Exploring the Universe: Crash Course Big History #2

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  • Опубликовано: 16 янв 2025

Комментарии • 2,3 тыс.

  • @gyinagal
    @gyinagal 8 лет назад +1291

    "Today we will be talking about what happened after the Big Bang."
    This is quite possibly the vaguest statement possible

    • @destoryeverything9677
      @destoryeverything9677 8 лет назад +41

      that can be anything from 0.0001 secs after it to 1000000000000 trillion years in the future, no limits there

    • @ireallyhatemakingupnamesfo1758
      @ireallyhatemakingupnamesfo1758 8 лет назад +5

      destory everything in fact there is "no edge"

    • @TheSassi14
      @TheSassi14 7 лет назад +7

      gyinagal
      The "today we are talking about" part is rather specific, but else true

    • @raenab1029
      @raenab1029 7 лет назад

      gyinagal lol

    • @LelouchKilluah
      @LelouchKilluah 6 лет назад

      Great! :)

  • @armaansoni6906
    @armaansoni6906 6 лет назад +178

    hank: "I love chemistry",
    John: "I hate chemistry"
    yep, they are brothers!

  • @jdsyke
    @jdsyke 8 лет назад +585

    Crash Course Big History #2: Our Stars and the Fault in Them

  • @FieldGamers
    @FieldGamers 10 лет назад +63

    Crash Coarse is easily the best Channel on RUclips. I really hope people learn and become educated from watching these videos. They explain things so well and put things into words and graphics that everyone can understand.

  • @BluueBiru
    @BluueBiru 10 лет назад +30

    I'm so happy to see John and Hank working together on a video series. You guys both rock!

  • @ThatCarterKid
    @ThatCarterKid 10 лет назад +44

    Just seeing these 2 episodes I can conclude that this is probably the best series you have done yet! I love it! and I also love all of your other series'! Thankyou for taking the time to make these! If the information is still correct I hope to show these to my kids someday! Thanks CrashCourse!

  • @spelunkerd
    @spelunkerd 10 лет назад +44

    I know it's more tricky to get three authors to contribute to one vid, but the end result is a lot greater than the sum. John, it's fantastic to see you dip a toe into the realm of science.

  • @arthur9078
    @arthur9078 9 лет назад +104

    This was such a mind-blowing episode. Like... WOW, the universe is quite something!

    • @queensaharaice7376
      @queensaharaice7376 9 лет назад +3

      True

    • @BrianHutzellMusic
      @BrianHutzellMusic 6 лет назад +5

      It’s quite simple really! The universe is like a cheese. It is bigger than a grapefruit. My dog was formed in its belly. Easy, right?

    • @EZR725
      @EZR725 5 лет назад +1

      @@BrianHutzellMusicThis comment underrated as hell

  • @dejureclaims8214
    @dejureclaims8214 10 лет назад +9

    With these new videos, Crash Course has rekindled some of the inspirational frisson that I first experienced watching major documentaries like Cosmos, The Ascent of Man, Civilisation, and Attenborough's Life series. I think John and the gang have really created something special here, that draws attention away from the mundane to resurrect our muddied relationship with the infinite.

  • @KaletheQuick
    @KaletheQuick 10 лет назад +86

    A wild Emily appears!
    Emily uses science!
    It's super effective!

    • @alexhood2886
      @alexhood2886 7 лет назад +3

      KaletheQuick Donald trump use nuclear weapons on himself. it super effective!

    • @animationspace8550
      @animationspace8550 6 лет назад +1

      Oof!
      0 XP earned

  • @khoboo
    @khoboo 10 лет назад +455

    My mind went blank when he says that there are other universe with different physics.

    • @AnstonMusic
      @AnstonMusic 10 лет назад +67

      *Could* be, that part is a bit speculative. (Other holes *might* exist in that block of cheese) I was almost a little worried that he stated that as a fact.

    • @khoboo
      @khoboo 10 лет назад +56

      The limit of my knowledge don't permit me to further comment on this.

    • @asgerlakkenborg2435
      @asgerlakkenborg2435 10 лет назад +20

      In advance, sorry for any misconceptions/flawed logic as I write this:
      Currently, IIRC, the theory of different universes is not accepted in the same way as gravity, i. e. it hasn't really been proven. It conflicts with another theory, which might also be viable, called super-symmetry.
      If memory serves, the multiverse theory would indicate that everything is random, and that we exist in this universe only because this particular one happened to behave in a certain manner. The other one, super-symmetry, apparently leans toward a higher being toying around with us (And before you get all atheist-hypocritical, this is actual science, not religious mumbo-jumbo).
      Neither has been proven or disproven.

    • @mattdombrowski8435
      @mattdombrowski8435 10 лет назад +7

      Andy Flow he's getting two different kinds of multiverses mixed up, for the first part the incredible uniformity of our visible universe suggests that it continues that way for a considerable distance, and since the number of possible arrangements of atoms in a space the size of a planet is finite, there are bound to be interesting arrangements. the different laws of physics part is something that falls out of string theory. string theory requires 11 dimensions, which suggests that what we call the universe (both visible and invisible parts) are on the surface of a multidimensional shape that appears infinite from within. using the same principle of remarkably even constancy there are likely many such multidimensional shapes that contain other universes. there is no reason why they would have the same laws of physics inside them so they probably would be different.

    • @khoboo
      @khoboo 10 лет назад +3

      All of you are giving me knowledganism. And it makes me think of what is the purpose of our struggle for survival. We are so goddamn small compared to it.

  • @stumpthegreat
    @stumpthegreat 10 лет назад +24

    In one of my astronomy classes, we discussed several situations in which the Earth would be doom. For example, the Millky Way/Andromeda collision, the moon eventually leaving Earth's gravitational pull (or being pulled back in, and crashing down). However generally these all took longer than the life of Sun. As such, we had an ever growing list of bad things that would happen "...but it's okay because the sun will blow up first."

  • @binbintrashtin
    @binbintrashtin 10 лет назад +26

    "Your right hand, made in the belly of a star. Your left arm, potentially made in the belly of different star"
    What... What am I?

  • @RandomGuy1235
    @RandomGuy1235 10 лет назад +7

    This series is just to perfect. It combines the best of Hank and the best of John. Science, humanity, youtube, love and curiosity. I can't wait to see more of this historical science opera spanning the everything and beyond.
    Amazing work guys. This last half hour I was brought on a journey where I was awed and humbled, became proud to be alive and became proud of my species.
    Also, I don't know who Emily is but I like her. I don't know if it's the plan to alternate different people or just do all of this with you three, but I'm happy either way.
    Good luck guys! Can't wait for more.

    • @CanadianRM4
      @CanadianRM4 10 лет назад

      She hosts a channel called "brainscoop". Check it out, it's pretty cool. She's also a taxidermist and shows how she skins and dissect dead animals. If you're sensitive to that stuff, then you probably shouldn't watch it or just prepare yourself.

    • @markruffruffalo9923
      @markruffruffalo9923 10 лет назад +1

      She's the host of the Brain scoop on youtube check her out it's great

  • @RukiaSailormoon
    @RukiaSailormoon 9 лет назад +579

    "Because let's face it our species isn't gonna make it until the sun wipes us out" I love these guys, always so blunt

    • @queensaharaice7376
      @queensaharaice7376 9 лет назад +5

      Well,sadly its true😞😢

    • @Fearofthemonster
      @Fearofthemonster 8 лет назад +23

      There are at least a million years. Don't underestimate the technology. 300 years ago we were travelling on horseback.

    • @dylanscanlan1857
      @dylanscanlan1857 8 лет назад +16

      +Fearofthemonster Exactly. Technology has advanced so much in the last 10 years, you can imagine what it will be like in the next million. Besides, what's going to wipe us out?

    • @christianeh8846
      @christianeh8846 8 лет назад +22

      +Dylan Scanlan Ourselves, with pollution and global warming

    • @dylanscanlan1857
      @dylanscanlan1857 8 лет назад +4

      +Christian Eh That will require adapting but I 100% do not believe that we will wipe our selves out. We have survived a lot worse and we have always adapted.

  • @karanvirsingh7829
    @karanvirsingh7829 9 лет назад +45

    0:49 "World War III will be fought by Radiant and Dire" subtle, Crash Course. Real subtle.

    • @VarunKini
      @VarunKini 9 лет назад +1

      Karan Vir Singh Hahaha! It will solve so many problems with so little causalities.

    • @nonamed56
      @nonamed56 9 лет назад +2

      +Karan Vir Singh i don't get it. you mind explaining it to me please?

    • @karanvirsingh7829
      @karanvirsingh7829 9 лет назад +3

      Radiant and Dire. The two teams in DotA 2. (If you don't know what DotA 2 is, please Google.)

    • @nonamed56
      @nonamed56 9 лет назад +2

      don't worry google is my friend. btw you are fast :)

  • @senikaarce8897
    @senikaarce8897 4 года назад +6

    You cannot convince me we’re the only life in the universe...it’s HUGE

  • @Moonbeam143
    @Moonbeam143 10 лет назад +110

    We are the Universe. The Universe is in side of us. That's amazing.

    • @davidshi451
      @davidshi451 10 лет назад +2

      I know right??!!

    • @DUES_EX
      @DUES_EX 10 лет назад +4

      So if i were the universe, i just went inside everyone? ;p

    • @Moonbeam143
      @Moonbeam143 10 лет назад +11

      Everybody is inside you, too. We're all in each other.

    • @DUES_EX
      @DUES_EX 10 лет назад +3

      Thats so deep ;p maybe too deep for me

    • @Rumble-Tusk
      @Rumble-Tusk 10 лет назад

      Jack Daniels TWSS

  • @grexwtf
    @grexwtf 10 лет назад

    I like the cutting to different people to describe another part of the subject. Makes the pace of the program that much better. More of this format, please. You guys are doing great.

  • @justjollyjacob
    @justjollyjacob 10 лет назад +1

    I love the growing collaboration.
    Which seems wonderfully appropriate, given the subject.

  • @TobiBaronski
    @TobiBaronski 10 лет назад +16

    "Your brain has more connections than there are stars in the galaxy." AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAUUUUUGGGGGGHHHHHHHHHHHHHH

  • @Marrowhunter
    @Marrowhunter 10 лет назад +5

    “We are a way for the cosmos to know itself.”

  • @Altorin
    @Altorin 10 лет назад +13

    I vote "Cosmic Latte" as a new Crayola color

  • @DonSmiths
    @DonSmiths 10 лет назад +1

    As this episode ended, I was overcome by a sense of pride by being a Subbable supporter of Crash Course. I'm a big fan of this Big History series. Fantastic job Crash Course team!

  • @rekahsoft
    @rekahsoft 10 лет назад +2

    This is a spectacular episode. Thanks for all your great work!

  • @PotatoBearRawr
    @PotatoBearRawr 10 лет назад +12

    Should have a warning: May cause violent nergasm.
    My brain is still syncing from all the awesomeness... MAKE MORE! Please :)

    • @davidshi451
      @davidshi451 10 лет назад

      Spread the word, share these videos, and also check out Subbable!

  • @SenorJC
    @SenorJC 10 лет назад +13

    Yes another crash course video!

  • @rushyahr7767
    @rushyahr7767 9 лет назад +3

    I love these videos you guys make. It's nice to watch these when I start feeling down, because it really gives me something better to think about. I try not to watch too many of them though, because then I start to ask too many questions. I've been wondering for the last month if my dog is capable of remembering her dreams, for example. Then I'm trying to figure out how that part of the brain might work, and boy is that a time consuming endeavor. I think I just ask questions till I find that page of the book that no one has written yet. Then I want to write that page, and soon after I realize I don't know nearly enough to write that page.

  • @katewoessner7607
    @katewoessner7607 10 лет назад +1

    How did the universe expand so fast in the beginning. Wouldn't it need to exceed the speed of light? I'm loving this and you've made me really curious.

  • @Thiefree
    @Thiefree 10 лет назад

    This tag team teaching technique is terrific. Ignorance and indifference don't stand a chance.

  • @theravendork5914
    @theravendork5914 10 лет назад +10

    I. Love. This. Series.
    DFTBA

    • @davidshi451
      @davidshi451 10 лет назад +3

      Share it with everyone you know!

  • @ChuDust
    @ChuDust 10 лет назад +27

    0:33 "And I don't mean stars like Kim Kardashian, who is actually not a star - she is a person!" HAHHAHA 😂

  • @nilesrock024
    @nilesrock024 10 лет назад +169

    There are people out there who don't like chemistry?
    You poor bastards...

    • @emperorpalpatine9841
      @emperorpalpatine9841 10 лет назад +11

      Theres people who dont like anything. Deal with it.

    • @verdiss7487
      @verdiss7487 10 лет назад +1

      I love chemistry, but I can't stand chemists.

    • @nilesrock024
      @nilesrock024 10 лет назад +1

      Verdiss That's fieldist!

    • @nilesrock024
      @nilesrock024 10 лет назад

      Emperor Palpatine Deal with what?
      How much it must suck for other people not to like chemistry, one of the most important and interesting fields at our disposal?
      Cause, I mean, don't think I actually have to deal with anything there...

    • @bacawaka2813
      @bacawaka2813 10 лет назад +9

      meh. Chemistry is just applied physics.

  • @TheAAbck
    @TheAAbck 10 лет назад

    only john can take something so complicated and explain so even the most average of people understand it thanks john u are the greatest educator of all time.

  • @melissaabbey641
    @melissaabbey641 10 лет назад +1

    I'm speechless. This series is mind-blowing and is helping me see everything in a new way, with new connections. THANK YOU

  • @azavala5
    @azavala5 10 лет назад +36

    The Mongols are made of stars too!!!

    • @SeraphimKnight
      @SeraphimKnight 10 лет назад +18

      THEY'RE THE EXCEP- wait no

    • @TheKeksadler
      @TheKeksadler 10 лет назад +5

      Mongol Exc- not this time.

    • @asgerlakkenborg2435
      @asgerlakkenborg2435 10 лет назад +4

      Jeremiah B Everyone knows Temujin's balls were actually tiny stars.

    • @alannar.8701
      @alannar.8701 10 лет назад +2

      Jeremiah B I feel like there's a Fault in Our Stars reference to make there, but I can't find it.

  • @damascus21
    @damascus21 10 лет назад +4

    11:57 Yay, it's Emily! I love Emily
    (Hank, John, you guys are great, too, but I love Emily)

  • @FROPDESAI
    @FROPDESAI 9 лет назад +35

    I bet that the 237 people who disliked this video are from North Dakota!

  • @robinchesterfield42
    @robinchesterfield42 7 лет назад +1

    1. I love that Carl Sagan is in the intro! :) 2. I want John-From-The-Past's shirt in this episode. That is an awesome shirt. 3. Knitting grandma star. :) 4. This is all so weird but SO COOL. We are the universe trying to understand itself. And that is AWESOME.

  • @VitaminSoup
    @VitaminSoup 10 лет назад +1

    Absolutely amazing ... and the way everything was presented was perfectly

  • @efe_aydal
    @efe_aydal 10 лет назад +4

    Yeah! That's what I'm talking about.

  • @godzilla964
    @godzilla964 9 лет назад +142

    Since we are technically made of recycled elements, Reincarnation sounds like a more realistic explanation to what happens after we die.

    • @TIMEtoRIDE900
      @TIMEtoRIDE900 9 лет назад

      +godzilla964 Reincarnation still requires some kind of waiting period, a place to wait, and "Angels" to shuttle your spirit to and fro.

    • @godzilla964
      @godzilla964 9 лет назад +11

      +TIMEtoRIDE900 I don't think so.

    • @TIMEtoRIDE900
      @TIMEtoRIDE900 9 лет назад

      godzilla964
      The day of the Tsunami 250,000 people died, and since the same ## weren't born, well, there's your waiting period.
      To not have "Spiritual Assistants" would mean that YOU are completely in control and responsible for the whole reincarnation process, that you would know exactly what to do and where to go.
      Your thoughts ??

    • @godzilla964
      @godzilla964 9 лет назад +14

      +TIMEtoRIDE900 I look at reincarnation the same way I look at anything written by H.P Lovecraft. A force beyond any human understanding.

    • @TIMEtoRIDE900
      @TIMEtoRIDE900 9 лет назад +1

      Fair enough.

  • @TheKonkaman
    @TheKonkaman 10 лет назад +8

    woo emily is back, she is my favorite

  • @dewarfV
    @dewarfV 10 лет назад +1

    Love seeing two of my favourite channels working together

  • @SpiritSonic
    @SpiritSonic 10 лет назад +2

    It's great to see Emily on the show-- I hope she can do more in the future!

  • @john.ellmaker
    @john.ellmaker 8 лет назад +10

    Love these guys, just an update from Harvard Smithsonian though, newer research shows that heavy element production is likely to have come from neutron star collisions. While heavy elements are produced in the r process it doesn't seem to account for the relative abundance of heavy elements, but add in occasional collisions which produce extreme amounts in comparison and you have a plausible explanation. Even more recent research in 2015 corroborates this idea as isotopes on earth have been confirmed to come from a neutron star merger (Nature Physics)

  • @LordMarcus
    @LordMarcus 10 лет назад +20

    If we become capable of colonizing the galaxy, I am unsure why we would remain on our own little island, as you put it, John.

    • @theguy9208
      @theguy9208 10 лет назад +8

      i imagine for the same reason the romans couldn't conquer the whole planet.
      its nearly impossible to govern a place that is years travel time away, and since nothing can go faster than light, we are very much restricted to living within our solar system and without risking the creation of a potential rival or enemy out of a colony light years away.

    • @hilsanka6621
      @hilsanka6621 10 лет назад +11

      Because of the massive distance between even neighbouring galaxies

    • @LordMarcus
      @LordMarcus 10 лет назад +1

      You both seem to have missed the functional part of the statement, "become capable of colonizing the galaxy." It's already given in this postulate that we can do that -- so, why WOULDN'T we do that?

    • @Meeko1010100112
      @Meeko1010100112 10 лет назад +1

      We wouldn't because it is dangerous out there. The wild Wild West was wild, and it was even connected to the less dangerous eastern seaboard. Now imagine living in the new one, only so far away that light takes minutes to get from place to place. Even years, at a scale most would dream of happening.

    • @sabbywins
      @sabbywins 10 лет назад +10

      He means we wouldn't leave our galaxy, not our planet. To be able to travel interstellar space within our own galaxy is one thing; but to be able to travel between separate galaxies is another problem entirely. At that point, distances become so big that there isn't any point thinking about them because we are unable to comprehend just how vast those spaces are. Besides, by the time we had thoroughly explored every inch of the milky way, it's entirely possible the universe will begin to die.

  • @TabithaUjang
    @TabithaUjang 10 лет назад +13

    I feel so small after watching this video..
    *hi, I'm just debris, floating by*

  • @thearomanticshipper4468
    @thearomanticshipper4468 5 лет назад +1

    This has nothing to do with the video but before the video played there were two adds that were shown and the irony of the two being shown together was amazing. The first one was a really insightful educational video about nutritional needs and how an overemphasis in society in reducing fat content has led to an overabundance of unhealthy amounts of sugar flavorings in our diets. The second add shown was trying to sell an an extremely unhealthy and sugary beverage that is the exact kind of thing the first add was warning against.

  • @amandafinlaw
    @amandafinlaw 10 лет назад +1

    All of this makes me feel hopeful, anxious, curious, skeptical, sad, and optimistic at the same time! I have so many hopes for humanity and I crave more knowledge about life and the universe that I doubt I'll ever receive. I really appreciate this series though because it's making me a more knowledgeable and curious combination of star stuff ;)

  • @MaryJane-bo6lj
    @MaryJane-bo6lj 9 лет назад +17

    *VIDEO ERROR*
    4:05 milky way is 100,000 light years across
    5:43 Laniakea is only 500 Light years across!
    Oh wait, I forgot that space and time was held in place by a Tardis...

    • @koyx
      @koyx 9 лет назад +2

      +Mary Jane Hahaha, I looked it up on and it's approxiamately 520 million light years ago, I guess they forgot the million.

    • @queensaharaice7376
      @queensaharaice7376 9 лет назад +2

      A fellow whovian!🙌🙋

    • @TheMitchy27
      @TheMitchy27 8 лет назад

      Mary Jane milky way is 110 million LY and laniakea is 500 million LY

  • @Jeanjellybean13
    @Jeanjellybean13 9 лет назад +188

    maybe my husband and I will forego the ring and get an xbox as a symbol of our marriage :)

  • @ragnkja
    @ragnkja 9 лет назад +31

    M87 is called that because it was the 87th fuzzy thing Messier wrote down that he'd checked out in the sky while searching for comets.

    • @milomineon2787
      @milomineon2787 9 лет назад +3

      I don't know why I laughed so hard at that XD

  • @BudCharlesUnderVlogs
    @BudCharlesUnderVlogs 10 лет назад +2

    This series is so awesome!

  • @Death-ingrasp
    @Death-ingrasp 10 лет назад +1

    Yay Emily Graslie! Thanks for having her appear on the show! I hope to see her more often too, I already subscribe to the brain scoop.

  • @ZiePe
    @ZiePe 10 лет назад +3

    Oooh Emily is featured. Great!

  • @SJY11
    @SJY11 9 лет назад +6

    me at 11:09:
    yeah just some old ring
    me at 11:42:
    ill look at a ring the same way ever again

  • @edgeldine3499
    @edgeldine3499 10 лет назад +4

    im from North Dakota... im just glad it was mentioned lol :D

    • @edgeldine3499
      @edgeldine3499 10 лет назад

      also if you hover over my name you get to see the wonderful land that is my home ;)

  •  10 лет назад

    i really like the way you express these ideas, hope it gets more people into seeing your videos and getting into some kind of intellectual debate about it. keep up the great work!

  • @porgy29
    @porgy29 10 лет назад

    While I love all of the Crash Course's you have done so far this series is by far my most favorite. Partly for the great subject matter and the bringing together of so many different themes, but also due to the fact that I get to see both of the brothers Green and Emily.

  • @therodentman
    @therodentman 10 лет назад +14

    the coldest star we've found is about a hot as a fresh cup of coffee

    • @davidshi451
      @davidshi451 10 лет назад +11

      That's sooooo cool! Literally and figuratively.

    • @SeraphimKnight
      @SeraphimKnight 10 лет назад +7

      Pretty sure that's a brown dwarf and not a star. By definition, a star needs to be hot enough to fuse hydrogen.

    • @dulipub
      @dulipub 10 лет назад

      Those are dead stars cause by definition stars would need to have fusion going on.

    • @Cornelixx
      @Cornelixx 10 лет назад +2

      why is there an account for a dick

    • @rayhs1984
      @rayhs1984 10 лет назад

      watch the Scishow space video about the smallest star.

  • @er1nyes_
    @er1nyes_ 10 лет назад +6

    School headmasters around the world, this is interdisciplinarity done right. Take some notes!

  • @jordankloosterman2966
    @jordankloosterman2966 10 лет назад +16

    I have to do my homework, but I want to keep learning

    • @davidshi451
      @davidshi451 10 лет назад

      Is it possible to do…both? Probably.

  • @nfnmrm9652
    @nfnmrm9652 9 лет назад +1

    I enjoyed this very much. extremely informative

  • @nattdaniel
    @nattdaniel 10 лет назад

    I asked my teacher to check out the first crash course big history and she played some of it in class, perfect timing for making these videos we're learning about the Big Bang and it's aftermath in Geography

  • @csolisr
    @csolisr 10 лет назад +27

    If the universe is built upon thermal disequilibrium, then it follows that the laws of physics must rearrange it back into equilibrium through entropy, right?

    • @Rodman200818
      @Rodman200818 10 лет назад +25

      You touch upon a very interesting topic. You are indeed correct, the state of the universe, given enough time, will be of total thermal equilibrium. The key is "given enough time" though, we are talking inconceivable timescales, perhaps beyond other potential ends to the universe itself. No worries bro!

    • @Zazz30
      @Zazz30 10 лет назад +7

      Yep. It's called "Heat death" if you want to look into it.

    • @csolisr
      @csolisr 10 лет назад

      Zazz30 Knew it already. I've been planning to write a book on the relationship between that and neuroscience to prove that morality has no rational basis, but it'll take me time to have a solid base for it.

    • @Zazz30
      @Zazz30 10 лет назад +6

      Carlos Andrés Solís Oh, I think I must have misunderstood the question then.
      What connection are you making between heat death and morality? It's not immediately apparent to me.

    • @Rodman200818
      @Rodman200818 10 лет назад +1

      Zazz30 the relationship between the second law of thermodynamics and neuroscience can (or he will try to) prove morality has no rational basis, is what I gather from this. That is definitely out of my scope of knowledge but I'm not sure its a strong hypothesis to begin with. Flimsy connection. I'm all ears tho.

  • @jack_the_sparrow
    @jack_the_sparrow 9 лет назад +4

    "... THAT'S NUTS, (well it's more like cheese), BUT THAT'S NUTS!"
    God I love their brand of humor haha

  • @mattiestyles2020
    @mattiestyles2020 10 лет назад +18

    If we come from dead stars, and if we still see the light from stars that have already died millions of years ago, is it possible that when we look up in the sky we are seeing the light from stars that made the atoms we consist of? Or, if they have been dead for so long, and we are still seeing their light, are these stars too far away to possibly have formed the elements that are on earth today?

    • @raph96.37
      @raph96.37 10 лет назад +16

      Light travels faster than matter so...no

    • @samguy7654
      @samguy7654 7 лет назад

      Mattie Styles That's so poetic Mattie.

    • @maxsteele3686
      @maxsteele3686 6 лет назад

      The stars that we can see in Earths sky are approximately within 100 light years, the number of stars we can see is something like 0.1% of our galaxy.

  • @mikejia1
    @mikejia1 10 лет назад +1

    just noticed how much nicer Hank's office looks compared to John's. Dat wood decor is just so warm and homey

  • @MilkCullen
    @MilkCullen 10 лет назад +1

    I love John from the past's reaction when present John told him how there are other universes with law of physics completely different from ours because that was exactly my reaction when hearing it.

  • @TheFuzzynutz65
    @TheFuzzynutz65 10 лет назад +24

    No offense but i now have to wonder how accurate your info is about the big bang considering mount rushmore is not in north dakota but it is in south dakota.

    • @lucasruano2283
      @lucasruano2283 10 лет назад +3

      They a simple mistake and that makes you wonder about the rest of the show?

    • @ArticWS
      @ArticWS 10 лет назад +194

      You missed the joke? Really?

    • @SethPanning
      @SethPanning 10 лет назад +122

      it wasnt a mistake it was a joke

    • @sanitd1
      @sanitd1 10 лет назад +45

      you guys didnt read the box?

    • @adamdifilippe8066
      @adamdifilippe8066 10 лет назад +63

      That was a joke, dude.

  • @VideoGamerDerek
    @VideoGamerDerek 10 лет назад +4

    the universe is awesome :D

  • @user-cn3ip6ok8p
    @user-cn3ip6ok8p 8 лет назад +25

    Stuff like this makes me sad for two reasons:
    1. My existence is pointless.
    2. There is a lot of cool stuff that'll happen and I will never be able to experience it.

    • @alexanderpezzutto3875
      @alexanderpezzutto3875 8 лет назад +2

      Ojaswini V that is, assuming all of this happened without a reason. However, if all this happened purposefully, then you too have purpose. Creation with a Creator has meaning.

    • @nathanmckenzie904
      @nathanmckenzie904 8 лет назад +3

      Ojaswini V Your life and existence is what you make it

    • @dulguunmurunbarsbold210
      @dulguunmurunbarsbold210 6 лет назад +4

      If you give it purpose, it isn't pointless.

    • @ahmeduchiha
      @ahmeduchiha 6 лет назад +1

      your existence is pointless if the existence of the universe is pointless
      but if you're existed from the universe and its stars then how the universe came from?
      and this is the job of "God"

    • @isaiahsmith3199
      @isaiahsmith3199 6 лет назад

      I would say the exact opposite, being you are a wayyyyy more complicated and interested set of particles and molecules working together than any sun, solar system, and a majority of living things on this planet. The fact that you can even comprehend "purpose" seems pretty spectacular when you consider everything else out there.

  • @UninspiredFilm5
    @UninspiredFilm5 10 лет назад

    Emily!! I'm glad to see her getting involved in the Crash Course videos! :D

  • @sockmaster2718
    @sockmaster2718 10 лет назад

    Big History is my favorite Crash Course so far. This is awesome.

  • @dr.kraemer
    @dr.kraemer 10 лет назад +3

    My five year old daughter frequently tells me that Emily Graslie is her favorite scientist. Very glad to see her as part of this show!

  • @gregjang5402
    @gregjang5402 10 лет назад +8

    anyone actually pause and look at the introduction? the 'post human' part is the funniest... ROB...

  • @BraighGaming
    @BraighGaming 10 лет назад +4

    If bending space is possible, we should create a wormhole that is very (very, very, very, very) far away, then put a super-crazy-high-powered telescope through it and watch the Big Bang. We could even use this technique (if it is possible) to catch a glimpse of earth during whatever time period we want. This would give us a solid understanding of the universe, with less guesstimates.
    Just a thought.

    • @EvansRowan123
      @EvansRowan123 10 лет назад +1

      Bending space is dome by gravity, so we'd have to physically move stuff to where the other end of the wormhole is going to be, which takes more time than the time for light to cover that distance, so it'd be better to just use a telescope now without a wormhole at all. Plus I'm pretty sure specifically making a wormhole is way harder than just bending space around.

    • @BraighGaming
      @BraighGaming 10 лет назад +2

      Rowan Evans
      I know that creating a wormhole is a lot more complex than simply bending space, but I wanted to put it in the simplest of terms so that anyone reading could easily understand.

    • @EvansRowan123
      @EvansRowan123 10 лет назад

      Nathaniel King The "edge" of the universe doesn't work that way, if we could set up wormholes outside our light cone, the sensible places to put them would be like, between 1 and 1,000 lightyears away. No screwing around with the edge of the universe necessary.

  • @Divercitylife
    @Divercitylife 10 лет назад

    of all the CC series, this is by far my favorite!!

  • @kraftthisile9113
    @kraftthisile9113 10 лет назад

    I love hearing you guys!
    Thanks for the video!

  • @SomethingCleverAndOriginal
    @SomethingCleverAndOriginal 9 лет назад +8

    WE ARE ALL STAR STUFF :D

  • @tri-slosher
    @tri-slosher 10 лет назад +27

    Hey, if Emily is talking in this series, shouldn't she also be in the intro?

    • @davidshi451
      @davidshi451 10 лет назад +6

      That's actually a good point… I think it's because she's not in all of the episodes?

    • @tri-slosher
      @tri-slosher 10 лет назад

      ***** If that happens, I wonder what she'll be doing in the intro...

    • @thebrainscoop
      @thebrainscoop 10 лет назад +4

      Sunwoo Kim Sciencing, naturally.

    • @tri-slosher
      @tri-slosher 10 лет назад +1

      ***** Of course. Silly me.

    • @MadScientist3000
      @MadScientist3000 10 лет назад +1

      too busy making sandwiches im guessing

  • @RadarRaym
    @RadarRaym 10 лет назад +14

    Kim kardashian is a person?. Ah I love learning with CrashCourse.

  • @DvanGinkel
    @DvanGinkel 10 лет назад

    This show is GREAT! Cool to see both Hank Green and Emily Graslie appear and share some knowledge (gives this complex matter a bit of fresh air).
    Question though: Why doesn't John from the past have any classmates?

  • @NanaV73
    @NanaV73 10 лет назад

    I like that you all of you are in the Big History videos. It takes a lot of experts to explain such a complicated concept! John, Hank, AND Emily in the same video? What more could we ask for? (except to maybe add Michael :))

  • @oshorrwarri5569
    @oshorrwarri5569 10 лет назад +5

    What if there's a grapefruit so large, that it's larger then the universe?
    *Twilight Zone Music*

  • @xelgringoloco2
    @xelgringoloco2 10 лет назад +13

    Who is Emily? Where's she from? She didn't introduce herself?

  • @chocolatez9042
    @chocolatez9042 7 лет назад +7

    (Quoting history of the entire world I guess)
    "Congratulations! Your world is now...
    A bunch of gas."

  • @Gigas0101
    @Gigas0101 10 лет назад +1

    Thank you very much for the Carl Sagan quote! Great episode!

  • @lemonadelotion
    @lemonadelotion 10 лет назад

    Crash course is great, they've actually helped me wrap my head around light years measurement

  • @beigeleachon4461
    @beigeleachon4461 9 лет назад +7

    What's so bad about BEIGE though?

  • @JNava
    @JNava 10 лет назад +12

    I know it may sound stupid & unreasonable but I've always wondered if our universe was a small speck of dust, like in "Horton Hears a Who". I've always thought that book was about the scientific curiosity overpowering the absent minds of religion & it's followers, Calling out blasphemy or heresy on questioning what's out there. It's crazy how a child's book can reflect on what grown ups wondered throughout history about the universe. I know it's just a silly book, but that image has sizzled & burned in my mind for years. I just want to know, what are the possibilities of mankind & it's universe, being simply a small speck of dust?

    • @HoneyvsClementine
      @HoneyvsClementine 10 лет назад +5

      Well, I guess now I know I am not the only one with that theory...

  • @akhil151100
    @akhil151100 9 лет назад +22

    2:07 I am offensive and I find that North Dakota

  • @kristinax5052
    @kristinax5052 5 лет назад +1

    you guys are incredible..

  • @chevchelios1990
    @chevchelios1990 10 лет назад

    At school, the same content would probably have put me to sleep.
    Thanks for making it awesome! And again, excellent graphics and presentation!

  • @Altorin
    @Altorin 10 лет назад +21

    *looks at right hand* huh.. *looks at left hand* woah......

  • @CBMX_GAMING
    @CBMX_GAMING 10 лет назад +404

    As soon as I heard "Big Bang" I also heard the roars of many stubborn Christians

    • @emperorpalpatine9841
      @emperorpalpatine9841 10 лет назад +11

      Hilarious, please tell us more.

    • @norahwilliams138
      @norahwilliams138 10 лет назад +100

      I'll just be over here with Georges Lemaître, the Catholic priest who proposed the theory of the Big Bang. Don't mind me. Oh no, I dropped a link to his wikipedia article, clumsy me. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georges_Lema%C3%AEtre

    • @thepineconeking6916
      @thepineconeking6916 10 лет назад +1

      Deadweight if you look closely then it says a thousand years to us is a day to God which can be put that God took 7 days for him but our time it would take 7,000 years. Maybe just maybe.

    • @Koop784
      @Koop784 10 лет назад +10

      ***** That would explain why prayers are never answered. It also basically amounts to God not giving the vaguest of fucks about any singular human.

    • @ibn_klingschor
      @ibn_klingschor 10 лет назад +8

      Deadweight
      Some creationists are muslim.

  • @burpilicious9687
    @burpilicious9687 9 лет назад +5

    So I was technically born by a star's womb. AWESOME

  • @titchglover2601
    @titchglover2601 10 лет назад

    Well done! Great video i had to learn this by viewing many of videos individually and piece it all together. And here it is now all pieced together nicely.
    Thanks.

  • @drevilatwork
    @drevilatwork 10 лет назад

    Crashcourse getting better and better. Thank you very much