why you can't explain qcd
37:26
oops all Jupiters
16:32
Ай бұрын
that dark matter video aged like milk
1:00:28
applied quantum mechanics
28:22
2 ай бұрын
stellar anatomy in world building
27:03
long live scientific debate
47:02
3 ай бұрын
the concept of temperature
50:50
3 ай бұрын
physicists only have 5 jokes
19:10
pulsar distance: one weird trick
25:23
"magnetic forces do no work"
40:56
the faraday effect
39:00
5 ай бұрын
of course antimatter falls down
39:09
how to teach yourself physics
55:30
the physics of pokémon evolution
32:30
a tiny peek at Christmas economics
52:00
the antimatter video
1:07:26
8 ай бұрын
violin plots should not exist
42:15
the computers can play stratego now
39:24
a nuclear physics primer
37:19
10 ай бұрын
alkaline water ...with lemon
1:00:25
11 ай бұрын
The Scourge of the Shire
55:13
11 ай бұрын
Пікірлер
@samuelculper4231
@samuelculper4231 50 минут бұрын
Arthur approved
@Sugar3Glider
@Sugar3Glider 2 сағат бұрын
He had the equations in the spreadsheet. *_*Flabbergastedly ambulates_** Talk about poisoning the well
@jaymenjanssens720
@jaymenjanssens720 3 сағат бұрын
🔥
@percylpaul
@percylpaul 3 сағат бұрын
good thanks for this!
@Freddisred
@Freddisred 4 сағат бұрын
The topic of 'how much agency is an AI clone anticipated to have?' is wild, especially when the default behaviours for these systems are unpredictable and biased towards attempting to mislead its human reviewers. Hopefully the wizard will acount for this when it creates AI clones in 5 years.
@enigmaraven2999
@enigmaraven2999 4 сағат бұрын
Part of the problem with people thinking the A in STEAM stands for the creative arts is people will go "See? now it includes all the careers you can go in! You don't have to go into science or engineering, you can also go into graphic design!" and then they just... forget that the humanities exist? I don't know if anyone else has experienced this, but I've seen it happen multiple times and as a history major it's always really funny. Also, are the social sciences included in STEM? Because you'd think they'd be, but people always seem to forget those too.
@MRKetter81
@MRKetter81 4 сағат бұрын
yup... this is why most philosophers still have a fun field day shattering your self aggrandizing echo-chambers. Just a simple math question since the topic is so elementary. What is the set of all sets that doesn't contain it self?
@ronniesan9805
@ronniesan9805 5 сағат бұрын
Idea: Lets keep republican, evangelicals, nutty conspiracy theorists and right wingers (all the same if you must) away from the public education system. Hire experts and invest more into our public education system. That may not solve all, but it's a start.
@EvelynNdenial
@EvelynNdenial 6 сағат бұрын
unfortunately you have fallen into their trap and directed a ton of traffic to their shitty shitty article.
@arturocuya7578
@arturocuya7578 6 сағат бұрын
Bro really thinks people who comment on videos watched the video
@maxpeterson8616
@maxpeterson8616 7 сағат бұрын
Thumbs-up for saying of Hoyle; "This mother f***er". 🎉 I read "The Black Cloud" as a kid with a more modern cover.
@alexcoroian3983
@alexcoroian3983 7 сағат бұрын
spherical cow reminds me of cow tools
@alexcoroian3983
@alexcoroian3983 6 сағат бұрын
whats a microcanonical
@jiteshvora86
@jiteshvora86 7 сағат бұрын
You think he is handsome? I guess beauty is in the eye of the beholder
@cpcp-qx5bl
@cpcp-qx5bl 7 сағат бұрын
The same problem exists in law, it's called the sovereign citizen movement. Nobody trained in any highly specialised field will ask "what if they're right" because we know what it's like when an amateur turns up thinking they know it all.
@matt4497
@matt4497 8 сағат бұрын
I'm going to guess water, you can't do chemistry without it.
@maxpeterson8616
@maxpeterson8616 8 сағат бұрын
In extreme cases, cavities have led to sepsis in rare cases, iirc. As someone who can't afford to get dental work done, I live in fear of this.
@gargrazz
@gargrazz 8 сағат бұрын
I was an associate producer working on those documentaries on Discovery and History Channel in the 2010s. We had them all on and let them say whatever they wanted and I was vaguely aware that we were just doing pop science at that point... but I knew it was BS when those dudes started popping up in tours of Saudi Mega Projects. Good grift, guys. I see you, now.
@immabird7861
@immabird7861 8 сағат бұрын
What's wrong with Tom Bombadil?!?!
@christopherwhittaker2620
@christopherwhittaker2620 9 сағат бұрын
You’re views on the women in lotr is so wrong it’s not even wrong.
@mydogeatspoo
@mydogeatspoo 9 сағат бұрын
Definitely read then watch The Expanse, in my opinion.
@Mkiv-A80
@Mkiv-A80 9 сағат бұрын
It was the same person commenting 900 times from different accounts Absoluty love your videos
@Null94
@Null94 10 сағат бұрын
BUT TARS IS LIKE A 5000lb BRICK
@BenIsOnlyAsking
@BenIsOnlyAsking 10 сағат бұрын
Have you ever considered making a video about why crackpots always try and shove “consciousness” into some insane “theory of everything”? My dad is on this kick and I’d love for us to collectively groan at him 😂
@Josh-tj2kz
@Josh-tj2kz 11 сағат бұрын
Your a passive crackpot
@Krossfyre
@Krossfyre 11 сағат бұрын
I haven't finished the video yet so this might be brought up later, but I think people are using AI in two distinct meanings but don't realise the distinction. There's a lot of things we call AI that can only do a few narrow things. These range from how an enemy in a video game works (usually an understandable script), to much more complex things like AlphaGo or ChatGPT, which are black boxes of decision making but still only do a few things. These are what we call weak AI, though that is a nebulous term because AI itself is so nebulous, as seen in the previous examples of the wide range of things we label AI. Then there's strong AI, things out of sci-fi where it's like a human mind (artifical general intelligence) to being way smarter (superintelligences). But we never speak of the difference to the general public, and people don't understand and many don't want to understand that they are not the same and the gap is massive. AI does exist, but not as they want it and it won't exist for a long time.
@immabird7861
@immabird7861 11 сағат бұрын
Is schrodinger's cat funny? Heisenberg: I'm uncertain. I'm sorry but that is hilarious.
@ReallyGoodBadBoy
@ReallyGoodBadBoy 11 сағат бұрын
This lady is really mean spirited and bitchy, I LIKE HER!!! 😊 👍
@johnnyragadoo2414
@johnnyragadoo2414 12 сағат бұрын
I'm uncertain about Schrodinger's joke.
@caseymead9399
@caseymead9399 12 сағат бұрын
Immediately resorting to ad hominems is a sign of an irrational and biased researcher. You cannot expect anyone to take you seriously like that.
@QuinnTaran
@QuinnTaran 12 сағат бұрын
One thing you didn't mention in this video is the way that the postdoc system traps international academics. If a bright student comes to the US for grad school on an academic visa, that visa will expire unless they get a postdoc with a professor that can support it. They've spent around five years in the US; for all intents and purposes they are Americans, but they cannot stay in their new home unless they sign up for this exploitative contact. Industry is essentially a non-option, as those work visas are largely granted through a lottery system. For international academics, the postdoc is comparatively the most stable option. This is especially frustrating because these are precisely the highly qualified immigrants we would expect the US to want to welcome into our economy (or at least that policymakers SAY they prefer). For now, as long as there are international grad students, there will always be postdocs.
@bulldozer8950
@bulldozer8950 12 сағат бұрын
Thank god you touched on the job hunting thing. People do not get it at all. My mom was telling me how I should’ve gotten an internship this summer and I was like ya I tried but none of them responded because I didn’t have a gpa yet. And then she’s like “you know when I was in college I worked at an internship at delta and it wasn’t the closest thing because I was a civil engineer, but it was a good start and you just have to put in some effort” and I’m just like omg, you really just don’t understand. That’s exactly the kind of internship I would be perfectly happy with, that just doesn’t exist, you’re talking about how the school just had all these internships to match you with and that doesn’t exist anymore, now you have to apply to at least 100 internships to get something like that that’s even somewhat related to your field. You literally have no concept of how much harder it is, your bottom line for the “it’s not really close but I guess it’s the best I can do for a first internship” is my “wow that would be an amazing first internship if I could get lucky with that, but I probably won’t be able to get it”. Like old people literally have 0 concept of applying to jobs now it’s insane.
@mrhassell
@mrhassell 13 сағат бұрын
If it falls up, you win a Nobel Prize. If it falls down, people tell you 'I told you so'. - Prof. Jeffrey Hangst
@s.toctopusn248
@s.toctopusn248 13 сағат бұрын
steam is essential to run our generators. Without steam there are no engine and no industrial revolution.
@RPWhitworth
@RPWhitworth 14 сағат бұрын
"These books should come with maps" killed me 😂 Your videos are so good
@Ubeogesh
@Ubeogesh 14 сағат бұрын
My instant reaction is, what's the point of calls with voices and videos if it's just a bunch of AId talking. Can't they have a more effective mean of communication?
@lobster-music
@lobster-music 14 сағат бұрын
Throwing grenades into the basement - it was actually a very common way of mass execution used by Germans across Europe. Grenades were cheap, accessible, and of course easier than shooting everybody individually. So, most likely the french soldier has seen this being practiced by Germans and gave them a taste of their own medicine.
@nedkelly8167
@nedkelly8167 15 сағат бұрын
My son, living in Australia, has a bit of a learning difficulty and struggles to get good marks in exams. However, he loves science and, in my assessment, learns enough to understand the material. His high school has tried to prevent him from taking calculus, physics, chemistry, and even biology since grade 10. We fought hard to get him enrolled in these subjects. He was failed in physics in grade 11 and is now being failed in chemistry and calculus in grade 12. This seems to be because the school, being a relatively high-ranking public school, wants to maintain its high ranking by failing weaker students in difficult science exams (this prevents these students from being counted in the ranking). As a result, many students are discouraged from taking science subjects (only around 30% take calculus, 20% take chemistry, and 10% take physics). I am tired of fighting and am considering giving up. Are we wrong to want an education in science subjects instead of subjects like geography, accounting, or nonsense IT?"
@iuliasima3599
@iuliasima3599 15 сағат бұрын
Gosh, but he is not handsome..
@wbwarren57
@wbwarren57 16 сағат бұрын
I think you were taking the wrong perspective. Someone famous has said that the only type of book or material that people try and steal is science fiction books and materials. Along the same lines, people only believe lies about things that they care about. The fact that string theorist Succeeded at lying for so long means that people are enthralled with science and that’s not such a bad thing.
@AA_Warlok
@AA_Warlok 16 сағат бұрын
Chaos the maximum separation of a system. Equilibrium the maximum mixture of the system. Entropy is the measured value between the two.
@AA_Warlok
@AA_Warlok 16 сағат бұрын
Ideals and concepts go hand in hand.
@mrhassell
@mrhassell 17 сағат бұрын
It's silicon, the real superstar in material science! Silicon most significantly, is the backbone of electronics. The material of computer processors (integrated circuits). It can switch between a conductive and insulated state, ideal for transistors. Integrated Circuits, use silicon wafers, in everything from smartphones to supercomputers. Silicon-based photovoltaic cells convert sunlight into electricity, as solar panels by the semiconductive properties of silicon. Light pulses in silicon fibres enable high-speed data transmission by fibre optics. Micro-Electro-Mechanical Systems or MEMS, in sensors, detect motion, gyroscopes, printers, accelerometers and sensors in smart devices. Silicon’s versatility extends to alloys (e.g., silicon-germanium) and compounds (e.g., silica). Silica (SiO₂) which forms glass, makes optical fibres, and it even serves as a desiccant.
@davidmarshall2399
@davidmarshall2399 17 сағат бұрын
Maybe we should humble ourselves and call it the Loeb Telescope, but then the physics establishment / bloggers won't even look through it
@knight_kazul
@knight_kazul 17 сағат бұрын
“Can't actually get data; you're just getting vibes.” ~ Angela Collier on violin plots sentence of the video, imo 11:32
@APR80s
@APR80s 17 сағат бұрын
What you explain from the minute 14:13 is one of the reasons why Joe Rogan is an idiot for bringing Torrens Howard's to his podcast to speak nonsense while he just noded and said WOW
@martianpudding9522
@martianpudding9522 17 сағат бұрын
I do think there's something very appealing and probably not in a healthy way about the idea of having a roommate who is incapable of disliking you and will do whatever you want. Like what we imagined those robo dogs in the 90s would be like but they can talk and help you with your chores and go places with you
@RYOkEkEN
@RYOkEkEN 17 сағат бұрын
Francis G. J. Perey looks like wolverine's fam?
@hahahaha2142
@hahahaha2142 18 сағат бұрын
Wait your telling me teachers are not getting paid during summer breaks?
@martianpudding9522
@martianpudding9522 18 сағат бұрын
I do find it kind of fascinating to see the kinds of humanoid robots people thought of in fiction before personal computers were a thing. Like I guess that was the most intuitive way for people to imagine a machine that did a traditionally human task, even though now it seems pretty obvious that would lead to a ton of redundancy. Like if you want automatic toast you make a toaster with a timer and some sensors, not a big metal guy who can bake your toast in a pan at your stove. But still to a person who can't comprehend computers a metal guy is apparently easier to come up with still. I have a bachelor's in IT and I was really fascinated when I read I robot a while back (it's really different from the movie) because it's simultaneously not at all like what modern computing is like but also remarkably relatable. Like they have robot psychologist that have to figure out why robots aren't working right and have to verbally convince them to do what they're supposed to do, and while that's absurd it was also surprisingly apt for what debugging code feels like. On a related note the other way around I also think it's interesting how we still humanize machines that aren't remotely humanoid. Like it's pretty common for people to lash out at or try to reason or plead with their appliances
@mitchellangelo86
@mitchellangelo86 18 сағат бұрын
"Have you even thought about this for a second?" Clearly, he has not.