheeler: “Time is _defined_ such that motion looks simple [italics mine -Cy]) GR disposed of the notion of time and space as absolute, independent of events in spacetime; it's the other way around. The Λ is a constant that Einstein initially added to the EFE to fine-tune the Universe from gravitational collapse, when expansion was not yet known. It wasn't the random act. Simply speaking, on the left side you have a 4-tensor expression with the Riemann curvature, on the right 2-tensor of momenergy density at every point in space. It's not an equation. The Ricci tensor is a 2-tensor contraction of Riemann tensor; the Ricci scalar is the further contraction of Ricci tensor. These are not random at all: the most important is that their sum (R+1/2 Rg) preserve not only static geometry, but, crucially, the Bianchi identity, a differential property. Obviously, adding a constant to the differential equation is the most natural thing to do: you specify the initial condition (“today, in 1918, the Universe in neither expanding nor contracting“ - diff. eqns. require it, in a sense). I don't see what's so mysterious about the Λ that would be more than about the momenergy T. I don't have a sensible answer as to what energy is. It's a thing that is conserved on small scales, good. It's a thing that corresponds to time-symmetry of physics on the small scale, excellent! But this is all properties of energy; they don't say _what it really is._ Energy is defined so that our equations look simple. 48:20 ~CPUs are designed by computers, and… we don't really know what they're doing - John, I highly recommend inviting an Intel engineer to explain how profoundly horrible, damaging and misinforming this notion is. They _perfectly_ know, in intricate detail, how their CPUs work. Bookkeepers know everything about their balance, even if they used Excel to compute it, instead of an abacus,. My trousers are made by machines designed with computers from fabric made by machines designed by machines and built by robots, designed by machines each with a CPU designed by machines. Still, the last thing I want to go back a couple thousand years ago. _Almost_ everybody was “employed,” but it's far form certain that I could afford trousers back then-the _sans culottes_ were making the said _culottes_ but didn't wear them. And don't forget the riots and burning the first automated loom machines. BTW, I discovered that I'm totally misunderstanding the meaning of the word “futurist.” I'll research the meaning when I have time. Looks like I have a profound misconception about the meaning of the word. I'm not qualified, but w.r.t. AI, we don't have it. AI and ML are synonyms. Having worked in AGI for the past 20 years, I'm extremely sceptical that we're any closer to it than in the 1980. Save for a earth-shattering discovery, I don't think that we'll see it soon, like in-my-life soon. The news have blown up the nonsense-babbling LLMs that people began thinking that this is “intelligence” (I'm reminded of late Minsky definition: “intelligence is akin to ‘unexplored areas of Amazonia’: as soon as we explore them, they are no longer ‘intelligence’” [inexact quote] We don't even know what it is. It's an excellent tool for a writer, as far as I understand what you do: in a dialogue, it may hint on an interesting plot twist. But no, it's not going to write sensible books. Recall that both Q and A are limited, 2048 characters in ChatGPT, if I'm not mistaken. That's the limit of short-term memory of the LLM. Unfortunately, we cannot make them better than even that. Unlike the CPU, I very well understand how they work. They wont overcome the world; neither they will leave trousersmiths unemployed. P.S. John, I just realized I know a few people at NVIDIA, working on the GPU computing. Just LMK if you want to connect.
@stevedriscoll2539 Жыл бұрын
I don't know what energy is either, but I know you're english. As far as I know only the english say "trousers"...as for the technical part of this, I am only familiar with the terms and notations but I don't understand it. But, I still found it interesting. What do you think of Eliezar Yudkowsky's end-of-biological-life scenario (via AGI)?
@oskarskalski2982 Жыл бұрын
8:29 JMG mixes up unit of work with unit of energy. Watt is SI standard of work, profesor Lewis talked about energy per volume.
@dj_tika Жыл бұрын
I was about to go to bed and this popped up in my feed and there's no way I can sleep before listening to this! Hahahaha best outro ever!
@tigriukasinlove Жыл бұрын
Oh boy after good work day even greater news an amazing episode of Event Horizon thank you for this great series keep em up ! :)
@SyriusStarMultimedia Жыл бұрын
I say take gravity out of the conversation. Let’s pretend it does not exist. Now unify everything!
@KrustyKlown Жыл бұрын
If it ends suddenly, who cares, you’ll never know it.
@andersistbesser Жыл бұрын
The reason why univers is expanding is because we live in an explosion and its not finished yet. We just experience time differently than it actually happens. Imagine the explosion is only one second and everything what happens is within this second but we experience it as billions of years.
@roberthutchison8197 Жыл бұрын
How long will it be until entropy is 100%? Will that be the end of the universe?
@aroemaliuged4776 Жыл бұрын
He was a great guest..
@ulicadluga8 ай бұрын
16:00 - Perhaps Gravity can explain all the other correlations, forces and particles - if it is conceded a "philosophical" nature. If the creation of time, led to the creation of gravity, and if Gravity is no more than the desire of the "creation particles" to return to a space-time coordinate in which they were created, then their forced seperation would lead to compensatory impulses, analogous to "whirlpools" (centripetal or centrifugal forces) that would allow remnants of antimatter (possibly electrons) to eternally revolve around protons. The strong force exhibits similar "compensatory characteristics", but on the quark level - which must also correlate with the electron behaviour. Even Electromagnetism can be seen as "balancing" (compensatory behaviour). All these properties must have been created in the same creation and dispersion process, which turned the "pressure" of returning to the origin into counter-reactions to the forceful seperation occuring during the "Biggest Bang" and/or other "previous Bangs".
@homosapien0000 Жыл бұрын
When I have a panic attack that's what it feels like.. the universe will just end instantly or something
@comeasyouarent Жыл бұрын
I'm ignorant in physics but very interested about it and the universe. I have a hard time wrapping my mind around the thought that something that had a beginning can be infinite. I never found anything that could explain this in a comprehensible manner (and english is not my first language so that doesn't help). Anyway, very good content right here.
@richb2229 Жыл бұрын
That’s a good concept to get stuck on. The concept of infinite tends to imply something that always existed and always will exist. So how does something that popped into existence last week fall into that concept. In math it is something similar to the difference between a infinite line verses an infinite vector.
@theobserver9131 Жыл бұрын
You might be "ignorant", which only means you have not collected a lot of information, but you are obviously smart. I think your intuition is exactly right. Anything that has a beginning can't be infinite? I'm not a physicist either, but you make sense.
@theobserver9131 Жыл бұрын
@@richb2229 if you don't mind, could you explain the difference between infinite line versus infinite vector? I'm not exactly sure what a vector is, but it sounds interesting.
@theobserver9131 Жыл бұрын
@@richb2229 vector sounds to me like two lines that start from a shared point with the space between them. Like a triangle with an open end?
@theobserver9131 Жыл бұрын
@@richb2229 I guess I could look it up, but it's more fun to get the answer from a human being. Call me old-fashioned. 🙂
@jmanj3917 Жыл бұрын
16:39 I think you're on the right, John. Here's why: I understand that a zero radius leads to the dreaded Infinity. In other words, You can't divide by zero. My snag is: Why are you dividing by zero, anyway? Doesn't Pauli's Exclusion Principle dictate that we shouldn't be trying to divide by zero in the first place? If two Fermions can't occupy the same quantum state, shouldn't there be s "nugget" of compressed matter, literally, not Quite at, but as close as possible (given the limited options for phase spaces and such) to the center? And, since my typing is so abysmally slow, I've been hearing quite a bit of your conversation as I type...lol Maybe the topology change described by your guest can be applied to what I'm saying..? Maybe it's necessary to change the POV of something, somewhere, so why not redefine the landscape but with no actual singularity? Wth do I know, though...lol Great interview, btw. Thanks!
@GenX_-um2ct Жыл бұрын
Expansion since the big bang? Is that whole theory in question now with the discoveries of James Webb Space Telescope? Galaxies too large to exist at the alleged dawn of time put the whole theory as I understand it in question. If physics are not constant through time, then how do we know anything related to science?
@AbbStar1989 Жыл бұрын
Love listening to Prof. Lewis especially when he talks to Dr Karl.
@bijaybenz Жыл бұрын
One thing i don't understand is, why do we assume that the universe should have been slowing down after the big bang explosion??? In every explosion, particles are initially accelerated due to the force of explosion, then after, it slows down.. what if the universe is still in that accelerated phase from the force of the big bang and yet to reach the phase where it starts to slow down... what makes scientist think that it should already be in she slowing down phase??
@carlbell22265 ай бұрын
Been waiting since 1970s and later but no luck but keeping my fingers crossed plenty of hope lately
@JJ33438 Жыл бұрын
AI will dumb down humans - computers already have dumbed down folks - few "research" anything. they just look up the answer. AI will make it worse. Even now its hard to find employees the exhibit common sense and the ability to use discernment!
@SuperBongface Жыл бұрын
maybe our Universe is far larger than light can illuminate for our eyes to perceive in the limited frequencies our eyes can see it with...
@NullHand Жыл бұрын
We have made artificial eyes, to sense those other frequencies. We even just made artificial ears that can hear Spacetime itself ringing.
@studleydewrite2942 Жыл бұрын
Everything that is exists in the intestinal tract of an entity so large that it's true scale would completely defy human comprehension. Our perception of time would mean nothing to a being whose heart beats only once every billion years. Galaxies are nutrients being processed. Everything is destined for the cosmic crapper.
@indridcold8433 Жыл бұрын
It does matter if the cosmos ends. Death is part of life. If the cosmos ends after I die, it will not matter to me, especially since there will be no me. I can not care about what happens after I die. Nobody can care after we die about anything. Death is the great liberator. Nothing can go wrong after we die. I am looking forward to my eventual death. I am tired of living. It is mainly all about hate, oppression, lies, users, ungratifying work, and illness. I did not sign up did this.
@carlbell22263 ай бұрын
You only mentioned the good bits, I love optimism
@indridcold84333 ай бұрын
@@carlbell2226 The part described about life was not very optimistic. But all the negatives of life will pass very soon. Death is our unconditional, magnanimous, unable to ever be equalled, reward for serving a life sentence none of us deserve. There can be nothing better than to return to being nothing. I routinely try to remember as far back as I can. I have not been able to remember past being in a crib, with a mosquito net over it, and my legs hurting a lot because I was trying to crawl and my legs were too weak. I started crying because my legs hurt. Then I force myself to try to think before that. There, an amazing, uncomprehensible, euphoric, blank is drawn. It is the closest there is to returning to nothing and still be alive. I have absolutely no fear of death because the emptiness beckons me. I yearn for it. I want to become it again.
@SuperBongface Жыл бұрын
why do vacuum and continuum have 2 u's each?
@notsoancientpelican Жыл бұрын
what does it matter to youse--?
@hazonku Жыл бұрын
That was a wonderful interview.
@galenhaugh3158 Жыл бұрын
...more likely to begin at any moment. Like one universe on top of another!!
@Maryland_Kulak Жыл бұрын
Dark energy isn’t a thing; it’s a rhetorical trick. Something is causing the universe to expand but we don’t know what. Calling the thing making the universe expand “dark energy” tells us nothing.
@Sundaydish1 Жыл бұрын
I work in customer service and the company I work for has started using AI to answer emails. It is an idiot. I keep having to apologise to customers for being sent the wrong response. Some of our customers are already saying "Can I talk to a human please".
@jeromebarry1741 Жыл бұрын
It's pleasing to learn that piling papers higher and deeper cannot have an infinity, either. This is in re: ArXiv being too fire-hosey.
@alexb6695 Жыл бұрын
I don't think I ever heard about "parity asymmetry". Thank u very much ❤
@Njkk500 Жыл бұрын
As intriguing and amazing as this is, the outro really got me. 😅
@Xwrt532 Жыл бұрын
As per Prof. Lewis's assertion, "dark energy causes expansion to accelerate." What then causes the expansion to slow down or shrink?
@juuu7801 Жыл бұрын
aint it the great attractor that pulls us faster when we approach closer? like some sort of unimaginable huge black hole we cant see yet?
@greggweber9967 Жыл бұрын
13:40 There are many scientists who have such a strong belief that they exclude lines of thought and evidence without looking at them. Is that science?
@newsmonger7710 ай бұрын
A moment in time could be a million years in cosmic terms. I don't think we should be worried.
@cavetroll666 Жыл бұрын
Thanks John for the content cheers from Toronto 🙃
@ashleyobrien4937 Жыл бұрын
what I don't get about the uncertainty principal, is that if we know for a fact that the Planck length and the Planck time are indeed the smallest units and are indivisible, then WHY is it impossible to determine a particles position or momentum and it's energy simultaneously? I know that light doesn't care about time, but surely even light must travel forward in values of Planck lengths and keep it's quanta of energy if the space it is in is a perfect vacuum...I can't help but think we have something wrong here...
@batmandeltaforce Жыл бұрын
There was no "beginning" and there will be no "end". Infinity can not have a beginning or end.
@batmandeltaforce Жыл бұрын
@@johnnyringo35 This is an I.Q. test. We are talking about the infinite universe, not baseball game:) What comes before you "beginning"? Any portion of infinity, is also infinite.
@alexb6695 Жыл бұрын
Nearly similar story with Gravity. We know it exist, what it does and can see n feel it affects, but no clue what it is. The paradox of weakest force in universe (particle physics don't even bother adding it in calculations) has such strong affect.
@jediwarlock1 Жыл бұрын
Theory of Everything: Some aliens told their Super AI to visualize all that is/makes you, and so the big bang appeared for the spawned in beings.
@zzscotty Жыл бұрын
Favorite horror movie: Psycho Favorite British spy TV: 2--Secret Agent (Danger Man) and The Avengers with Diana Rigg
@charlessoukup1111 Жыл бұрын
We realize if we nail down big bang that won't tell us anything? A process? Is there a why? Or what led to a BB? And what before? All observation, conclusions, where does that get us??
@russellneitzke4972 Жыл бұрын
Can the force that prevents infinite mass be dark energy? Can dark energy be anti-gravity which scales only in places like the voids where there is no mass?
@leetrask6042 Жыл бұрын
Watts is an MKS unit. A watt is a joule per second. In the English system power would be ft-lb/sec.
@senecaflint6853 Жыл бұрын
The idea of AI machines doing science for us and making scientists obsolete reminds me of the adeptus mechanicus from 40k or comstar from battletech. Scientists become little more than priests who interpret answers that computers tell us, despite not at all knowing how the machines work or why they’re arriving at certain answers
@fred_2021 Жыл бұрын
I guess that's the relatively near future. I imagine a world populated by humanoid machines, all linked by a kind of world wide web. It would be akin to telepathy, but more like a global mind. Science, technology, engineering, government - the whole kit and caboodle - would be handled at warp speed, faster than humans could keep track of. Humanity might either be saved from their own limitations and savagery, or face extinction.
@jajupa78 Жыл бұрын
That answer is 42 of this, i am sure..
@ZestyCrab10 ай бұрын
What's the "archive" being referred to here? Easy to access?
@JoeTheDIY Жыл бұрын
What if there have been an infinite number of big bangs? Would the gravity of previous visible universes, outside our ability to detect or see, have enough mass to rip other big bangs apart at an increasing rate? Could that account for increasing expansion?
@redtrees Жыл бұрын
no
@ugiswrong Жыл бұрын
yes!
@absolutelyreel8795 Жыл бұрын
Maybe!
@Mr.johninjax Жыл бұрын
Unknowable.
@martinwilliams9866 Жыл бұрын
Well I'm glad everyone agrees!
@Jaggerbush Жыл бұрын
When you die - its all gone as far as you or anything you ever knew are concerned.
@rossneilson Жыл бұрын
Ok I've been sitting on this hypothesis for over 2 decades now because no one has ever suggested it before and I thought I must be stupid but has anyone calculated the solar solar sail effect? So here it is. What is the effect of all the solar radiation pushing against every other star in the universe? Considering the fact that every star also constitute a huge surface to push agents. Ie a solar Sail. But with gravitational affecting mass. Could this not be dark energy that everyone has been looking for?
@oskarskalski2982 Жыл бұрын
Actually there is something called galaxy wind and this is thought to contribute to S8 discrepancy. Although it is thought to be too small contributor anyway, since distances between galaxies are huge compared to the amount of radiation.
@martinwilliams9866 Жыл бұрын
I thought something similar to that, including neutrinos & gravity waves, within a galaxy, which I called ambient mass.
@rossneilson Жыл бұрын
Ok but how long ago were the calculations made. I'd like to see the maths updated with our current estimates for the total number of stars plus taking into account, the full span the star formation, how densely packed they were in the past, how fast everything was already traveling when the first star formed, our new estimates on Stella numbers, the added boost's caused by the more frequent super Nova's of predicted hyper giant stars etc etc. Basically we need a super computer and all current knowledge and let's double check that assumption 🤔
@soularis3510 ай бұрын
So if our universe exists in the skin of a bubble and it expanded from the big bang it would be like standing on an island and our visible universe would disappear on the horizon. The inside of the bubble being an internal dimension and the outside would be an external one not visible to us. And surface tension would play a large part in holding everything together. This 3.14 might and the curvature of our universe might be a thing 🤔. I'm sure people living on an island 10k years ago thought they could see there universe 😉
@pavel96526 ай бұрын
The topology is believed to be flat or if the universe is spherical it has to have a minimum size to appear flat within the measurement error. The space extends, which primarily applies to space between galaxies.
@frogisis7 ай бұрын
Maybe this is actually happening to us all the time but by definition we can never find ourselves to be in a version of the present where we observe it.
@tadejpeckaj1151 Жыл бұрын
Great talk! And the outro.. seems scarily familiar 😬
@AndrewBlucher Жыл бұрын
I think it's a fallacy that there are no new ideas in Hollywood. I think there are plenty of idea, but they are rejected by the studios who want low risk investments.
@dubsar7 ай бұрын
I had a glass of wine. Now I am considering an infinite universe in which some infinitely large regions are experiencing a collapse and other infinitely large regions are being ripped apart by the gravitational forces of this infinite universe.
@stricknine6130 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic interview! Thanks!
@rockets4kids Жыл бұрын
This one was especially good.
@edwardbell492811 ай бұрын
Soooo...they don't like infirmities. He said himself there are possible infinities but here is how we can work around those. Cosmological version of placing your hands over you ears and saying la-la-la-la when the figures don't come up to your liking. I agree that infinities are probably the equivalent of the hidden areas on a game map, but to not consider the possibilty that there infinities means denying that the cat is indeed just a cat and is not being very open minded. Still love the episode and as always thought provoking and fascinating...
@abyssoftus Жыл бұрын
I appreaciate that he was trying to go for the foot-pound per cubic yard energy density for imperial units.
@kx4532 Жыл бұрын
Superluminal gravitational blast wave maybe. It smishes the vacuum and the universe flat to zero size! We live in the recoil maybe.
@locust3349 ай бұрын
Everything has a beginning and an end from our perspective in 3 dimensions so we need everything to be quantified. What if infinity doesn't need to be banished but included in our theory's. What if space time and infinity are linked and that is the 4th dimension or the field that that or 3 dimensions exist
@jamesfowley4114 Жыл бұрын
When something goes past the cosmological horizon does it's gravity disconnect, or stop affecting us?
@ChristianHWilliams Жыл бұрын
Good program. Thanks John.
@ulicadluga8 ай бұрын
10:20 - Gravity, in "philosophical" terms is the "desire" of "matter" (or energy, or strings, or whatever is the original "thing") to return to its place of creation. And there is no other explanation for gravity, because there is no clear reason for apparently "all matter" to be attracted, unless all matter (energy, etc.) is essentially the one singular creation. If all matter were the result of various unrelated processes (rather than an "iteration" of a singular repeating process) then the laws of physics should be violated in parts of the universe - or at least they should not be uniform throughout the Universe.
@jmsconflictreports Жыл бұрын
A good movie, "An American Werewolf in London," with a Dr. Peppar addiction is possible if you watch it too much.
@Dogtroll Жыл бұрын
Maybe the reason why we can't solve for everything is just because of the fact that to do so would be to solve for infinity. Just like trying to draw a perfect circle seems like it should be a relatively easy and achievable task but you can't simply because of the fact that drawing a perfect circle would be the same as solving for circular infinity. Or if you can solve for circular infinity it should take just as long as solving for linear infinity despite the fact that circular infinity seems like it's much easier to observe the entire equation or theory in its entirety compared to linear infinity.
@MichelleHell Жыл бұрын
The universe is solving itself. It would take as much energy to actually predict every particle. In that sense our universe is a simulation, but not the digital kind. The kind of simulation where you sit back and wait for the result to be computed. You can know the outcome of the universe by being there as it unfolds. This is how a computer scientists dive deep into the smallest computable unit in the universe when devising sub-microscale computer hardware. You end up with a view that sees the universe as a simulation. Not a digital computer simulation from an alien civilization, but a simulation as the unfolding of the physics in real time.
@Frank-ve7ep Жыл бұрын
Personally I think we over estimate our intelligence sure we’ve been consciously aware for millions of years but the world is literally billions of years old (that we know of) it’s just incomprehensible by size power and meaning And the faster it expands the faster we must indulge in the knowledge of it Kind of like trying to catch up to a fast car with the answers while chasing it on foot… the first second was the easiest moment to understand but the faster the car goes the less realistic you are to walk up and open the door 😂😂
@evihofkens9530 Жыл бұрын
A lot of things are already not understood by most people.
@deanwalker5367 Жыл бұрын
Wrong there was no beginning to the universe only a beginning to how we can measure it through observation. The big bang was not a beginning, just a period of rapid expansion.
@Aslowfade Жыл бұрын
Having watched all the episodes of Ahsoka ( Yeah I was the one that did.) I'm all for A.I writing scrips.