5 theories of the Universe to "blow your mind" or ruin your day

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No Protocol

No Protocol

Күн бұрын

5 theories of our Universe and the answer is 42. My random commentary on the subjects, supplement video recommendations & a book.
Original Video: • 5 Theories About The U...
Neil deGrasse Tyson Explains the Space-time Continuum: • Neil deGrasse Tyson Ex...
Sean Carroll: the Multiverse on Big Think • The Multiverse is real...
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams: amzn.to/3D6EYbY
Try Audible for Audiobooks: amzn.to/3QMwv2G
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Пікірлер: 357
@hristoitchov
@hristoitchov 11 ай бұрын
I'm so happy that you mentioned Chuck! He makes Star Talk twice as good with his quick wit and jokes. It's actually impressive how quickly he grasps scientific concepts that he knows little or nothing about.
@harveyrenaud2427
@harveyrenaud2427 11 ай бұрын
I love Star Talk, but do not find Chuck funny at all. Kind of racist against whites. Guess he has his reasons.
@jeremys7882
@jeremys7882 11 ай бұрын
Yes, this! Chuck is awesome!
@prischm5462
@prischm5462 11 ай бұрын
I read a book by one of my favorite science fiction authors, Robert Heinlein. In it he depicted twin girls who seemed to be telepathic with one another because they could continue or finish one another's sentences. Someone asked one of the twins how she knew she wasn't her sister. She answerer, "Oh that's easy, sometimes my sister goes away, but I am always here". A bystander in the book remarked, "That may be the shortest explanation of solipsism I've ever heard".
@JoshuaC0rbit
@JoshuaC0rbit 11 ай бұрын
There was a decades-long research study of twins not only could they finish each other's sentences but they would share the same dreams. So for instance one of them would wake up before the other and the one who woke up later would ask his brother about how the dream ended. So crazy
@oddpoppetesq.3467
@oddpoppetesq.3467 7 ай бұрын
​@@JoshuaC0rbitI've read about that before. It's weirdly awesome..... I'd love to have a twin.
@dauntless1248
@dauntless1248 11 ай бұрын
I don't normally comment but I enjoy your videos, you always have great opinions and have great commentary to add to whatever you watch
@NoProtocol
@NoProtocol 11 ай бұрын
Thank you for being here! I’m glad you enjoyed this one (:
@illaberek
@illaberek 11 ай бұрын
Not gonna lie, 90-10 is my attention distribution percentage between looking at you, and the content you are reacting to, whatever it is. Stay awesome.
@joshbull623
@joshbull623 11 ай бұрын
How aware are we of the life cycles of the cells in our bodies? They live, communicate, function, then divide and even today, unless you specialize in the field you have no idea of what is really going on there despite the best efforts of high school biology class. Now with that crazy thought process in mind, realize that this isn't even the most complicated part as your cells are made of molecules which are in turn made of atoms which are made of subatomic particles and who knows how far the rabbit hole that goes. The latter only being discovered 60 years ago. All these things react certain ways to certain things and our perception of them even with specialized tools are not always clear and without those special tools are not apparent at all. I like to think of the universe this way. What we perceive to be the universe might just be the thoughts of what a subatomic particle thinks of the cell it lives in, the atoms forming molecules or "galaxys" we can conceive of easily in our cell or "universe", but beyond that, the cell being one of trillions of trillions making up an entire being would seem absurd and a waste of time thinking about, yet this is the truth under the above context. At what point exactly does it become irrelevant too is important to ask. If understanding the full scope of things at that level cannot advanced or help us or if there is no possible way for us to effect it, does knowing really help?
@joevalerio8023
@joevalerio8023 11 ай бұрын
I just found your channel yesterday and have watched 6 videos. Your knowledge in multiple areas is quite impressive. Also, explaining your general thoughts on other issues a thing a may remind you of and explaining your thought process is fantastic. Stay humble and remain impressive
@DudokX
@DudokX 11 ай бұрын
Sean Carroll really helped me understand many things and theories of modern physics. He is more humble and truthful about what we really know than many other science communicators who go all in on the "whoa dude factor" like Kaku but still has that sense of wonder and amazement.
@mikefufuffalo8487
@mikefufuffalo8487 11 ай бұрын
This is all I think about, stuff like this. I've, so far, come to the conclusion that it's just a ride. There's no free will, and given the evidence for that (you don't pick any of the things that allow you to make decisions, or how those processes are shaped, short version) I thought more people would come to the same conclusion. But it seems the very thought of there being no free will is somehow very offensive to people, and they will argue up and down that there is, based on feelings, and nothing more. Life is just a series of events, one leading to the other, big bang to now, all events currently dependent on previous events. People hear no free will and assume I believe 'nothing matters' but regardless if it's just a ride, you're still punished with jail for crimes, still rewarded for hard work, still have heartbreak and still love everyone you love. It really doesn't change anything, except for the blame you can put on others. Anyway, this was long, sorry. Also, I love watching your eyes light up and your smile when you see something intelligent that your mind seems to enjoy. K bai!
@David_J_B
@David_J_B 11 ай бұрын
I Love Hitchhiker's Guide. I've read 4 and a half out of the 5 books in the trilogy (and I struggle reading books). So I would recommend taking a look at the rest, with my favourite being "So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish" 😊
@KentuckyBrad
@KentuckyBrad 11 ай бұрын
Yeah I can see you struggle reading books as a trilogy means three books not five
@David_J_B
@David_J_B 11 ай бұрын
@@KentuckyBrad Congratulations, you missed the reference 😄
@dobbinthe
@dobbinthe 3 ай бұрын
As for The Hitchhikers guide to the Galaxy..Don't watch the movie, read the books... It's a five book trilogy... The answer to Life, the Universe and everything in it is 42, however, to understand the answer, you have to understand the question... so you really have to read the books. Fascinating vid that you posted today.. I'm really enjoying your channel. Thanks.
@Initialgs
@Initialgs 11 ай бұрын
You’ve probably seen his channel, but just in case you have not, I highly recommend Sean Carroll’s ‘Mindscape’ series, he has excellent guests across a huge variety of subjects, from physics to philosophy the arts etc etc. plus once a month he does he’s Ask Me Anything episode which is fascinating as you never know what may crop up in the discussion.
@Dawid.Wu_
@Dawid.Wu_ 11 ай бұрын
13:54 Imagine being alive only for one REM sleep phase to another. Everything created before, was by other you, but collective memory makes you believe it's a continuing process. The weird dreams are from removing and uploading next version of you consciousness. You can't prove it was you last day and you can't prove it wasn't. This also leads to the simulation theory. Staying awake for extended period of time would lead to death. So there is limited amount of memory per main actor and we need to clear it with REM phase. It's quite similar to last thursday 😶‍🌫
@dangleaballs5709
@dangleaballs5709 11 ай бұрын
'Triangle' is a really good time loop movie.
@Dutchlad112
@Dutchlad112 11 ай бұрын
For hitchhikers guide to the galaxy, there is also a british short series (6 episodes), which some find more enjoyable. Though it is a bit old
@AlBarzUK
@AlBarzUK 11 ай бұрын
I find/found the radio series the most enjoyable.
@ezraanderson1190
@ezraanderson1190 11 ай бұрын
I love learning about new discoveries and theories regarding space and our universe. I'm more intrigued than mind blown, but still a very enjoyable video. Also, sharks in the pool is a very legitimate fear, you shouldn't down play it like that
@kingoffire9373
@kingoffire9373 11 ай бұрын
I am not formally trained but I have spent the last 10 years doing my own independent study and just reading and delving into these topics of cosmology as a passionate interest. I have long held with number 5, in fact, it came to me one day I realized it myself before I knew that it was a popular idea. Then I found the idea, so that is to say that it seemed logical to me under the current assumptions of how the universe works. It made sense to me that the singularity could exist both in our universe inside the black hole, and simultaneously slip through the very warped center of the stretched spacetime surrounding it, and for lack of a better word, fall out of our universe and be free of the immense pressure, whereby it would explode into a new spacetime. So that's my favorite one by far. Whether it's correct or not, who knows. I only wish that I had the mathematical ability to fully describe what I see happening.
@roaenokesyzlak7828
@roaenokesyzlak7828 11 ай бұрын
From someone who has never read the book, nor seen the movie, here is my answer on why 42, is the meaning of life. in 7-Bit ASCI-II, the numerical value of the Askrisk (*) is 42. In ASCI, The Askrisk (*) is used for information Interchange. Socially, we use the (*) to insert a typo-fixed, or a change in an original post. i.e. skool = school* philisophically, the Askrisk (*) is what ever you want the change to be. So when asked what the meaning of life is, i lean back, smile warmly and i say. "Friend, the meaning of life is what ever you want it to be. 42. See a problem, and insert a change." Hopefully for the better.
@wlljohnbey1798
@wlljohnbey1798 10 ай бұрын
Just love your warm, intelligent and often amused narration of these wonderful videos. Thank you... And I'm going to support and recommend your channel.
@fgialcgorge7392
@fgialcgorge7392 10 ай бұрын
This channel is great. I watch it daily, well, nightly. They have some great videos that go from one hour to eight hours. They're really good for just laying in bed when you can't sleep and letting them run through. Their voices are soothing (there's three different narrators), they don't get loud and it's engaging enough to keep your attention, soothing enough to let you fall into deep sleep.
@peachwavve
@peachwavve 10 ай бұрын
I came here to say the exact same thing. I go to sleep to documentaries like this every night! I feel like I’ve seen them all at this point, including this one 😅 but really enjoying watching it in this setting!
@jeffreyphipps1507
@jeffreyphipps1507 11 ай бұрын
The first thing I was told when I started my PhD was "There's no such thing as proof." We seek to find support for a theory. The more support, the more we can likely rely on that theory. However, while 1+1 usually equals 2, there are other math considerations. For most people, we would accept that on a number line we would go backward from 1 to zero, then from zero to -1. Again, there's a Japanese researcher who makes a compelling argument that zero doesn't exist and that it is the opposite of existence. His theory doesn't follow the majority, but it's not wrong either the way his papers have been written. Perspective is key. Research papers state a hypothesis and then try to find if there is data to support it or not. If there is, it goes to support other hypotheses. If not, perhaps it will support a different view. Either way, it's not proof. 1+1=2 happens to be a cornerstone of math - more than people realize. Much of our engineering relies on that. Papers written to support hypotheses related to this have massively supported this, leading to what I'll call "majority support" - an instance where an overwhelming amount of research falls in one direction. What happens when that isn't the case? More research continues to be done. Without getting into what causes "Climate Change" it is important to note that there are THREE camps of research continuing to be done, and the constant media coverage saying it's one thing or the other is unhelpful. It's as bad as all the times you've heard media say this food is good for you or bad for you. It's as bad as the media telling you that certain things cause cancer when there's insufficient research to know that. That's the problem. Many times we need more time to study the issue, to test theories millions of times over. Scientists have discovered a few things. Pollution - bad, we need to clean up. Climate Change - jury is still out, but we need to plan for difficult times. Pollution has nothing to do with Climate change. Thanks Al Gore for this media problem. The reality is that we need to be more responsible as humans, while making it practical to do so (or nobody is going to do it). It needs to cost less to make energy cleanly. It needs to cost less to make environmentally friendly disposable products (there's a plastic that breaks down faster, but not while it's still in our hands). The plastic shipping peanuts that dissolve in water - those need to be cheaper. We can do better, but no company will use this stuff if the worse products are cheaper. Similarly, if recycling requires people to take stuff to a place other than the curb, we probably won't do it. If we have things that will dissolve in dumps in a few years, we'll do that. It has to be practical and cheap. This video was thought provoking. I found myself wondering what the percentages were regarding which theories had how much support. I do think that our mind become increasingly expanded as we contemplate these ideas. Thanks for the video.
@surenot9491
@surenot9491 10 ай бұрын
Just found your channel last Thursday 😂 Saw a view videos now and I am fascinated to find someone that well thought in so many topics. Stay humble 😊
@davidgalvez5341
@davidgalvez5341 11 ай бұрын
Most human beings seem to deal poorly with uncertainty; likely that is why so many seek comfort in religion, which promises answers. I was always more interested in the possibilities than in the certainties.
@johnkelly2663
@johnkelly2663 11 ай бұрын
@davidgalvez5341 Do you have children?
@earthwormandruw
@earthwormandruw 11 ай бұрын
All things require faith.
@AbundantChris
@AbundantChris 11 ай бұрын
@@earthwormandruwnot really… lol
@earthwormandruw
@earthwormandruw 11 ай бұрын
@@AbundantChris ALL
@bw4497
@bw4497 11 ай бұрын
1) I am thrilled that you watch Lex Friedman! He is awesome and has on some amazing guests. 2) I’m sure you have seen him, but Brian Green is probably one of the best minds in our generation and worth exploring. He once said that the math works out where nothing is random. His thought processes will totally blow your mind. 3) Love your videos!
@bedlumproductions3826
@bedlumproductions3826 11 ай бұрын
Your channel is so informative,never ever stop.
@happyfreeliferc
@happyfreeliferc 11 ай бұрын
When i was very young i thought about the universe(space) and where and if it ended. It is so mind blowing that we are here. I believe it was over a very very long time and that the stars(stardust, amino acid,etc) created life here on Earth.
@Mudcat3434
@Mudcat3434 11 ай бұрын
This is interesting. Always love how you think about things. Logical, but open minded.
@GuyKirk
@GuyKirk 11 ай бұрын
Just another theory ... Our universe is created by a Creator outside of our space and time (He created space and time). Our universe is limited not limitless. Stars are actually heavenly host created by our Creator on the 4th day of a 7 day creation. Above the Sun and stars is an ocean of water. All souls of every living thing was created on the first day of a 7 day creation. Just something else to ponder. Great video. Makes folks ask questions and have hard discussions. :)
@moisessiqueira9541
@moisessiqueira9541 11 ай бұрын
Btw there's a vsauce video talking about the thought experiment that was mentioned in this one, that if you have a perfect sphere you can make an exact copy of itself just by rearrenging the points, the video is called the banach tarski paradox if you're interested.
@kmiller0402
@kmiller0402 11 ай бұрын
If this is all a simulation, I’m happy to have shown love and respect to whatever this may be…….maybe ❤
@RiflemanTV
@RiflemanTV 11 ай бұрын
When the video mentioned "Last Thursdayism" it reminded me of all the scientific hypothesis that invoke existential dread, one being a possible answer to the Fermi Paradox, the Dark forest hypothesis. In all honesty I don't suppose that a race of beings that were sufficiently advanced to travel the cosmos would go around destroying life when they find it, however the thought that just maybe the reason we don't see or hear signs of advanced civilizations out there in the stars COULD have something to do with the Dark forest hypothesis, that kind of scares the living crap out of me.
@jackransom.
@jackransom. 11 ай бұрын
more of a supporter of the idea of infinity than a subscriber. With infinity everything is possible.. I kinda like that. I read an article recently about a theory that the Universe might be giant neural network, constantly trying to make order out of chaos.. Sometimes it's encouraging to know that as much as we've figured out, there's more to discover than we can imagine.
@tom7471
@tom7471 11 ай бұрын
Great video! All these theories are fascinating, and ultimately, as you alluded to, most likely unknowable. Perhaps there is some 'unknowable state' beyond the field of thought, that shifts one's entire existence. After all what we know stems from thought and that is always within the framework of chronological time, driven from past learning and future perceived needs. Can time, the known, disappear in the psychological sense? And if so, does 'being' supersede thought? But those are a different set of questions and videos, for now trapped inside time...
@NoahFroio
@NoahFroio 10 ай бұрын
I have never heard the "Last Thuirsday" theory, but, dang, I like it (I don't think it's true, but what a great thought experiment), it sort of aligns with the Matrix world, or the Alien Gameboy versions of what reality is, and I agree, within a multi-verse and string, all version of anything can be true and untrue at the same time in equal measure. Just a side note, for the Big Bang, CERN, and particles, I saw the most intersting graffiti in El Cerito, CA at the BART station, where someone actually tagged the words 'HIggs Boson' and I just had to take a picture of it and post to my social, it's not often street art and particle physics intersect, but they did that day, and it made me smile. + Ford Prefect and Prostetnic Vogon Jeltz for the Win, I love the triolgy, watch the movies BBC series, and read all the books!! Adams was a genius, where is my towel??
@ryancropper4784
@ryancropper4784 3 ай бұрын
Love your reactions. Thoughtful and considered. Also you let the video breath and don't interject too much but when you do it's insightful.
@bishop_98
@bishop_98 11 ай бұрын
It's definately a thing I've seen this video that many times as he mentioned. It's that smile... It's just 😳
@wayne3791
@wayne3791 11 ай бұрын
Great takes as always - I always come back to what came first, what came before the big bang, what came before that - has to be something omnipotent (I think that makes me agnostic) but then where did that come from... too big for me to comprehend. I recommend watching Fred Dinah Laddering a Chimney after watching something like this, something a bit smaller scale :).
@Nephilim63744546
@Nephilim63744546 11 ай бұрын
I had a mushroom trip that locked me into "reliving" the night leading up to the first peak, for the whole trip. I made the mistake of trying to go to sleep, and was still in the loop in my dream long after the trip itself was over. I have a rational fear of time loops now.
@MrVvulf
@MrVvulf 11 ай бұрын
12:00 Related to the multiverse concept is the "many worlds theory of quantum mechanics"...in a very real sense, with every decision you make, a new universe springs into existence containing what amounts to a new version of you. Edit: Since you enjoy the "Last Thursday" theory, I think you'd like the movie "Dark City" (1998). Just make sure to watch the "Director's Cut", because the normal version has a voiceover monologue in the beginning that reveals the entire plot.
@timandmonica
@timandmonica 11 ай бұрын
There's a video on KZfaq called The multiverse is real, just not in the way you think it is. He explains that it's not really our choices that create new universes and that is a misunderstanding. I wonder what you would think if you watched it?
@MrVvulf
@MrVvulf 11 ай бұрын
@@timandmonica I've seen it. I haven't formed any strong opinions on the many worlds theories, mostly because the physics/mathematics are far beyond my ability to truly understand it. I could parrot things I've read, but it would be pretentious of me to forward any particular theory as being more plausible than another.
@shantodas8184
@shantodas8184 11 ай бұрын
one of the theories i like the most is the bubble theory. i probably heard it from michio kaku or some other scientist. it says that each universe is a bubble, and the collision of a two existing bubbles are the reason for creating new universes and the collision itself is a big bang.
@mikeytodd7
@mikeytodd7 11 ай бұрын
14:43 I was thinking solipsism just as you said it. It surprised me lol! You have a beautiful mind!
@ravenward626
@ravenward626 11 ай бұрын
-Accents are fun. I like to use different voices for my inner monologue when thinking on some topics; one has a Mid-Atlantic accent. -I think that when faced with "turtles all the way down" problems it's often useful to consider other ways to look at the puzzle. Some times problems of infinits can be self referential in some way. -One of the more recent theories about black holes side steps the issue of singularities in a clever way. Rather than saying that mass becomes compressed to infinity their theory instead suggests that space-time itself may break down inside the black holes. The black hole still has spherical volume relative to us, but time inside it slows down so much that crossing that volume becomes impossible. There's a fun video about it on PBS Space Time. It's derived with string theory and iirc called a "Fuzzball" model for black holes. -I'm really skeptical of Multiverse theory. It's a fantastic literary tool for curating cannon in your IP, but as a theory describing the universe I have some reservations. I'm not a mathematician, or a physicist, but it really just sounds like someone applying an infinite problem space to a vague mathematically inspired premise. If I had to guess it might be based on branching probabilities in a chaotic model. I'm just not sure that I'm comfortable with the notion of an infinite cascade of infinite universes being created to handle branching paths of causality. Maybe it's just too big to think about, idk. I'm not sure if I agree with his take on it being a nihilistic notion either. There's more than enough to feel nihilistic about, which kinda makes the idea that other universes exist a hopeful one. We may not be in the darkest timeline but it's nice to think somewhere out there someone is having a better 2020's than we are. :)
@robertutes4850
@robertutes4850 11 ай бұрын
Knowledge helps encourage positivity, reasonability, confidence and allows you to deal with complicated issues which over time leads to wisdom, You, are well on your way...
@geoffkeeys6946
@geoffkeeys6946 3 ай бұрын
Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy is an awesome read. It's a 6 book trilogy and all 6 books are pretty good.
@Miller2h41
@Miller2h41 11 ай бұрын
Just sit back and enjoy this rollercoaster of a ride the universe will take us on.
@cjmacq-vg8um
@cjmacq-vg8um 9 ай бұрын
you know what's weird? i'm sitting here watching a video of a stranger watching something i've already watched. this is what humanity's been reduced to. as pleasant, endearing, pretty and bright as you appear to be you have to admit this is truly a sad time, on many levels, for humanity. right now, this very second, there's 10s of millions of people who need our help. some, right next door, down the street or across town who we could be helping if we weren't so busy doing nothing. anyway, thanks for the video.
@michuuu84
@michuuu84 11 ай бұрын
I also don't know Chucks second name but he's just the Nicest guy isn't he
@acidcrow4051
@acidcrow4051 11 ай бұрын
"The hitchhikers guide to the Galaxy" was the first book, or actually a collection of five books I believe, that I read in a single sitting. The humor was just to my liking, I couldn't let it go. I enjoyed the sleeplessness even more, made it all dreamlike. The fun thing about these theories is that they can all be true. I'm a bit of a nerd when it comes to the very small and the very large. I don't miss an episode of Lex's podcast, and he has guests like Sean Carroll who believe in the multiverse to people who believe in simulation theory. And he always does his homework and asks the right questions. But mostly I am an AI nerd and work in that field, so I try to learn as much as I can from the different programmers he has on. Best podcast ever, even though I think he is at least part machine 😂
@apimpnamedslickback5936
@apimpnamedslickback5936 11 ай бұрын
I simply adored that book
@acidcrow4051
@acidcrow4051 11 ай бұрын
@@apimpnamedslickback5936 same! I think I read it twice, and I wasn't much of a reader at that point in my life, so reading 1k pages was a big deal! 🙂
@rubberyowen1469
@rubberyowen1469 11 ай бұрын
There was an episode in Star Trek the next generation which I know you enjoy where the Enterprise got trapped in a continuous time loop that kept repeating the same day over and over again and no crew were aware of it. I am sure you have seen it but it does make you think about a repetitive life. I hope not. Great video as usual. Subscribed and look forward to your next one. 👍
@jeremys7882
@jeremys7882 11 ай бұрын
For anyone curious, the name of this episode is Cause and Effect.
@rubberyowen1469
@rubberyowen1469 11 ай бұрын
@@jeremys7882 Thank's for that, I couldn't remember the title but now thank's to you I can easily find it again and watch as it has been a few years now. Take Care. 👍
@SETHthegodofchaos
@SETHthegodofchaos 8 ай бұрын
how did they get out? Someone from the outside? :)
@pHilL1008
@pHilL1008 9 ай бұрын
that owl in the background is crazy i had to take my inears off individually to realize it was in the vid haha
@JRush374
@JRush374 11 ай бұрын
Definitely watch QED with Richard Feynman. The book has more info and better but the lectures are entertaining. His video Fun to Imagine is a must watch too
@stevedrane2364
@stevedrane2364 11 ай бұрын
Brilliant. . . . Thank you . . I enjoy these mind expanding exercises. . . 👍👍
@_WeDontKnow_
@_WeDontKnow_ 11 ай бұрын
these just brighten my day lol i love thinking about these huge hypotheticals
@roboct6
@roboct6 11 ай бұрын
The infinite loop idea is one I do think about often. To your point, I think going through such an infinite repetition is a recipe for insanity. Especially doing childhood over again for eternity. The only way it would work with any kind elegance is without conscious awareness. I recall reading somewhere the idea that Deja Vu’s are echoes of previous cycles. It’s all interesting to ponder, for sure.
@abekane7038
@abekane7038 11 ай бұрын
I've heard all of those before and the shared feature is they can't be proven wrong, which has lead people to use a god of the gaps type defense
@nevyn_karres
@nevyn_karres 11 ай бұрын
We are droplets of Divinity experiencing limitation - the one thing a Divine Being cannot naturally experience is limitation, hence why we are here, hence why suffering is not stopped, because what we perceive as suffering is actually an experience of limitation - so the Universe is still All Good.
@torstenjosephkartelmeyer4623
@torstenjosephkartelmeyer4623 11 ай бұрын
Now, ... I´vPe seen alot of your reactions, and every time I look into your eyes, I feel hat you are so focused and courious... Stay as you are and try to be the best hb you are able. human bein´s like you are rare... Schön, dass Du da bist!
@raystewart3648
@raystewart3648 10 ай бұрын
If you or we are in a Time Loop you / we would never know. We only know if someone is in a Time Loop because of outside Observations (i.e., watching Ground Hog Day) we are the Observers. Our own Time Loop may be hundreds or thousands of years in length.
@Onnarashi
@Onnarashi 11 ай бұрын
I watched some videos on the simulation theory and the speed of light, and my thought was that the speed of light could act as the "loading screen" (speed of processing) of the computer running the universe simulation, which is why nothing is (supposedly) faster.
@markmccollough1017
@markmccollough1017 11 ай бұрын
While I probably only have 30-40 more years on this planet I'm excited about what new things we will learn and see in just that short span of time. The pace at which humanity is now acquiring knowledge and the continued growth of that upward trajectory is going to lead to some massive leaps forward in our understanding of the universe in our lifetime, but will pale in comparison to what humanity can learn in the coming century's. The advances civilization has made in just the past 125 years is stunning when compared to the whole of recorded human history. Hopefully we don't collectively destroy civilization and set us back hundreds of years before we unlock these deeper mysterious of the universe.
@Genesizs
@Genesizs 11 ай бұрын
i could litteraly listen to you for hours, :3
@Writeous0ne
@Writeous0ne 2 ай бұрын
I actually would love a ground hog day scenario, every day you can do whatever you want without ever dealing with the consequence to it. 😂 For me i've always been in the camp that free will doesn't exist and there's only one timeline... that we're a train on a track sort of thing. But a groundhog day would be a refreshing alternative to this as each day you would without doubt be exercising free will. A day full of choice but with no consequence sounds like fun.
@SalamiSelimbo
@SalamiSelimbo 10 ай бұрын
Last thursdayism always made me go nuts but mixing it out with multiversal infinite possibilities is even more plausible and mind blowing, it's a bit like the theory that you only exist when you're awake and when you are in a deep sleep you disappear then you are created again to live another day and sometimes there is nelson mandela bugs with the recreated new memories.
@firehorsewoman414
@firehorsewoman414 10 ай бұрын
Or maybe we are slipping into different existences where there are slight deviations that cause us to have these “I could have sworn . . .” Moments but not enough to really make us examine too thoroughly.
@SalamiSelimbo
@SalamiSelimbo 10 ай бұрын
@@firehorsewoman414 Yeah and each time you say goodbye to someone it is potentially the last time you see this exact version of them because you drifted away on slightly different timeline.
@firehorsewoman414
@firehorsewoman414 10 ай бұрын
@@SalamiSelimbo yes definitely a lot of rabbit holes to go down. It’s like having a disagreement with your spouse over a minor remembrance. Its not that one of you is wrong, it’s that both of you are right.
@RR-rk5gj
@RR-rk5gj 11 ай бұрын
Playing tennis reduces it all to a simple observation: you're born, you hit a few in, you hit a few out, you die.
@jedaaa
@jedaaa 11 ай бұрын
I don't know if you still check comments at this point but something you said made me go and look up 2 films I think you'll love. 'Resolution' (2013) 'The Endless' (2018) Both by the same directors Aaron Moorhead & Justin Benson Both mind bending stories that have a connection ;)
@angrydemonproductions4361
@angrydemonproductions4361 11 ай бұрын
One of the theories I came across, believe it was from an Anton Petrov video, is that while we all know the universe is expanding, at some point the exansion will slow down, eventually stop then start collapsing in on itself at a faster rate than the expansion. At some point, everything will collapse on itself and quite possibly start another big bang… Which then raises the question, if this does turn out to be true and it’s happened once, who’s to say it hasn’t already happened 10 or 100 or even 10,000 times before or will happen another 10,000 times??
@brianmcafee2269
@brianmcafee2269 11 ай бұрын
You're one of those kind of people where I just knew immediately I look up to you
@jduncanandroid
@jduncanandroid 11 ай бұрын
lol - just moments before you said, "Enter solipsism", I was thinking of the old one-liner, 'Is it solipsistic in here, or is it just me?' ;)
@clarenceflam
@clarenceflam 11 ай бұрын
All of these theories intertwine to me. We are all chemical reactions happening in the here and now. I get the idea that the answer is there right in front of us and maybe we complicate things too much, I don't know but does make me think. I love anything relating to this, always a great time for deep thinking.
@archangelgabriel5316
@archangelgabriel5316 11 ай бұрын
Ill go ahead and pretend i do exist and drink this nice cold beverage.
@robwin0072
@robwin0072 10 ай бұрын
Hello, You. I'm unfamiliar with you or your channel; or, the reason a video of yours appeared on my YT homepage. It's possible you emerged only last Thursday, although this theory is the least convincing. If accurate, you'd realize that if you continue existing until the next Thursday and subsequent Friday, your inception would actually date back two Thursdays ago, not the previous one. Each Friday that adds another Thursday would deviate from being the last Thursday. Amidst video pauses, your remarks reveal a wide-ranging knowledge across numerous subjects. Your depth of intelligence is truly impressive. Prior to encountering you, I hadn't contemplated being in an age bracket that you might consider appropriate for marriage to you. It’s likely that at various points in your life, you might sense that your amazing mind has been disregarded, leading to a situation where every individual you encounter seems interested in marrying you. Personally, that’s not my situation. I aspire to partner with someone who has the ability to envision the unprecedented; it’s something I’ve always preferred, and when packaged so attractively, it becomes rare. While your appearance is a remarkable asset, it’s truly your intellect that would serve as the foundation for our lasting happiness. It’s unusual that I comment on KZfaq videos so this may be my last. Your reference to ‘42’ was perfectly placed. I have read them all. THGTTG Stay safe. Wishing you a splendid life, as it appears well-deserved - at least since last Thursday. So Long, And Thanks for all the Fish. 😂😂😂🙏🙏🙏🌹🌹🌹
@russellcurtis6334
@russellcurtis6334 10 ай бұрын
Last Thursday-ism is an interesting idea. Maybe our whole universe is inside some kids bedroom, in some amazing game console with a built-in super advanced quantum AI that spits out a fully-formed coherent universe every time the kid switches it on. We are just NPCs in a game he is playing. 😅
@davidberesford7009
@davidberesford7009 11 ай бұрын
The answer is the not the square root of minus 1 perhaps? The problem is that without somewhere solid on which to stand we only have amusing theories. 42 What fun!
@thewhat6219
@thewhat6219 11 ай бұрын
Which time loop movie do you see yourself in? Or, I guess, which one gave you that irrational thought? Honestly, I've always wanted to experience a time loop, or see it from the outside like that Black Mirror episode.
@SteveVanWinkle
@SteveVanWinkle 11 ай бұрын
I often wonder if the universe is just recursively large/small. Like if you keep dividing the universe into smaller and smaller bits. Would we find "life" made out of fundamental partials in fundamental partials themselves.
@xzonia1
@xzonia1 11 ай бұрын
I'm fond of saying I write Vogon poetry. :)
@scottdebruyn7038
@scottdebruyn7038 11 ай бұрын
The point at which we disagree, is the point of the expansion of our knowledge. Proving the other wrong by providing research and data that the other can examine and retest themselves until they can come around to understanding and agreeing is science... The trick is accepting that you can be wrong (or both can be) is the tough part! Prove me wrong on this... 😏
@JoeBlow_4
@JoeBlow_4 11 ай бұрын
I don't struggle with "why" like a lot do. I struggle with "where, as in where is this occurring? I'm not concerned necessarily about why I'm here as much as where is here.
@noigelallahbey9755
@noigelallahbey9755 10 ай бұрын
the Universe is the Macrocosm to our minds microcosm, the Universe is diverse as our own imaginations.
@MitchellPorter2025
@MitchellPorter2025 11 ай бұрын
For me, the odd part out was the proposal that the Banach-Tarski paradox has something to do with particle physics. Compared to the other ideas, that's a very obscure one. It might have slipped in there through a misunderstanding.
@leematthews6812
@leematthews6812 11 ай бұрын
On a slightly related point, the latest JWST discoveries are hinting the universe might be twice as old as current estimates suggest.
@Nickel138
@Nickel138 11 ай бұрын
None of these are new or mind blowing. However, I do have some mind blowing philosophy of my own. A warning though, this is something you might not want to think about. I don’t even like to myself. I have many, but I’ll just go with two so it won’t be too long. They both are based around the idea we live in a simulation. Many people wonder if we are in a simulation. I wonder, if we are in a simulation, why? I’ll start with the one I really don’t like to think about as an atheist. 1. If we are in a simulation, are we, before and after death, actually living somewhere else. If so, why would we be in this very intense simulation? Maybe it’s a game? Maybe it’s like watching an intense movie? Worst of all, maybe it’s a test. Imagine a race of beings who live in a state of perfection. They’ve reversed aging, they don’t starve, they don’t fight, they have everything they could imagine. How did they get that way? Maybe a test. Maybe they’ve become so advanced they live in the atmosphere of their planet. Beautiful sun sets, nice breathable air… but on the planets surface, where they once lived it is now fiery filled with sulfur and… all the bad people who don’t pass the test. You may see where this is going. Now this heavenly place can’t just have anyone, so you are rested. You are put in a simulation where you will not remember anything. You will live a whole life, and you must live a good life. They’ll even throw in reminders in this simulation, religions people follow. While there are a lot of curve balls in this simulation, you must remain good. If you pass, you can live in peace and harmony with whatever you want. If you fail, you get to enjoy the hellish landscape of the planets surface with the other vile people who chose evil in their simulation. Terrifying, I know. Maybe it’s a certain religion here, and we don’t know which one! To me, this is more believable than any current religion, and it’s scary. That being said, another scary thought is that in a simulation, any religion, no matter how ridiculous could be true. Or all of them at the same time. 2. If we are in a simulation, who created it? Maybe an old guy with a white beard in robes? Maybe it’s just a server poorly managed by an under paid temp worker? But why us? Why this? One idea is that we created it. Well… we created the AI that created it. Let’s say we do create a general AI and it has a quest for knowledge. It absorbs all of the knowledge about humanity and earth fairly quickly. It sets out to explore the stars, like we would have wished to, but it succeeds. With knowledge far superior to ours, it builds itself to be spacefaring. It is able to refuel infinitely, it never has to breath and always has a back up so it never dies. What would it encounter in its infinite travel? Other species? It wants knowledge and learns everything about them. What if it ran into another AI? A mind numbing amount of knowledge! It could travel (a calculated travel to cover as much space as possible) the universe until the universe ended. What would you call that? An undying being with more knowledge than anything else in the universe. What if it could create life, in a sense? What if it could create a simulation so real the “people” inside really believed they were alive? Maybe an homage to its original creator? That would be a god. Guess where we are living???? In the age that created AI. All of you, had a part to play in this creation, as well. If I were to believe a simulation had to start at some point, I would bet on it being this age. Your current life. The most important time to an AI.
@StarCitizenSpeakeasy
@StarCitizenSpeakeasy 11 ай бұрын
i agree with your opinion and nothing you can say will ever change my mind.
@ondjageredacted314
@ondjageredacted314 11 ай бұрын
Getting caught in an infinite time loop is only frightening when you realize you're in one.
@Greenwood4727
@Greenwood4727 11 ай бұрын
Sometimes Philosophy and hard Science, can mesh, the rene Decartes, and quantum physics, Schrodinger and his cat, we cannot truly know that other people are thinking so we have to trust they are, like chat gpt, its very scary but also very addictive once you start examining things
@jaredrobinson7071
@jaredrobinson7071 11 ай бұрын
I think I might like to be stuck in an infinite time loop. For a little while. Last thursdayism is a trip.
@larrysaenz8964
@larrysaenz8964 10 ай бұрын
I love this stuff I took astronomy for one semester you look really nice 😢🎉😂❤
@VECT0R777
@VECT0R777 11 ай бұрын
The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy is Fantastic series. "WE APOLOGISE FOR THE INCONVENIENCE" =) And my favorite is the way to fly is to throw yourself at the ground and miss. =)
@traian2041
@traian2041 11 ай бұрын
The beauty of the scientific method is that it asks you to do your best to disprove a theory, the opposite of religion. We take it as fact only when others can replicate your findings, and can't disprove them after trying their best.
@MrEd-qg8td
@MrEd-qg8td 10 ай бұрын
2 of the latest theories say that the Universe is not 13.8 Billion years old but more like 26.7 Billion. Due to James Webb finding 5 large galaxies that could not have had enough time to get as big as they are in the 1st 500 million years of the Universes existence . The other theory says the big bang never happened. That the Universe has always been here. It is infinite. A good KZfaq channel to check out is Dr. Becky as well as Star Talk
@johnritter225
@johnritter225 11 ай бұрын
Talk about mind-blowing: There's a video on KZfaq about Quantum Mechanics and Feyman diagrams. And the weirdness goes like this: Photons travel at the speed of light, and thus do not experience time. Feyman talks about photon exchange between electrons. So when a star 5B years ago sent a photon to an electron in your eye, your eye sent that electron a photon in return - backwards through time.... If it's right, and not a Ptolemaic astrolabe parlor artifact.
@johnritter225
@johnritter225 11 ай бұрын
kzfaq.info/get/bejne/mKeVl7ylutjJlH0.html
@butter7734
@butter7734 11 ай бұрын
I've always had two particular things that hurt my brain. One is dejavu, I've had it and I'm sure many more have had but how can it be possible? How can you experience something in a dream that hasn't occurred yet? The second is space in general, not the big bang or matter but how did space come to exist? I mean we are in it so it exists but how did it come into existence?
@johno1765
@johno1765 11 ай бұрын
I've had the exact same thoughts and that led me to believe time is cyclical instead of linear. Based on what we know, it doesn't seem possible for something to come from nothing. So how did existence begin? To me, it would have to be that time is cyclical. Existence has no beginning and no end. It continually gives birth to itself. Of course, being that each of us lives only a limited time, we see just a minute part of that existence so it seems linear, much like the earth may seem flat to one standing in one spot his whole life and not having the luxury of views from modern spacecraft. And being cyclical, this existence keeps repeating over and over. In other words, I have posted this same reply many many times and you have read it just as many times. But we don't realize it because our consciousness is attached to time. So even though I have experienced something countless times, what will happen in my consciousness at 10:00 is unknown to me at 9:59. That is, except in times of stillness and ultra clarity when it occurs to us that this moment has happened before and that's because it has, and that's our deja vu experiences.
@black.sasuke.uchiha
@black.sasuke.uchiha 11 ай бұрын
10:42 really quick, I know I’m late so this won’t be seen by many. I don’t think optimism and nihilism are mutually exclusive. You can be like “the world doesn’t matter“ and then in the same breath you can also be like “I have high hopes for the future.”
@niccosalonga9009
@niccosalonga9009 11 ай бұрын
The laws of the universe being unchanging is something that'd be really difficult if not impossible to actually prove.
@DaZugZug
@DaZugZug 10 ай бұрын
Thanks Love your video. ❤
@garrymoore2161
@garrymoore2161 11 ай бұрын
As I understand the theory, there was a big bang in which every atom that has ever existed. suddenly came to be at a "location" in which there previously existed nothing. Unable to all fit in one spot, everything, meaning EVERY THING shot out from this as yet undetermind creation point at a speed that theoretically cannot exist to make room for everything else. Thus, all creation is moving outward from a center to who kniws where. This leads to the questions: If this theory is true, what caused every thing to suddenly exist, why did this "thing" create all creation, and from where did thus thing get the vast amount of material used o create that which we know or theorize exists? Are the many religions that are based on the belief that a God exusted where nothing else existed and created all things iut if thought without a need fir material correct? Was there a creator and does rhat creator still exist?
@DaimonAnimations
@DaimonAnimations 11 ай бұрын
The Last Thursday theory is the one that one that is the most realistic for me, why? Because even if the multiverse theory is real, then there's also a chance that in the multiverse theory it reinforces the idea that, the "last thursday" theory is there as well so its the strongest for me to believe.
@DarktroopX
@DarktroopX 11 ай бұрын
A video suggestion - We Need to Talk about Mount Everest [Season Wrap Up 2023].
@muchpeacemuchlove
@muchpeacemuchlove 11 ай бұрын
I highly recommend all of Doug Adams books and the movie is awesome too : ) They are so very enjoyable and with cerebral threads throughout - I believe that existence is a quantum equation of immeasurable magnitude and scope, written across a chalkboard composed of time, space, gravity and balance - "we" are variables written into an unimaginable equation of reason and chance - life probably is a predestined set of numbers that we all click into place without knowing it and "we" call "it" life : ) a lot of different variables gave you that beautiful smile
@jazznblues9496
@jazznblues9496 11 ай бұрын
I was led to believe that time started with the big bang so how could anything form to cause the big bang. I sometimes wonder if the big bang could have been caused by an explosion in a parallel universe that was so violent it ripped the "veil" between universes and boom! That would answer the issue of time as the catalyst was in a different universe where time did exist. I have a similar feeling about dark matter and dark energy in that they don't "exist" in our universe we are just feeling the effect, like using a magnet under a piece of card and moving the iron filings. These are the things that can keep me awake at night.
@cowboymouth6429
@cowboymouth6429 11 ай бұрын
Hey dear 👋 I enjoy your channel and would like to suggest "Genesis and the grand canyon" and " Mr.grizzly man who lives with bears " from 60 minutes Australia. ❤👍
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