Richard Feynman. Why.

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  • Опубликовано: 15 янв 2025

Комментарии • 13 тыс.

  • @freedomworks3976
    @freedomworks3976 5 лет назад +23625

    Feynman gets stopped by a cop.
    Cop : why were you speeding ?
    Feynman : what do you mean why ?
    Half hour later
    Cop : please just leave me alone

    • @RODWALLBANGER
      @RODWALLBANGER 5 лет назад +414

      Freedom Works many people will respond with a simple Lol. I actually laughed hard at your post. Excellent. Thank you for the laugh. Kudos

    • @mmv9155
      @mmv9155 5 лет назад +60

      lolol

    • @akihitonarihisago4276
      @akihitonarihisago4276 5 лет назад +60

      I died🤣🤣
      Maybe because read your comment exactly at the time when feynman asked such a question

    • @juliorodriguez1634
      @juliorodriguez1634 5 лет назад +23

      Freedom Works I laughed so hard when I read your comment. Thank you!

    • @RobertoDonatoFS
      @RobertoDonatoFS 5 лет назад +17

      😂🤣🤣

  • @matthewsawczyn6592
    @matthewsawczyn6592 3 года назад +6790

    If this man ever talks to toddlers, the conversation will be infinite

    • @TheMennoXD
      @TheMennoXD 3 года назад +119

      Lol because they always ask why

    • @TheMennoXD
      @TheMennoXD 3 года назад +33

      I still do

    • @BradKwfc
      @BradKwfc 3 года назад +130

      Why will it be infinite?
      Richard goes straight into an infinite loop discussing the infinite.

    • @thisismonitor4099
      @thisismonitor4099 3 года назад +122

      He actually did. He talked to me when I was a toddler at a physics conference in Greece and i remember it well. However, at the time I thought my father (another physicist) was smarter than him:)

    • @amysteriouspersonintophat1458
      @amysteriouspersonintophat1458 3 года назад +20

      @@thisismonitor4099 Really? That's really cool! What did you talk to him about? :D

  • @thatsalex5298
    @thatsalex5298 4 года назад +4357

    Interviewer: Why do magnets repel each other?
    Feynman: You wouldn‘t get it...

    • @baedenmckell5043
      @baedenmckell5043 4 года назад +105

      perfect paraphrase

    • @ImHeadshotSniper
      @ImHeadshotSniper 4 года назад +139

      the very moment when Feynman says "when you explain a why, you have to be in a framework where you allow something to be true, otherwise you're perpetually asking why", i believe it makes it very clear that his soul purpose in life is to EDUCATE in the form of changing peoples viewpoints to always consider the "Scientific Method", even if you're a simple person such as this interviewer who Feynman likely knows very well will have no interest in actually studying magnets to actually understand them.
      i believe he is basically saying, unless you really take the effort the understand the fundamentals of literally every single aspect of the question you're asking via experiment or experimental data, then your knowledge of that question is entirely based on what you read/see/ or are told.
      this may be because i just finished watching his Scientific Method video as well, but to me it seems he basically found it very reasonable to apply the Scientific Method to any aspect of life as lets you take into account all possible biases in the situation which can be incredibly helpful for solving problems, and literally every single thing you do in life could be considered a problem you can solve.

    • @Jayhhardy
      @Jayhhardy 4 года назад +5

      Simple answer

    • @rishabhroy1774
      @rishabhroy1774 4 года назад +4

      @@ImHeadshotSniper May I have the link for the Scientific Method video please.

    • @rishabhroy1774
      @rishabhroy1774 4 года назад +2

      @@ImHeadshotSniper Thanks!

  • @NeonKnightXD
    @NeonKnightXD 10 месяцев назад +150

    I bet at first the interviewer felt ashamed for asking the question, but after few minutes of Feynman giving this EPIC speech, he couldn't have felt any better about asking it :D

    • @AlanCanon2222
      @AlanCanon2222 9 месяцев назад +9

      That would be Christopher Sykes, who, when asked once what he did for a living, replied, "I make films about Richard Feynman".

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 9 месяцев назад +2

      The interviewer had nothing to feel ashamed about. It is Feynman who doesn't hear one of the finest science questions that one can possibly ask. Neither is Feynman in a good situation here because in an interview the man with the camera always has the upper hand. If he decides to show one of your weakest performances as a human being, then you are toast. And, yes, that is what the interviewer did here.

    • @automotive474
      @automotive474 9 месяцев назад +3

      A good interviewer.

    • @ballparkjebusite
      @ballparkjebusite Месяц назад +4

      I thought the interviewer showed confidence and fortitude in the face of unexpected resistance to “a perfectly reasonable question”

    • @oO-_-_-_-Oo
      @oO-_-_-_-Oo 13 дней назад

      Well said!

  • @Atombender
    @Atombender 5 лет назад +2944

    Interviewer: "Magnets? How do they work?"
    Feynman: "Listen...hospitals..."

    • @logicalapple_3274
      @logicalapple_3274 5 лет назад +26

      deserves more likes

    • @aldrinb.e4297
      @aldrinb.e4297 5 лет назад +2

      Lol

    • @elietheprof5678
      @elietheprof5678 5 лет назад +16

      Real juggalos don't wanna talk to a scientist...

    • @gregoryjclark81
      @gregoryjclark81 5 лет назад +8

      @@elietheprof5678 Real scientists prefer zero association with Juggalos, real or fake, let alone conversation...

    • @SolaceInHD
      @SolaceInHD 5 лет назад +3

      Ya I'm a scientist and I don't want anything to do with juggalos

  • @AbhishekSharma-zq5qk
    @AbhishekSharma-zq5qk 5 лет назад +11026

    'Some husbands arent interested in their wives' - Richard Feynman explaining magnetism.

    • @athleticaesthetixfitness6937
      @athleticaesthetixfitness6937 5 лет назад +65

      Opposites attract on the macro scale just as frequently as on the micro and quantum scale

    • @RIPToot
      @RIPToot 5 лет назад +32

      If feels like he is projecting raw that. He is a thought train conductor

    • @firozosman
      @firozosman 5 лет назад +9

      Good catch Abhishek! 👏

    • @DavidPellerinmaison
      @DavidPellerinmaison 5 лет назад +7

      In fact the dude was apparently very attracted and interested to his wife... therefore, its elsewhere he lacked...

    • @dontinjectdisinfectant9919
      @dontinjectdisinfectant9919 5 лет назад +7

      😆

  • @professormburatto7172
    @professormburatto7172 4 года назад +2874

    Imagine a world with more teachers like this man. I wish I had teachers like him.

    • @leefithian3704
      @leefithian3704 4 года назад +66

      Yes , he expands your methods of thinking about anything , it makes you more analytical about everything and gives you wisdom in dealing with the world around you at a safer level than just the simple mthd of not exploring he “why” deeper , it’s a survival skill multiplier , so to speak , if you choose to use the informationsafely

    • @joshuarohantitchener7395
      @joshuarohantitchener7395 4 года назад +29

      He exists across dimensions and space you will meet him again when you finally confront your own suffering on your terms

    • @sgigi4839
      @sgigi4839 4 года назад +7

      that would be awful. they're all boring now.

    • @Oscar_Armstrong
      @Oscar_Armstrong 4 года назад +25

      This man is an amazing philosopher but would make a horrendous teacher. A teacher teaches, they don't question why, they teach you why.

    • @martinch.6257
      @martinch.6257 4 года назад +86

      @@Oscar_Armstrong you do realize that he did, in fact, teach, and produce some of the best known lectures on physics?

  • @Iruleyouforafee
    @Iruleyouforafee Год назад +237

    This is the greatest version of: "I can explain it, but I'm not sure how much of it you would understand" that anyone has ever said.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 Год назад +8

      The sad thing is that he would have been able to explain the answer to the actual question quite well. He just didn't hear it. Watch the video carefully. You will notice that he was very tired. His eyes were glazing over when the interviewer asked the actual question at the ten second mark. He didn't get it and he misunderstood what he was being asked to explain. The whole thing went down from there because what he thought he was being asked is not a physics question that can be answered in anything less than a whole semester course called "Magnetism", which is so awful that I hope that you will never be required to take it. I was. ;-)

    • @johnjordan6032
      @johnjordan6032 9 месяцев назад +12

      Not really, it’s more of a “we don’t f*ckn know so what do you want me to tell you?”

    • @Iruleyouforafee
      @Iruleyouforafee 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@johnjordan6032 he clearly knows. He just explained it quite clearly.

    • @dianevandenhaak468
      @dianevandenhaak468 8 месяцев назад +2

      That is exactly it! A very long polite way to say" You wouldn't understand" Beautiful!

    • @rstrid5505
      @rstrid5505 Месяц назад +1

      @@Iruleyouforafee explain it clearly?! he just said something vague about it being the same force that affects electricity and that it is just a fundamental part of the universe. Nothing in there clearly demonstrated anything. His answer was basically, “because” 😂

  • @coolz9479
    @coolz9479 5 лет назад +4026

    interviewer: "so why is aunt minnie in the hospital?"
    feynman: "ok so magnets..."

    • @jayeshunde1481
      @jayeshunde1481 5 лет назад +14

      😂😂😂😂😂

    • @Nikolapoleon
      @Nikolapoleon 5 лет назад +94

      "Why is Aunt Minnie in the hospital?"
      "Because water expands when it freezes, and because of gravity, which involves the planets and everything else. Frankly, it's impossible to really understand why she's there."
      "You are a bad cousin, Richard."

    • @matthewnewton8812
      @matthewnewton8812 5 лет назад +3

      Yes. Yessss.....is this being clever? That’s exactly what he’s saying. Aunt Minnie is in the hospital because of electromagnetic forces holding molecules together in Aunt Minnie-shaped clumps, and gravitational forces attracting those clumps to larger clumps like planets. So, yes. You’re restating what he said. Is there a joke I’m missing?
      (AND BEFORE I CATCH ANY FLACK- yes I know smaller masses also tug on larger ones; but because electromagnetism is so vastly stronger, it takes a much larger body for gravity to overcome it and be noticed)

    • @musicfan1695
      @musicfan1695 4 года назад +2

      that's incredibly funny hahaha

    • @ASLUHLUHC3
      @ASLUHLUHC3 4 года назад

      Brilliant

  • @danielisenberg2360
    @danielisenberg2360 3 года назад +4055

    I just had an epiphany. This is why young kids ask "why?" over and over. They don't have the framework with which to understand the answer that those with more experience understand intuitively.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 3 года назад +33

      That's cool, but just like every other little kid in this comment section you missed the question at 0:10. :-)

    • @hugobraat2104
      @hugobraat2104 3 года назад +114

      Epiphany? You mean you used to think they asked why to annoy you?

    • @MovementLiquid
      @MovementLiquid 3 года назад +83

      @@schmetterling4477 I think you missed the rest of the video between 0:00 and 7:32 :-)

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 3 года назад +4

      @@MovementLiquid When Feynman has a meltdown because, like you, he didn't listen carefully at 0:10? No, I didn't miss that, but that's Feynman's shame and yours. :-)

    • @nielsendc1
      @nielsendc1 3 года назад +19

      I have a 3 year old asking why all the time and i actually just had the exact same thought. I think there is definitely some truth in that.

  • @yorkerold
    @yorkerold 5 лет назад +2266

    This is how you give your job interviewer an existential crisis.

    • @waldwassermann
      @waldwassermann 4 года назад +34

      I actually suggest anyone having an existential crisis to watch these videos. Perhaps that's how we all got here.

    • @joshuarohantitchener7395
      @joshuarohantitchener7395 4 года назад +6

      That is the intended effect

    • @KibyNykraft
      @KibyNykraft 4 года назад +8

      You're joking. He barely gave a high school teacher answer of BASICS, and mostly just avoids the question.

    • @AppleOfThineEye
      @AppleOfThineEye 4 года назад +22

      @@KibyNykraft Splish splash your opinion is trash

    • @djoakeydoakey1076
      @djoakeydoakey1076 4 года назад +1

      @@AppleOfThineEye Why did I find your comment funny?

  • @etherealstars5766
    @etherealstars5766 2 года назад +285

    This is why I LOVE the "Explained In 5 Levels" Series on RUclips, covering all sorts of different subjects. You get to see the cut off in your own understanding, and the deepening of the explanations as they get more technical, but also the beauty in how complex things arise from simple concepts in a progression of stacking and intertwining knowledge.

    • @pianospeedrun
      @pianospeedrun Год назад

      well worded

    • @AdelaideBen1
      @AdelaideBen1 Год назад +11

      That's true - but the point is, you can start with the simple... and become more complex/nuanced. This video is the example of someone saying, it's ok you don't understand, you are dumb and don't need to. Learning should be focused (and this is a modern view) on the rising-lifts-all-boats. We need to encourage that the answers are easy, but the understanding is hard. If we can get more people past the first hurdle, the later ones become incrementally easier.

    • @hitchslap8254
      @hitchslap8254 Год назад

      Thanks. Just looked it up!

    • @TheArrowedKnee
      @TheArrowedKnee Год назад

      Exactly what i thought of when he started talking about the different kind of levels of his hospital analogy

  • @billpaxton7525
    @billpaxton7525 5 лет назад +2544

    Imagine him at a job interview.

    • @riku4861
      @riku4861 5 лет назад +10

      Bill Paxton lmao

    • @droptak
      @droptak 5 лет назад +107

      Why do you want this job?

    • @cetinakkaya4607
      @cetinakkaya4607 5 лет назад +250

      Bill paxton
      Boss : 'Why' should we hire you?
      Feynman : listen , because the ice slippery and so...

    • @bencorrigan2702
      @bencorrigan2702 5 лет назад +5

      Great comment!

    • @wick9462
      @wick9462 5 лет назад +8

      This was the funniest comment

  • @GAURAV-hm4xd
    @GAURAV-hm4xd 2 года назад +2339

    Even after speaking on so many topics and fields in a single breath, he came back to original topic. That's an art. Many people tend to forget where they started.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 2 года назад +18

      Yes, he took seven minutes and still didn't answer the question at 0:10. He did talk a lot of nonsense, though. ;-)

    • @GAURAV-hm4xd
      @GAURAV-hm4xd 2 года назад +64

      @@schmetterling4477 i think he did answered the questions in last few seconds. Iron atoms spinning in same direction magnifying the force which u generally dont feel in other materials.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 2 года назад +15

      @@GAURAV-hm4xd No, he didn't. The question at 0:10 was not about magnets. It was about the nature of the magnetic field. Do you know why he was being asked that? Because he wasn't a solid state physicist but a quantum field theorist. He got the Physics Nobel for developing the correct theory of the quantized electromagnetic field. He really didn't know much about magnetism and you can clearly tell by his struggling attempt to explain what he hadn't been asked to begin with.

    • @GAURAV-hm4xd
      @GAURAV-hm4xd 2 года назад +2

      @@schmetterling4477 oh. U may be right. Thanks for telling me this.

    • @vigilante8374
      @vigilante8374 2 года назад +27

      @@schmetterling4477 He answered the question at 0:10 at 0:32. The interviewer asked "why" at 0:37.

  • @Saturn-uz6jc
    @Saturn-uz6jc 5 лет назад +2475

    Interviewer: Why?
    Feynman: I'm boutta end this whole man's career

    • @PartiallyAgonized
      @PartiallyAgonized 5 лет назад +24

      No, you were bout to leave the most original comment on RUclips.

    • @stef25ify
      @stef25ify 5 лет назад +3

      I made is this far down the comments before pretty much pissing my pants with laughter

    • @squamish4244
      @squamish4244 5 лет назад +2

      And his sanity.

    • @CSP-777Cinema.Science.Politics
      @CSP-777Cinema.Science.Politics 5 лет назад +3

      Thank you very much brother. This one made my day

    • @thelaurels13
      @thelaurels13 4 года назад +2

      Nobody ever says that bone head! Such an unoriginal cretinous comment.

  • @esoteric404
    @esoteric404 2 года назад +86

    i could literally listen to this guy speak for hours and never get bored.

    • @Mg3-Si2-O5-OH4
      @Mg3-Si2-O5-OH4 Год назад +6

      I don’t think he would either

    • @AdelaideBen1
      @AdelaideBen1 Год назад

      @@Mg3-Si2-O5-OH4 The funniest comment I've read so far. Spot on.

  • @stefanserofuggsgiven2981
    @stefanserofuggsgiven2981 3 года назад +2296

    Teacher: Why did you forget homework!?
    Me: See, when you ask why something happens....

    • @IanDoesMagic
      @IanDoesMagic 3 года назад +48

      You are the real genius here. Thank you.

    • @IanDoesMagic
      @IanDoesMagic 3 года назад +32

      @vladimir putin is andrei panin jfk is jimmy carter How do you know that you're not hallucinating right now and just responding to things you've imagined? Ultimately we can be certain of very little, but if something has been verified by enough other people, it's worth trusting them. If we try to verify every detail of every piece of information in our life we won't have time for stuff like ice cream or youtube.

    • @qnm7704
      @qnm7704 3 года назад +1

      😂🤣

    • @user-fc5wq3sb4f
      @user-fc5wq3sb4f 3 года назад +3

      Thats an excellent question.

    • @shashwatprakash8516
      @shashwatprakash8516 3 года назад +1

      You are a fing genius you

  • @513morris
    @513morris 5 лет назад +2332

    If he had only asked him why ice is slippery, he might have found out more about how magnets work.

  • @WeSaveWe
    @WeSaveWe 5 лет назад +859

    Brilliant. I will use this approach to answer my 5 year-old nephews' 'why' questions going forward.

    • @Pallum13
      @Pallum13 5 лет назад +51

      Why?

    • @m_c_frank
      @m_c_frank 5 лет назад +26

      try asking your nephew about his own opinion to the "why" question. That worked for me.

    • @lordgaulo6520
      @lordgaulo6520 5 лет назад +13

      I use this method with my children they are the hyper active type and they naturally don't think much but they enjoy the mental aerobics of these types of questions I think your nephew will also enjoy this type of game

    • @DDanV
      @DDanV 5 лет назад +24

      You should rather listen to your 5 yo nephew's questions and wonder why yourself. That's actually the point Feynman makes: if you're curious enough you'll end up questioning why until you find the fundamental "why" that actually gives you fundamental and true understanding. We took more than 2 thousand years do find the "atom", that literally means uncuttable or indivisible, just to find out it wasn't the fundamental, smallest constituent unit of ordinary matter that the philosophers of old thought it was... so we asked "why" until we were satisfied just to discover 2 millenia after we didn't fully comprehend reality, we had an incomplete answer to our "why", and yet again we were asking "why", a new "why".
      I started out in Physics... I'll be asking why till the day I die. Your nephew is trying to understand the world, it's good that his curiosity still wasn't hampered and he still digs deeper on those why's, for as long as he does his understanding will deepen more than of those who stopped asking it earlier.

    • @crazydavec3861
      @crazydavec3861 5 лет назад +3

      When you're done with so many "Why's" go "What's the next to last letter of the alphabet?" ... "Why"... "Correct, well done!" :)

  • @lucasm5334
    @lucasm5334 Год назад +326

    Feynman's wife: why is there lipstick on you neck?
    Feynman:

    • @nateo200
      @nateo200 11 месяцев назад +2

      Ahahaha

    • @Gumshrud1
      @Gumshrud1 8 месяцев назад +2

      "what lipstick"

    • @jonijarkko123
      @jonijarkko123 7 месяцев назад +18

      6:41 this would be the actual answer

    • @ilyakalinin2660
      @ilyakalinin2660 6 месяцев назад +1

      Severely underrated

    • @chrislee176
      @chrislee176 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@jonijarkko123 lol

  • @IronCandyNotes
    @IronCandyNotes 5 лет назад +5209

    Your mind doesn't have the packages installed required to run this explanation.

  • @saltstillwaters7506
    @saltstillwaters7506 3 года назад +2458

    Interviewer: So why did Aunt Minnie go to the hospital?
    Feynman: Ok so magnets...

    • @majorpeg8534
      @majorpeg8534 3 года назад +37

      Underrated

    • @kryrins
      @kryrins 3 года назад +8

      why?

    • @XENOS1010
      @XENOS1010 3 года назад +9

      Billy Herrington: Ok maggots...

    • @leon320gb
      @leon320gb 3 года назад +4

      genius

    • @Asterius_101
      @Asterius_101 3 года назад +17

      @Berta Maria Mota It's a joke, chill

  • @NorroTaku
    @NorroTaku 3 года назад +817

    this is exactly the kind of depth I wanted to hear as a kid ^^

    • @filippetersen1304
      @filippetersen1304 3 года назад +33

      yes, yes! I totally agree! And as a father of a 7 year old child I hope that every time I tend to be anoyed by the billion questions a day I will remember this clip and very calmy explain the things, just the way they are and how "I"! understand them to my boy - in HIS language :-)

    • @David-ku6dm
      @David-ku6dm 3 года назад +4

      Well said

    • @mik9napkin598
      @mik9napkin598 3 года назад +2

      Just means you (and all of us) need to learn enough to provide this level of knowledge and intrigue for kids today.

    • @orthopraxis235
      @orthopraxis235 3 года назад +10

      What this shows is that you are capable of many levels of understanding as a kid. The educational system in public and some private schools today wants to keep your stupid, so they provide stupid answers, the same stupid answers that Feyman is unwilling to use. Kids want to and understand the need to get it completely right. Adults don't want to take the time to indulge them.

    • @nickwilton6822
      @nickwilton6822 3 года назад +3

      Why?

  • @SimonGeraedts
    @SimonGeraedts 2 года назад +56

    I could listen to this man for hours. The way he sees and describes the world is just so incredibly unique. I guess this is how a super intelligent alien would have answered that question. Never take anything for granted, always stay curious. 😊

  • @marthinus_2805
    @marthinus_2805 5 лет назад +774

    Me: Hey Richard, what day is it?
    Him: Well, first you have to understand what a day is.

    • @entrancemperium5506
      @entrancemperium5506 5 лет назад +1

      Here is a better analogy: Why today is Monday?

    • @robjohnson591
      @robjohnson591 5 лет назад +6

      no. you ask him "what is today"
      Feynman: "Well, first you have to know what day it is NOT.
      Me: "Just answer the damn question! What is the truth!?"
      Feyman: You can't handle the truth!

  • @maksimkuzmin5246
    @maksimkuzmin5246 3 года назад +1874

    Imagine him answering the question: "Why do you want to work for our company?"

    • @ThexXxXxOLOxXxXx
      @ThexXxXxOLOxXxXx 3 года назад +96

      Recruiter: He talks a lot of stuff i dont understand.. HIERED!

    • @martinchitembo1883
      @martinchitembo1883 3 года назад +18

      😂😂😂this comment is underestimated.

    • @jamesdoolan8040
      @jamesdoolan8040 3 года назад +50

      'I don't want to work for you. I just need the money'

    • @ThexXxXxOLOxXxXx
      @ThexXxXxOLOxXxXx 3 года назад +21

      @@jamesdoolan8040 This answer always gets you the job guaranteed.

    • @Yus1409
      @Yus1409 3 года назад +1

      😂🤣😂

  • @psychicbink4492
    @psychicbink4492 3 года назад +2798

    2 lessons I perceive:
    1. Asking "why" allows to start on the journey of discovery
    2. Discovery ends only when the observer decides that they are done searching

  • @BhuvanaRajkumar-mv9ng
    @BhuvanaRajkumar-mv9ng 3 месяца назад +2

    Hey ! WHY on earth do I watch this again and again⁉️😅

  • @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache
    @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache 3 года назад +1946

    "Why"
    HIm: "And I took that personally."

  • @Ixions
    @Ixions 4 года назад +3162

    "Sir, this is a McDonald's drive-thru...."

    • @Jayhhardy
      @Jayhhardy 4 года назад +63

      What do you mean by would I "like" fries with that? What do think it means to like? Let me explain weather we are even able to like in the way you think you like things. We can't. Do I want fries? Yes please.

    • @AdamTibbo
      @AdamTibbo 3 года назад +5

      You win

    • @mickeymcnaughton2555
      @mickeymcnaughton2555 3 года назад +6

      @@Jayhhardy But why does he (or she) ask the question; What do you mean by would I "like" fries with that? Probably because the McDonald's drive through assistant DIDN'T ask; DO you WANT fries with that?, Because he (or she) has probably been instructed to use the word, "like" when a customer orders, because it is a positive sales reinforcement technique.

    • @painstruck01
      @painstruck01 3 года назад +9

      he'd make an excellent McDonald's manager. "sir, why are my fries cold?"

    • @attiylanen
      @attiylanen 3 года назад

      LOL 🤣

  • @BeSmarterFaster
    @BeSmarterFaster 3 года назад +3275

    Feynman's ability to instantly delve deeply into the topic of "Why' with so many examples that are immediately relatable is really quite remarkable. He takes what seems to be on the surface a simple question and expounds on it to an extraordinarly deep level. He really was quite a fascinating person to listen to.

    • @walter4180
      @walter4180 3 года назад +89

      Sure but the dude just wanted an answer to how magnets work.

    • @voicetube
      @voicetube 3 года назад +31

      ​@@walter4180 I'm with you Walter; in a sense, Feyman sort of gives a good reason as to why he didn't need to go into any of that. It's called "reading the room." It's pretty obvious to most people watching this video (or that film) that the dude asking wanted to know some of the inner workings of the physical universe that aren't so apparent on the surface as regards magnetism. If you go to my channel and watch my recent Vlog on magnetism, you will get a much clearer understanding of this magical force (that was a joke - I generally make an ass of myself - purposely :-)
      In any event, the basic principles of magnetism and why it seems like magic but the explanation of why it isn't maybe given in about one or two minutes would have sufficed.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 3 года назад +50

      @@voicetube That's complete nonsense. Feynman simply messed up here. There was no need to start a rant about why questions. The initial question was "What is that feeling (force) between two magnets?". That is a perfectly fine physics question that has a straight forward answer. Why Feynman couldn't give it is a mystery to me.

    • @danielrelva
      @danielrelva 3 года назад +55

      @@schmetterling4477 because almost every question of magnetism doesn't have simple answers. He tried to say that on the beginning but the man wasnt satisfied. So Feynman just explained how his question will turn in another ten questions and will take hours to explain

    • @johncoops6897
      @johncoops6897 3 года назад +27

      @@schmetterling4477 - It's simply because he is such a smart-arse dickhead that he didn't know HOW to answer it. So smug and arrogant in his own self-righteousness, yet totally unable to answer the most simple question.
      There are various technical terms, including "fuckwit", "knob-jockey", "bell-end" and "tool".... mostly related to penises, however it's notable that a penis is a useful object.

  • @maryetdave
    @maryetdave Месяц назад +12

    Legend has it that he is still answering the question

  • @charleshirst6220
    @charleshirst6220 2 года назад +720

    I have watched this so many times over te years that I almost know it off by heart; and yet, when I bump into it again I cannot resist istening to it yet again.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 2 года назад +2

      Yes, there is something magic about Feynman making a fool of himself, isn't it?

    • @ronniechilds2002
      @ronniechilds2002 2 года назад +3

      Same here. I've also watched his famous lecture series several times. Never fails to draw me in.

    • @anthonymusto3537
      @anthonymusto3537 2 года назад +12

      Why?

    • @lexandersig
      @lexandersig 2 года назад +1

      Bacause you do not understand why.

    • @animalbird9436
      @animalbird9436 2 года назад

      @@lexandersig comes after x and b4 z. Lol

  • @Euquila
    @Euquila 5 лет назад +5257

    come here to learn about magnets. left with an anxiety attack and an existential crisis.

    • @CaptApril123
      @CaptApril123 5 лет назад +215

      That's why there's a certain advantage in being dumb.

    • @Declan_Lyons
      @Declan_Lyons 5 лет назад +51

      How does an existential crises feel?

    • @Yorkie-UK
      @Yorkie-UK 5 лет назад +183

      @@Declan_Lyons I would say it feels with the force of rubber bands but I would be cheating...

    • @gilbert691
      @gilbert691 5 лет назад +71

      I WONT take all day to explain to you "why" you made me laugh. Just accept that it was fucking funny.

    • @ALPalmos
      @ALPalmos 5 лет назад +20

      This particular thread has made my day. Cackling. Thank-you!

  • @Mussi93
    @Mussi93 3 года назад +1259

    Finally someone who gets straight to the point!

    • @goodisnipr
      @goodisnipr 2 года назад +7

      Pelosi could learn so much...

    • @21.parthjoshi20
      @21.parthjoshi20 2 года назад +59

      The whole point of the video is he didn't go straight to the point

    • @Thanos-hp1mw
      @Thanos-hp1mw 2 года назад +71

      @@21.parthjoshi20 he DID go straight to the point by saying "magnets repel each other" however he predicted the interviewer would ask 'why' again and had to tell him that he could not explain anything deeper than this. It seems like very few people listened to him speak.

    • @trollme.trollmehard.9524
      @trollme.trollmehard.9524 2 года назад +3

      This was quite clear to me.

    • @Ligierthegreensun
      @Ligierthegreensun 2 года назад +2

      @@goodisnipr Touch grass.

  • @MuthuKumaran-hb6ku
    @MuthuKumaran-hb6ku 7 месяцев назад

    God what an amazing teacher he is....thanks to the uploader many others can benefit from this..

  • @david-barna
    @david-barna 3 года назад +1054

    "Your aunt Minnie is in the hospital." - Feynman on magnetism

    • @JERLOG-y1g
      @JERLOG-y1g 3 года назад +14

      Why? - Aunt Minnie on broke hip

    • @curtisa188
      @curtisa188 3 года назад +2

      this is the most relevant summary

    • @curtisa188
      @curtisa188 3 года назад +23

      •aunt minnie is in the hospital
      •ice is slippery
      •some husband aren't interested in their wife's welfare and are drunks
      •grease is wet and slimy
      •ordinary people don't know anything
      •if you put your hand on the chair it pushes you back
      •i can't explain it
      revise for test

    • @Carfeu
      @Carfeu 3 года назад +2

      If you know why she slipped it’s because of quantum gravity

    • @neithere
      @neithere 3 года назад

      @@curtisa188 and some people actually can't grasp anything else :/

  • @nvsabhishek7356
    @nvsabhishek7356 4 года назад +664

    His last question to himself: "WHY did I ask him this?!!"

  • @sharptongue2972
    @sharptongue2972 5 лет назад +316

    I agree. When most people answer "why" questions, they are actually answering "how" at a superficial level.

    • @GrammeStudio
      @GrammeStudio 5 лет назад +32

      i don't think Feynman draws the difference here. I don't think he thinks the interviewers was mistaking motive or an agency behind natural phenomena. I think he sees the interviewers curiosity to ask such an interesting question about physics to be the start of an inquiry that if the interviewers is being scientific, would lead to a series of questions that would eventually bring him to the most fundamental question--a question about the fundamental forces. and so he's answering the question that would be asked in the future and pointing out that at the end of the would-be series of inquiry, the questioner would have to be contend with not knowing further because that's as far as one could explain. this fundamental premise is known as axiom. a valid axiom can be demonstrated by its alignment with reality--and hence verified with the senses.

    • @garysutherland7004
      @garysutherland7004 5 лет назад +8

      @@GrammeStudio Well, there is also no known answer for why magnets work. I think he could have answered honestly, but had the wherewithal to explain his reasoning. The answer is that no one knows why.

    • @subhadeepmanna7106
      @subhadeepmanna7106 4 года назад

      How?

    • @shrawan12321
      @shrawan12321 4 года назад

      @clayfame I used to think the same. But if I carefully analyze answers that I am satisfied with, they are merely descriptions as well. More importantly, we can differentiate actual descriptions from false ones by being able to correctly predict outcomes of yet unknown scenarios. Then i ask why am i satisfied with some descriptions while a few others leave a bad taste (or a certain kind of uneasiness in accepting). The only answer I can come up with is randomness of my mental state of acceptance.. Given an alternate universe, I might have been satisfied and dissatisfied with completely different sets of descriptions.

    • @edek3159
      @edek3159 3 года назад +2

      @@garysutherland7004 That's simply not true. There are varying levels to what 'understanding' is. As eloquently explained by Feynman in this video, there are varying depths of understanding how magnets work, that varies among different people. Eg. a university student will know more about how magnets work than say a child. Sure, we may not know how magnets work to the deepest level of quantum physics, but just because we do not, does not mean the answer is "no one knows".

  • @marklipson
    @marklipson 7 дней назад

    From when I first saw this years ago, I was changed by this video. I literally look at the world a bit differently after listening to this man for eight minutes.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 4 дня назад

      If you become a bartender, then you will get a lot of similar rants from drunk aging men. ;-)

  • @amityadav85
    @amityadav85 5 лет назад +881

    me : why didn't you recommend this video sooner!?
    youtube: ok, so semiconductors.. . .

    • @shashank_srivastava
      @shashank_srivastava 5 лет назад +8

      😂😂👌👌

    • @chandramouli3106
      @chandramouli3106 4 года назад +2

      Why semiconductor?

    • @amityadav85
      @amityadav85 4 года назад +12

      @@chandramouli3106 err.. Semiconductor materials are at the core of a computer processor.. Feynman is sure to go into that level of detail! 🤣

    • @kairostimeYT
      @kairostimeYT 4 года назад +3

      Why are they used in computer core?

    • @amityadav85
      @amityadav85 4 года назад +5

      @@kairostimeYT what do you mean why are they used in the computer core? 😂

  • @222ableVelo
    @222ableVelo 3 года назад +353

    Wife to Husband: "Does this dress make me look fat?"
    Richard Feynman: "Don't worry I got this bro."

    • @freddiebauer5843
      @freddiebauer5843 3 года назад +5

      Know when you say "make"...

    • @JohnCena-yu4mj
      @JohnCena-yu4mj 3 года назад +22

      "it's not the dress that makes you look fat."

    • @everlastingideas8625
      @everlastingideas8625 3 года назад +8

      If we consider the wife to have a negative charge. The charge of the husband closely depends on his answer.

    • @kindnessfirst9670
      @kindnessfirst9670 3 года назад +2

      He was too smart to answer with anything but a "no".

    • @notablediscomfort
      @notablediscomfort 3 года назад +8

      "Do try to understand that I haven't called you fat at any point leading up to this interaction. I clearly haven't shown that I think you're fat. I might notice it if I really look. But at this point I know I don't care. So to me, I have to say no, not at first glance. But now that you've put me in the mindset that you might be fat, I'm gonna go out on a limb here and say yes, it does. Not necessarily the dress alone, unfortunately. It definitely exasperates some visual features that people see more in someone they would call fat. I'm not calling you fat. But someone else might. So if someone else seeing you as fat is the issue you care about, then yes, the dress absolutely makes you look fat. I would go as far as to say some people would call you a heckin chonker. But that's not me. I didn't want to be here in the first place. I just wanna touch your butt and watch south park with you."

  • @aubreyscott6058
    @aubreyscott6058 6 лет назад +1380

    It's so neat how he detected the interviewer getting defensive and calmed him by saying "No, it's an excellent question!"

    • @MarsLonsen
      @MarsLonsen 5 лет назад +69

      How? It's very human to detect the feelings of other humans and other living beings.

    • @vikitheviki
      @vikitheviki 5 лет назад +9

      @@MarsLonsen Watch the clip again LOL

    • @MarsLonsen
      @MarsLonsen 5 лет назад +5

      @@vikitheviki eh no LOL

    • @MarsLonsen
      @MarsLonsen 5 лет назад +10

      @@vikitheviki tell me why its neat or stop wasting my time.

    • @Izkapts
      @Izkapts 5 лет назад +104

      ​@@MarsLonsen Well, first you ask how did he detect it and I might tell you that he perceived it with his senses, but then you might ask how do senses tell us things. Then I might say that our sensory system consists of sensory organs that perceive outside stimuli and deliver it through a neural network to our brains. Then you might ask ''how come we have such sensory organs'' and so on... That's interesting.

  • @johnarmstrong6867
    @johnarmstrong6867 2 года назад +16

    This is a WONDERFUL insight into Feynman's integrity and thought

    • @edithbannerman4
      @edithbannerman4 Год назад

      @Hello there, how are you doing this blessed day?

  • @tannerallen597
    @tannerallen597 2 года назад +1334

    This is actually an incredibly useful exercise in limiting the scope of a question. "How" and "why" questions have answers that are entirely defined by the expected knowledge of the *questioner,* just as much as that of the answerer. Notice how Feynman _did_ answer the question to various levels of satisfaction as a component of his overall criticism of asking unbounded questions.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 2 года назад +3

      Ah, there is the kid who didn't pay attention to the question at 0:10. :-)

    • @jloost-gamer
      @jloost-gamer 2 года назад +19

      Schmetter Ling is right. The point is not that one has to limit the scope of a question, but that every question contains numerous, almost infinite implications and frameworks. Communication between two people always depends on these implications and frameworks, and part of Prof. Feynman's pleasure is that he WANTS you to ask deeper, deeper, deeper until you go with him to truly understand the marvels of the universe.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 2 года назад

      @@jloost-gamer Ah, more bullshit. ;-)

    • @dhawkins1234
      @dhawkins1234 2 года назад +50

      @@schmetterling4477 do you really think the interviewer would have been satisfied with, "the magnetic force" in response to a question about what is it that he's feeling when he feels two magnets repel? The interviewer already knows that the magnetic force exists, but he's not clear about what is going on-he doesn't even have a framework to articulate why it seems mysterious to him that magnets repel each other. He wants a deeper answer than just, "they do" and yet ultimately, as Feynman points out, there is no deeper answer. It's a feature of the universe. You're the kid who is so convinced he's smarter than everyone else that he doesn't even need to listen to the full video before setting himself up as superior to Feynman. We get it, you think you're a genius, and so insecure you have to point out flaws in people with reputations for being brilliant.
      Christopher Sykes was the interviewer, and had immense respect for Feynman. Maybe you should consider that he got a lot more out of the answer than you think he did.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 2 года назад

      @@dhawkins1234 I mostly think that you just wrote a large amount of bullshit. ;-)

  • @Undead8
    @Undead8 5 лет назад +803

    When my daughter was about 2 years old, she went through a phase of asking "why" constantly. I would answer each question as best as I could, then she would ask another "why?", often to statements that were self-evident for me and everyone else. Seeing that video helped understand that she has a totally different framework than mine - she knows nothing about the world so everything needs to be explained to the most basic level.
    It would go on until she would have an answer that she understands in her framework or until she would not understand the words I was saying: "The car is white" - why? "hmm Because someone painted it white" - why? "Because I asked them to paint it white when I bought it" - why? "Because I like the color white, just like you like purple!" -oh... ok...

    • @PartiallyAgonized
      @PartiallyAgonized 5 лет назад +17

      Umm yeah? I don't even have children and I knew this... this is something everyone already knows, you didn't need to spend the effort writing a whole novel about it.

    • @Jide-bq9yf
      @Jide-bq9yf 5 лет назад

      Eric Yoon absolutely ; piss off @ Cousin Kyle .👎🏾

    • @smolytchannel5062
      @smolytchannel5062 5 лет назад

      Lol I have a cousin who, when she says the why word, people just reply z and she just doesn't know how to come back from that

    • @Blubbha
      @Blubbha 5 лет назад

      Best advice to keep trying to answer the whys. She will stop asking about the specifics after she feels to understand the deepest basics of it. Its something like the natural "first priciple".

    • @tonmoydeka7319
      @tonmoydeka7319 5 лет назад +1

      @@PartiallyAgonized how old are you?your words looks so childish

  • @morbikdon5245
    @morbikdon5245 5 лет назад +207

    "You have to be in some framework that you allow something to be true. Otherwise you're perpetually asking why". What a great great neuron connections.

    • @joshuarohantitchener7395
      @joshuarohantitchener7395 4 года назад +3

      morbikdon nothing is true everything is permitted as self imposed limits dictate and as ones own internal harmony harmonizes with the harmony of others or dis harmony so to speak Mr Anderson

    • @Oldfashionedcowboybebopjazz
      @Oldfashionedcowboybebopjazz 4 года назад +4

      The beauty of mathematics encapsulated in a single sentence

    • @Sahilbc-wj8qk
      @Sahilbc-wj8qk 4 года назад

      @@joshuarohantitchener7395 Nothing is true?
      Then mobile phones must not work.
      Or anything.

    • @fakeemail4005
      @fakeemail4005 3 года назад

      @@joshuarohantitchener7395 If nothing is true then the statement "nothing is true" is also false, so it shall be disregarded

  • @RadiantFreeEnergyResearch
    @RadiantFreeEnergyResearch Год назад +3

    i grew up around hundreds and thousands of people that spoke to me the exact same way richard feynman is speaking to the gentleman that is interviewing richard feynman. it was highly frustrating but most importantly, highly rewarding, because i learned how to think about thinking. i am very grateful for the time everyone spent, educating and guiding, my potential. truly wonderful.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 Год назад +1

      That's cool, but he didn't give you the correct answer here.

  • @GreenEnvy.
    @GreenEnvy. 4 года назад +714

    *Gives Richard a snicker bar*
    Feynman: "I see, it turns out I was just hungry."

  • @shortcutDJ
    @shortcutDJ 8 лет назад +1587

    He truly was a fine man.

  • @SnootchieBootchies27
    @SnootchieBootchies27 3 года назад +672

    This is why children get stuck in the "why" loop. It's the question that can't be answered.

    • @wavydavy9816
      @wavydavy9816 3 года назад +10

      If you actually keep answering their questions they soon lose interest (normally when you mention doing some research) 🙄 hopefully well before you're completely out of your depth.

    • @midnattsol6207
      @midnattsol6207 3 года назад +71

      @@wavydavy9816 it's very healthy for children to learn that their parents knowledge has limits and to present them these limits

    • @wavydavy9816
      @wavydavy9816 3 года назад +69

      @@midnattsol6207 Yes. This is also true. But with small chlidren, when they get stuck in the why loop, they're rarely listening to what you're actually saying, they're playing a game. You play the game by answering the questions, but you're just playing the part of the person delivering a set-up line for the child. You can tell when a child is genuinely inerested in obtaining information to answer questions, and I think the best way to help educate children these days is to demonstrate to them that they can educate themselves using the resources directly at hand. I tried to explain how lightening worked to my nephew when he was about 5 and quickly realized I _didn't know_ how lightening worked and we spent a good 20 minutes learning about it together on the computer. Job done! 👍

    • @midnattsol6207
      @midnattsol6207 3 года назад +6

      @@wavydavy9816 Yeah, that's true also. Well done! :)

    • @timangar9771
      @timangar9771 3 года назад +18

      @@wavydavy9816 noooo, when I was a kid I would ask my das questions for HOURS, and I was lucky enough to have a dad who was well educated and could answer a lot of them. But it always bugged me when we reached the "that's just how the universe works" point.

  • @Robbo1966
    @Robbo1966 Год назад +2

    This is brilliant, I keep coming back to this one to, most people seem not interested or devote the time to understanding the deeper meaning to fundamental questions, rather want quick answer to satisfy limited understanding.

  • @CyclonicTuna023
    @CyclonicTuna023 3 года назад +581

    Interviewer: Why...
    Feynman: First of all, that's incorrect.

    • @stephandalton2390
      @stephandalton2390 3 года назад +1

      Hollering LOL!!!!!! comment of the year

    • @neithere
      @neithere 3 года назад

      This... is... not at all what happened.....

  • @Luisp0t
    @Luisp0t 4 года назад +3117

    I can’t explain that magnetic attraction in terms of anything that’s familiar to you

    • @CarlosGomes-yc3nm
      @CarlosGomes-yc3nm 3 года назад +46

      That's a good one.

    • @Cometer
      @Cometer 3 года назад +177

      And with that thousands decided to study physics.

    • @aristotle_4532
      @aristotle_4532 3 года назад +5

      At any level besides a gross practically useful one.

    • @ahnaffarhan8028
      @ahnaffarhan8028 3 года назад +33

      because I don't understand in terms of anything else that's you are more familiar with.

    • @MPHOSADIKI-vu8rx
      @MPHOSADIKI-vu8rx 3 года назад +4

      Man I love your content.

  • @onemanenclave
    @onemanenclave 6 лет назад +269

    "I can't explain that attraction in terms of anything else that's familiar to you."
    That sums it up well.

    • @fidziek
      @fidziek 5 лет назад +9

      Well, except how did Feynman know what exactly is familiar to that person asking questions. So he himself made some /pretty unjustified/ presumption about someone's knowledge or mental abilities...
      And he implied that he doesn't like that question, actually insulting his interlocutor.

    • @margaritasytcheva2730
      @margaritasytcheva2730 5 лет назад +33

      @@fidziek The thing is, Electromagnetism is notoriously for being a very difficult topic to most people in the STEM disciplines and requires substantial prerequisite knowledge. If you go further than that (to describe the nature of forces within particles), you would be tackling Quantum Mechanics, which kills all.
      So, unless Feynam happened to know that the interviewer had a background in engineering or physics, I think it's pretty fair that Feynman can make that claim.

    • @studiousboy644
      @studiousboy644 5 лет назад +12

      @@fidziek
      It's not about knowledge. The fact that he asked that question should make it clear that electromagnetism cannot be explained in terms of anything that interviewer knows. Otherwise he wouldn't have asked the question.

    • @fidziek
      @fidziek 5 лет назад +1

      @@studiousboy644 only he's not asking for his own benefits, but on behalf of the viewers/listeners, and I pressume he's not one of Feynmann apprentices/students...
      i.m.H.o.

    • @fidziek
      @fidziek 5 лет назад +1

      @@philipfry9436 it's not about someone's feelings, but so called personal culture (including empathy, EQ, IQ) of Great Master Feynmann - he should not humiliate anyone,
      simple as that.

  • @ShoeibShargo
    @ShoeibShargo 2 года назад +10

    "No Aunt Minnie were harmed in the making of this video."

  • @studio48nl
    @studio48nl 5 лет назад +287

    Sagan: There are no stupid questions.
    Feynman: Why?

    • @johnjonjhonjonathanjohnson3559
      @johnjonjhonjonathanjohnson3559 5 лет назад +5

      stupid question: why is the earth flat

    • @studio48nl
      @studio48nl 5 лет назад +1

      @@johnjonjhonjonathanjohnson3559
      I do understand what you mean, but maybe the person is, not the question.
      According to Sagan, questions are not stupid because it's a 'method' to get information.
      If you tell the person (a child maybe), 'Earth is a sphere because of (proof)' and he/she goes 'ok', then it was not very stupid...

    • @johnjonjhonjonathanjohnson3559
      @johnjonjhonjonathanjohnson3559 5 лет назад

      but that doesnt answer the question, why is earth flat?
      an incorrect fact has been forced into the question thats why its stupid.

    • @Ometecuhtli
      @Ometecuhtli 5 лет назад +7

      Why is not a stupid question, and when Feynman says it is a good question he isn't patronizing, he's genuine in his response that it is difficult for him to answer it in a way that can be considered satisfactory to the interviewer. I'd have to transcribe what he says because I don't have a better way to explain it, it all depends on the reason for asking it is, whether your trying to understand forces, the way materials behave under certain circunstances, if you're interested in metallurgy, applications, curious about science, and so on.
      Sagan was talking about how as we grow up we start to take into account how we are perceived by our classmates, so the more pressure we feel the more we try to avoid questions that are considered 'stupid', and social animals that we are, we tend to ask 'safely', to supress the questions that would reveal our ignorance even if it's a perfectly good question and, as seems to be happening in the video, ask a question that we don't know if it's good or not, and not be really prepared for its answer.

    • @amellirizarry9503
      @amellirizarry9503 4 года назад +1

      in my opinion Feynman is way more badass than Sagan👌

  • @fujihita2500
    @fujihita2500 4 года назад +1014

    Interviewer: "Why must you give a long lecture on why?"
    Feynman: "So you have chosen death."

    • @devanshsingh3369
      @devanshsingh3369 4 года назад +25

      I would've liked this comment, but it was on 69 likes and i didn't wanted to be that guy who stops another person from smiling.

    • @odyseuszkoskiniotis6266
      @odyseuszkoskiniotis6266 4 года назад +9

      The question was indeed stupid, and he has foreseen it and he replied in a way that would completely psychologically surprise interviewer

    • @razormilkyway8444
      @razormilkyway8444 4 года назад +1

      @@odyseuszkoskiniotis6266 what? No. I will ask the same thing.

    • @STyl888
      @STyl888 3 года назад

      AHAHAHAHAAHAHAAHAHAAHAHA

  • @NagCamagoni
    @NagCamagoni 3 года назад +772

    My mom : Why are you home this late?
    I can't explain why in any terms familiar to you.
    *shoe thrown at me*

    • @irshviralvideo
      @irshviralvideo 3 года назад +7

      rolf !!!

    • @christy3971
      @christy3971 3 года назад +4

      The last thing I remember was a shoe flying towards me 😂

    • @DickiMonster
      @DickiMonster 3 года назад +3

      Primitive mom

    • @francisofthefilth8829
      @francisofthefilth8829 3 года назад

      @@irshviralvideo Rolling on the laughing floor. My floor also laughs at me sometimes. I stopped rolling on it since that time it tried swallowing me though. Don't piss off your floor. It's friendlier when it's laughing. Much friendlier. Oh god.. so much friendlier...

  • @russellbrown3526
    @russellbrown3526 2 года назад +63

    I wasn't "feeling so good", but this put a big smile on my face. :)

  • @lizc6393
    @lizc6393 3 года назад +934

    Feynman was just as much an outstanding philosopher as he was a scientist.

    • @fL0p
      @fL0p 3 года назад +22

      Both philosophy and science need to be put into play if the human race wants to "know" more and more about the nature of the universe from its -obviously, human- perspective. Even religion is vital to that, sadly (for me). You could even reach to saying that pilosophy is a field of science, in some way.

    • @42ZaphodB42
      @42ZaphodB42 3 года назад +9

      @@fL0p Philosophy is a science of thought and existence, but not really about nature.

    • @pAO29Ex
      @pAO29Ex 3 года назад +1

      @@42ZaphodB42 that's called mathematics

    • @42ZaphodB42
      @42ZaphodB42 3 года назад

      @@pAO29Ex maefs?

    • @jetjazz05
      @jetjazz05 3 года назад +1

      @@fL0p Very true. Just like there is a search for a unified theory that can explain all of the universe that principle, those rules of nature govern our existence and therefore our perception.
      Humans evolved from a world following rules, equations, principles, whatever terminology, and so really the physics and the philosophy are just interpretations of existence.

  • @kanatsizkanatli
    @kanatsizkanatli 10 лет назад +1898

    Wow! I mean, it's not just his explanation that is impressive, it's his ability to understand a question better than the person asking the question. He sees the inner workings of the mind of the interviewer, understands his motivation, notices a flaw or weakness in that mind and then sets out to repair or awaken that mind in that very precise and almost ruthless way of his!

    • @TheKwod
      @TheKwod 10 лет назад +42

      Lol, he's a professional bullshitter.

    • @joedt1
      @joedt1 9 лет назад +47

      TheKwod IS that what he won the Nobel for?

    • @TheKwod
      @TheKwod 9 лет назад +10

      I suspect so, the committee does like to award prolific bullshitters at times.

    • @joedt1
      @joedt1 9 лет назад +72

      TheKwod it was not the peace prize :) It was quantum physics :P

    • @TheKwod
      @TheKwod 9 лет назад +5

      Not everyone believes in some of the mumbo jumbo of quantum physics.

  • @lemonade2473
    @lemonade2473 5 лет назад +505

    I envy people who can maintain a train of thought. Ooh a squirrel 🐿

  • @TheSatch10
    @TheSatch10 3 года назад +46

    I'm a Mechanical Engineering student. You learn about guys like this that were geniuses and changed mankind's understanding. But what makes me smile is that he sounds just like MY professors, the good ones anyway. He's angry that I asked a good question in a stupid way and he wants me to understand what's proper and try again. I've always wondered what it would be like to be taught by professors Like Feynman but I've realized that he was human like the rest of us and that my professors were amazing like the greats before them.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 3 года назад

      I can tell that you never asked a good question, not even in a stupid way.

    • @cuongdang3304
      @cuongdang3304 2 года назад

      a very interesting yet so commonly miss out by the majority, me included

  • @dorianphilotheates3769
    @dorianphilotheates3769 6 лет назад +123

    Me: Good morning, Professor Feynman, how are you today?
    R.F.: Well...

  • @siddhantkabra
    @siddhantkabra 3 года назад +57

    In this 7 min 33 sec, I learnt to Love Richard Feynman ! ❣️😍

    • @ZeHoSmusician
      @ZeHoSmusician 3 года назад +1

      And also never to ask a 'why' question! XD

    • @atikshagarwal5147
      @atikshagarwal5147 2 года назад

      @@ZeHoSmusician bhai coaching sir se inorganic chemistry mein poocha why? That's when I learnt😂😂

  • @valevisa8429
    @valevisa8429 Год назад +2

    My father was the same.He would start with a subject,jump from that to a second one ,third one,forth one etc.,and finally after 15 minutes he will come back and explain the first one.Drove me crazy.

  • @Jybgame
    @Jybgame 4 года назад +79

    Always loved this clip. The quintessential Feynman. He doesn't want to just answer questions. He wants you to truly understand the nuance of the answer. Forever the teacher. The breaking down of answers so that he's ready to engage you at any level.

    • @52baldingindianjanitor72
      @52baldingindianjanitor72 3 года назад +6

      Really? I didn't even know this guy was famous, thought he was just a crack addict.

    • @paoloritter315
      @paoloritter315 3 года назад

      Genious

    • @shauna1609
      @shauna1609 3 года назад

      I agree!! I already knew he was about to speak his mind, Period.

    • @jollydove6314
      @jollydove6314 3 года назад

      What the fuck are you talking about? Feynman does not understand magnets!

  • @TheNewTravel
    @TheNewTravel 6 лет назад +449

    The quality of your questions determine the quality of your answers

    • @zigravos
      @zigravos 5 лет назад +25

      this exchange sort of disproves that does it not ?

    • @gon_trek2481
      @gon_trek2481 5 лет назад +5

      @@zigravos Only because it was a teaching on the matter of asking questions.. the guy wasnt answering the question (he was indirectly), he was making a point about knowledge

    • @Fundracar74
      @Fundracar74 5 лет назад +2

      @@gon_trek2481 Which has nothing to do with the quality of the question, because said question is not complicated at all (altough it could have been ). So it disproves the initial statement indeed.

    • @gon_trek2481
      @gon_trek2481 5 лет назад +1

      @@Fundracar74 mmmm right but that explanation didnt emerge because the question hinted at it, only because the speaker felt like dropping knowledge bombs... so most of the time if the speaker isnt really oriented to teaching you just answering your question, the less contextualized the question the more general (worse) the answer will likely be.. it seems obvious really

    • @dalesmith4609
      @dalesmith4609 5 лет назад

      garbage in, garbage out

  • @lewisburton1852
    @lewisburton1852 5 лет назад +1054

    Imagine being his son and asking him where do babies come from.

    • @deidara_8598
      @deidara_8598 5 лет назад +105

      He'll have you sit there for hours while he explains the entire history of life on earth and the details of child birth on a cellular level.

    • @dionlindsay2
      @dionlindsay2 5 лет назад +8

      @@deidara_8598 I bet he won't if the son stops asking why.

    • @Exosfear13
      @Exosfear13 5 лет назад +21

      why are babies made.

    • @robertdale001
      @robertdale001 5 лет назад +1

      hilarious!

    • @markgigiel2722
      @markgigiel2722 5 лет назад +29

      @@Exosfear13 Hormones and stupidity.

  • @nyksik001
    @nyksik001 5 дней назад +1

    "if you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough" - Albert Einstein

  • @Rbx98Cp
    @Rbx98Cp 2 года назад +3107

    Richard actually forgot why magnets repulse, so he came up with the most elaborate distraction of an explanation to make you forget that you'd even asked.

    • @stefanmenzel263
      @stefanmenzel263 2 года назад +39

      😉😅😀😃😃😄😆😆😅😅😅🤣🤣🤣

    • @tyrannde6392
      @tyrannde6392 2 года назад +66

      @@SkepticMaestro he did answered though

    • @hillaryclinton1314
      @hillaryclinton1314 2 года назад +50

      Actually, explaining repulsion is easy ..explaining attraction..like gravity.. is very very hard

    • @johndabate644
      @johndabate644 2 года назад +59

      He should have been a politician.

    • @deviklovecraft3835
      @deviklovecraft3835 2 года назад +1

      Hah 🤣

  • @bluejay6205
    @bluejay6205 3 года назад +141

    I need to start answering my kids’ questions in this manner

    • @huskiehuskerson5300
      @huskiehuskerson5300 3 года назад +1

      Yeah

    • @Wabbelpaddel
      @Wabbelpaddel 3 года назад +1

      Unless you want future morons, yes, this is the bare minimum.

    • @kennybeans6115
      @kennybeans6115 2 года назад +1

      I betcha they’ll regulate their rate of questioning. That’s for sure. Brilliant.

  • @scottchappel1907
    @scottchappel1907 3 года назад +242

    The interviewer is feeling how I felt as a kid when I asked the teacher, "can I go to the bathroom"....

    • @raisin4406
      @raisin4406 3 года назад +33

      I don't know, CAN you?

    • @Asdayasman
      @Asdayasman 3 года назад +3

      @@raisin4406 Fuck you that's EXACTLY what I wanted to comment.

  • @chriswilson6827
    @chriswilson6827 Месяц назад

    I start my days with this... There are levels to everything... Communication is more effective when we remain mindful of this!

  • @LazerC4
    @LazerC4 7 лет назад +4161

    Nevermind bro, I will just google it

    • @1996Pinocchio
      @1996Pinocchio 6 лет назад +117

      LazerC4 So, tell me when you have found a satisfying answer using google.

    • @liveinshyam
      @liveinshyam 6 лет назад +181

      Legend says LazerC4 is still searching for an answer on google could not find a satisfying one except one of the results which is this video itself

    • @lawrencejohnson3259
      @lawrencejohnson3259 6 лет назад +3

      Dheeraj V.S. LOL

    • @darthvader-ey4xw
      @darthvader-ey4xw 6 лет назад +8

      Snowflake

    • @JeanMarcGarin
      @JeanMarcGarin 6 лет назад +22

      He's not really a "bro", you know...

  • @richardwaldron1684
    @richardwaldron1684 3 года назад +166

    I've watched this clip countless times, and it never fails to amaze and entertain me. I could listen to this man all day, though I'm not certain why...

    • @apifunctions1095
      @apifunctions1095 3 года назад +16

      I see what you did there.

    • @NorthDelhiFighter
      @NorthDelhiFighter 3 года назад +1

      Lmao

    • @Gerald0613
      @Gerald0613 2 года назад +1

      Because you're interested in the subject. But why?

    • @foggianism
      @foggianism 2 года назад +2

      What do you mean, "why"?!

    • @orgasmified
      @orgasmified 2 года назад +3

      It certainly involves electrical force somewhere along the line

  • @hariprasadramakrishnan6241
    @hariprasadramakrishnan6241 3 года назад +70

    He ended up explaining the whole thing in sooper detail, gave a lecture on 'why' and then said he couldn't do justice to 'why' question. Just pure genius man this guy is...

    • @gunnarMyTube
      @gunnarMyTube 3 года назад +6

      A deeper explanation requires the listener has deep knowledge in math and physics to be able to comprehend.

    • @connor828
      @connor828 2 года назад

      *souper V*;

  • @John-ci8yk
    @John-ci8yk 2 года назад

    With 12,000 comments I'm sure whatever I had to say was already said. So I'm just going to go with thank you for the time and effort you put into this video, thumbs up.

  • @cowboyuniverse7258
    @cowboyuniverse7258 3 года назад +202

    This was the reason maths was soooo hard when I was younger. The teacher explain the concepts as if it was an already understood concept like many stem teachers in secondary education. Same goes for learning a new language

    • @orangeziggy348
      @orangeziggy348 3 года назад +1

      Exactly! Well said.

    • @jamestrujillo5195
      @jamestrujillo5195 2 года назад

      hahaha

    • @TheFreak111
      @TheFreak111 2 года назад +7

      It's a really hard thing to do, to step back to a certain level of knowledge which may be a point where you were many years ago, and explain from there.

    • @zarmadyl5038
      @zarmadyl5038 2 года назад +7

      @@TheFreak111 It's not really an ascension in knowledge but rather just simply forgotten. I might be able to solve some math equations but wouldn't be able to explain anything, I can just say this goes there and you do this and then this one here will be added here. This will become a game of memorization, to remember what goes where. And could still be used for other similar equations. But ''why'' needs more explaination. And not being able could be the lack of knowledge or simply forgotten it.
      I haven't touched pythagorean theorem. I remember understanding it but I have actually at this moment forgotten it and can't explain anything. But with a little review I could recieve that knowledge back.

    • @BlookbugIV
      @BlookbugIV 2 года назад +6

      That’s simply bad teachers. Good teachers necessarily have a sense of things from a pupils perspective.

  • @Vatsek
    @Vatsek 6 лет назад +1710

    It would be a very bad idea to ask him what day is today.

    • @RogerBarraud
      @RogerBarraud 6 лет назад +68

      +Vatsek.
      True.
      Necromancy is a Bad Idea.

    • @strategen9124
      @strategen9124 6 лет назад +21

      Vatsek why? You will get knowledge from a intellectual man

    • @davidsiatatgaming
      @davidsiatatgaming 6 лет назад +22

      it would actually be a very good idea :)

    • @mattzx003
      @mattzx003 6 лет назад +36

      The singularly most important reason as to why it would be a poor choice to ask Richard Feynman what day it is today is because the guy is fucking dead. Resultantly, it would be extraordinarily difficult for him to respond to you, let alone provide you with an accurate answer.
      Retrospectively, it would have been just as easy (or perhaps significantly easier) to have conveyed that exact same message with just 5 words rather than 50

    • @Schmidtelpunkt
      @Schmidtelpunkt 6 лет назад +10

      "Resultantly, it would be extraordinarily difficult for him to respond to you, let alone provide you with an accurate answer."
      And yet would there be an answer, it would last four minutes and make you feel like an idiot for not wording the question better.

  • @leftyfourguns
    @leftyfourguns 4 года назад +892

    Basically what he's saying is that he can't answer "why" magnets repel each other because giving you a definitive answer would not be truthful. There are so many things you need to understand and theories you need to accept as true to understand "why" magnets repel each other. And that's literally what scientists spend their whole lives doing. So unless you want to be a scientist and study physics, you just need to accept the known nature of magnetism.
    And this is why I love this guy so much. He purposely went on all those tangents and drew out the "answer" so long to demonstrate the fact that such a simple question only begets more and more questions, some of which we can't answer truthfully yet. It's not meant to insult the interviewer or anyone else, but only to illustrate how amazing science is and how much more we still have to learn. People who are fascinated by everything he said here may be encouraged to further their study of science. Everyone else will just go, "oh...okay..." and quickly accept that magnets repel each other because it's cool and sciency.

    • @AppleOfThineEye
      @AppleOfThineEye 4 года назад +16

      @Hearing.Chanting Remembering.Krsna Go fuck yourself.

    • @successfulatpeace
      @successfulatpeace 4 года назад +1

      Beautifully said.

    • @AppleOfThineEye
      @AppleOfThineEye 4 года назад +11

      @Hearing.Chanting Remembering.Krsna Again, go fuck yourself.

    • @leftyfourguns
      @leftyfourguns 4 года назад +9

      @TomG Gabin If you don't want to learn the science yourself (which takes a lot longer than a 10 minute RUclips video can accomplish) then yes, you just need to trust the people who've dedicated their entire lives to it. If you chose to be both ignorant and skeptical, then that's on you and no one is under any obligation to cater to you.

    • @AppleOfThineEye
      @AppleOfThineEye 4 года назад +5

      @Hearing.Chanting Remembering.Krsna Go fuck yourself.

  • @jianhushi215
    @jianhushi215 Год назад +40

    An ordinary man is eager to tell you what he knows. An extraordinary man goes to great lengths to tell you what he doesn't know.
    By the time he is done, you know 10x more than what you asked for.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 Год назад +2

      But you didn't get your question answered, though. You just got bullshit about rubber. ;-)

    • @santiagoo.8958
      @santiagoo.8958 Год назад +1

      ​@@schmetterling4477how would you answer that question?

  • @4jonah
    @4jonah 4 года назад +1590

    3rd grade Teacher to Feynman on an English test: "What color was the balloon?"
    "What do you mean by what color? Color is a refractive index of light. Color is an illusion. You might as well ask me why sugar is sweet and salt is salty. That's a great question, let me explain. But first, tell you where taste actually comes from. It's an electro-neurological stimulus...."
    *5 pages later*
    "Anyway, I can't tell you what color it was because you don't know anything."

    • @drkarimalsalihi8785
      @drkarimalsalihi8785 4 года назад +49

      Probably the best comment in this whole comment section

    • @oleole3608
      @oleole3608 4 года назад +14

      Brilliant, rofl.

    • @cristianmartinez9091
      @cristianmartinez9091 4 года назад +9

      This is why scientists need to be truly educated, meaning actually having the ability to think. And again, meaning that they become well versed in philosophy or at least epistemology. The nihilistic and amateurish conclusion that we know nothing is laughable at best.

    • @potusumanbibingka
      @potusumanbibingka 4 года назад +4

      indead. 😂

    • @alexanderb6278
      @alexanderb6278 4 года назад +23

      @@cristianmartinez9091 You're spouting sweet nothings. You claim that every scientist needs a background in philosophy because of... What? A physicist's long-winded response to an inane question? The fact he hurt your feelings by saying that you know nothing? Feynman wasn't perfect, but he was definitely not an ivory tower academic.

  • @anusuyabhattacharyya9580
    @anusuyabhattacharyya9580 4 года назад +23

    I sympathize deeply with his mother. Most mothers only have to endure 2 years of the "WHY" questions phase, but Feynman NEVER GREW OUT OF IT!!

    • @Samgurney88
      @Samgurney88 4 года назад +1

      Somehow I doubt he went to his mother if he didn't know the answer to a physics question...

  • @real.xplo1t
    @real.xplo1t 3 года назад +12

    This is a gem. Never regretted clicking on this video

  • @UnknownMFe
    @UnknownMFe Год назад +2

    He didn't just answer the raw question. He expanded my knowledge any provided me with entertainment. This is a great man

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 Год назад

      So what was the question the interviewer wanted to get answered? ;-)

    • @UnknownMFe
      @UnknownMFe Год назад +1

      ​@@schmetterling4477The interviewer asked why the magnets repel eachother

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 Год назад +1

      @@UnknownMFe Listen to the question at the ten second mark, again: "What is the feeling between the two magnets?". It's not a why question but a what question. It doesn't ask about the mechanism inside the magnets that causes the magnetic field but it asks directly about the nature of the magnetic field itself. Why would the interviewer ask such a question? Because Feynman had received the Nobel Prize in physics for illuminating the mathematical structure of the theory of the field. Feynman didn't spend a waking second in his life on the question of how permanent magnetism works, as far as I know. That's a completely different and unrelated question to which no easy answer exists. What the field is, however, that much more fundamental question can be answered easily and it was Feynman's field of work.

  • @LukeFaulkner
    @LukeFaulkner 6 лет назад +420

    I found his discourse on why more interesting than the question that provoked it.

    • @linlin20x53
      @linlin20x53 6 лет назад +1

      I was thinking that.

    • @Johnny-sj9sj
      @Johnny-sj9sj 6 лет назад +2

      And then he goes and solves the mystery of the shuttle’s launch disaster - in about five minutes! And he was a brilliant drummer and lock picker. What’s there not to like?

    • @meesalikeu
      @meesalikeu 5 лет назад +2

      sweet jesus thank god you said, “i found his discourse ....” instead of, “i feel like....”

    • @margaritasytcheva2730
      @margaritasytcheva2730 5 лет назад

      That's fair.

    • @doumkatekz
      @doumkatekz 5 лет назад

      @@Johnny-sj9sj Orange juice!

  • @UmesShrestha
    @UmesShrestha 3 года назад +22

    This is so awesome in so many levels and has made me re-think on the concepts of teaching and learning, on direct instructions and discovery learning. When the learner is just a novice, all you can give to the learner is abstractions/ideas which the learner must take it for granted and build on it. This is an excellent video for teachers to share and have conversations around how to help students develop knowledge and skills.

  • @aakkoin
    @aakkoin 3 года назад +432

    One of the greatest bongo players of his age bracket.

    • @Zyzarda
      @Zyzarda 3 года назад +19

      and a pool legend too!

    • @AEO21Productions
      @AEO21Productions 3 года назад +14

      I had never heard of this man before today and was confused at these comments, thinking these comments were talking about his hand movements during the video and maybe basing the "jokes" on that... then I googled him.. I learned he worked on the Manhattan Project and shared a Nobel Prize for something or other... this man's life was like a movie character!

    • @stefanovitali2925
      @stefanovitali2925 3 года назад +12

      Dude stole and hid a dormitory door when he was a student. When questioned, he readily confessed only to be shut down for "not taking it seriously". Just as planned...

    • @OnerousEthic
      @OnerousEthic 2 года назад +6

      @@AEO21Productions please read his book(s) “Surely you’re joking, Mr. Fineman!” for a “Nerdy good time”!

    • @canadianroot
      @canadianroot 2 года назад +1

      His deftly-constructed popsicle stick lampshades were the stuff of legend. Nobody could touch this guy during his heyday.

  • @kurtmcfc1629
    @kurtmcfc1629 Год назад

    nice of him to explain every conversation with my niece.. Why is the most fundemental question we humans have.

  • @zlcoolboy
    @zlcoolboy 2 года назад +41

    I've heard of him, but I had no idea I would be such huge fan of him from one video. The title of the video is perfect.

  • @MSI2k
    @MSI2k 3 года назад +86

    This man was a gem! How I wish he was alive today

    • @Gerald0613
      @Gerald0613 2 года назад

      Hol up he died?

    • @TheColonyRed
      @TheColonyRed 2 года назад +2

      why?

    • @MSI2k
      @MSI2k 2 года назад +5

      Feynman has been dead since 1988 😢

    • @Roger__Wilco
      @Roger__Wilco 2 года назад +3

      @@TheColonyRed He slipped on some ice :D

    • @titanproductions3628
      @titanproductions3628 2 года назад +1

      @@MSI2k he's a clown, he couldn't answer a single question without being argumentative.

  • @MasthaX
    @MasthaX 3 года назад +448

    Feynman is an absolute legend when it comes to knowledge, and sharing that knowledge with others on multiple levels.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 3 года назад +5

      And right here that legend collapses. :-)

    • @riseandshinemrfriman5925
      @riseandshinemrfriman5925 2 года назад +4

      He was an arrogant prick tho :P

    • @barneymiller5488
      @barneymiller5488 2 года назад +2

      @@schmetterling4477 How so? I found this answer extremely enlightening. You didn't? WHY not? haha!!

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 2 года назад

      @@barneymiller5488 I doubt that you even listened to it. I will give you attention, anyway. ;-)

    • @barneymiller5488
      @barneymiller5488 2 года назад +3

      @@schmetterling4477 Of course you'll give me your attention. Attention seems to be all you care about. Love that dopamine rush when you see people disagree with you, eh? I did listen to it. I found the entire piece fascinating. I'm now going to read his books. I know he's become controversial in recent years. Some "sexism" accusations. Is that your beef? I'm just trying to see why you're obsessed with this clip. Why are you drawn to this clip but repelled by his answer? Why. WHY. WHY!!!! ;)

  • @christianmosquera9044
    @christianmosquera9044 Год назад +2

    excellent video

  • @JaydenLawson
    @JaydenLawson 5 лет назад +247

    Imagine a little kid asking “why” questions to this guy

    • @BillAnt
      @BillAnt 5 лет назад +23

      The kid would suffer schizophrenic paranoia even at the thought of this scientist. xD

    • @Ometecuhtli
      @Ometecuhtli 5 лет назад +12

      In fact those little kids grew up to be one a computer engineer and another a photographer.

    • @jusalbanicae184
      @jusalbanicae184 5 лет назад +13

      Why do say 'little' kid? Isn't a kid by definition little? And what is little? How do you measure it? Is there a general length for a person to be qualified as little? If so, who and how and why did they come up with that requirement?

    • @giovannip8600
      @giovannip8600 5 лет назад +5

      @@jusalbanicae184 clearly because one (meter) is a low number although there's infinite amount of decimal numbers, but we define the unit so really we could also say the density is low for example a body except for the head would stay afloat in water. What was the question again?
      Lol

    • @cristiangamboa2037
      @cristiangamboa2037 5 лет назад +9

      That would be the luckiest kid in the world, who has Richard Feynman to answer his questions.

  • @joaooscar3078
    @joaooscar3078 3 года назад +133

    "the deeper the thing is, the more interesting it is" Well Mr. Feynman, you do have a point there

    • @mechwa28
      @mechwa28 3 года назад +1

      I see what you did there. Lol

    • @greatgooglymoogly3153
      @greatgooglymoogly3153 3 года назад +5

      thats what she said

    • @atikshagarwal5147
      @atikshagarwal5147 2 года назад +1

      @@greatgooglymoogly3153 fucking awesome 😂😂 just think how would Dwight respond to this😂😂

  • @feminist098
    @feminist098 4 года назад +394

    This is me in oral exam when I don't know the answers

  • @tarikb.9497
    @tarikb.9497 Год назад

    This is a concentrate, illustrated and elaborate course of scientific methodology. I just love it 💕💕😍🤩💓🤩😍💕💕

  • @SarahFimm
    @SarahFimm 7 лет назад +68

    "Listen to my question."

    • @thesimpleeastern
      @thesimpleeastern 5 лет назад +3

      I want to say this everytime when someone starts answering me without listening me properly. But too bad you can't say this phrase without offending people.

    • @timprescott4634
      @timprescott4634 5 лет назад +1

      ambrish sinha You simply need to rephrase it in a more intelligent, less confrontational manner...