TRANSCRIPTIONEnglish

What Really Is Everything?

43m 1s5,778 mots1,047 segmentsEnglish

TRANSCRIPTION COMPLÈTE

0:03

a barren stretch of desert is dimly lit

0:06

by the brightening sky

0:08

there are still 30 minutes before

0:10

sunrise but above the clouds the stars

0:12

have already faded and a deep blue

0:15

shadowless light suffuses the desert

0:18

floor

0:20

in the last few months the flat

0:22

featureless ground has been transformed

0:24

a 30 meter tall steel tower bearing a

0:27

terrible payload stands alone at the

0:30

foot of the ascora mountains surrounded

0:33

by little more than criss-crossing tyre

0:35

tracks leading three kilometers from a

0:37

now empty adobe ranch house

0:40

beyond situated to the north west and

0:42

south all at a deliberate nine kilometer

0:44

radius from the tower are three part

0:47

buried shelters each with their windows

0:50

turned towards their joint focus the

0:52

scientists and soldiers now encamped

0:54

within these shelters cannot see the

0:56

tower at the circle's epicenter

0:58

but they will soon see all too well the

1:01

effects of its fateful payload

1:04

not knowing what to expect they lie on

1:06

the ground feet pointed towards the

1:08

invisibly distant tower and listen to

1:11

the countdown as it crackles over the

1:14

public address system

1:17

at precisely 5 30 a.m on the 16th of

1:20

july

1:21

1945 an earth-shaking boom marked the

1:25

beginning of a new era of civilization

1:33

and the birth of a new branch of physics

1:37

the so-called gadget bomb which had been

1:40

hoisted to the top of the firing tower

1:42

imploded beginning a devastating nuclear

1:46

chain reaction within its plutonium core

1:48

the nuclear bomb exploded with a force

1:50

equivalent to 21 000 tons of tnt within

1:54

a fraction of a second the steel tower

1:56

was vaporized and the desert floor

1:58

melted to a green glass

2:00

dim dawn turned to bright day in an

2:03

instant as the blast ballooned and then

2:05

mushroomed into the now iconic symbol of

2:08

the nuclear age

2:11

this was the trinity test the first ever

2:13

full-scale detonation of a nuclear bomb

2:16

which would come to shape the course of

2:18

history and the field of science

2:24

the 1930s had seen monumental advances

2:27

in atomic science and radiation research

2:30

and the spectacular discovery of nuclear

2:32

fission in 1938 was overshadowed by the

2:35

outbreak of war just a year later but

2:37

physicists were quick to realize the

2:39

devastating potential of their new

2:41

discovery albert einstein co-signed a

2:43

letter to then-president roosevelt with

2:45

a warning it is conceivable that

2:48

extremely powerful bombs of a new type

2:51

may thus be constructed

2:53

so the u.s developed their own bomb

2:56

before any other nation could

2:59

the test was considered a great success

3:01

and just 21 days later the united states

3:05

dropped a similar atomic bomb the

3:08

so-called fat man on the city of

3:10

nagasaki japan

3:12

[Music]

3:14

if it had not been for the deadly

3:16

pressures of war nuclear science may

3:18

have followed a very different and

3:20

likely slower path

3:22

the exploration of the atom one of the

3:24

tiniest particles of matter had until

3:26

then been little more than a curiosity

3:28

the domain of at first philosophers and

3:31

then gentlemen's scholars small

3:33

improvements in experimental methods and

3:35

equipment brought small breakthroughs

3:37

until the fateful revelation that atoms

3:39

and their nuclei were indeed not the end

3:43

of the russian doll

3:44

a discovery that led directly to new

3:46

mexico and then japan

3:48

[Music]

3:53

as the glow from that first nuclear

3:55

explosion faded it left behind a new

3:58

thirst to understand what our universe

4:01

was actually made of

4:03

and how it came to be

4:06

that journey the quest to discover what

4:08

makes up everything would see scientists

4:11

delve ever deeper down a rabbit hole of

4:13

matter and mass of fields and particles

4:16

and even further back in time in a

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century-long quest to answer the

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immortal question

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what is

4:25

at its most fundamental level everything

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and perhaps even more importantly

4:32

is any of it

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really real

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at all

4:50

[Music]

4:57

this video is sponsored by magellan tv

5:00

the documentary streaming service

5:02

question how long does it take for a

5:03

black hole to die a 10 to the power of

5:06

67 years b google years or c it never

5:10

dies it just sort of lingers like a bad

5:13

smell

5:14

that's right it's 10 to the power of 67

5:17

years

5:18

ages and the fact they evaporate at all

5:21

is due to heisenberg's uncertainty

5:23

principle something you can find out

5:25

plenty more on by watching our

5:26

recommendation on magellan tv this week

5:29

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5:32

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5:36

into the achingly confusing quantum

5:38

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5:39

they're a sort of netflix for

5:41

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5:43

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5:45

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5:51

so click on the link in the description

5:52

for an exclusive month-long free trial

5:55

for history of the universe viewers

5:58

thanks

5:59

[Music]

6:03

it was ancient indian philosophers of

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the 8th century bc who first asserted

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that nothing we experience

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is in fact

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real

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such an extreme reductionist philosophy

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is simple enough to follow a cart can be

6:19

broken down to its component parts

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wheels axles yoke those components can

6:25

too be broken down a wheel becomes a hub

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rim and spokes each succession of

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smaller parts can be broken down further

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by hand and with specialist tools until

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nothing remains but a collection of

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minuscule specs each indistinguishable

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from the next

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what then are the objects of our

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experience is everything if not piles of

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such specks amassed and organized to

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give the appearance of something greater

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these looming existential puzzles were

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visited again by ancient greek

6:59

philosophers some 400 years later

7:02

considering the same problem democritus

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and lucipus came to the same conclusion

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ultimately everything we can see and

7:09

touch can be broken down time and time

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again until an impasse is reached of

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tiny particles that can be divided no

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further democritus gave these

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hypothetical particles a name defining

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them by their fundamentally indivisible

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nature

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at thomas meaning uncutable

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today we know them

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as atoms

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and yet it wasn't until the 19th century

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that science rather than philosophy

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allowed researchers to probe the nature

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of these mysterious uncuttable atoms

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in the early 1800s english chemist john

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dalton spent his summers in the

7:52

mountains of the lake district in

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northwest england before the advent of

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comprehensive maps of the region he was

7:59

an authority measuring their altitude

8:02

and distances through his own hiking

8:03

experience one can imagine his mind

8:06

wandering in these hills both measuring

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and musing upon the remarkable theories

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he was forming within his manchester

8:14

laboratory

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for dalton spent the rest of his time

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analyzing the nature of various chemical

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compounds

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[Music]

8:24

these compounds were as distinct as the

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peaks he knew so well what was it about

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their basic nature that made them behave

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so differently

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all of these chemicals he posited were

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composed of simple indivisible building

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blocks that related to the elements that

8:41

made them up so methane as a combination

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    What Really Is… - Transcription Complète | YouTubeTranscript.dev