TRANSCRIÇÃOEnglish

Is True Nothingness Even Possible?

57m 46s8,076 palavras1,338 segmentsEnglish

TRANSCRIÇÃO COMPLETA

0:00

What does nothing

0:03

contain?

0:05

On the Earth, a single cubic meter of

0:08

air isn't very much. It's roughly a

0:10

thousand lungfuls. And yet, compared to

0:12

the cosmic average, it's one of the

0:15

densest regions in the universe.

0:18

The largest creatures to swim through

0:20

this volume are the bacteria, drifting

0:23

with the winds and searching for a home.

0:25

Although some spend their entire lives

0:27

airborne, joining the bacteria is

0:29

microscopic detritus. Skin, snot, and

0:32

saliva exhaled and expelled from

0:34

creatures around the world. All the

0:36

complex molecular arrangements that

0:37

[music] our human senses reduced to

0:39

smells. And then there is the air

0:42

itself. Diatomic nitrogen and oxygen,

0:45

carbon dioxide, water vapor, a host of

0:47

less common molecules like methane and

0:49

ozone. But that is still not all.

0:53

Roughly every second, a cosmic ray

0:55

passes through that cubic volume.

0:58

Produced by some high energy process in

1:00

the distant [music] cosmos like an

1:02

exploding star or collapsing black hole.

1:05

This particle will have sailed

1:06

unmolested for billions of years only to

1:09

meet its final end colliding with some

1:11

unlucky air molecule. There is also

1:14

[music] radiation constant and

1:16

ubiquitous of wavelengths up and down

1:18

the electromagnetic spectrum. The

1:20

visible light from the sun shining

1:22

above, the infrared heat from the ground

1:24

below, the stray X-ray and gamma ray

1:27

coursing in from the wider cosmos, and

1:29

the sloshing microwave and radio waves

1:32

carrying messages and signals from one

1:34

side of the globe to the other. That's

1:36

without mentioning the particles that

1:38

almost never make their presence known.

1:40

The thousand trillion neutrinos, the

1:43

everpresent dark matter.

1:52

And so what would happen if you stripped

1:55

all of that away? What if we managed to

1:59

remove every single molecule, atom,

2:02

particle, and photon of radiation? Could

2:05

we make absolutely nothing? Not just

2:07

emptiness, not just a vacuum, but pure

2:11

nothingness.

2:15

The journey [music] to discover the

2:16

answer to this question is a strange

2:18

one. One that will take us from simple

2:20

vacuum pumps to the beginning of the

2:23

universe, from ancient philosophical

2:25

ponderings to the bleeding edge of

2:27

theoretical [music] physics.

2:29

And this is because the question can

2:32

nothing exist has a twin.

2:35

Why are we here?

2:50

The Dextra robot, part of Canada's

2:53

contribution to the International Space

2:54

Station, is operated remotely from

2:56

Earth. Named Dextra because it is

2:59

Dextrous. Controllers at the Canadian

3:01

Space Ay's headquarters in Quebec can

3:03

guide its two multi-jointed arms using

3:06

live video, eliminating the need for

3:08

spacew walks and allowing the astronauts

3:10

a bit of time off. Sometimes it's useful

3:13

to be able to control something

3:14

remotely, even from the other side of

3:16

the world. And if you're looking to

3:18

remotely control your computer for

3:20

personal or business reasons, Anyesk can

3:22

help. Anyes is a lightning fast remote

3:25

access tool that makes it feel as if

3:27

you're sitting right in front of the

3:28

remote machine. We find it especially

3:31

useful for video editing. Our editors

3:32

[music] can access their high

3:34

performance desktops back at home

3:35

wherever they are. Any proprietary codec

3:38

technology ensures minimal lag and crisp

3:41

visuals even over slow or unstable

3:43

internet connections. This allows us to

3:45

keep digging into projects even when

3:47

traveling abroad or on a relation's

3:49

rural Wi-Fi. Anyes is available across

3:52

all major platforms, is backwards

3:54

compatible with older operating systems,

3:56

and has 99.98%

3:58

uptime reliability, so you can depend on

4:00

being able to use it when you need to.

4:02

And what's more, personal use is totally

4:04

free with tailored plans for team and

4:06

business environments. So head to

4:08

any.com to try this premium remote

4:10

access tool free of charge.

4:18

The year is 1654 and Otto Vongerka is

4:22

gently dabbing the sweat from his brow.

4:26

Standing before the emperor of the Holy

4:28

Roman Empire himself, he raises his hand

4:32

and gives the signal. Everything rests

4:35

[music] on this moment. There is a loud

4:38

winnieing and dust billows into the air

4:40

as his two teams of horses heave into

4:43

action, pulling in opposite directions

4:45

and straining the ropes that connect

4:47

them. The two sets of eight are evenly

4:49

matched and very little progress is made

4:51

as the struggling beasts strain and

4:54

sweat digging their hooves into the

4:56

dirt. But no matter how hard they

4:58

struggle, absolutely nothing happens.

5:02

Otto smiles. It's all going according to

5:05

plan.

5:11

Otto Vongerka was the Burgermeister of

5:14

Magnabberg, a city in what was then the

5:16

Holy Roman Empire. In addition to his

5:18

attempts to help his home recover from a

5:20

brutal sacking 20 years before by

5:22

Catholic forces, [music] he was also

5:24

intensely curious about the latest

5:26

philosophical thinking, including the

5:29

increasing popularity of the new [music]

5:31

heliocentric model of the universe. And

5:34

this was connected to his experiment by

5:36

a feature of the old geocentric model

5:38

that had the earth at its center. In

5:40

that model, the universe [music]

5:42

contained no voids. The earth had

5:45

instead been surrounded by a nested

5:47

series of crystalline spheres that

5:49

carried the objects of the heavens with

5:51

no gaps between them. Beyond [music]

5:54

that was heaven itself.

5:57

Yet in the heliocentric model, the

5:59

planets themselves were physical bodies

6:01

that moved through something. And what

6:04

that something was wasn't exactly clear.

6:08

It wasn't air. Otherwise, we should all

6:10

feel the rush of wind as the earth moved

6:12

with great speed.

6:14

And so then what was it? Could it be

6:19

nothing?

6:25

Indeed, the question of whether nothing

6:27

was even possible and by extension a

6:29

vacuum had long baffled scientists and

6:32

philosophers.

6:34

Ancient Greek [music] schools had not

6:36

managed to reach consensus. On one side

6:38

had been the atomists led by figures

6:40

such as Democrus who divided the

6:42

universe into two basic components.

6:46

The atoms and the [music] void.

6:49

The atoms combined in a multitude of

6:51

ways to make up reality, creating

6:53

everything from skin and sweat to light

6:56

and air to emotions and thoughts. The

6:59

void, however, was pure emptiness. The

7:02

stage, [music] so to speak, through

7:04

which the atoms moved, giving the

7:06

universe its basic foundation.

7:10

But opposing the atomists was another

7:12

line of thinking led by none other than

7:14

Aristotle [music] himself. Aristotle,

7:17

like his mentor Plato, outright rejected

7:20

the concept of the void and [music] the

7:21

vacuum. The vacuum could not be

7:23

ascertained by the senses. You couldn't

7:25

smell [music] it, see it, or touch it.

7:27

And so, if you could not encounter

7:29

something, could it truly exist? And if

7:31

that argument wasn't enough, air

7:33

expanded to fill every volume of space

7:35

[music] and container. If you tried to

7:37

create a vacuum, air would simply rush

7:40

in to fill it. [music]

7:42

In other words, nature abhored a vacuum.

7:52

In Muslim and Western traditions, this

7:54

authorative voice of Aristotle had

7:56

echoed throughout the centuries with the

7:58

horror vacui, the abhorance of the

8:00

vacuum becoming the accepted wisdom. And

8:03

so by 1277, as French Bishop Etien Toier

8:07

began his pope approved quest to put the

8:09

mystery to bed once and for all, the

8:11

very idea of a vacuum seemed an affront

8:13

to all that is holy. His investigations

8:17

had been set off by a simple theological

8:19

debate taking place within the

8:21

University of Paris.

8:23

Could God create a vacuum? After all,

8:27

the Almighty was almighty and was

8:30

capable of doing anything. but vacuums.

8:33

Nothing simply could not exist. Could

8:37

God create something that could not

DESBLOQUEAR MAIS

Registe-se gratuitamente para aceder a funcionalidades premium

VISUALIZADOR INTERATIVO

Assista ao vídeo com legendas sincronizadas, sobreposição ajustável e controlo total da reprodução.

REGISTE-SE GRATUITAMENTE PARA DESBLOQUEAR

RESUMO DE IA

Obtenha um resumo instantâneo gerado por IA do conteúdo do vídeo, pontos-chave e conclusões.

REGISTE-SE GRATUITAMENTE PARA DESBLOQUEAR

TRADUZIR

Traduza a transcrição para mais de 100 idiomas com um clique. Baixe em qualquer formato.

REGISTE-SE GRATUITAMENTE PARA DESBLOQUEAR

MAPA MENTAL

Visualize a transcrição como um mapa mental interativo. Entenda a estrutura rapidamente.

REGISTE-SE GRATUITAMENTE PARA DESBLOQUEAR

CONVERSAR COM A TRANSCRIÇÃO

Faça perguntas sobre o conteúdo do vídeo. Obtenha respostas com tecnologia de IA diretamente da transcrição.

REGISTE-SE GRATUITAMENTE PARA DESBLOQUEAR

APROVEITE MAIS DE SUAS TRANSCRIÇÕES

Inscreva-se gratuitamente e desbloqueie o visualizador interativo, resumos de IA, traduções, mapas mentais e muito mais. Não é necessário cartão de crédito.

    Is True Nothingne… - Transcrição Completa | YouTubeTranscript.dev