TRANSCRIPTEnglish

Is True Nothingness Even Possible?

57m 46s8,076 words1,338 segmentsEnglish

FULL TRANSCRIPT

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

UNLOCK MORE

Sign up free to access premium features

INTERACTIVE VIEWER

Watch the video with synced subtitles, adjustable overlay, and full playback control.

SIGN UP FREE TO UNLOCK

AI SUMMARY

Get an instant AI-generated summary of the video content, key points, and takeaways.

SIGN UP FREE TO UNLOCK

TRANSLATE

Translate the transcript to 100+ languages with one click. Download in any format.

SIGN UP FREE TO UNLOCK

MIND MAP

Visualize the transcript as an interactive mind map. Understand structure at a glance.

SIGN UP FREE TO UNLOCK

CHAT WITH TRANSCRIPT

Ask questions about the video content. Get answers powered by AI directly from the transcript.

SIGN UP FREE TO UNLOCK

GET MORE FROM YOUR TRANSCRIPTS

Sign up for free and unlock interactive viewer, AI summaries, translations, mind maps, and more. No credit card required.

    Is True Nothingness Ev… - Full Transcript | YouTubeTranscript.dev