@@CDeeMondays I know it’s semantics but you don’t prove science, you prove theories, which can change over time. Science isn’t something to be proved it’s a method to determine the truth as best we can
@@Law-of-EnTropy Who uses reddit? It's just concerning that people treat science like a religion that's completely true and right when that's not what it is at all, it's a method to see what's most likely right, not truth itself
Physics requires zero faith. When certain conditions are met, certain things happen. Things behave in measurable, consistent ways. Physics don't rely on anyone's belief in them.
I wouldn't really call it faith in physics as much as it is faith in engineering, which is something we all do every day. I don't need to have faith in friction and hydraulics as much as I do that my car's brakes will work when I step on the pedal
@@benharbyessine230 the problem here, is not trust in the physics, we know that's solid, it's always the human element where things go wrong. You have to really trust whoever setup the experiment and they did it correctly 😄
@@Epicurousdemos physics existing doesn't mean God doesn't exist, but you can have an opinion. Edit: to prevent further confusion, I didn't bring God into this conversation randomly, @Epicuroisdemos said "and people still believe in God", and so I responded.
The World needs more passionate and enthusiastic individuals like this man right here. A teacher who will inspire curiosity with his approach to science is invaluable to society! 💯
@@crazychinese7315You can wrap your hand around a sharp blade without getting cut if you don't slide your hand. Besides, even a blunt metal plate falling on the back of your neck could still do some damage
Mine peaked in 5th, 6th grade and also especially the last 2 years of high school 😊 Now I’m also pretty happy with all of my college professors, and especially 2 of them this semester - the ones doing lectures about cellular biology and botany !
My final chemistry teacher was amazing... Like, he wasn't "nice", but he ensured we knew what he was talking about. He explained, showed, then told us to repeat... If we failed he explained how. Then when exams came he gave us a cheat sheet... and still said to me "I was quite shocked you passed, never mind got a high grade" xD (I was terrible at chemistry, and loved physics, almost failed physics but chemistry I passed with flying colours... and though my physics teacher was great, I think the style of teaching from my chemistry teacher is how I succeeded... I actually understood what was happening).
I am a physicist, graduated with a BA from that very university, and I know/have done the math of Lenz's law. I know, in my head, I SHOULD have every certainty that this is perfectly safe. I still dont think I would be brave enough to do it.
It's like the swinging bucket demo. Your mammalian instincts don't care about the math/ physics, they just see something that *look* like it's going to damage the meat suit and scream at you not to do it.
@@oz_jones Of course he trusts physics. However, no physics is 100% guaranteed. Only highly probable to a percentage well over 99% due to the probabilistic nature of particles. This concept is related to quantum tunneling, where particles can pass through energy barriers they seemingly shouldn't be able to.
I also know that in real world little imperfections can create major flaws. For example screws that holding the magnets got loose and the "knife" will not slow down enough. It's not likely but I wouldn't put my neck on "everything will be okay"
@@GMPranav Lenz's law is that the current flows in such a way as to oppose change. The copper isn't powered by any battery, it's the magnet giving it a flow of electrons that slows the guillotine
My physics teacher used wooden boards covered with nails and put himself between them to demonstrate pressure. He put a cinder block on top and had a student use a sledgehammer to break it. Physics teachers are a different breed
@@ivan0912 I had a high school teacher who similarly did the cinderblock act, what's crazy was that this teacher was so old that my father had the same teacher when he was taking the class, and he still was willing to have a cinderblock on his head!
@@angeloishere4006 in the hitman games, agent 47, the player character, is canonically famous for using "accidents" to assassinate targets with plausible deniability. The missions provide numerous alternative storylines that you can play through to use different creative means, often focused on different set pieces related to the target characters. If the physics teacher were a hypothetical target in a hitman game, one of the mission stories you could play through to assassinate him would involve sabotaging the guillotine by swapping out the magnets for sheets of steel, causing the teacher to willingly put his neck on the block and schumpf himself. When he's eliminated, your handler voices over "well done 47, target eliminated. Time to find the exit." or something similar. So that's what op was referring to, the fact that the setup is perfectly designed like a hitman subplot.
@@tamuphysastr can you show a demonstration of what it would do to a piece of fruit or something without the magnets? I'm having trouble imagining a thin copper plate hospitalizing a person
This is why I trust science. People will literally go out of their way to prove their point. If you use your knowledge and expand it by diving into the research you’ll find you start understanding the science as fact as well.
@@ninas6486 but that's the best part about science: you don't have to believe. Belief implies a lack of evidence. Science provides evidence. We know science is right because anyone can replicate this demonstration and achieve the exact same results.
Unless someone replaces the magnet with sheet metal for April Fools - there is absolutely no risk involved. Other than hit the metal frame with your shoulders... or getting a lumbago while standing up.
flipping the magnets won't change the result actually, that's part of why Lenz's law is so cool. The eddy current formed in the copper plate will always resist the changing magnetic field passing through the plate. It's electromagnetic inertia, basically.
Bro's so sure of himself that he doesn't even demonstrate any sign of momentary anxiety when the thing goes down. That's a true teacher right there, props to him.
Bro was ready to behead himself just to prove science.
@@CDeeMondays I know it’s semantics but you don’t prove science, you prove theories, which can change over time. Science isn’t something to be proved it’s a method to determine the truth as best we can
@@teenagestacker6063 someone left the reddit containment
@@CDeeMondays not rlly, it wasnt sharp
"AAHH"
@@Law-of-EnTropy Who uses reddit? It's just concerning that people treat science like a religion that's completely true and right when that's not what it is at all, it's a method to see what's most likely right, not truth itself
I swear Physics teachers have so much faith in physics I love it. They always do insane stuff to prove a point I swear
@@Ridlay_ We gotcha bro
We gotchu
Physics requires zero faith. When certain conditions are met, certain things happen. Things behave in measurable, consistent ways. Physics don't rely on anyone's belief in them.
don't swear
I wouldn't really call it faith in physics as much as it is faith in engineering, which is something we all do every day. I don't need to have faith in friction and hydraulics as much as I do that my car's brakes will work when I step on the pedal
I don't think hospital is the place he'd go if there was no magnet 💀
I think Graveyard is more accurate 💀
"Let us just stitch that back on, about 1000 stitches should be enough."
The copper plate was pretty small and it's looks like less than 2m. He might live.
No way you said “might”☠️
It's probably not even sharp.
Replacing that blade with a different material would be a Hitman mission
Ngl it would be great
What if it wasn’t a copper blade and was just a rusty piece of metal….
@@Papersona BRO
@@RumTheRaccoon perfect
@@RumTheRaccoon the real question is who would be paying for 47 to complete this mission, and why
He got so much trust in physics
@@benharbyessine230 the problem here, is not trust in the physics, we know that's solid, it's always the human element where things go wrong. You have to really trust whoever setup the experiment and they did it correctly 😄
@@Epicurousdemos physics existing doesn't mean God doesn't exist, but you can have an opinion.
Edit: to prevent further confusion, I didn't bring God into this conversation randomly, @Epicuroisdemos said "and people still believe in God", and so I responded.
@@The_Redstone_Robot more like world exists, doesnt mean god created it.
@@Epicurousdemos Yes, it means we were the only animals that became conscient humans, because evolution😵💫
@@joaodavid2001 we weren't actually. Our cousin species couldnt survive. May be they weren't descendants of adam and eve. 🙂
The World needs more passionate and enthusiastic individuals like this man right here. A teacher who will inspire curiosity with his approach to science is invaluable to society! 💯
please, the world is full passionate and snthusiastic individuals, lets calm down.
But someone told me that Jesus will take care of everything.
there were many but they got decapitated
@@Nomamegoogle Sounds like you're very detached from reality. Statistically there's less than 5% of teachers who actually enjoy what they teach.
@@cashewnuttel9054 You should get a refund from that "someone" while you still can 😆
Plot twist: his scream scared the plate and instilled fear into it causing it to tremble and get stuck
@@zeyy84 Asserting his dominance
@@zeyy84 simple physics
Only Chuck Norris has this power
@@travdad76 I can see a physics teacher having this power aswell
@@Drenamow
Yeah, and those people who can break glasses with their voices!
You know... on command. 😅
He has more faith in those magnets than I have in people.
Rightly so, you can predict how magnets behave. Not always the case with people.
As the Portal 2 Announcer once stated,
"Humans... cannot be trusted"
"The solution? Build robots!"
So I guess magnets are more trustworthy after all.
imagine those magnets weakened and failed
Find someone who trust you like this guy trust magnet
@@random_user1000 Magnets take forever to weaken unless you apply a lot of heat to it.
Hospital?! Literally grave 💀
@@templater no that copperplate isn't heavy enough. But he could get paralyzed from the neck down if unlucky.
@@powerdude_dk its not sharped, they touched the blade part without any problem when hooking it.
@@crazychinese7315You can wrap your hand around a sharp blade without getting cut if you don't slide your hand. Besides, even a blunt metal plate falling on the back of your neck could still do some damage
Im sure they knew it was not going to be a big issue regardless of the magnets.
You knew my comments
Watermelon at the bottom would work but you do you
@@PandaOfRegret doesn’t have the same tension for students.
Ok Mr. Peabody
@@samlevi4744 Maybe the students who need this amount of "tension" to learn something don't belong in that field to begin with?
what you scared it might glitch?
I think he did it to show how reliable it was.
He understands stress of school and is a teacher that is the biggest step up ive seen since my 2nd grade teacher. He was amazing.
My teachers peaked in 1st and 6th grade
Mine peaked in 5th, 6th grade and also especially the last 2 years of high school 😊
Now I’m also pretty happy with all of my college professors, and especially 2 of them this semester - the ones doing lectures about cellular biology and botany !
@@trilikvlt they love what they talk about. It's a very interesting topic
My final chemistry teacher was amazing... Like, he wasn't "nice", but he ensured we knew what he was talking about. He explained, showed, then told us to repeat... If we failed he explained how.
Then when exams came he gave us a cheat sheet... and still said to me "I was quite shocked you passed, never mind got a high grade" xD (I was terrible at chemistry, and loved physics, almost failed physics but chemistry I passed with flying colours... and though my physics teacher was great, I think the style of teaching from my chemistry teacher is how I succeeded... I actually understood what was happening).
Expected to see a comment like this
Your faith in physics is inspirational
Everyone gangsta until Magnet stops working.
Yeah I mean if you heat it it stops working.
@@fenderbender2096 lots of ways to demagnetize a material.
@@heinzerbrew sure, just gave an example.
@@fenderbender2096 some student gonna move it where it is sunny
@@real_goober it’s not gonna do anything except for a slightly decrease it, but it’s gonna go back to normal
Not me thinking he was about to explain how him screaming “AH” at exactly the right pitch and intensity gave him impenetrable skin.
Not funny
@@samsurrency6967 i dunno it made me laugh
baki logic
@@samsurrency6967it was funny :3
What have you been watching? XD
"Start!"
"Wait sir, the magnets are in the wron-"
@@ZeKermet 🤣
I am a physicist, graduated with a BA from that very university, and I know/have done the math of Lenz's law. I know, in my head, I SHOULD have every certainty that this is perfectly safe.
I still dont think I would be brave enough to do it.
Scary, fun times!
You dont trust physics?
It's like the swinging bucket demo. Your mammalian instincts don't care about the math/ physics, they just see something that *look* like it's going to damage the meat suit and scream at you not to do it.
@@oz_jones Of course he trusts physics. However, no physics is 100% guaranteed. Only highly probable to a percentage well over 99% due to the probabilistic nature of particles. This concept is related to quantum tunneling, where particles can pass through energy barriers they seemingly shouldn't be able to.
I also know that in real world little imperfections can create major flaws. For example screws that holding the magnets got loose and the "knife" will not slow down enough.
It's not likely but I wouldn't put my neck on "everything will be okay"
Going to the hospital?
Bruh you'll be ending up in a funeral procession after that lol
I really doubt that. Really guillotinés were weighted and really heavy
It's copper, not heavyweighted steels
@@renofumi28 copper is more dense than steel.
@@Krannski it's still small enough to just cause bruising, and maybe a cut. It's pretty small and thin after all. I also doubt they sharpened it.
well the morgue also exist in a hospital
He is a good and dedicated teacher😊
Switching the magnets for iron on april fools 😂
🤣😂
Or reverse the poles in such away that it would accelerate
@@GMPranav i think if you reverse the poles it still slows down
@@GMPranav Lenz's law is that the current flows in such a way as to oppose change. The copper isn't powered by any battery, it's the magnet giving it a flow of electrons that slows the guillotine
@@GMPranav it doesn't, lenz law says it will act opposing the motion and never support it
the “AAAH” each time it plays is hilarious😂
@@Narr30000 I think he’s just terrified physics will stop working one day
It sounds like when Chapelle played Rick James.
@@Narr30000 for real 😂🤣
Prevents from going to hospital ❌
Prevents from going in grave ✔️
Prevents to skip physics class 💯
OH I FORGOT THE MAGNETS !
😂😂
💀
@@alle_edits french moment
That you CrackerJack?
@@alle_edits famous last words xD
Dude, is preventing you from going to the cemetery not hospital. 💀
Fr school just be calling the family telling them to meet her husband’s at the funeral home getting sowed
I doubt the blade was sharp. Although given how confident this guy is, maybe it is...
Not only did he do it once, he did it twice, mans a legend.
My physics teacher used wooden boards covered with nails and put himself between them to demonstrate pressure. He put a cinder block on top and had a student use a sledgehammer to break it. Physics teachers are a different breed
@@ivan0912 mine used to love demonstrating what happens when potassium or sodium are dropped in water
@@ivan0912 I had a high school teacher who similarly did the cinderblock act, what's crazy was that this teacher was so old that my father had the same teacher when he was taking the class, and he still was willing to have a cinderblock on his head!
Wooden board with nails. Unwavering trust you would give your life for. Someone could make a religion out of this.
Couldn't find a better believer in Science.
It's not science, it's physics
Every classroom should have one of these
@@Blashswanski yes
... maybe without the magnets 😂
Until someone puts their head above the magnet
@@Sotanaht01There are 2 pieces of plexiglass to avoid that :p
which one are you talking about?
teacher? or a guillotine?
Never mess with a confident physics teacher
@@letmesleepinpeace7052 What about a non confident one?
It didn't protect him from going to hospital, it protected him from his grave
Good job agent 47
I understood that reference
@@cosmictreason2242 what’s the reference?
@@angeloishere4006 in the hitman games, agent 47, the player character, is canonically famous for using "accidents" to assassinate targets with plausible deniability. The missions provide numerous alternative storylines that you can play through to use different creative means, often focused on different set pieces related to the target characters. If the physics teacher were a hypothetical target in a hitman game, one of the mission stories you could play through to assassinate him would involve sabotaging the guillotine by swapping out the magnets for sheets of steel, causing the teacher to willingly put his neck on the block and schumpf himself. When he's eliminated, your handler voices over "well done 47, target eliminated. Time to find the exit." or something similar. So that's what op was referring to, the fact that the setup is perfectly designed like a hitman subplot.
@@angeloishere4006 can i just say I'm glad RUclips didn't ban my comment for taboo words
@ That could be a fun mission story, I wish they added new maps to hitman woa, it’s been a few years already. Thanks for the explanation.
"I want to nullify Lenz's Law"
"There are 4 things you can't wish for"
The first person to test run this device was clinically insane😂
Bro did a deadly experiment 💀
Literally not deadly, as was demonstrated
@@oz_jones even though it's wasn't deadly, if the magnet wasn't there, bro could have died 💀
@@Jyothichittanuri but it was there
That wouldn't be deadly at all even if the magnetic wasn't there, that's a thin copper plate it wouldn't do anything
bros really hoping that physics keeps being a law abiding citizen
(it will)
I love him. He seems such a nice teacher
This is win-win. If it works, the teacher's happy, if it doesn't students are happy 🙂
@@Aadi-du9ut 💀
😂😂😂😂
And traumatized
What
That’s not what a win win is
You just know everyone loves that teacher
@stormcloudfilms I bet his final is tough😂
What confidence man. I won't dare it...
I wish I had lecturers who cared about students education like this absolute Gem!💎🙂❤️🇮🇪🍀
I love this! Way to put your neck on the line for physics!! 😅
The French loved science, so they tested this device a lot before finally perfecting it.
Honestly a really fun looking (albeit terrifying) demonstration.
Thank you! It was a fun time
@@tamuphysastr can you show a demonstration of what it would do to a piece of fruit or something without the magnets? I'm having trouble imagining a thin copper plate hospitalizing a person
This is why I trust science. People will literally go out of their way to prove their point. If you use your knowledge and expand it by diving into the research you’ll find you start understanding the science as fact as well.
@@ninas6486 but that's the best part about science: you don't have to believe. Belief implies a lack of evidence. Science provides evidence. We know science is right because anyone can replicate this demonstration and achieve the exact same results.
you need jesus actually. jesus saved this man
@melonmind.eng333 😂😂 yea yea whatever
@@Anatoliys_Adventure Jesus created science
You're easily fooled, that copper plate wouldn't do any damage.
"Sir,Wrong plates" last words he would hear
"So this is the eddy current guillotine. Observe. WAITTHEMAG-" - famous last words
Kudos to you, the best teacher’s were always doing fun stuff like this
The cool teacher you'll always remember. Love to see it.
Legit thought he was gonna say “end of the world “😂
Tomato, potato
he was definitely about to
Someone better not demagnetize it 😂
Imagine there was a power outage RIGHT AFTER the copper plate was dropped
He’s got some good sense of humor!
"Wait I think I forgot to place the magnets-"
💀💀
The hospital???
Nah even they couldn't save you from the king Henry treatment 💀
@andrew-o8w naw that's the French revolution treatment
@gabrielbeyt6267 fair enough, but I forgot what to say 🤷🏻♂️
I don't think where you're going would be hospital 💀
This teacher is literally cursed with risking his life for Lenz’s law.
Unless someone replaces the magnet with sheet metal for April Fools - there is absolutely no risk involved. Other than hit the metal frame with your shoulders... or getting a lumbago while standing up.
Bro was a miscalculation away from giving the students a class they’d never forget
Fight'n Texas Aggies... GIG 'EM!
Gig 'em!
I was wondering why no one else was talking about that 😂😂😂
Pretty cool unc
What a great teacher! 🧑🏫
Since we can prevent it can we reverse something and then accelerate it
Just wait till someone flips the magnets to make it look like an accident.
flipping the magnets won't change the result actually, that's part of why Lenz's law is so cool. The eddy current formed in the copper plate will always resist the changing magnetic field passing through the plate. It's electromagnetic inertia, basically.
Probably a good teacher. I hope he doesn't get wasted on useless students.
Thats so cool I will demonstrate this on class but I'll use silver instead since it looks more realistic! Thank you so much!!! 🙏🙏
Gonna assume thats a joke as Silver is not magnetic
@@IrisLilys copper is also not magnetic
@@IrisLilys the metal doesn't have to be magnetic, just conductive. So most metals will work
This should not be done with or without expert supervision
PhD in magic
@@tamuphysastr it's always "magic" until you understand how it works!! :-)
This should not be done. Period. 😂😂
@@jbourdette exactly
It's not a matter of should or should not, it's a matter of your personal decision and trust in physics and your capability to apply it.
"PHYSICS WORKS, AND I'M STILL ALIVE" 💀
That’s a guillotine! Lucky you that you have a magical magnet behind!! 👍🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
P.S. Loved the experiment!
Thank you! Yes physics = magic :)
natural selection: i like this guy
Going to the hospital ❌
Going to the graveyard✅
Imagine someone sneaks in there and replaces the magnets with metal blocks. 😂
Dude put all his points in intelligence and faith 💀
There's no better demonstration of physics than putting your life on the line and knowing that physics will work the same way 100% of the time.
I thought the one that stopped the blade was the teacher's powerful scream.
Lovely teacher. Need more such teachers in this world !
Self aware teachers are the best ones
That's going in the "Things I'll never try" part of my brain 😂.
That's some serious faith in physics
Bro said mockexecute me to relieve your understandal disdain for me. What a G
Bro's so sure of himself that he doesn't even demonstrate any sign of momentary anxiety when the thing goes down. That's a true teacher right there, props to him.
What a cool teacher
This is the kind of school I need in my life
The hospital ain’t fixing that my boy
This man is in all aspects the truest version of a Teacher... I'd love to be one of his sudents.
Bro's got more faith in physics than i have in myself 😭
bro almost made a revolution
Bro i swear physicians are the bravest people to exist
@PasNyoom Physicists. Physicians are medical doctors
Teachers like this were the best. They always had a tough class but it was okay because there was plenty of fun to be had while learning.
Me going back to the time of the French Revolution with a magnet to play a little joke:
I don't think you would need to go to the hospital if the blade wasn't stopped, sir.
Being a physics teacher has to be the most dangerous but safest job
It's a job that appears dangerous from an outside perspective but isn't dangerous.
You know it’s a good teacher when they (technically) risk their lives
This video is very creative!
I love that the subtitle keeps showing emotes whenever he screams "AHHH!!"
Never been surprised that most of the physics teachers are crazy, this man is even crazier than others.
World's best physics teacher fr
"yo bro thats not copper"
"its fine it will still work"
the teacher:🔴🔴🔴💀️🔴🔴🔴🔴
Saying prevented me from the Hospital hits so hard knowing he'd go str8 to the tomb😅
I wish I could trust as much as those cool physics teacher videos you see sometimes online, trust physics, their calculations and their build.
I mean this experiment is Revolutionary.
"... And is preventing me from going to the hospital." This teacher would definitely NOT be in a hospital if the copper blade hit with full force
Dr. Dawson, this is awesome!
His students were happy for a second there.