Sir Roger Penrose: Faith, Fantasy, and the Big Questions in Modern Physics

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  • Опубликовано: 31 авг 2017
  • Sir Roger Penrose, the celebrated English mathematician and physicist as well as author of numerous books, including The Emperor's New Mind: Concerning Computers, Minds, and the Laws of Physics, joined the Clarke Center to share a talk titled "Fashion, Faith and Fantasy and the Big Questions in Modern Physics."

Комментарии • 197

  • @patarnababan6440
    @patarnababan6440 5 лет назад +21

    I love Sir Roger Penrose cordiality as much as his thinking.

  • @Thomasp671
    @Thomasp671 5 лет назад +19

    Penrose is 87+ years old and a genius and smart as it gets !

  • @onehitpick9758
    @onehitpick9758 6 лет назад +12

    Penrose is really onto something here. This makes more sense than anything I've heard in recent times.

  • @ericgraham8150
    @ericgraham8150 4 года назад +5

    I really can't quite put my finger on it, but I just love listening and going down the rabbit hole that is his brain

  • @cauchyh3879
    @cauchyh3879 6 лет назад +86

    9:00 real start

  • @jooky87
    @jooky87 6 лет назад +12

    An honest mathematician. Excellent talk highlighting the realization that not all mathematics is physics and vice versa. There’s still much to be discovered both physically and in theory.

  • @jackhammer5468
    @jackhammer5468 5 лет назад +6

    I wish Penrose would have heard the question of the young woman more clearly than he did. The question repeated to him by the moderator was not the question she asked. It was a good one I don't think he answered because he didn't hear the first part of the question that had to do with the extremely improbability of our big bang and asking wouldn't that make the othe big bangs even more improbable. It was a great question. I think his ideas about the extreme improbability of our universe was formed long before his ideas about there not being a first big bang. I too would have like to hear him square up those notions.

  • @robertdobosz9681
    @robertdobosz9681 6 лет назад +3

    Please keep inviting Sir Penrose back for further talks!! It seems that his contrarian nature among his colleagues has paid off greatly!

    • @NondescriptMammal
      @NondescriptMammal 2 года назад +2

      Science is based on skepticism, even of existing scientific dogma itself, so it is always refreshing to see someone as qualified as Penrose to fill this role and keep us thinking in other directions than the usual consensus that marches in lockstep with the prevailing theories

    • @brendawilliams8062
      @brendawilliams8062 2 года назад

      @@NondescriptMammal you need Sir Penrose to figure out what the lockstep is.

  • @brendawilliams8062
    @brendawilliams8062 2 года назад

    I am glad i stay at it. Thankyou for ccc

  • @franknimal9966
    @franknimal9966 6 лет назад +7

    The brain is an area of neurophysiology activity. Neurophysiology activity consists of electrochemical reaction. Thus at any given time, the brain state is defined by a subset of electrochemical reactions, derived from a large set of possible reactions. Consider the phenomenon of a. conscious thought. As at any given time the brain physical state consists of a collection of electrochemical reactions (events), it can be inferred that they are collectively responsible for the conscious thought. This means that at least in part, simultaneous events are responsible for thought. In other words, thought creates a connection between simultaneous events. This is in contradiction to the consequences of special relativity, which states that the fastest connection between events is the speed of light and thus excludes the possibility of connection between simultaneous events. Consider the memorizing of, say, the value 5. This would necessarily involve more than 1 point in space as, say, if it is assumed a single electron records 5 by taking a particular potential. Then it by itself cannot define (or know) 5, as its magnitude would be defined only with respect to another datum or event defined as a unit potential, thus involving at least 2 simultaneous events. Consider the experience of vision. While we focus our attention on an object of vision, we are still aware of a background and, thus, a whole collection of events. This would mean at least an equal collection of physical events in the brain are involved.
    Take the experience of listening to music. It would mean being aware of what went before. Like vision, it would probably mean that while our attention at any given time is focused at that point in time, it is aware of what went before and what is to follow. In other words, it spans the time axis. Many great composers have stated that they are able to hear their whole composition. Thus their acoustic experience is probably like the average person's visual experience. While focusing at a particular point in time of their composition, they are nevertheless aware of what went before and what is to come. The rest of the composition is like the background of a visual experience. Experiencing the composition in this way, they are able to traverse it in a similar fashion to which a painting is observed. In this sense, an average person in comparison can be seen as having tunnel hearing (like tunnel vision) when it comes to music, thus making it very difficult for him or her to reproduce or create new music. It can be seen that consciousness is a 4-D phenomenon. If it is a physically explainable phenomenon, such an explanation would involve EPR type effects and as such physical explanations at a quantum level will be involved.
    philpapers.org/rec/DESCAS

    • @Chaos------
      @Chaos------ 6 лет назад +2

      electrochemical reactions. Wrong bucko. Theres quantum activity in the microtubules that you're completely ignoring.

    • @franknimal9966
      @franknimal9966 6 лет назад +2

      If you read to the end you will see that what I am saying is that QM level explanations would be needed in the least

    • @tseikkisnelkytkaks9013
      @tseikkisnelkytkaks9013 5 лет назад +3

      There is no contradiction between emergent phenomena and special relativity. Probably the workings of the brain do utilize quantum phenomena, but the point you're making here is just plain wrong. You are using an insane amount of words to say that emergence such as consciousness arising from the brain is not explainable or calculable using a deterministic theory such as special relativity. It is not, but there is no contradiction either. :)

  • @ashoknaganur8551
    @ashoknaganur8551 2 дня назад

    In double slit experiment after expanding electron formed in the slit it contracts and by dark matter becomes wave it behaves like super conductor kinetic energy increases and electron formed according to me s.c black hole double slit experiment etc are examples

  • @vermouth310
    @vermouth310 6 лет назад +4

    I wonder how many honest people there were in the audience, that were lost very early in the lecture?

    • @muzzletov
      @muzzletov 6 лет назад +1

      u lookin for company?

  • @erikschiegg68
    @erikschiegg68 4 года назад

    How much is the universe cooling by expansion, if you consider the universe as a gas?

  • @pjmclach
    @pjmclach 6 лет назад +6

    Penrose has the best pictures

    • @vinm300
      @vinm300 5 лет назад

      ....and draws them himself I believe.

  • @pedrodanielpfaff5386
    @pedrodanielpfaff5386 4 года назад

    I am looking for the programs I loaded down on modern physics .What happened?

  • @brendawilliams8062
    @brendawilliams8062 2 года назад

    I am amazed that one may comprehend the square root of ten being multiplied or divided by 1001032155. Then subject to the same multiplication or division with 1000564416 into strings using deminsions.

  • @cseeger1
    @cseeger1 6 лет назад +8

    It would appear that Roger Penrose and Lawrence Krauss have the same tailor.

    • @waldieschmidtke9630
      @waldieschmidtke9630 3 года назад +1

      True,...... the tie probably got through the split light experiment, like his cat analysis ...... 2 cats appear and a third with a colour lol

  • @ericgraham8150
    @ericgraham8150 4 года назад +3

    Sir Penrose, I'm freely available for hire to handle any future button pushing you need for you lectures.

  • @DaveLH
    @DaveLH 6 лет назад +4

    What the Five Perfect Solids are good for are D&D dice.

  • @Carfeu
    @Carfeu Год назад

    I hate math but I love this man

  • @brendawilliams8062
    @brendawilliams8062 2 года назад

    Thankyou

  • @johnsmith1474
    @johnsmith1474 5 лет назад +1

    Arthur Clarke Center needs to get it's shit together. When you have a man of this caliber speaking, GET A FREAKING REMOTE FOR THE AV THAT WORKS FOR HIM!

    • @c23e
      @c23e 5 лет назад

      He has a good mind but always is chaotic when using slides, print outs, projectors and anything technical. You would think either he spent an hour getting used to equipment or organisers would do a rehearsal with him. I suppose it adds to the view of the chaotic boffin.

  • @davidjames5517
    @davidjames5517 6 лет назад +6

    Penrose demolishes the 26 Dimemsions concept underpinning string theory...and is told by Susskind, father figure in string theory, "you are completely right and totally misguided."
    As Penrose almost says: WTF!?!

  • @OnCharmLee
    @OnCharmLee 5 лет назад +2

    I do not agree with Kanto's infinite theory that there can be countless infinities of different sizes in infinity. There is only one infinity.

    • @REALSLIK
      @REALSLIK 4 года назад

      I used to think the same thing but take calculus and you might see it differently. Infinity is not a number but a process. If two functions approach infinity but one does so faster, then it's the "bigger" infinity. Also look up big o notation.

    • @nissimlevy3762
      @nissimlevy3762 4 года назад

      Unfortunately for you mathematics is not a matter of your opinion. His mathematics rests on a solid, rigorous foundation. If you write a paper showing where his proofs are wrong then the mathematical world will listen to you.

  • @dougmarkham
    @dougmarkham 3 года назад +3

    I like Roger's idea that space conformally rescales infinitely into the future as a result of the decay of all matter leaving only massless radiation.
    What I don't understand is how that conformal rescaling causes new matter to be created leading to the restarting of time and the reexpansion of space-time, and re-emergence of gravity. Does anyone know how this happens in Roger's model?

    • @Voivode.of.Hirsir
      @Voivode.of.Hirsir 3 года назад +1

      Doug James, I told my father about the CCC hypothesis and he was wondering the same thing...

    • @zagyex
      @zagyex 3 года назад

      Is that explained in Big Bang cosmology? Not really, there are some ideas. The same applies to CCC

    • @dougmarkham
      @dougmarkham 3 года назад

      @@zagyex Yes, well I've heard ideas such as: quantum fluctuations in the quantum foam could start big bangs and lead to inflation.
      What interests me specifically in light of the CCC theory is that: as mass decays leaving only massless particles like photons, time ends, distance goes with it ie, leading to the collapse of space into perhaps a singularity or close to it. Now, that implies that the concentration or density of the massless particles will go through the roof.
      I was wondering: at the point where all mass remaining in the universe finally decays, that means frequency and hence time goes to zero. Now, if 'c' (speed of light) = distance travelled by a photon/time, and time goes to zero, then obviously the math breaks. Whether the conformal contraction of space is gradual (as mass and time gradually decay away), or if if time goes only after the last subatomic particle decays, at some point, the constant speed of light has to be violated as distance left approaches zero (the singularity). Does that somehow convert massless subatomic particles back into super hot big bang primordial plasma?

    • @zagyex
      @zagyex 3 года назад

      @@dougmarkham I am really not an expert, but as I understand this, photons experience no time even now. And no distance. So in a sense photons are already infinitely close together from _their perspective_ . But particles with mass create a frame of reference where there are distances. So the boundary is gradual for the particles as their frame of reference disappears ?

    • @TheDavidlloydjones
      @TheDavidlloydjones 2 года назад

      @@zagyex
      Yes. Of course. And vice versa.
      Thank you for asking.

  • @92587wayne
    @92587wayne 4 года назад +3

    This lecture is a perfect example of why it is said that many mathematicians go insane. Rodger's mind has a very high level of Entropy.

    • @brendawilliams8062
      @brendawilliams8062 2 года назад +1

      I believe it is a built upon intelligence. What is there to be crazy about?

  • @prostytrol
    @prostytrol 6 лет назад +14

    Center for Human Imagination, use your imagination and provide elderly presenters with big button pointer or at least a clapper...

    • @luminography
      @luminography 6 лет назад

      and for clumsy younger presenters!

    • @luminography
      @luminography 6 лет назад

      such as yours truly

    • @gerhardmoeller774
      @gerhardmoeller774 6 лет назад

      Penrose is a genius but.... Luddite... Check out other talks of his. These young ”Drs” don't help the old buzzard very much.

  • @SSimonMr
    @SSimonMr 5 лет назад

    Herman Potočnik alias Hermann Noordung
    Potočnik's book Das Problem der Befahrung des Weltraums - der Raketen-Motor (The Problem of Space Travel - The Rocket Motor) in Berlin (1929) described geostationary satellites (first put forward by Konstantin Tsiolkovsky) and discussed communication between them and the ground using radio, but fell short of the idea of using satellites for mass broadcasting and
    as telecommunications relays (developed by Arthur C. Clarke in his Wireless World article of 1945). The wheel-shaped space station served as an inspiration for further development by Wernher von Braun (another former VfR member) in 1952. Von Braun saw orbiting space stations as a stepping stone to travel to other planets.
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herman_Poto%C4%8Dnik

  • @sixpooI
    @sixpooI 6 лет назад +6

    lol @ susskind impression 33:18 =D

  • @tagorian
    @tagorian 4 года назад +7

    Despite of mounting evidence , why are western scientists afraid to admit it - the ancient East was further ahead in their understanding of consciousness.
    The vibrato of the universe as well as of each microtubule in the brain is what Om intendeds to aid . Those Indian books need to be relooked at .

    • @brendawilliams8062
      @brendawilliams8062 2 года назад

      Don’t you think it’s best applied to the medical doctors?

    • @jondor654
      @jondor654 8 месяцев назад

      Hopefully Sir Roger will not anytime master that buzzer, as I detect an inverse correlation to his scintillating brilliance

  • @LAEXCITOSAAPARECIDA
    @LAEXCITOSAAPARECIDA 5 лет назад

    Do people that live in deep space (without the influence of strong local gravity all the time like we do) have greater quantum consciousness?
    Does the full moon being on the opposite side of the Earth from the Sun become crazy making because of an unsettling gravity overlap?

  • @calebhaines3794
    @calebhaines3794 3 года назад +1

    43:30 Amazing drawing

    • @brendawilliams8062
      @brendawilliams8062 2 года назад

      His geometric ideas are very deep in the richness and implications. The more you know then the more you see

  • @omeander
    @omeander 6 лет назад +1

    What makes Conformal Cyclic Cosmology presume that the stacking of aeons proceeds in a columnar or linear fashion rather than being circular? Kepler and Desargues regarded the two "ends" of a "straight" line as meeting at "infinity" so that the line has the structure of a circle. In fact, Kepler actually thought of a line as a circle with its center at infinity. This would allow the CCC model to be represented with a bit of fantasy in the shape of an infinite double ouroboros, Thus allowing the observer to eternally return as observer to observe the cyclic circularity of a self-creating autopoietic universe.

    • @nissimlevy3762
      @nissimlevy3762 4 года назад

      The Navel Of Creation: A Loop In Eternity

    • @omeander
      @omeander 4 года назад

      @@nissimlevy3762 Beautifully said an Omphalos (navel) of the Ouroboros...as the Ouroboros may be used to illustrate not just spatial scales as was done by Martin Rees, but also temporal ones, so as to establish an intimate link between the microcosm of the ever present now and the marcocosmic confluence of past and future eternity , symbolised by the ouraborus, as tail and head meet to complete the cycle..

    • @brendawilliams8062
      @brendawilliams8062 2 года назад

      You have to understand a torus.

    • @18890426
      @18890426 7 месяцев назад

      @@brendawilliams8062 why? Any significance?

    • @brendawilliams8062
      @brendawilliams8062 7 месяцев назад

      @@18890426 if it is to me. I am not an educator. Authority Or representative

  • @elilauffer
    @elilauffer 5 лет назад +7

    "it's very hard to bore a photon" what if it's tunnelling? Pun intended :P

    • @elilauffer
      @elilauffer 5 лет назад

      academic.oup.com/jxb/article/68/13/3321/3897356

    • @elilauffer
      @elilauffer 5 лет назад

      ruclips.net/video/oNZove4OTtI/видео.html

    • @elilauffer
      @elilauffer 5 лет назад

      what about a Big Bing! (Hameroffs term) www.cia.gov/library/readingroom/docs/CIA-RDP96-00788R001800010002-1.pdf re: questions

  • @alextravine9422
    @alextravine9422 Год назад

    Good timing if i do say so

  • @melaniehazel6559
    @melaniehazel6559 2 года назад

    If the pyramids were the representation of a 3d cube dropping into 2d....what would happen if we threw it back exactly where it came from?

  • @OnCharmLee
    @OnCharmLee 5 лет назад

    Schrödinger's cat paradox should be understood to occur in the process of accumulating energy with minimum granularity.

    • @brendawilliams8062
      @brendawilliams8062 2 года назад

      Without 111 then a lot of prexisting maths would be voided. It has more than one use.

  • @LO-gg6pp
    @LO-gg6pp 5 лет назад

    You clickbaited Sir Rogers lecture

  • @NathanOkun
    @NathanOkun 6 лет назад +13

    "Einstein thought he had made an error, but he was mistaken." A joke phrase that is literally true concerning the Cosmological Constant... Go figure!

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 3 года назад

      That's not the real problem with Einstein. The real problems are in those cases where he was clearly wrong and he never thought that he could have been mistaken.

    • @brendawilliams8062
      @brendawilliams8062 2 года назад

      @@schmetterling4477 it must have taken influence to make him relent to the idea.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 2 года назад

      @@brendawilliams8062 To relent to what? The cosmological constant is simply one possible modification to GR. It pops out of the math, so do others that are less well known but that you can find easily in the textbooks. During Einstein's time there was no evidence for the cosmological constant. Today we may have evidence, but the statistical significance is being questioned, right now.
      Einstein simply didn't have any criteria on which to base a rational opinion. That's all there is to it.

    • @brendawilliams8062
      @brendawilliams8062 2 года назад

      @@schmetterling4477 all mathematical logic may serve mankind with useful purposes. When you start trying to put two ideas or more to the task of an identical outcome then people think this one or that one is dead. The idea they all survive doesn’t seem logical.

    • @brendawilliams8062
      @brendawilliams8062 2 года назад

      You are going to have a problem with 10013648 when you see a 1003234 and 1003236. I don’t know how that constant came about up a 125 line?

  • @tonymccann1978
    @tonymccann1978 9 месяцев назад

    9:06 Roger starts speaking

  • @lkd982
    @lkd982 5 лет назад +3

    1:21:56 "... so it's a experimentally perfectable testable theory" Really?! And how exactly could we test whether a massive black hole was formed in a "previous" "aeon", which is how he prefaced that conclusion about testability?

  • @jamesemcguire
    @jamesemcguire 6 лет назад

    Why talk about very large numbers? Never heard of infinity being raised to a power?

  • @PauloConstantino167
    @PauloConstantino167 4 года назад

    FUNCTIONAL FREEDOM BABY

  • @scenFor109
    @scenFor109 5 лет назад

    I like the notion that 'matter' in a black hole is a pulsating super conductor.
    #EndGlobalApartheid

    • @brendawilliams8062
      @brendawilliams8062 2 года назад +1

      Yeah try that one with electrical engineers They got that one. Thank goodness.

  • @nrrgrdn
    @nrrgrdn Год назад

    @8:20

  • @declinescore
    @declinescore 6 лет назад +2

    If history tells us that every model is wrong and we openly admit that the current theories are crazy and we have difficulty understanding them, then shouldn't we return the idea of expanding our minds? I have to admit that the answer that Roger gave to the question relating to poetry and the Arts was somewhat lacking.

    • @greedyfirstalgorithmlast26
      @greedyfirstalgorithmlast26 6 лет назад

      Ah, but Sir Roger with Dawkings and others have had to create a new private £18,000-a-year university
      Because like the USA the schools do a shit sorry education and China, India and Mexico all turn out Great Graduates, while USA universities turn out illiterate stubborn Business/ Wall Street thieves. The only Science taught is basic Standford University (Next town south of me) where Murder Science ( Weapons of Mass Murderers-American Dream, murder every one else then live in Peact)
      Professor Richard Dawkins - New College of the Humanitieswww.nchlondon.ac.uk/faculty/professor-richard-dawkins/
      About Professor Richard Dawkins. Professor Richard Dawkins lectures for the Science Literacy Core Module at New
      College of the Humanities. A prize-winning evolutionary biologist,
      Richard is one of Britain's best-known academics and was the inaugural
      Professor for Public Understanding of Science at Oxford University.

    • @brendawilliams8062
      @brendawilliams8062 2 года назад

      The bullet he mentions may have had merit. I mean however the small the possibility was it exist.

  • @willschmitz7438
    @willschmitz7438 6 лет назад

    Well, Bots, Come!

  • @walterfristoe4643
    @walterfristoe4643 Год назад

    The history of the universal aeons is like a punctuated equilibrium, or a punctuated steady state.

  • @intothevoid2046
    @intothevoid2046 3 года назад

    nice hat

  • @junevandermark952
    @junevandermark952 2 года назад

    One of my elderly acquaintances, whose parents were Atheists, said that until she went to school, she had never heard the word "Jesus," and didn't have a clue what the kids were rambling on about. If information is not put in to the thought processes, there isn't any way, it can be preached back out.

    • @brendawilliams8062
      @brendawilliams8062 2 года назад

      The brain is conscious.

    • @junevandermark952
      @junevandermark952 2 года назад

      @@brendawilliams8062 The human brain is only conscious, because the conscious cells that built the brain in the embryo in the womb, were conscious.
      Everything that lives ... IS conscious.
      Humans are just not at all special.

    • @junevandermark952
      @junevandermark952 2 года назад

      @@brendawilliams8062 This podcast, from my perception, is phenomenal. I hope you take the time to listen and watch and learn, as did I.
      The most important lesson from 83,000 brain scans | Daniel Amen | TEDxOrangeCoast ruclips.net/video/esPRsT-lmw8/видео.html

    • @brendawilliams8062
      @brendawilliams8062 2 года назад

      @@junevandermark952 there must be air that makes them special.

  • @simongleaden2864
    @simongleaden2864 3 года назад

    09:04 to skip the tedious introduction.

  • @iaindelacroix4999
    @iaindelacroix4999 5 лет назад

    Get a remote with big fucking buttons !

  • @michaelspooner9160
    @michaelspooner9160 3 года назад

    I am like a space-lion at this lecture.In space-suit on the moon.A tranquilizer feature may also be a part of the suit as I may be confused and try to escape lecture environment or actual moonscape.The mexican program may actually attempt a space walk with lion.

    • @brendawilliams8062
      @brendawilliams8062 2 года назад

      Get knee deep in some of the thoughts with equations then I can get you.

  • @divisorplot
    @divisorplot 6 лет назад

    symmetry broken symmetry thank ST UV therefore double U XYZ characteristic function chromatic number chi Xi . how about a funny bow and string method string theory cave man particle wave ST symmetry ring ring ring ring. agni/Ignatius carl jung symbols of transformation masters corrupted works pride [?]

  • @calebhaines3794
    @calebhaines3794 3 года назад +1

    How might this play an extraordinary role in interacting with the very fabric of the universe . . . if weather = X then weather protection = X1

  • @rd264
    @rd264 6 лет назад

    why is roger saying all this?

  • @williamfitzpatrick6369
    @williamfitzpatrick6369 5 лет назад

    Um Uh Jeez

  • @pauldavidhaynes8243
    @pauldavidhaynes8243 3 года назад +1

    Hes great and probably will go down in history as great as Einstein, but damm he's far from smooth to listen too at times..

    • @austinlevan5885
      @austinlevan5885 2 года назад

      Hes old and trying to speak to an audience who are not physics phds or experts in his field?

    • @pauldavidhaynes8243
      @pauldavidhaynes8243 2 года назад

      @@austinlevan5885 I love him, but I dont think he's ever been a brilliant public speaker. Age is against him now, I guess he was abit better when he was younger.

  • @janklaas6885
    @janklaas6885 2 года назад

    🇺🇳58:25 😒

  • @johnmiller7453
    @johnmiller7453 6 лет назад +3

    gay

    • @gerhardmoeller774
      @gerhardmoeller774 6 лет назад

      Not that there’s anything wring with that!

    • @gerhardmoeller774
      @gerhardmoeller774 6 лет назад +1

      Also... He introduced himself as Dr. Blah blah..... Only podiatrists, optometrists, chiropractors, and PhDs in ”education” feel the need to impress others with the title Dr.

    • @0ooTheMAXXoo0
      @0ooTheMAXXoo0 6 лет назад

      Or, if you are not trying to impress anyone you just use the titles for descriptive purposes, like when you are doing introductions.

    • @johnmiller7453
      @johnmiller7453 5 лет назад

      @@gerhardmoeller774 Of course not Kramer

  • @friedrichschopenhauer2900
    @friedrichschopenhauer2900 6 лет назад +5

    I hate these intros.

    • @nwogamesalert
      @nwogamesalert 3 года назад

      Yes they are boring, but it is the only part I understand. The rest is a bit like modern Jazz or twelve tone music in my ears, sometimes I even listen to it.

  • @schmetterling4477
    @schmetterling4477 3 года назад

    It is obvious that Penrose doesn't know much about the history of quantum mechanics. The double slit experiment wasn't the reason why it had to be developed. Atomic and molecular spectra were. Thermal radiation was. The photoelectric effect required it. Technically, and this is quite a bit more troublesome for Penrose, the double slit experiment is not even a quantum experiment. It works with water waves just as well. It works with sound waves. It works with any kind of wave phenomenon and it does not, at any time, require Planck's constant for its explanation. That alone should give a physicist pause to call it a quantum experiment.

    • @brendawilliams8062
      @brendawilliams8062 2 года назад

      Triangulation is the reason for the discrepancies in their proper use.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 2 года назад

      @@brendawilliams8062 Random assemblies of words are the sign of the troll. ;-)

    • @brendawilliams8062
      @brendawilliams8062 2 года назад

      @@schmetterling4477 I am not a troll. I am trying to learn something.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 2 года назад

      @@brendawilliams8062 What's the question? ;-)

    • @brendawilliams8062
      @brendawilliams8062 2 года назад

      @@schmetterling4477 I do my own research. I don’t have any particular goal. I comment a lot. Sometimes I get extra yt help.

  • @stewartbrands
    @stewartbrands Год назад

    So called "black holes" are only hypothesised by a few people. That doesn not meant they exist or could exist.
    It is like physic's superhero. Completely speculative.
    The salary for those sitting around speculating them is real and comes from your tax dollars.

  • @DJThorb
    @DJThorb 5 лет назад

    great stuff but very hard to handle the lecture. He is absolutely terrible at it.

    • @NondescriptMammal
      @NondescriptMammal 4 года назад

      For sure. He goes on so many little tangents that it's incoherent and incomprehensible. I really enjoy his writings and his novel approach to science, but he gives a terrible lecture.

  • @qqqqqqqqqq7488
    @qqqqqqqqqq7488 6 лет назад

    The absolute worst description of the double slit experiment that i have EVER heard.

  • @rsb3609
    @rsb3609 2 года назад

    Way too much babbling by SIr Penrose..... It is time to stick to painting pictures.

  • @patrickbrennan2864
    @patrickbrennan2864 Год назад

    What a bunch of rambling disconnected nonsense