Can you list these objects in order?

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 21 янв 2025

Комментарии • 37 тыс.

  • @veritasium
    @veritasium  Год назад +2626

    There’s a data driven way to read the news: go to ground.news/veritasium to get 30% off the Vantage plan and see through sensationalized reporting.

    • @MrUssy101
      @MrUssy101 Год назад +19

      God created earth for us and rest are bunch of lifeless planets. People should care more about the judgment day than universe.

    • @iBridgee
      @iBridgee Год назад +1

      ppl are dumb

    • @Fakeshridhar
      @Fakeshridhar Год назад +13

      Chipi chipi

    • @iBridgee
      @iBridgee Год назад +68

      @@MrUssy101no

    • @zottekott
      @zottekott Год назад

      Chapa chapa​@@Fakeshridhar

  • @semir_ramic
    @semir_ramic Год назад +14879

    I couldn’t even imagine that basic knowledge about our universe is so limited by so many people

    • @mLyonJE
      @mLyonJE Год назад +610

      ikr? This isn't complicated or subtle. This is about knowing some basic language. "What is a galaxy?" Collection of solar systems. So galaxy bigger than star or moon, right? Wow.
      [EDIT - Some people have misconstrued my point. I'm not being superior or precise or grandiose. I'm trying to convey that a basic, approximate sense of how it vaguely works (solar systems go in galaxies, for example) is fine for most people. We don't all need to be experts in everything. General Knowledge is just that. General.]

    • @TheGenericAssasin
      @TheGenericAssasin Год назад +273

      Right! It just seems so odd. I guess I assumed everyone knows the basics at least.

    • @cosmic_love_5
      @cosmic_love_5 Год назад +252

      My mind was blown when I found out my stepmom had no idea of the basics of our existence/reality. I thought she was the dumbest person on earth, but I guess there are people even dumber out there.
      I also had to teach her when i was 7 that there's different types of metal. She thought metal was metal and it's own thing and that copper wasn't metal but it's own thing, and that steel wasn't metal but it's own thing, that brass wasn't metal but it's own thing, and so on. I literally asked her if she was the other word for special at the dinner table and got yelled at for asking her that. I'm pretty sure I made her cry that night because I made her feel so stupid.

    • @dobbi6083
      @dobbi6083 Год назад +136

      @@mLyonJE there are those people, but i'm pretty sure he asked a lot of strangers and just picked the once that struggled more, cause there's nothing to learn if someone just comes up and knows everything

    • @daltonmiller5590
      @daltonmiller5590 Год назад +88

      Yeah this is really surprising to me. I thought everyone got taught about basic astronomy in elementary school.
      Moons orbit planets, planets orbit stars, stars have solar systems, solar systems make up galaxies, galaxies make up the universe. This takes like 1 day to teach, and it's generally mind-blowing for kids, so it's usually a fun lesson that they'll remember for the rest of their lives.

  • @dannyb763
    @dannyb763 Год назад +21825

    I like the way Derek doesn't mock people for ignorance and instead encourages learning.

    • @tgc517
      @tgc517 Год назад +207

      He just went in with a different goal
      If I was going to do it I would only want the information
      He wants to know more after the interaction so he is nice.
      Or he’s just nicer than us in general, or me any ways… that’s probably more likely

    • @acetechnical6574
      @acetechnical6574 Год назад +37

      I dislike the way people dont mock him for holding a lav mic like that. aka the "Clueless Logan"

    • @molrat
      @molrat Год назад +76

      @@tgc517i think he's nice but he's also lot gonna post a video just mocking ppl for a channel like his he's gonna have to stay professional

    • @tonyhawk123
      @tonyhawk123 Год назад +36

      I notice all the religious answers were cut from the video, so we can't know if he laughed at those. No flat earthers either?

    • @Deathinacann
      @Deathinacann Год назад +5

      @@forbidden-cyrillic-handle some wizards can

  • @Imadethistocomment13
    @Imadethistocomment13 Год назад +41524

    I don't expect the general public to know specific details but college students not understanding the difference between a planet and a star is very worrisome

    • @RicoHelms
      @RicoHelms Год назад +4439

      Bro thinks the sun is smaller than the earth. That isn’t even schools fault.

    • @Imadethistocomment13
      @Imadethistocomment13 Год назад +2505

      @@RicoHelms Yes, I thought some stuff was just common knowledge from a young age but apparently I was wrong

    • @Alblaka
      @Alblaka Год назад

      @@RicoHelms I would argue, yes, it is. Like, imagine there was no schools, no education. Of course you would think the sun is smaller than the virtually infinite planet you're standing on. Same way a remarkable amount of antique civilizations considered the sun some kind of (large) object carried/drawn by some deity, usually with the implication that the deity would fit onto the planet in a human-observeable size scale, thus implying the sun had to be smaller than the planet.
      It's exactly only education (or generally available educative information), thus usually school, that teaches people things beyond the stuff we can observe on first glance. I would never expect somebody to know the precise distance to, or the size of, the sun, because that's not exactly information pertaining to your everyday life, thus nobody should be expected to just look it up for no reason. Hence the only thing a random non-astronomer would know is exactly that a class or two might have shown him (often wildly mis-proportioned) depictions of the solar system.
      So if people somehow forget about that, or never understood it, the educative system meant to teach them has failed.

    • @raskbell
      @raskbell Год назад +1944

      This is pretty typical of these productions to cherry pick the biggest ingnoramus' out of the crowd. For everyone of the people that made it into the video, there could have been hundreds who had no problems. Without showing honest statistics of how many people got it right vs didn't all this video does is show that a few very poor students were still able to get through the vetting process of UNLV.

    • @larryrzv6173
      @larryrzv6173 Год назад +569

      The only person who can be forgiven for this mistake is a child or a peasant from the 15th century, because everyone should at least know that the moon is smaller than the sun.

  • @You-ih2gx
    @You-ih2gx Месяц назад +392

    This is something I previously thought that everyone and their two year old would know when I was younger, but it’s actually really interesting how many people don’t realize. Like my step mom for example, who is extremely smart and graduated with all A’s and B’s with a PhD in Biology. She had absolutely no idea that the sun is our nearest star.

    • @deek791
      @deek791 28 дней назад +3

      😮

    • @xandergay3505
      @xandergay3505 25 дней назад +24

      idk i think she just cheated..

    • @kyze8284
      @kyze8284 24 дня назад +3

      Talking about OUR sun as the star, OUR moon, it should be easy. Just a star in general though, some of those dwarf stars are teeny

    • @You-ih2gx
      @You-ih2gx 24 дня назад +12

      @kyze8284 She didn’t even know the sun IS a star

    • @hulmhochberg8129
      @hulmhochberg8129 23 дня назад +4

      ​@@kyze8284do you think any of those people even know about dwarf stars? Also thats a different category.

  • @pssurvivor
    @pssurvivor Год назад +10112

    as someone who was obsessed with astronomy as a kid, them repeatedly calling it astrology really hurt. but i also appreciate how he was able to go about it without mocking them

    • @the_untextured
      @the_untextured Год назад +477

      I just laughed when I heard that. Watching university students get stuff wrong which 5 year old me could have nailed is quite painful to watch.

    • @wyatt8770
      @wyatt8770 Год назад +142

      yeah I'm curious how much people's confusion with that has led to pseudoscientific thinking in the general public.

    • @pssurvivor
      @pssurvivor Год назад +113

      I am not American but most of us learned these basic things in primary/elementary school. We went to the local planetarium and science museum for field trips, and heard scientists talk. I'm curious how it's done in the US.

    • @the_untextured
      @the_untextured Год назад +60

      @@pssurvivor From what I know, American education is not the best. I am Italian and here, education is pretty good. People here tend to be auite cultured, but there are exceptions obviously.
      Here as well, most people know that a star is huge. You can expect a pre school teacher saying to a child that "stars are veeeeeryyy big!"

    • @LukeSS
      @LukeSS Год назад +26

      I aspire to this level of patience

  • @noobkilla3
    @noobkilla3 Год назад +3638

    As an astrphysics major, a part of me died within the first 5 minutes of this video but the rest of it revived me and filled me with a sense of hope because there's people like Derek who'll keep educating the general public about things the education system failed to.

    • @pugofwarbr
      @pugofwarbr Год назад +55

      i got very triggered at that part

    • @anainesgonzalez8868
      @anainesgonzalez8868 Год назад +62

      As someone who had a pretty good basic education, same 😂
      I do not know a lot, I though I knew nothing until this video to be honest… but yeah, last half of the video is really nice. I admire people that keep pushing for people to learn.

    • @TransgirlsEnjoyer
      @TransgirlsEnjoyer Год назад

      Fun fact college educated people support democrats

    • @tobberino
      @tobberino Год назад +12

      Good job on getting that Astrophysics major! That’s amazing!

    • @varunbhadauria7816
      @varunbhadauria7816 Год назад +32

      Yeah, in that part I was like "a 14 year old can answer that"

  • @KokBisa
    @KokBisa Год назад +7843

    This topic typically leads to feelings of existential crisis, but the way you're explaining it turns the video into something very wholesome. Love it.

    • @chalkkit777
      @chalkkit777 Год назад +11

      hai, bang. big fan!

    • @sciencephere
      @sciencephere Год назад +8

      ga kaget liat kokbisa juga nontonin veritasium, keep up the great work you guys!!

    • @cqstle-
      @cqstle- Год назад +131

      Depending on perspective, but when I think of the vastness of our universe and how small we are to scale, I realize how insignificant we are. Which oddly increases the feeling of significance. It definitely forces an out-of-body thought for a second. It makes big problems in our life seem trivial, and yet, makes small acts of kindness mean that much more. Sounds cheesy I guess, but damn if it doesn't make me think.

    • @ChitatoBarbeque
      @ChitatoBarbeque Год назад

      Kobi!!!

    • @earlysda
      @earlysda Год назад +4

      @@MA-ts3xsMA, My forever home is in heaven with Jesus.

  • @Spacesnakes474
    @Spacesnakes474 Месяц назад +109

    I was so happy that you brought up the space between galaxies at 8:30. What is so fascinating to me is that galaxies are actually *really* close together relative to other things in space. You can fit thousands of other planets in-between the earth and mars, you can fit millions of stars in-between our sun and it's closest neighbor, and yet you can only fit a couple dozen galaxies in-between the milky way and its close friend Andromeda. And possibly this paradigm extends even one further into a multiverse of universes all layered directly on top of one another, who knows

    • @Rin-qj7zt
      @Rin-qj7zt 20 дней назад

      Yeah but Andromeda is colliding with us so it doesn't count. What's the next one?

    • @masrihuly
      @masrihuly 19 дней назад +3

      @@Rin-qj7ztwe say that andromeda will collide with the Milky Way eventually but that’s just the most soon galactic thing that will happen, after that who knows what galaxy’s we will collide with

    • @DragonNation_
      @DragonNation_ 19 дней назад

      @@Rin-qj7ztthat will happen in billions of hears. Humans may be gone vy that time or stop the collision

    • @DragonNation_
      @DragonNation_ 19 дней назад

      Dark matter. Pushing away everything from each other

    • @lauriloo38c
      @lauriloo38c 14 дней назад +2

      I just asked Chat GPT if there are solo stars between galaxies. It said they are called “Rogue” or “Intergalactic” stars and happen due to galaxy collisions or interactions with other stars or black holes with enough force to throw them out of their galaxy enough to not belong to any. Rare but they do exist

  • @theondono
    @theondono Год назад +12067

    The fact that Derek can not laugh every time they say “astrology”…
    That’s talent

    • @Jose.AFT.Saddul
      @Jose.AFT.Saddul Год назад +373

      It’s an honest mistake. I’ve done it a few times aswell.

    • @andyjohnson4907
      @andyjohnson4907 Год назад +215

      ​@@Jose.AFT.SaddulMy mnemonic is to think of a big "log" of poo.

    • @vedritmathias9193
      @vedritmathias9193 Год назад +132

      ​@@andyjohnson4907I'm sure psychologists would have something to say about that

    • @stare4539
      @stare4539 Год назад +1

      Lmao

    • @Jose.AFT.Saddul
      @Jose.AFT.Saddul Год назад +101

      @@vedritmathias9193 A scatologist would agree

  • @eligillispie1206
    @eligillispie1206 Год назад +2409

    I’m a big fan of how you interacted with the students. Anytime they degraded themselves for not knowing, you encouraged them. Neat to see these interactions.

    • @vinnibod2500
      @vinnibod2500 Год назад +64

      That is one of my favorite things about this channel. Derek has always been the type of person to encourage growth. His journeys have always been entertaining and educational.

    • @whymusti99
      @whymusti99 Год назад +9

      That’s literally how the channel started!

    • @GetawayFilms
      @GetawayFilms Год назад +11

      The original format of Veritasium didn't work very well.
      Student: "I think that the stars are the smallest because they're just little white dots"
      Derek: "Really? Hahahahahahahahahahahaaha...."

    • @cloroxbleach9222
      @cloroxbleach9222 Год назад +20

      Yep, as much as I like watching "dumb American geography" or "flat earth debunking" videos for the shock value, ultimately this way of encouragement is one we should all aim for, then we wouldn't even need to create those shock value videos

    • @KermitsBadFurDay
      @KermitsBadFurDay Год назад +17

      I'm sorry but.. you maybe should feel a tiny bit bad about not knowing the answer to this question.

  • @ravi72munde
    @ravi72munde Год назад +3368

    Being a science student I just assumed this was common knowledge. We need more work like this, nobody should die without knowing the scale of the universe.

    • @hdmat101
      @hdmat101 Год назад +194

      I learnt about this from kids tv shows when I was younger

    • @Robbyrool
      @Robbyrool Год назад +144

      Absolutely. There should be a law that before anyone m*rders anyone they must first teach them the scale of astronomical bodies.

    • @runnergo1398
      @runnergo1398 Год назад +138

      This is why I can't vote Republican ever again. The fact that so many of them think the Earth is only around 6000 years old while we have proof how old stuff in the Universe is, is just mind blowing. And even if you try to teach them, they just plug their ears.

    • @chattw6885
      @chattw6885 Год назад

      It is commin knowledge before education got hijacked and now they only learn unnecessary stupid stuff

    • @Ryzen776
      @Ryzen776 Год назад +3

      It should be.

  • @LukeMaynes
    @LukeMaynes Месяц назад +32

    Nice to see a video in this format that’s not just about making fun of people for lacking basic knowledge.
    I love how you took the opportunity to educate people in a way that makes them excited to learn the things that school didn’t teach them in a memorable way.

  • @mr.pocket575
    @mr.pocket575 Год назад +2548

    The tree question hit me the hardest. I was thinking... the amount of surface area on the Earth that contains trees is ASTRONOMICALLY smaller than the space in the galaxy that could contain stars. If it was a multiple choice question I'd have gotten it wrong. I still can't believe there are that many trees on Earth.

    • @John-wc6lk
      @John-wc6lk Год назад +173

      The exact same for me, I guessed there were tens of billions, but trillions is incomprehensible

    • @fakecubed
      @fakecubed Год назад +86

      Most question of that nature, comparing numbers of big things up there to small things down here, there's more small things down here. The things up there are very low density. The things down here are very high density.

    • @seigeengine
      @seigeengine Год назад +42

      I wasn't sure either. I was like "there's about 150M km^2 of land on Earth... so that's about 1000 trees per km^2 for there to be about as many as stars in the galaxy... that's a tree for every 1000 m^2... that's about a tree in every 30mx30m area... that's a lot less dense than a forest, but how much of the Earth is forest? Large stretches of it don't even have trees. Hmm....
      I decided on trees, but yeah, they're only about an order of magnitude apart (which btw, means there's about 1 tree for every 100 m^2 of Earth, or every 10m x 10m area)

    • @cinnamoncat8950
      @cinnamoncat8950 Год назад +89

      i actually got it pretty easily, but not because i actually managed to grasp the scale, just simple math.
      if on average a galaxy has 100 bil stars and there are about 8 bil humans, and i think there are probably at least a hundred trees to one human then it easily surpasses the average amount of stars in a galaxy

    • @Judge_0f_Everything
      @Judge_0f_Everything Год назад +9

      ​@@cinnamoncat8950🤓

  • @ampushade8809
    @ampushade8809 11 месяцев назад +3730

    My favourite part of this video is that he actually educates the people interviewed. And doesn't just put them down.

    • @bequerhernandez8487
      @bequerhernandez8487 11 месяцев назад +75

      Yeah, he doesn’t leave them in ignorance. I love that.

    • @sporovid5856
      @sporovid5856 11 месяцев назад +58

      I would have such a hard time not putting people down. The dude in the video has willpower.

    • @robinolsson7003
      @robinolsson7003 11 месяцев назад +31

      I mean for the most part it can't be their fault that they don't know this stuff. Has to be their education system or just society that's to blame.

    • @tsarrite
      @tsarrite 11 месяцев назад +9

      You know deep inside he's thinking wtf?

    • @comfypanda5050
      @comfypanda5050 11 месяцев назад +27

      Well the comment section here alone is doing a good job of putting them down

  • @flyjet787
    @flyjet787 Год назад +1121

    I am really shocked at the lack of understanding. Great for being so kind to these folks to keep them open to learning.

    • @winterfall4910
      @winterfall4910 Год назад +16

      It's incredible how lacking it was

    • @wilfdarr
      @wilfdarr Год назад

      Really? When those same people are lecturing you about the 32 different genders, you're shocked they are ignorant of the real world? Really? 🙄

    • @fluxxNZ
      @fluxxNZ Год назад +45

      i feel like my 6yr old would do better than some of these people. It would also be interesting to see these questions asked of different age groups, cities and even countries and we might have an idea why things like 'flat earth' come back when we just know better :-)

    • @railx2005
      @railx2005 Год назад +26

      I really thought these knowledge are common after the age of like 10, guess I'm wrong..

    • @81KWolfe
      @81KWolfe Год назад +23

      I suspect Derek only included the truly clueless people he interviewed to make this video. I cannot - nay - choose not to believe that this is representative.

  • @basilisk..
    @basilisk.. 27 дней назад +11

    Growing up i always thought i know just as much about the universe as the next person, but after watching these types of videos where you guys ask random questions that are super easy (to me anyway) i now know that my level of understanding is much higer than i thought it was.
    Im not saying people are dumb, i just have a natural curiosity about space and everything in it, more so than the regular person. And i feed that curiosity a lot

  • @bamzerdaniel1997
    @bamzerdaniel1997 Год назад +1474

    This was very eye opening. Never knew it’s possible to go through the education system and still not know the difference in size of the moon and sun.

    • @Izomak12
      @Izomak12 Год назад +117

      Seeing this was super dissapointing.

    • @maxpelletier2237
      @maxpelletier2237 Год назад +53

      It's as if they were thinking from eye perspective looking at the sky. The sun and the moon are roughly the same size (like during an eclipse) But since the universe is included in the responses, it shows they aren't capable of thinking from an outer perspective.

    • @abcdefghijk123456100
      @abcdefghijk123456100 Год назад +26

      i'm astounded. i never went to college and i know more than a lot of the people i see in these kinds of videos. it's insane that they even graduated highschool.

    • @sarfarazgaming121
      @sarfarazgaming121 Год назад +6

      When there's no need for it u forget

    • @Mshagy02
      @Mshagy02 Год назад +9

      I once met a guy in school that thought the planets in our solar system where stacked vertically on top of each other and that they didn’t take that long to get to. It was fun explaining to him how long to took it get to each planet. The look on his face was priceless

  • @drastelne
    @drastelne Год назад +2194

    While I commend the students' eagerness to learn, the fact this isn't already largely known is kinda mind blowing to me considering basic astronomy is part of my compulsory curriculum

    • @Khal-E1
      @Khal-E1 Год назад +72

      In elementary school?

    • @mariacamilaserranomelo6307
      @mariacamilaserranomelo6307 Год назад +127

      I know, I asked my 5yo and he got it right, he only messed up when I asked him to compare the sun and the stars

    • @hishaam5429
      @hishaam5429 Год назад +67

      @@mariacamilaserranomelo6307 comparing the sun and the stars doesnt really make sense icl

    • @Cosinegl
      @Cosinegl Год назад +52

      ​@@Khal-E1 Why not? I just checked a textbook for 4th grade (9-10 years old), and it has a few chapters about astronomy.

    • @floydmaseda
      @floydmaseda Год назад +22

      It was part of theirs too; they've just forgotten (or more likely never actually learned) it since them.

  • @Defiantclient
    @Defiantclient Год назад +2927

    As a casual fan of astronomy, this was hard to watch at first but I appreciated it! Great video

    • @prymexxxx
      @prymexxxx Год назад +87

      Real, why cant I be on these videos. Would have had 100% right

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Год назад +70

      I expected it to be hard to watch, but instead it was kind of nice. Like a completely smooth road to the point where I realize I don't know how many stars are in the galaxy, and then I'm right there with the people in the video.

    • @neonblack211
      @neonblack211 Год назад +16

      yeah I'm struggling to watch right now

    • @raphaelefranco1123
      @raphaelefranco1123 Год назад +51

      you mean astrology, right? xD

    • @Fenhum
      @Fenhum Год назад +8

      @@raphaelefranco1123 If this is a joke It's way too unclear

  • @chadcop7218
    @chadcop7218 21 день назад +11

    And then people say we are the only intelligent species in the entire universe, I can't believe that

    • @WhatAmIBrewing
      @WhatAmIBrewing 6 дней назад

      Yea there’s just no way that there’s no life throughout the whole universe. It’s just too unlikely for it to be the case

  • @cookeepuff
    @cookeepuff 11 месяцев назад +1594

    The number of people who did not know that a star is very large and only looks small because it is far away was shocking to me, among other things! I am glad they were all able and willing to learn. Lovely video.

    • @ChatterBoxBran
      @ChatterBoxBran 11 месяцев назад +65

      90% sure he just didn’t include the ones who knew and only included the ones who didn’t

    • @Alpatrixx
      @Alpatrixx 11 месяцев назад

      obviously but its still outstanding the amount who didnt know. or they are just people told to act like that.@@ChatterBoxBran

    • @Twig.With.No.Muscle
      @Twig.With.No.Muscle 11 месяцев назад +87

      @@ChatterBoxBran yeah, at a college campus in a 1st world, well developed country every single student should know the answer

    • @soph7230
      @soph7230 11 месяцев назад +50

      @@Twig.With.No.MuscleAmerica is different from most developed countries. For-profit medicine, debilitating medical debt, mass shootings almost daily (usually several on weekend days), and a sad number of people who don’t know basic knowledge.

    • @Lenevor
      @Lenevor 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@soph7230 name one first world country that is perfect please :)
      and mass shootings are not weekly tf you mean 😭

  • @Coerciveutopian
    @Coerciveutopian Год назад +682

    This was painful at the start but I'm glad I stuck with it. This is an amazing example of good science communication: Not laughing at people for their ignorance but using it as a starting point for getting people excited about the universe.

    • @timp6834
      @timp6834 Год назад +6

      These people aren't excited about it as it doesn't affect their lives (which is how our specialized society operates). He also obviously didn't include the interviews where the interviewee knew everything because that would be boring to watch. For example, I'd have gotten all these instantly except for the trillions of trees on earth because I could care less about the number of trees on earth, but my specialization is in a related STEM field to astronomy.

    • @jfan3049
      @jfan3049 Год назад +17

      @@timp6834live "i could care less" reaction. WRONG. INCORRECT. CLEARLY you meant that you "couldn't care less" because, right now, you're displaying an AWFUL high potential of caring less about the amount of trees on earth, which indicates that you care an AWFUL lot about the amount of trees on earth. Checkmate "timp6834".

    • @orangejjay
      @orangejjay Год назад +2

      ​@@jfan3049Do you feel better now? 😂

    • @xxwookey
      @xxwookey Год назад +2

      @@jfan3049 This is a weird American English thing. They say 'could care less' where British English says 'couldn't care less'. The British version makes rather more sense if you stop to think about it for a mo. But the US version, whilst perverse, isn't really 'wrong' - that is the accepted usage there SFAIK (it may be regional?). Sadly language is very much as we find it, even when it's annoyingly nonsensical.

    • @whatguy05
      @whatguy05 Год назад +3

      I almost stopped watching before the 2 minute mark. I'm right there with you.

  • @mikeaninger7388
    @mikeaninger7388 Год назад +66447

    “We are not astrology majors.” Education officially failed them.

  • @frenchfrieguy9370
    @frenchfrieguy9370 День назад

    It's nice that you're taking the time to teach them and us about "astrology." Warms my heart

  • @ryandeboltmusic
    @ryandeboltmusic Год назад +1893

    As someone with a degree in Astronomy, this was painful... We need to get better at spreading this info around! Great vid!

    • @undefinedvariable8085
      @undefinedvariable8085 Год назад +219

      Most of this stuff is honestly elementary level knowledge. The size differences, the difference between moon and planet, the names of the major planets (for god's sake, we're at a point where we're giving kudos for being able to name all of them). The only thing I wouldn't expect the average layman to know are the sheer quantities of things at the upper scope and scale.

    • @tarakivu8861
      @tarakivu8861 Год назад +17

      Its probably a combination of
      Pressure because you are filmed in such a situation (without much experience for such situations)
      Many people simply not cwring about things outside their life in general. Many dont care about the bigger picture (even if it would help e.g. in a job).

    • @leaguemastergg3647
      @leaguemastergg3647 Год назад +57

      As someone with a brain, this made me regret having one

    • @gorak9000
      @gorak9000 Год назад +22

      Heh, in the US, you only need to ask people questions about a state 2 or 3 states away to flabbergast them and come up with blank stares

    • @runrickyrun157
      @runrickyrun157 Год назад +12

      Astrology* Which is consequently one of the many tools of the devil.

  • @christiaandijkstra2050
    @christiaandijkstra2050 Год назад +1896

    Good on him for trying to educate people, but it’s shocking to me that so many people struggle with these topics that should be common knowledge.

    • @Fannystark007
      @Fannystark007 Год назад +19

      Now imagine most rich people are far below intelligence of the average people. You didn't know THAT, right?

    • @sleeplessdev7204
      @sleeplessdev7204 Год назад +129

      @@Fannystark007 Where are you getting that stat from?
      In my anecdotal experience, most of the rich people I've met are at least smarter than average. But it's certainly true you don't need to be a genius to be rich. In fact, it may even hamper wealth creation through traditional means because smart people tend to overthink things.

    • @gemtun2
      @gemtun2 Год назад +1

      ​i would probably snap and call them idiots

    • @DraconianEmpath
      @DraconianEmpath Год назад +40

      Maybe not so shocking? what happens among the stars currently has very little bearing on what happens down here on earth. you could live your whole life never knowing what our own star is, let alone anything beyond, with few if any negative consequences. for most people... knowing about space doesn't matter. it's a novelty.
      I happen to think space is really cool. I like learning about stuff up there, but it's ok if someone else doesn't. people like different things, and it's not like we're any better or worse off for it.

    • @MatBaconMC
      @MatBaconMC Год назад +55

      It's the U.S. It's expected.

  • @madboycal7859
    @madboycal7859 Год назад +1921

    One significant thing to always appreciate about Derek is that although some of these concepts may be simple or so, he does not dare bash any of those that he interviews for not knowing answers to his questions. He guides them through this journey of gaining a new perspective on misconceptions or something that most do not think about on the daily. He really lives up to his channel name!

    • @HerbertHeyduck
      @HerbertHeyduck Год назад +25

      On the other hand, he publishes this ignorance to the public here on RUclips.
      And that comes across as a denunciation.

    • @BunchOfGreyGrapes
      @BunchOfGreyGrapes Год назад +2

      Times New Roman

    • @V3RTIGO222
      @V3RTIGO222 Год назад +8

      He's stronger than I am, for sure

    • @zenpapyrus
      @zenpapyrus Год назад +40

      ​@@HerbertHeyducklol, I'm sure he gets them to sign a legal disclaimer. so they know. some ppl don't care and still want to be seen

    • @gguioa
      @gguioa Год назад +50

      @@HerbertHeyduck But who is being denounced? IMO, it's the system that was supposed to be teaching people all this stuff.
      Can you be faulted for dealing with your life and not learning something you'll likely never use in your daily matters?

  • @vinz2876
    @vinz2876 12 часов назад

    i love that derek is very gentle with everyone he interviews and tries to gently correct and teach them the right answer if they’re wrong. i see a lot of video’s of street interviews where the person interviewing will just let them embarrass themselves by answering the questions wrong and then not tell them or help them understand the right answer to learn something

  • @davidbrown2704
    @davidbrown2704 Год назад +1905

    I think I take my general understanding for granted. A lot of this to me seems like general information that everyone would know...and I'm just a music major. It just goes to show that we can't take our skills, knowledge, or gifts for granted. There's someone out there who would love to be where you are.

    • @walter7825
      @walter7825 Год назад +67

      wow, that put things into perspective. i have a weird urge to teach someone something

    • @Dvrvs
      @Dvrvs Год назад

      Dude they just don’t apply themselves or have a low IQ, whatever.

    • @TheTrafficBoss
      @TheTrafficBoss Год назад +1

      Apparently billions of them.........SMH

    • @ItsDesm
      @ItsDesm Год назад +49

      Is it a failure in curiosity?. I feel the same way you do and I know teaching people and they always enjoy and are fascinated by it. It just seems there are many more, easily accessible thing that consume their curiosity (social media, etc)

    • @xXxPoppixXx
      @xXxPoppixXx Год назад +40

      This is just wild. Im a welder myself and i had the correct answer in like 3 seconds. Also all the questions in my mind to spesify what planets or moons are we talking about. It just shows what a great basic education can do to people.

  • @arnd_cf1180
    @arnd_cf1180 3 месяца назад +888

    0:35 "Is the sun bigger than the moon" what the... I am watching that video for 40seconds I already write a comment this is not a good sign generally

    • @Fischi_cc
      @Fischi_cc 2 месяца назад +39

      Yea just the avarage American getting interviewed.

    • @samotnywilk3381
      @samotnywilk3381 2 месяца назад +31

      @@Fischi_cc i'm American and this is just shameful... and i'm younger than most these people...

    • @michaelbrooks8037
      @michaelbrooks8037 2 месяца назад +8

      Look in the background. This is UNLV. The science courses there are just fine. Same textbooks and curriculum as any other college or university. Many students avoid science courses if possible and are not interested in thinking very deeply🤔

    • @tonyparedes8154
      @tonyparedes8154 2 месяца назад +1

      ​@@Fischi_cc Yeah, just discrimination writing a comment

    • @aethere4l
      @aethere4l 2 месяца назад +7

      @@samotnywilk3381 Making videos like these usually involve interviewing hundreds or even thousands of people. Those where there are learning opportunities are the ones that have the opportunity for the dialogue desired for the video, so those are shown. Out of those thousand there are a dozen or so people that make it to the final video, the other 988 are on the cutting room floor. Anywhere this video was recorded the outcome would have been the same, because that was the outcome the author was intentionally looking for.
      At no point is the video positioned as a study on American's knowledge of basic astronomy, and no one should assume that it is.

  • @bowlerballer6852
    @bowlerballer6852 Год назад +950

    Honestly, huge props for being so patient and approachable. It says a lot to be able to teach something that one might think should be common knowledge in a way that doesn't come off as condescending or disparaging. Good education should encourage people to learn more rather than making them feel bad for not knowing. Content like this is so important for keeping people in touch with reality and for seeing the bigger picture rather than getting overly hung up on comparatively petty arguments. Well done! 👏

    • @ethanstong1564
      @ethanstong1564 Год назад +33

      Thank you! So many people in the comments are talking down to these people. We can't know their background or what kind of education they got. Being wrong should be exciting cause you get to learn, it shouldn't be a negative thing

    • @DIEKALSTER8
      @DIEKALSTER8 Год назад +9

      Very well said. I don't have that patience. Oh, I will explain away at the slightest invitation, but I get discouraged quickly when people struggle to get stuff.

    • @mithrae4525
      @mithrae4525 Год назад +1

      It helps that on this subject in particular it's just impossible to have the right answer intuitively - unless you're an astronomer you literally cannot know without being told.

    • @firmak2
      @firmak2 Год назад +5

      @@ethanstong1564 "Being wrong should be exciting cause you get to learn, it shouldn't be a negative thing" completely agree, but that starts falling off when full adults dont know kinder garden level stuff.

    • @Dont_Read_My_Picture
      @Dont_Read_My_Picture Год назад

      Don't read my name.

  • @ShadowPhoenix82
    @ShadowPhoenix82 Год назад +1306

    I appreciate that he's not doing this to judge, but to educate.

    • @personaljm463
      @personaljm463 Год назад +83

      Oh but they should be judged 😭 this is not even funny it's concerning

    • @joshuawillingham6363
      @joshuawillingham6363 Год назад +16

      Some of them should be blamed for not paying attention, but the truth is the public school system is garbage in a great many places.

    • @pxprimary3790
      @pxprimary3790 Год назад +38

      ​@@joshuawillingham6363the basic knowledge asked at the start of this video should be known to everyone regardless of how good their elementary school budgets were.
      There are no excuses for being this ignorant. I expect all of them know the names of top TikTok influencers...

    • @joshuawillingham6363
      @joshuawillingham6363 Год назад +6

      @@pxprimary3790 When would you encounter this information outside of a formal education setting? Unless they have a particular interest in space there's no reason to look it up, and public school does a great job of beating any joy to be found in learning out of people.

    • @pxprimary3790
      @pxprimary3790 Год назад +25

      @@joshuawillingham6363 scifi movies. Documentaries. Comic books. TV shows. Novels and general literature.
      There is almost no way you can go through life and not understand the basic size differences between planets, moons, stars, solar systems, galaxies, etc.
      You don't have to know exactly how big they are.... But you should know relatively speaking.

  • @MatthewEsguerra
    @MatthewEsguerra Год назад +1344

    That last one summed it up perfectly -- "people are worried about making mistakes, but you can't learn without making mistakes." Good on her and the rest of the students for being willing to learn something no matter how trivial it may seem to others. Future's looking bright for them.

    • @PerciusLive
      @PerciusLive Год назад +41

      Making mistakes is one thing, not learning from them is another. Theres a trend in the recent years of the latter.

    • @moon-pw1bi
      @moon-pw1bi Год назад +10

      thats true but how do they think stars are planets

    • @Mark-wx8ne
      @Mark-wx8ne Год назад +10

      @@moon-pw1bi Because theyre Americans

    • @DRcorban
      @DRcorban Год назад

      But you can.

    • @oglordbrandon
      @oglordbrandon Год назад +5

      You can absolutely learn without making mistakes.

  • @nathanr.9507
    @nathanr.9507 Год назад +782

    On one hand, I'm terrified how "simple knowledge" (at least in my frame of reference) isn't that known. On the other hand, I do enjoy the fact that these same people are curious and that they feel safe enough to learn like that.

    • @Volundur9567
      @Volundur9567 Год назад +41

      Schools are failing these kids. It's sad.

    • @jondoe8350
      @jondoe8350 Год назад +32

      @@Volundur9567and the proof is how they were willing to stay and learn, instead of just leaving when they got it wrong

    • @_agent47_
      @_agent47_ Год назад +6

      it hurts so bad to watch this

    • @moonasha
      @moonasha Год назад +17

      @@Volundur9567 I doubt it. They were probably taught this stuff in school, I know I was. But the fact is most people simply don't care about this sort of thing and their brain forgets it. It's nothing beyond a fun fact and has zero effect on everyday life. I remember when I was 6 or 7 years old reading all sorts of books about the planets and space, I couldn't get enough of it. But sad truth is 99% of people don't care about it at all and don't look up. 80% of people in the US live in an urban area and have never even seen stars or galaxies.

    • @Kai_The_Kaiookie
      @Kai_The_Kaiookie Год назад

      Dont we learn this in schools? So two do most of them not know?

  • @Yaykozoltz231
    @Yaykozoltz231 День назад +1

    the problem with humanity is that so little people actually know how vast and brutal space is, so that's why so many people don't care about preserving our kind and planet and instead figths each other

  • @UltimateChallengeKit
    @UltimateChallengeKit Год назад +388

    "The thing is that people are worried about making mistakes, but you can't learn without making mistakes a lot of times." -The woman at the end.
    This is such an important piece of wisdom that everyone would benefit from by taking to heart. It's okay to make mistakes, and we should be gracious with those who make mistakes as well.

    • @sheesh9050
      @sheesh9050 Год назад

      crazy its so old too

    • @PotionsMaster666
      @PotionsMaster666 Год назад +3

      Yeah ... And You're taught this as a child*

    • @kyjo72682
      @kyjo72682 Год назад +5

      What about those "not astrology majors" ladies though? They didn't seem too worried about making mistakes.. Imagine people like these making important policy decisions in the government. So maybe making mistakes is ok but if adults are still making mistakes like kids from elementary school maybe they should go back to school.

    • @jayjya
      @jayjya Год назад

      As trite as it comes

    • @speedy01247
      @speedy01247 Год назад +2

      ​​@@kyjo72682I mean to be fair how often does needing to know what's larger in terms of planets and moons matter in politics, not often.(I want to change that)

  • @hunterjeffries7326
    @hunterjeffries7326 Год назад +532

    Man I love your patience. You never mock or poke, you just let people learn. Keep it up.

    • @MatthewTheWanderer
      @MatthewTheWanderer Год назад +1

      So, instead he posts this video online so the whole world can see how embarrassingly ignorant these people are. If he was really being good, he wouldn't have done that in the first place.

    • @mattramen3696
      @mattramen3696 Год назад +21

      I think it’s important to show that people don’t know things and it’s OK to not know things! These people seem kind and open hearted and willing to listen. It might be embarrassing to not know but it’s more embarrassing to not learn. The whole point of this channel is learning. I was cringing at people not knowing things at the beginning but when it came to the size and scale of things I was also ignorant. And it’s ok! We laugh at our ignorance, we learn, and we move on.

    • @timtrex9414
      @timtrex9414 Год назад

      I quite like the like ratio between you and the other commenter.@@MatthewTheWanderer

    • @adamm8136
      @adamm8136 Год назад +1

      This is beyond sad. These are answers a 13 year old should know. Straight up. That's not an over exaggeration

    • @falconranger3116
      @falconranger3116 Год назад +1

      He should have asked them about Kardashians

  • @Appocalypse
    @Appocalypse Год назад +719

    "We are not astrology majors" had me cracking up. Kudos to you for not losing it, Derek.

    • @littlefurrow2437
      @littlefurrow2437 Год назад +41

      Such a Gemini comment

    • @scotte4765
      @scotte4765 Год назад +51

      I don't believe in astrology. I'm a sagittarius and we're skeptical.

    • @sleep-paralys1s
      @sleep-paralys1s Год назад +7

      I came here to say the same thing. Crazy sentence

    • @Walleyedwosaik
      @Walleyedwosaik Год назад +3

      Stop being an Aquarius

    • @teejay10238
      @teejay10238 Год назад +4

      If there's an astrology major in there, I'm really afraid to ask what else people can major in

  • @ThePsyko420
    @ThePsyko420 Месяц назад +6

    "You can't learn without making mistakes" such a lovely quote

    • @philcross7315
      @philcross7315 26 дней назад

      Having the intelligence to realise that, goes a long way.
      Sadly, for some, that never happens.

  • @bakedmomo5693
    @bakedmomo5693 10 месяцев назад +3628

    jesus, the amount of times astrology was used instead of Astronomy, hurt me both physically and mentally.

    • @Theobfool
      @Theobfool 10 месяцев назад +64

      Ow! My neurons!
      But at least astrology does have something to do with space

    • @itsthequenchiest5072
      @itsthequenchiest5072 10 месяцев назад

      @@Theobfool🤨

    • @ratfromsewer6683
      @ratfromsewer6683 10 месяцев назад +79

      everyone in this comment section getting on these ppl for saying astrology when really its the long co-opted etymologically correct term for science/study of the stars, its what we know as astronomy today SHOULD be called, but we got stuck with their etymological definition instead (-nomy referring to rule/law). for an astronomer, the psychic damage exists at a base level at all times for having to call themselves astronomers because some schmucks who think the movement of the planets affects your fortune and personal compatibility with other people decided to take the word that means science (no actual offense meant towards astrologers but can we please switch words)

    • @harikishore2514
      @harikishore2514 10 месяцев назад +6

      because they used share same ancestor name before both terms separated

    • @johns9652
      @johns9652 10 месяцев назад +8

      Came to the comments for this. I cringed so hard. I'm just an electrician with a love of sci-fi since I was a kid, and knew the answers to all the questions he asked since before I was in high school,, except for the galaxies question, which I thought was infinite, not 100 billion - 2 trillion.

  • @dedballoons
    @dedballoons 11 месяцев назад +2389

    At first I was sad to see such basic questions being failed, but what got me was how everyone seemed eager to learn and understand and seemed genuinely happy to learn something new. They're not stupid, they've just never really thought about it much before. Maybe there's hope yet.

    • @maxxcarver5502
      @maxxcarver5502 11 месяцев назад +150

      The school system failed them and never bothered to teach them. That's truly sad.

    • @mitchhudson3972
      @mitchhudson3972 11 месяцев назад +81

      ​@@maxxcarver5502 no, they just forgot. Like i bet you did with 90% of what you learned in school too

    • @dantalien6591
      @dantalien6591 11 месяцев назад +122

      @@mitchhudson3972 Those are like basics of the world and things around us, how can you forget that.

    • @foodaah
      @foodaah 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@mitchhudson3972complex math is one thing,now basic knowledge stuff is something else

    • @lokithehero2309
      @lokithehero2309 11 месяцев назад +42

      ​@@dantalien6591Don't forget they are also being asked to recall their knowledge on the spot. Hindsight is 20/20, I'm sure if they were relaxed behind a screen that they'd be able to remember better.

  • @JanStrojil
    @JanStrojil Год назад +1054

    This is an old school Veritasium video, back to the roots. Love to see you PhD put to use! Educating without judging, inciting curiosity. Love it.

    • @oqulus6880
      @oqulus6880 Год назад +12

      without *openly judging. some of them are 20+ and never ever watched a single clip about the universe and thats a bit sad

    • @gyula.gubacsi
      @gyula.gubacsi Год назад +9

      @@oqulus6880 Or remember some basics about the solar system from primary schools.

    • @24GoldenCarrots
      @24GoldenCarrots Год назад +7

      U don't need a PhD for this

    • @orshabaal8990
      @orshabaal8990 Год назад +9

      @@oqulus6880 or people just find interest in different things. I'm sure these people know things you don't that to them are quite elementary.

    • @mikeholt2852
      @mikeholt2852 Год назад +7

      @@orshabaal8990exactly, the comment section is brutal. Its a given that a veritasium viewer would know all these "basic" stuff. Im sure these people know things we dont know

  • @deek791
    @deek791 28 дней назад +2

    Contemplation and understanding go hand in hand and yet seem mutually exclusive among so many individuals. Foster curiosity from birth and never stop feeding it.
    Also, it's never too late to start being curious.

  • @philipbassett4386
    @philipbassett4386 9 месяцев назад +458

    He is keeping such a straight face through all those interviews, I would not be able to keep my composure. It is baffling to me that people could confuse the size of a star and the moon.

    • @AMV_KINGDOM_mv
      @AMV_KINGDOM_mv 9 месяцев назад +6

      We have multiples moons and stars which is the problem

    • @philipbassett4386
      @philipbassett4386 9 месяцев назад +12

      Earth has one moon. The problem is people can’t or don’t try to grasp the concept of perspective. Nor do they remember one second of the solar system model they learned in elementary school

    • @zm6301
      @zm6301 8 месяцев назад +5

      This video explains why the masses are so easily duped. It's like we're in the dark ages but with smart phones.

    • @TheHiyy
      @TheHiyy 8 месяцев назад

      @@AMV_KINGDOM_mv This isn't Tatooine dude, what?!?!?

    • @AMV_KINGDOM_mv
      @AMV_KINGDOM_mv 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@TheHiyy .....did you not know factually other moons exist and on other planets some planets have moons look it up

  • @Version_Update
    @Version_Update Год назад +3139

    As a lawyer, who’s definitely not an astronomy major…I was absolutely baffled at how people were even considering putting the moon above planets and stars 💀. Also when that one person said stars are the smallest I was dead 😂.

    • @StitchSprites
      @StitchSprites Год назад +206

      fun fact, in terms of size moons can be larger than planets, however they're not commonly larger than the planet it orbits. Ganymede, one of many of Jupiter's moons, is larger than Mercury for example. Similarly, some red dwarf stars are smaller than the largest planets. Centauri (AB) b being the largest known planet 10x the size of Jupiter, and EBLM J0555-57Ab which is the smallest red dwarf star at 118.000km smaller than Saturn at 120.536km in diameter

    • @PeteR-rr5of
      @PeteR-rr5of Год назад

      On the positive side college kids can now name every one of the 57 genders and have invented many new and useful pronouns

    • @Version_Update
      @Version_Update Год назад +104

      @@StitchSprites I mean I'm sure there are moons/planets bigger than stars(small stars like red dwarfs) but we're talking about the average ones and it's a logical thing to think that a moon will not be bigger than a planet since it needs to orbit it.

    • @RobMedellin
      @RobMedellin Год назад +41

      You'll be surprised but the moon is larger than most known plants 😂
      (it's my lame attempt to make fun of a typo that was funny to me, sorry)

    • @StitchSprites
      @StitchSprites Год назад +9

      @@Version_Update I mean yea, It was just a fun fact.

  • @Pedro-hk4sk
    @Pedro-hk4sk Год назад +2797

    As a space nerd, I find it very weird watching people struggle on the easiest question.

    • @Slevaizum
      @Slevaizum Год назад +286

      I'm not a "space nerd", I'm just a guy who went to a Russian school and received a Russian education. You know, we often say that education in America is disgusting, and no one seems to argue with this But not as much! I don’t presume to say that we are such geniuses, but the question “which is bigger, the Moon or the Sun” causes not only hysterical, but rather panicky laughter

    • @Tina-mt9cl
      @Tina-mt9cl Год назад +33

      @@Slevaizum You-have-an-education-system-designed-to-educate...You-cannot-even-compare-that-to-what-we-have-here-in-America-because-the-purpose-of-our-system-is-the-complete-opposite...Hopefully-this-changes-in-the-future-though-now-that-so-many-people-here-in-America-are-taking-notice-for-the-first-time.

    • @yagamilight589
      @yagamilight589 Год назад

      @@Slevaizum Don't say "Russian" as it's something good. 35% of Russians believe that Sun goes around Earth - data from the Russian state agency for public researches in 2022.

    • @Slevaizum
      @Slevaizum Год назад +39

      @@Tina-mt9cl In fact, although our education system provides much more knowledge, it is also terrible. Yes, for us, what is shown in the video is the most basic knowledge, but it is not limited to this. Children in post-Soviet countries are obliged not to “study”, but to “know”. It's a big difference. This is a real mockery of children, because we are forced to cram something that will not be useful in life in principle. Of course, this develops neural connections, and this would be the case if we were instilled with the DESIRE to learn, and not just forced to do it.

    • @Slevaizum
      @Slevaizum Год назад +6

      @@Tina-mt9cl Sorry for GTranslate, but this is the fastest way for me to formulate a thought while concentrating only on what I want to say

  • @DeadlyRespect
    @DeadlyRespect Месяц назад +14

    You saying a star is smaller then a moon is grouds for a break up 0:27

    • @tuxedooblue8515
      @tuxedooblue8515 8 дней назад +1

      Ganimedes (Jupiter's moon)> Mercury (planet) > neutron star (star). Checkmate!

  • @coyyoc4353
    @coyyoc4353 Год назад +416

    Beginning of the video blew my mind, I didn't know people didn't know these things.

    • @SharmV
      @SharmV Год назад +89

      American education system is showing

    • @ishaan863
      @ishaan863 Год назад +96

      Exactly it's not even funny watching people think this stuff through, it's more concerning than anything else. I dont wanna know your other opinions on the world if you dont know if the moon is bigger than the SUN

    • @mufasafalldown8401
      @mufasafalldown8401 Год назад +5

      The tiktok generation.

    • @person8064
      @person8064 Год назад +12

      79% of Americans believe that the Earth orbits the sun, so ehhhhh

    • @PupoT570
      @PupoT570 Год назад

      ​@@SharmV haha America is bad

  • @blackbirdsax4041
    @blackbirdsax4041 7 месяцев назад +553

    4:55 that "can you tell me" is at least to me somewhat promising.
    She may not have known, but she still had to the curiosity and the courage to ask, and genuinely wanted to know more. It's easy to shun people for not knowing, but it's much better to teach them and feed that curiosity.
    I think the desire to learn more matters more than what you already know.

    • @Aliyahens
      @Aliyahens 7 месяцев назад +6

      I agree, but still how do they not know things that even elementary students know? Hell, knowing the scale of celestial object is basically common sense

    • @harlowk
      @harlowk 7 месяцев назад

      ya.. it’s also a way to take the heat away from not knowing… not a bad thing either tho

    • @rynatknight
      @rynatknight 6 месяцев назад +1

      Came here to say the same thing!

    • @ArticG-gc1iu
      @ArticG-gc1iu 5 месяцев назад +1

      honestly its important to learn but its also depressing how little Americans know

    • @MrStanFungi
      @MrStanFungi 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@ArticG-gc1iu nah i think its just them, cause everyone i know knows that stars aren't tiny

  • @andrewyes1206
    @andrewyes1206 Год назад +750

    the universe is shockingly giant but i thought people would at least know the sun is bigger that the moon

    • @donothesitate1198
      @donothesitate1198 Год назад +30

      I mean you can literally see both of them from earth and one is clearly bigger

    • @uzairahmed8260
      @uzairahmed8260 Год назад +6

      I thought he would also ask them about which galaxy is bigger, but it was just basic stuff. Still the video was good.

    • @dreammaker9642
      @dreammaker9642 Год назад +42

      @@donothesitate1198you should also know one is tremendously closer to us so put one and one together to realise the sun behind dwarfs the moon. You’re comparing a pebble to Everest.

    • @uretaanid4405
      @uretaanid4405 Год назад +30

      @@donothesitate1198 They actually look about the same size from earth, because the moon is about 400 times closer than the sun, but its diameter is 400 times smaller than the suns.

    • @Creamworks
      @Creamworks Год назад

      ​@@donothesitate1198that's just plain wrong. neither of them is clearly bigger when seen from earth. they actually look about the exact same size as evidenced by solar eclipses where the sun is perfectly hidden behind the moon.

  • @om_burra
    @om_burra Месяц назад +7

    5:25 “not to scale” is crazy

    • @elijahrelucio3427
      @elijahrelucio3427 24 дня назад +1

      Why is that crazy

    • @om_burra
      @om_burra 24 дня назад +1

      @ it’s crazy how there are some people that are so dumb that he needs to put “not to scale”

    • @Luxurywon
      @Luxurywon 20 дней назад

      ​@@om_burra of course there is

    • @xenqor5438
      @xenqor5438 18 дней назад

      @@om_burrashut up

  • @PH-G
    @PH-G Год назад +750

    As an astronomy major, this pained me greatly. Thanks Derek!

    • @will2see
      @will2see Год назад +4

      Similar here

    • @joshskier
      @joshskier Год назад +105

      Astrology*

    •  Год назад

      Me too

    • @JebFromWarmDays
      @JebFromWarmDays Год назад +18

      @@joshskier Beat me to it hahaha

    • @timothyletwin5911
      @timothyletwin5911 Год назад +31

      My daughter as an 8 year old, it pained her greatly.

  • @DETHdressedInRED
    @DETHdressedInRED 3 месяца назад +325

    7:07 so fun fact, if you stretch your arm out and cover part of the night sky with your hand, you are covering more stars with your hand from your view point than there are grains of sand on every beach on earth.

    • @DETHdressedInRED
      @DETHdressedInRED 2 месяца назад +6

      Thanks for the likes! I'm so happy at least one or two people pay attention to my nerd facts!!!!

    • @mikasa2748
      @mikasa2748 2 месяца назад +6

      This fact is in fact fun!

    • @KidPrarchord95
      @KidPrarchord95 2 месяца назад +15

      But consider this: You also very well be covering more grains of sand than stars

    • @whimsipop4308
      @whimsipop4308 2 месяца назад

      That's fascinating, thanks for sharing

    • @bobogz
      @bobogz 2 месяца назад

      Well the universe is infinite so that would still be the same thing as if you covered the sky with a grain of sand.

  • @calebtraxler8466
    @calebtraxler8466 Год назад +538

    It's easy to be discouraged by how little many people seem to know, but it's also refreshing to see how quickly people learn concepts that are presented to them.

    • @FakeDomi
      @FakeDomi Год назад +61

      consider the possibility that the majority who got it right immediately is simply cut out to make the video less boring

    • @acunit5627
      @acunit5627 Год назад +15

      @@FakeDomi Exactly, i know it is cherry picked but it still hurts me

    • @refuse2Btools
      @refuse2Btools Год назад +21

      This is a sci-fi horror film. Those are post-secondary STUDENTS. That is a centre for HIGHER LEARNING. This is what's to come, they represent the HOPES AND DREAMS for the future. Oh, but it's ok, they aren't studying Astrology, and, surely, somewhere out in the vast distances of space, past the stars, to where the great moons fill the skies, intelligent life will be found in one of the other 11 galaxies.

    • @robadams1645
      @robadams1645 Год назад +14

      DO they learn it though? They may be able to repeat it back to him right afterward, but they probably forget it as soon as they walk away.

    • @Nightstick24
      @Nightstick24 Год назад +11

      That's sure an optimistic way to look at it! I'm just still in shock that a person could not know a moon is smaller than a planet and a star is larger than a planet... Like I'd be shocked if kindergarteners got that wrong, much less what appear to be college/university students. Everyone's gotta start somewhere, and I appreciate that they weren't mocked or made to feel stupid for it, but I'm still struggling to process reality here.

  • @ankitasarkar7365
    @ankitasarkar7365 15 дней назад

    As an astrophysics student, doing a lot of outreach, we sometimes assume that people outside our field will know something, because it's so obvious for us! Turns out that's not the case😂 This is why more & more science communication is required to reach out to common people and aware them about our own universe!
    (Also that pale blue dot's image & the description by Carl Sagan is my favorite 🤭 I have it on my wall, along with a bunch of other fascinating astrophotographies!)
    The cosmos really put us into our place! It shows how small our problems are comparison to the gigantic universe! So instead of being egoistic, selfish or spreading hatred, spread LOVE & HAPPINESS, cause this is all we've got, on a tiny speck of dust, resides the entire mankind!✨️✨️

  • @erinwiebe7026
    @erinwiebe7026 Год назад +5190

    A nice showcase for why science literacy is important.

    • @dangerfly
      @dangerfly Год назад +121

      Marvel is to blame. Earth deals with a UNIVERSAL crisis every movie which is extremely narcissistic. WRITERS think the universe is the size of a solar system.
      Edit: The multiverse contains multiple solar systems. Thinking we're the only one is also narcissistic. :)

    • @staceygram5555
      @staceygram5555 Год назад

      They're too busy learning about how women and bIack people are oppressed and how white men invented bigotry and slavery....

    • @TheRealWilliamWhite
      @TheRealWilliamWhite Год назад +114

      To answer random questions from a stranger in a sandwich board? I don't see how that's important.

    • @michaelnewman2343
      @michaelnewman2343 Год назад +131

      how does this showcase it? none of these people knew the answers and they seem like theyre doing fine.

    • @jellygoo
      @jellygoo Год назад +11

      @@dangerfly Hm... "a" solar system? Surely you meant "the" because solar refers to our star sol hence there is only one solar system. Others are called star systems (simplified).

  • @1990erre
    @1990erre Год назад +543

    I've always thought the "Pale Blue Dot" picture is one of the two most important artistic images we have ever taken. The other being the Hubble "Deep Field" image, showing how unbelievably vast our universe is. One aimed inwards, one outwards.

    • @shelby6
      @shelby6 Год назад +8

      Same, this video was shocking

    • @peterparker9286
      @peterparker9286 Год назад +1

      Bob Ross

    • @BunchOfGreyGrapes
      @BunchOfGreyGrapes Год назад +3

      Wdym artistic

    • @Daniel_Rodrigues_89
      @Daniel_Rodrigues_89 Год назад +14

      Not only Pale Blue Dot is the most important picture ever taken in history of humankind, I consider Sagan's speech the best idea human intellect ever produced. Its beauty surpasses every piece of art ever made, every picture or poetry or music ever done, every verbose text ever written by intellectuals or anything some stupid politician has ever said. And it's beauty produced entirely by the intellect, supported by facts and observation basically. It's just so REAL that nothing else in human nature or experience comes even close.

    • @wonder_platypus8337
      @wonder_platypus8337 Год назад +6

      And now we have the JWST images that contain more galaxies than even Hubbles.

  • @OakHillSoulman
    @OakHillSoulman Год назад +621

    Videos like this are one reason Derek has nearly 15m subscribers. It was hard to watch at times but he actually educated people and didn’t make them feel stupid. Great job.

    • @stacysilverman6366
      @stacysilverman6366 Год назад +15

      He shouldn't make them feel stupid, but they should feel stupid on their own. The problem is that they don't. And they'll be the ones in charge someday abolishing private property and throwing you into a gulag.

    • @carlsagan7638
      @carlsagan7638 Год назад +2

      Deruk must have sorted through hundreds of people find the dumbest 10 people in america to make a shocking video.
      Thats why he gets the views. He makes shocking videos. Hopefully this doesnt become the norm, I used to like his videos (the hypothetical long cable/electricity video left a bad taste). But seeing the view count here, I am afraid this format will become the norm.

    • @Fhull
      @Fhull Год назад

      @@carlsagan7638I think it’s more likely that most people in America are that stupid

    • @megagatlingpea2322
      @megagatlingpea2322 Год назад

      i still think he has 12million even though its been like 3 years

    • @DieFlabbergast
      @DieFlabbergast Год назад +2

      They were not stupid: hardly anyone is. But they WERE very ignorant! These are things that everyone SHOULD know. This level of ignorance is hard to comprehend.

  • @OSKS-PJ4556
    @OSKS-PJ4556 6 дней назад

    your channel inspired me on space and engineering since beginning thankyou!!

  • @isakleo4706
    @isakleo4706 Год назад +708

    I've always hated the trend of going up to strangers and asking them trivia just to prove how "stupid" people are but this is so nice. Same basic premise but approached with care and a willingness to educate. Enriching instead of degrading, love it.

    • @Zorro9129
      @Zorro9129 Год назад +24

      Stupidity is sadly not something that can be cured.

    • @GonFr14
      @GonFr14 Год назад +100

      ​@@Zorro9129it can be cured by open-mindedness and the will to learn.

    • @zikli9249
      @zikli9249 Год назад +67

      ​@@Zorro9129 Why would you consider people not knowing trivia stupidity? There could be loads of reasons why these people do not know this information. They could have not gone to a school that taught this information. They could have lost this knowledge in favor of spending time learning other facts which are more pertinent to their every day lives. They could have known the information and their mind just blanked on the subject while they were being put on the spot.

    • @vinnibod2500
      @vinnibod2500 Год назад +36

      @@zikli9249 Brilliant mindset here. Not "knowing" some throwaway facts doesn't make one stupid. The information presented, in my opinion, shows a gap in education related to astronomical objects. But, for most people on Earth, astronomical objects are as insignificant as quantum objects. Quantum objects and astronomical objects have almost 0 relevance to everyday life.

    • @vinnibod2500
      @vinnibod2500 Год назад +11

      @isakleo4706 Agreed. Trivia is fun, but entirely non-indicative of actual human knowledge. Derek manages to walk that line between "trivia to prove people are stupid" and "genuinely caring about people's knowledge" in a way that seems to me to be someone who truly cares about people.

  • @ShizuruNakatsu
    @ShizuruNakatsu Год назад +654

    As someone who knows all of this stuff and assumed it was pretty common knowledge, it's kind of hard to imagine "most" people not knowing it.
    I guess that happens though. When you know a lot about a topic, you underestimate your own knowledge on the topic by overestimating the knowledge of others (assuming that the gap between what you know and what everybody else knows is not so big).

    • @imnotnotgameiacmaniac5327
      @imnotnotgameiacmaniac5327 Год назад +44

      Unfortunately it doesn't seem like veritasium is cherry picking results either. 25% of americans think the sun orbits around the earth for example

    • @ShizuruNakatsu
      @ShizuruNakatsu Год назад +26

      @imnotnotgameiacmaniac5327 Really? That's actually insane to think about. That would be one person in every immediate family, on average. Possibly two or three in a larger family. That means possibly some of my friends would even think that way, though I like to think my friends are intelligent people. I have had to explain to people, including my own parents, that the sun is a star, and that every star you see in the sky is also a sun, some billions of times bigger than ours. But my parents grew up poor, and with less education, they were never willfully ignorant.

    • @imnotnotgameiacmaniac5327
      @imnotnotgameiacmaniac5327 Год назад +12

      @@ShizuruNakatsuI think when it comes to topics that people lack interest in and where only taught as a child people can look dumber and less educated then they actually are especially sense a lot of people are just kinda doing their own thing and lack curiosity. But still, this kind of stuff is ridiculous and shouldn't be happening in the 21th century though with the same survey finding things like half of Americans not knowing antibiotics don't work on viruses i think human stupidity still plays a large part.

    • @ShizuruNakatsu
      @ShizuruNakatsu Год назад +6

      @imnotnotgameiacmaniac5327 Yeah, that's one of the things that makes me very different. I've always had a natural curiosity, loved to learn, and wanted to know as much I could. I pretty much always retain information, whether it's from school, my own research, or even watching quiz shows for entertainment. I don't just let the knowledge flow out of my brain like that, because I want to know and remember things. I know a majority of humans are just caught up in their own little bubble, and don't really care about anything that happens outside of it, but I'll never really understand that mindset.

    • @imnotnotgameiacmaniac5327
      @imnotnotgameiacmaniac5327 Год назад +5

      @@ShizuruNakatsu i envy you lol i also like to do research but i forget information all the time. im often left with the correct conclusion but i can't remember how i got there even with irl stuff i stuggle to remember things clearly that where more than a month ago

  • @TheMrJizzus
    @TheMrJizzus Год назад +464

    We are very tiny compared to the universe, but it's always great seeing someone expanding other people's minds. That can have no limits

    • @Hellraiser_666_
      @Hellraiser_666_ Год назад +7

      Well if we look at everything in the universe we are actually pretty big. At least if we compare us to the smallest and biggest known thing. If we would scale up the planck length to human size, a regular human would be billion times bigger than the observable universe. So on the scale we are above the middle. At least from what we can see

    • @DNTMEE
      @DNTMEE Год назад +8

      @@Hellraiser_666_
      So, basically, we're pretty much right where we should be to be able to observe the very large and very small.

    • @cosmosandchill
      @cosmosandchill Год назад

      But we ARE the universe, in a literal sense. To make a human from scratch, you first need the entire universe to exist, exactly as it is. The way we are is a direct consequence of how the entire cosmos unfolded, right back to the Big Bang. We are not "in" the universe... we are an emergent property of it. It's the deepest nature of our being.

    • @earlysda
      @earlysda Год назад

      Jesus Christ spoke them all into existence.
      Let's praise his holy name!

    • @beepbop6697
      @beepbop6697 Год назад

      ​@@earlysda lol. wut?

  • @sinwalker_gaming
    @sinwalker_gaming Месяц назад +2

    Sorta off topic, but i like this style of content. Instead of presenting the people they interviews as idiots and letting them make fools of themselves, the guy is educating them in a professional and fun manner that doesn’t come off as arrogant or to make them feel dumb. Sweet. 👍

  • @ramuthra1
    @ramuthra1 Год назад +714

    It baffles me that many people aren't driven by curiosity and fascination to educate themselves about the fundamentals of physics and astronomy. Learning about the mechanics of the universe was like a drug during my teens. I'm glad Derek is inspring some of that wonder in these young people. To my mind, understanding reality is crucial to appreciating one's existence and finding meaning... without going through that process, you are blind to so much beauty.

    • @jacobjaramillo3192
      @jacobjaramillo3192 Год назад +18

      Im so interested in the cosmos and yet im terrified to look up at the stars because its an overwhelming feeling for me and not many people understand why i feel that way. Maybe its because as this video proves, not many people understand that scale of the universe.

    • @tiki_trash
      @tiki_trash Год назад +22

      It always amazes me that we live in a time when vast amounts of knowledge are literally at our fingertips and people use this technology mostly for games and social media.

    • @smhdpt12
      @smhdpt12 Год назад +19

      The great majority of people just want to be entertained. They could care less the difference between a moon, planet or galaxy. Give them a drink and a video game and watch their minds turn to mush.

    • @MatsueMusic
      @MatsueMusic Год назад

      I feel the same way @@jacobjaramillo3192

    • @nikolayangelov7763
      @nikolayangelov7763 Год назад

      Most Americans are poorly educated - Look at these adults at the start struggle to fathom which planer object is bigger.... Stuff you learn in the first grade

  • @cocoatwist
    @cocoatwist 9 месяцев назад +1516

    "is the sun bigger than the moon?" i just gasped

    • @saltyninja5534
      @saltyninja5534 8 месяцев назад +28

      bro you listen to kpop you probably gasp just walking on a daily basis when your not sitting on a chair

    • @cocoatwist
      @cocoatwist 8 месяцев назад +123

      ​@@saltyninja5534 do people gasp when they realize you can't use basic grammar 😭

    • @linamariaorozcouribe5291
      @linamariaorozcouribe5291 8 месяцев назад +3

      I mean if they have only ever seen the sun and moon on earth with their own eyes. They look roughly the same size.

    • @Fabian3331234333
      @Fabian3331234333 8 месяцев назад

      I mean just look at it, duh

    • @cocoatwist
      @cocoatwist 8 месяцев назад +35

      @@linamariaorozcouribe5291 i learned that the sun was bigger than the moon in 4th grade... how do people just not get taught basic astronomy

  • @roblox1387
    @roblox1387 8 месяцев назад +497

    Astrology getting mixed up with Astronomy is making me cry.

    • @Nexowl
      @Nexowl 7 месяцев назад +26

      True. But I get why some people mix this up. There are real sciences that end with -logy, like biology, for example.
      Also, if I'm not mistaken, astrology started as a real science.

    • @roblox1387
      @roblox1387 7 месяцев назад +11

      @@Nexowl Astrology is just a weird thing in general, I wouldn’t consider it a science.

    • @Nexowl
      @Nexowl 7 месяцев назад +11

      ​@@roblox1387 What it is now, yes, absolutely. I mean back 3000 years ago, when they started to inspect the rotation of planets. They called it Astrology. Today it is pure Esotericism.

    • @roblox1387
      @roblox1387 7 месяцев назад +3

      @@Nexowl ohhh, yes, I agree, it’s nice someone in the online world fonds modern Astrology to be wierd

    • @ano_nym
      @ano_nym 7 месяцев назад

      It's the icing of the cake that is the beginning of the clip.

  • @DenkouNova
    @DenkouNova 16 дней назад

    I'm so grateful for the love mister Derek shows, and I do mean love, towards all the people who came to him with wrong answers. It genuinely brings a tear to my eye.

  • @msheahan7
    @msheahan7 10 месяцев назад +204

    I appreciate how well you turned this into a learning experience instead of just trolling them and walking away.

  • @lewis4200
    @lewis4200 Год назад +460

    I think that intro demonstrates how we take the knowledge we already have as a given... Ordering those items by size seems so obvious and straight-forward to me that I wouldn't even consider that it could be hard for other people.
    Maybe we should give our parents a break when they ask us how to work the computer lol

    • @sierrabianca
      @sierrabianca Год назад +25

      @lewis4200 It does seem like more of a failure of education and culture though when people know everything there is to know about computers and almost nothing about the Universe around them.

    • @kryzethx
      @kryzethx Год назад +19

      @@sierrabianca Are we talking about people in general, or as a civilization? Because I know people who work with computers on a daily basis, but don't know simple (what I would consider simple) concepts like shortcuts, hotkeys, network folders, or even the difference between Windows Explorer and Internet Explorer

    • @dagreatghosface
      @dagreatghosface Год назад +18

      This was seriously eye-opening. I feel like my 4 year old would be able to order these, but then again she's taken up my interest in astronomy

    • @Impetuss
      @Impetuss Год назад +12

      A lot of Americans don't even know where USA is on a world map, or cant name a European country ​@@sierrabianca

    • @ckpioo
      @ckpioo Год назад +13

      @@dagreatghosface im honestly blown away like how are there literal humans alive currently in 2000s who still dont even know the simplest answers, im extremely shocked

  • @necronom
    @necronom 10 месяцев назад +409

    I was amazed at how little some of them knew.
    I always think of Douglas Adams and The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy when I think of the vastness of space: "Space is big. Really big. You just won’t believe how vastly hugely mindboggingly big it is. I mean you may think it’s a long way down the road to the chemist, but that’s just peanuts to space."

    • @candylemonn
      @candylemonn 10 месяцев назад +2

      I just started reading that series and I love it so much! Funny to see i’m not the only one who thought about it while watching this 😂

    • @dannileigh6426
      @dannileigh6426 9 месяцев назад

      I was looking for this comment🤣

    • @mitchell8273
      @mitchell8273 9 месяцев назад

      I always think of the Total Perspective Vortex, and on a microscopic dot within a microscopic dot are the words, "You are here."

    • @k1llsh0t_87
      @k1llsh0t_87 9 месяцев назад

      Space is massive and also empty, you could hop in a spaceship and blindly fly around for a century and you'd likely not hit anything

    • @JoseHernandez-q6f
      @JoseHernandez-q6f 9 месяцев назад

      @@k1llsh0t_87you actually would probably hit the asteroid belt before you got too far and that would probably kill you. If you got past it though I think it is vast and empty until you reach another solar system, I’m not sure.

  • @troytab6089
    @troytab6089 19 дней назад

    I love that this man is supportive and educational towards these people. I wouldn't be able to do that.
    This info seems so basic and obvious to me.
    I would be telling that guy who did Star < Planet < Moon that he was an utter dunce, that school has failed him, and that my sister has known these things since she was 5.

  • @CameronBoyd-b2w
    @CameronBoyd-b2w Год назад +82

    I'm a math teacher and I see you teaching these people. Who cares about us, you taught each of these people something with an individual education. Thank you

    • @MichaelSouthMichaelSouth
      @MichaelSouthMichaelSouth Год назад +7

      That is what I got out of this video. It wasn't just a 'gotcha' video but challenged some young people with basic facts, that describe the fantastic scale and power of this ancient universe.

    • @gaugea
      @gaugea Год назад +3

      @@MichaelSouthMichaelSouthi agree. im somewhat disappointed looking through the comments- most people making fun of the people in the video… i used to love learning in school, you can see the people here enjoying themselves when they learn something new, and the thing that always made me become disinterested in a topic was when i was made fun of because of it. lets encourage learning! it makes us all smarter and happier

    • @MichaelSouthMichaelSouth
      @MichaelSouthMichaelSouth Год назад

      @@gaugea Thank you for your comments. The truth is I rarely enjoyed learning in school until my second year in College but always enjoyed learning from non-fiction books about historical technology or natural phenomena including astronomy, physics etc. I am over 30 so I enjoyed seeing young people become interested in learning, but imo, it is a legitimate concern that the new generation may not be well served in basic science and technology when their votes determine whether new generations of space telescopes are built or horizons in biology or "A.I." are pursued.

  • @Nihilore
    @Nihilore Год назад +549

    Really puts into perspective the bubble we might exist in as the kind of people to watch veritasium videos, and also why proper education funding is one of the most important things

    • @matthewrix1047
      @matthewrix1047 Год назад +11

      Ah yes throwing money at the problem should solve it. Even though education funding in real dollars has gone up every year for decades

    • @christophearbus3523
      @christophearbus3523 Год назад +8

      @@matthewrix1047 Which means education in your country is not a proper one, which means Nihilore is right.

    • @firstname4337
      @firstname4337 Год назад +14

      @@christophearbus3523 WRONG -- obviously more funding would not solve the problem -- the problem isn't "need more money" -- the problem is "we have plenty of money but we spend it on the wrong things" -- besides, this is BASIC science -- any 11 year old should know this

    • @Flaschenteufel
      @Flaschenteufel Год назад +2

      ​@@matthewrix1047what? Your country has private colleges made by food and big pharma. Barely anyone has any Idea of the world behind U.S. boarders. What are you talking about?
      Are you even aware that you need to pay teachers?
      Is this a serious run for my medal of "Internet Idiot of the day"?

    • @readtherealanthonyfaucibyr6444
      @readtherealanthonyfaucibyr6444 Год назад +4

      It used to be normal for every college aged person to know these things. Public education has gone down the tubes in recent decades in favor of certain "party approved" education only.

  • @SephBane
    @SephBane Год назад +347

    I used to volunteer at a library makerspace. I made a sign that said, "Failure is always an option" to try to encourage kids to try new things and no care about the outcome. The library took down the sign. The biggest challenge those kids had to learning was fear of making a mistake because they have been thought that you will get a bad grade and punished. Mistakes are the only way we learn without them you are just memorizing. Mistakes are what make us reflect on what we have experienced and coalesce it into rules about the world that we see around us.

    • @sephreed1938
      @sephreed1938 Год назад +25

      My name is Seph and I run a library makerspace. This is weird.

    • @SephBane
      @SephBane Год назад +20

      @@sephreed1938 I have never met another Seph before.

    • @Eden_Laika
      @Eden_Laika Год назад +39

      I feel like there are much better ways to convey that message than "Failure is always an option." I know it's meant to be encouraging, but it comes across as defeatist. I respect the intended message, but I don't blame the library for taking down the sign.

    • @Desimere
      @Desimere Год назад +13

      @@Eden_Laika haha, yeah, just the thought of how some people would read that, as in "You're never safe from failure." and then they would be so confused about who would put up such a mean sign

    • @MrTheclevercat
      @MrTheclevercat Год назад +11

      That sign isn't as amazing as you thought it was.

  • @Farinhir
    @Farinhir 9 дней назад

    Talking about how large the universe is made me think of the following quote from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series.
    “Space,” it says, “is big. Really big. You just won’t believe how vastly, hugely, mindbogglingly big it is. I mean, you may think it’s a long way down the road to the chemist’s, but that’s just peanuts to space.”

  • @mashfia_05
    @mashfia_05 Год назад +304

    While being totally speechless for first half of the video, I realized that most people actually don't know things I consider as basics (which actually IS, we should learn more about the world outside our atmosphere as well as our planet), there’s so much to learn, if you look around you'll never run out of things to know about. I mean being interested in astronomy since forever, even I didn’t know that there are more trees on earth than there are stars in our galaxy!

    • @swampfox984
      @swampfox984 Год назад +11

      The trees and how many planets we have identified were the only questions I didn't know the answer to/got wrong. And I don't even study or even really care about astronomy. I just know it because I enjoy learning.

    • @DeathValleyDazed
      @DeathValleyDazed Год назад +3

      Yup, I missed the trees question also.

    • @DeathBYDesign666
      @DeathBYDesign666 Год назад +3

      Only the trees for me but I feel like that is an unrelated question in all fairness. But generally speaking I think that any sci fi nerd could answer these questions very easily. On the other hand there are people that actually know these answers but believe that the earth is flat, so regardless of them knowing this information they still believe it's false due to some unknown conspiracy agenda. These people actually went to the trouble of learning this kind of knowledge and immediately discredit it as "mainstream propaganda". That proves that you don't need to be smart to just assimilate the data, understanding it is another story.

    • @DeathValleyDazed
      @DeathValleyDazed Год назад

      @@DeathBYDesign666 Well stated. Next time you take a flight there is a small chance that your excellent pilot may actually believe our Earth is flat 🥴

    • @DeathBYDesign666
      @DeathBYDesign666 Год назад +1

      @@DeathValleyDazed That's worse than snakes on a plane! 😂

  • @barilllapasta
    @barilllapasta 7 месяцев назад +415

    I appreciate that he was so nice to people and educated them without being mean or mocking. I, however,

    • @airgearmaster123
      @airgearmaster123 7 месяцев назад +4

      Though the same thing, as I do that mysrlf when I find a topic or subject interesting

    • @its_a_doggo
      @its_a_doggo 6 месяцев назад +10

      I would not be nice either

    • @potatomanz6486
      @potatomanz6486 6 месяцев назад +6

      I would try my best to help them but I couldn’t guarantee I wouldn’t laugh

    • @nathancornwell1455
      @nathancornwell1455 4 месяца назад +1

      It's easy to take for granted what you consider common knowledge.

    • @tesnaibs
      @tesnaibs 4 месяца назад +1

      Purpose of this video:
      Learn the scale of the universe ❌️
      See the rizzy guy in the cap ✅️

  • @curtbro100
    @curtbro100 4 месяца назад +447

    Now I understand why there are still people who still think the earth is flat

    • @kroooassant9899
      @kroooassant9899 3 месяца назад +4

      Multiverses, fat woman in another world, catwoman in this one.

    • @k9tirion927
      @k9tirion927 3 месяца назад +7

      No, not "still".
      The terrifying thing is that it is not just a few remnants of stupid or "oldthink", flat earthers *gained* growth thanks to the internet/information age.
      People in the middle ages and early industrial revolution pretty commonly knew the earth wasn't flat.

    • @geheimeWeltregierung
      @geheimeWeltregierung 3 месяца назад +2

      @@k9tirion927 exactly the "mainstream" view of scholars in the middle ages viewed the earth as a globe therefore charlemaine was given the Globus Crucigern a globe shape object with a cross on top to symbolicise ...

    • @abirpaul5064
      @abirpaul5064 3 месяца назад

      perhaps education is illegal in the States, they prefer the pride flag more

    • @pofdsjoijsodfjsoidf
      @pofdsjoijsodfjsoidf 3 месяца назад

      And 99% of them are from USA.

  • @bigdream_dreambig
    @bigdream_dreambig 17 дней назад

    A lot of people mention how truly understanding the scale of the universe makes them feel small, but for me it does the opposite. I am in awe of the vast potential of humanity; we can become so much more than we are today.

  • @PaintingWinterMusic
    @PaintingWinterMusic Год назад +1449

    Yesterday I found a pinecone, and it was clearly bigger than the sun (which looked like it was just about the size of my thumb), so I have no idea why all these crazy people think the sun is so big!

    • @PaintingWinterMusic
      @PaintingWinterMusic Год назад +82

      I mean, I've seen pictures of the Milky Way, and those pictures were clearly smaller than a piece of paper.
      Also--just going to shamelessly plug--I'm hoping some of you might like the music I make too :)

    • @MrUssy101
      @MrUssy101 Год назад +32

      Yeah am gonna need the contact of your dealer. 🚬

    • @Thuktun
      @Thuktun Год назад +42

      It makes my head hurt that people think like that...and vote.

    • @eidwight_teh_revenant
      @eidwight_teh_revenant Год назад

      Lmao

    • @acmichels1970
      @acmichels1970 Год назад

      😂😂😂😂

  • @alterego634
    @alterego634 11 месяцев назад +258

    It may be my interest since childhood for astronomy speaking and countless documentaries, but I’m genuinely surprised how little people know about astronomy

    • @4isbestnumber
      @4isbestnumber 10 месяцев назад +5

      real
      like its common sense...

    • @yoface9079
      @yoface9079 10 месяцев назад +3

      I'm genuinely surprised no one notices part of it os a trick question! Stars very greatly in size, some larger then a planet, some smaller!

    • @grubface
      @grubface 10 месяцев назад

      @@4isbestnumberhow is astronomy common sense..?

    • @liberalstchenel596
      @liberalstchenel596 10 месяцев назад +6

      Or like some of them said "astrology" 🤣

    • @techtree5969
      @techtree5969 10 месяцев назад

      Im still by technicality a child a im astonished they got this wrong there is common sence in this i figured mist from watching anime scales and 1v1 and few books in primary

  • @joseenriquemunar8901
    @joseenriquemunar8901 10 месяцев назад +595

    I love how he's happy teaching random strangers some stuff, feels so wholesome

    • @steveswm7742
      @steveswm7742 10 месяцев назад +20

      This isn't wholesome. It's disturbing.

    • @LuciferWrld999
      @LuciferWrld999 10 месяцев назад +22

      ​@@steveswm7742its both. Its wholesome seeing how happy he is but its disturbing that so many people struggle with this. Im 20 and have known this stuff for like 10 years already.

    • @Miguel-xj5pg
      @Miguel-xj5pg 9 месяцев назад

      @@steveswm7742a lot of people don’t really take the universe into consideration on their daily lives cause all their problems are here on this planet. I don’t blame them for not knowing anything past the sun.

    • @jinparksoul
      @jinparksoul 9 месяцев назад +2

      Funny you think they taught them something. There is no doubt they were already taught and exposed to these things many times in the past. It just didn't stick.

    • @verifeli
      @verifeli 9 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@steveswm7742So.. learning and teaching other people is disturbing? 💀
      Now you know why there are lots of kids that didn't bother to study at school. Because it's "disturbing", just like what you said.🤦‍♂️

  • @marvelover7089
    @marvelover7089 25 дней назад

    I have such a strong connection to the universe that this video,weirdly,made me feel bigger than before

  • @jonathanrose5490
    @jonathanrose5490 Год назад +382

    I genuinely enjoyed the positivity of this. No shame, no anger, people learning things etc
    I am shocked as a complete life long nerd that folks didn't know this stuff but again... I'm a big old nerd.

    • @Tommy_007
      @Tommy_007 Год назад +7

      @@beowulf_of_wall_st I agree completely.

    • @jonathanrose5490
      @jonathanrose5490 Год назад +42

      @pcap8810 that's one way to go through life.
      I think, personally, that attitude will simply encourage people to remain ignorant for fear of asking questions.
      I'm sure there are many topics you are ignorant of that others find to be common knowledge.

    • @Blackwind_Legacy
      @Blackwind_Legacy Год назад

      One should be angry about this. This is just 1 sign of a decaying civilization in the AGE OF INFORMATION. This is very basic knowledge and yet our education system has failed us. Failed us so hard, we have people believing things like conspiracies and flat/hollow earth... If we can't get succeed in teaching this very basic information, how are we supposed to be able to combat the stupidity that is flat/hollow earth and other likewise dumb ideas enabled by those in power. Having said that, its no wonder the system fails us. They want us dumb. So, sorry, not sorry if these people and their ignorance makes me just a little angry.

    • @crappyspidersucksthemost
      @crappyspidersucksthemost Год назад +12

      It's not nerd stuff, it's 3rd grade stuff

    • @NOTONtechsx
      @NOTONtechsx Год назад +18

      @@beowulf_of_wall_st Well tbh, I too was surprised a lot of people didn't know the absolute basics but I have to disagree that they should be ashamed of it. Maybe they weren't really curious because they didn't know anything about it in the first place which led them to not look into it. A good teacher knows to bring out the curiousity in children, the curiousity isn't in there initially. I think you get the reference. Finally, it's never too late to learn something new.

  • @chillsahoy2640
    @chillsahoy2640 Год назад +204

    It was interesting to see you return to the style that formed part of the data for your PhD! As someone who's been watching your videos for over 10 years, when I myself was still in university, it certainly was a blast from the past. One thing you've always been good at is letting people work it out themselves, even if they're wrong, and then helpfully lead them towards the right answer so that they learn without feeling like they're being mocked.

    • @bb5979
      @bb5979 Год назад +1

      They should be mocked. What sort of consuming slave do you have to be to be completely unaware of your surroundings like that

    • @chillsahoy2640
      @chillsahoy2640 Год назад +12

      @@bb5979 Obvious troll is obvious but against my better judgement, I will reply...
      If you mock them, what do you get? People who have not really learned anything, but are now mad at you. If you show compassion and teach them the correct information, what do you get? People who have now learned something new.
      By mocking them you're actively taking steps to keep the world ignorant instead of increasing the amount of knowledge in the world.

    • @ChristianBarry-hm5my
      @ChristianBarry-hm5my Год назад +2

      I actually went to comment this too, but you beat me to it, and put it way better lol

    • @version365
      @version365 Год назад

      Yep, it really was a blast a from the past! I too missed these street videos of derek.

    • @enricozetti
      @enricozetti Год назад +2

      ​@@chillsahoy2640 Also, it is very easy to judge them and sure, some answers show holes in education but I'd also say each one of us is very ignorant on many subjects. I find myself searching stuff on google all the time. It means I encounter stuff i don't know all the time.
      Many of the people following this channel would have probably fared better at these queations but maybe not on literature or history or literature, art, politics, economics and whatnot.. it's not as easy as it may seem from here to look smart when answered random and unexpected questions.

  • @MuzeXC
    @MuzeXC 11 месяцев назад +557

    As someone obsessed with astronomy and the natural world my jaw was on the floor watching this one..

    • @commandershepard2490
      @commandershepard2490 11 месяцев назад +40

      my jaw was so was not of the floor but the fuckin outer core of earth watching this. UNBELIEVABLE....

    • @zetanax1041
      @zetanax1041 11 месяцев назад +28

      its quite shocking to see, definitely doesn't give me much hope for the future generations.
      don't worry though, I'm sure they know all the tiktok dances💀

    • @jamesambrocio
      @jamesambrocio 11 месяцев назад +7

      I know right. I love astrology.

    • @gwilkes5325
      @gwilkes5325 11 месяцев назад +46

      @@jamesambrocio "we're not astrology majors" 😭

    • @daveyes9571
      @daveyes9571 11 месяцев назад +27

      It is genuinely frightening that anyone in education at any level doesn't know this. They all seem really polite and nice, but how do you even get into high school withough knowing what a moon is? I am sure he cherry-picked the most ridiculous answers and I am sure most got it right but still, that's really bad. 6 years olds learn this stuff.

  • @ogkendrick6392
    @ogkendrick6392 19 дней назад

    The pale blue dot image is still very very emotional to me... It's one of the most profound images ever taken

  • @tophus5583
    @tophus5583 Год назад +623

    "People can't learn without making mistakes"
    Best quote that I heard from a student in a VERY long time.

    • @MosaidDeath
      @MosaidDeath Год назад +28

      And it doesn’t help that so many people make fun of people like her in the comment sections.

    • @kroneexe
      @kroneexe Год назад

      It’s not a very original or intelligent quote. If that is the best you’ve heard then maybe you’re as dmb as the people in the video.

    • @dewiellin7898
      @dewiellin7898 Год назад +16

      You actually can learn without mistakes 👆

    • @neonintention
      @neonintention Год назад +3

      ​@@dewiellin7898 I doubt that

    • @k_otey
      @k_otey Год назад +21

      learning by not making mistakes is basically just remembering. you did something and it’s correct, so you repeat it. but you can’t really get much further than that by not making mistakes from trying new things. you’ll stagnate.

  • @handlesarecringe957
    @handlesarecringe957 10 месяцев назад +1403

    The relative sizes of bodies is literally kindergarten level science. The fact that anyone can not know this is concerning.

    • @dbznappa
      @dbznappa 10 месяцев назад +139

      Much of American education rests on the belief that the universe revolves around the USA.

    • @Shijaru64
      @Shijaru64 10 месяцев назад

      Americans do have a strong stereotype of not being smart. These youngsters don't do the country any favors.

    • @Malhaloc
      @Malhaloc 10 месяцев назад +59

      ​@dbznappa Not so much anymore. Now it rests on the individual as the center of the universe. "YOU are special. YOU are unique. YOU are whatever you say YOU are, and if anyone tells you different, that is violence against YOU...And that concludes math class. Thank you, everyone! See you tomorrow! And remember, after our pledge to the pride flag, we will have a pop quiz on pronouns! All 5,892,634,051 of them!"

    • @dbznappa
      @dbznappa 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@Malhaloc Oh look, another poor conservative that permanently thinks they are a victim. You poor, poor, sensitive snowflake, it must be so hard being so upset all the time.
      Imagine if you ACTUALLY had something worth caring about.

    • @andrewgreenberg1862
      @andrewgreenberg1862 10 месяцев назад +22

      ​@@MalhalocI thought everyone agreed that individuals are important. The U.S. was founded on personal rights. I think there are issues with this, socially, but you are just making sht up. Pronouns have always been taught, but not the 'modern ones.' They are needed in language, and totally made up. If anything, more popular pronouns besides the main ones should be taught, so students know about them. You know, education.

  • @MrAmad3us
    @MrAmad3us 11 месяцев назад +163

    As a space nerd, I vow to first say “I’m no Astrology major but” before then answering correctly if I’m ever in this situation

    •  11 месяцев назад +5

      “I’m no Astrology major but” is a ridiculous statement either way, in my country we learned the solar system and the basic principle of the universe as elementary school students.
      I've never seen an elementary school that doesn't have at least one model of the solar system in the classroom, so I can't understand why there are so many university students in the US who don't even know whether the sun or moon is larger or smaller.

    • @Impeccable-Bread
      @Impeccable-Bread 11 месяцев назад +23

      The dude was joking by implying that "astrology" is astronomy. It's fairly common that people confuse the two even though one is in actuality a physical science and the the other utter nonsense. ​@

    • @boaz7028
      @boaz7028 11 месяцев назад +5

      ​@and it seems you don't even know it's called astronomy and not astrology

    • @Joseph11OG
      @Joseph11OG 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@Impeccable-Breadastrology was the foundation for Astronomy. Astrology transformed into Astronomy during the enlightenment . Why are you throwing out the baby with the bathwater? Thousands of years of human intuition just one day suddenly became rendered entirely useless and obsolete because we became enlightened by the scientific method? It's such an arrogant perspective. Don't disrespect ancient wisdom like that. There is so much going on that cannot be deduced by empirical observation and measurement alone. I.e the metaphysical. "Imagination is more important than Knowledge" - Albert Einstein

    •  11 месяцев назад +3

      @@boaz7028 Firstly, English is not my native language and secondly, I copied this statement from MrAmad3us' comment, I didn't even notice that it said Astrology instead of Astronomy.
      So I already know the difference, but for someone who can only write English error-free with the help of Google Translate, it's easier not to notice such errors.

  • @leogiroux6751
    @leogiroux6751 День назад +1

    And that's why I believe we are not the only intelligent species in the universe it is mathematically impossible

  • @theolaa
    @theolaa 11 месяцев назад +602

    I really liked that guy's take at the end. Everyone else was commenting on how small this all made them feel, and he basically says "Sure, we're tiny in the grand scheme of things, but why would I let that get me down? There's so much to do here on earth that it really doesn't matter if we're only a speck in the universe".

    • @SlyAceZeta
      @SlyAceZeta 11 месяцев назад +20

      My favorite ways of thinking are, sure, our actions today may be infinitesimally small when described on a cosmic level, but 1) we're not cosmic beings, we're Earthlings, and 2) who's to say humanity won't get to the point of star travel one day? Our actions have consequences, we make ripples every day with what we do, and those ripples may be felt through time for a long, long time. Who's to say someone we help today doesn't become tomorrow's Carl Sagan or Stephen Hawking? Hell, who's to say that's not you yourself? Live every day.

    • @r.daneel.90
      @r.daneel.90 11 месяцев назад +5

      "how small this all made them feel"
      I hate that phrase. Simply because it's false, it's just a gimmick that people use to think they know better and are more interesting.

    • @shahnoormaredia5269
      @shahnoormaredia5269 11 месяцев назад

      @@r.daneel.90 you sound dumb. We are small. We are nothing on the cosmic scale yet some of hs deny it and consider themselves special.

    • @dinoaurus1
      @dinoaurus1 11 месяцев назад +11

      ​@@r.daneel.90no? Looking at the scale of the entire universe we are tiny. Nothing that happens on earth is going to have a notable impact on the universe.
      Now its a different topic if this is at all important

    • @r.daneel.90
      @r.daneel.90 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@dinoaurus1 i'm not talking about "truthiness" of the catchphrase, but why and how people say it

  • @ratdoto2148
    @ratdoto2148 Год назад +355

    "I don't know were they come from, can you tell me?" This is telling. These people are willing to ask, they don't know because they have never had someone in their life to ask. Someone approachable, someone patient, someone willing to teach for the sake of teaching. Thank you Derek.
    Edit: I know the internet exist, obviously, I know they can look stuff up, but learning things from the internet in ways which are both interesting and retained is a skill. Most people can not just read a published paper or random facts and actually remember any of it. Derek's videos are an outlier, a lot of info on the internet is far less approachable and/ or far less accurate.

    • @freshrockpapa-e7799
      @freshrockpapa-e7799 Год назад +29

      They have a ton of things to ask, did you hear about the internet? What those people needed was starting to think and realizing they have a gap in their knowledge, and then getting curious. It has nothing to do with "having someone to ask".

    • @GizzyDillespee
      @GizzyDillespee Год назад +1

      They can ask reddit or quora
      Hehe

    • @GizzyDillespee
      @GizzyDillespee Год назад

      But this sort of information is readily available in videos online, and in books in the discount bin, or in the actual astronomy section, at your local bookseller. I got one on my shelf, that I just looked at, that was $8 from B&N, and covers it all, with great pictures, and month by month star maps.

    • @pifopifo1000
      @pifopifo1000 Год назад +3

      Books, internet, magazines or television are all very accessible tbh. though..

    • @alanhilder1883
      @alanhilder1883 Год назад

      @@pifopifo1000 But they do look, sometimes, in their "One" book which tells them everything, even if it has been proven false for a thousand years or more.

  • @roccov1972
    @roccov1972 Год назад +772

    The truly scary thing is not the size of the universe, but the fact that Derek was likely on (or near) a college campus, speaking to people who made it into that college. The average person on the streets probably knows even less.

    • @kryo2k
      @kryo2k Год назад +22

      Came here to say exactly this.

    • @helpfulcommenter
      @helpfulcommenter Год назад +61

      Well let's be judicial here. It's not UCLA or Harvard, It's UNLV (University of Nevada, Las Vegas) with an 80%+ acceptance rate and 44% graduation rate, so do with that what you will.

    • @Obscurai
      @Obscurai Год назад +7

      UNLV sounds more like a community college / vocational school than a university.

    • @nbboxhead3866
      @nbboxhead3866 Год назад +59

      Sheesh. I'm a bit nerdy and probably overestimate the knowledge of the people around me, but I'm fairly sure here in Australia most people are at least educated enough to correctly place the ordering of what's bigger than what.

    • @luuunaatic
      @luuunaatic Год назад +3

      ​@@helpfulcommenter... Wow.

  • @chefmoogleomega
    @chefmoogleomega 12 дней назад

    I enjoy these videos because people are learning something without someone just trying to one up or prove they are smarter than them.

  • @geraldkottler3014
    @geraldkottler3014 8 месяцев назад +820

    „Is the Sun bigger than the Moon?“
    I literally almost puked

    • @Frostified
      @Frostified 7 месяцев назад +1

      Use of the word literally sucks though... :)

    • @trekkiejunk
      @trekkiejunk 7 месяцев назад

      I bet you literally DIDN'T. Sounds like you're part of the problem.

    • @raeann445
      @raeann445 7 месяцев назад +26

      @@trekkiejunk ah, yes, I am going based on the assumption of someone mentioning a part of the video and mentioning their reaction that they didn’t while I have literally ZERO evidence to back up my assumption, very smart and totally not being an idiotic a-hole!

    • @jason-qc5lr
      @jason-qc5lr 7 месяцев назад +3

      @@trekkiejunk lol the hell

    • @hillelkita2354
      @hillelkita2354 7 месяцев назад

      chill out

  • @PixelTrainer.
    @PixelTrainer. 3 месяца назад +754

    "How many galaxies are in the universe?"
    "Idk, like 20?"
    TF YOU MEAN THERE'S ONLY 20 GALAXIES

    • @Rebekalinker
      @Rebekalinker 3 месяца назад +22

      REAL LIKE WHEN HE SAID THAT I FELT FEELINGS I CANT DESCRIBE LIKE 20 IS ROOKIE NUMBERS AND THATS PUSHING IT ALOT

    • @GeezSus
      @GeezSus 3 месяца назад +24

      Cut him some slack dude he thought the solar system was a galaxy lmao, bro still thinks the Milky Way is the entire Universe

    • @Madrock7777
      @Madrock7777 3 месяца назад +1

      The kind of people who watch Science youtubers like you and I are operating at a bit higher knowledge base for these topics.

    • @Vario69
      @Vario69 3 месяца назад +26

      Milky Way
      Mario Galaxy 1
      Mario Galaxy 2
      Guardians of the Galaxy Galaxy
      Galactus' Galaxy
      And some other ones
      😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @Rebekalinker
      @Rebekalinker 3 месяца назад +1

      @@GeezSus "he though the solar system was a galaxy" thats even worse

  • @SeedRamples
    @SeedRamples Год назад +368

    I don't understand how people got the size sorting question wrong. I am from the same America they are from and college aged like them. While sure I would have guessed the amount of planets, stars, galaxies, etc. wrong, the general size of individual objects was something I was taught at latest in middle school. The lowest age someone can drop out of school at is 16, well into their high school career. They would have learned of this topic in elementary and middle school. How could they not have?

    • @mvmlego1212
      @mvmlego1212 Год назад +52

      Agreed. Not only that, but the size order can be derived from other basic knowledge*--so not only have they failed to memorize a specific fact; they have no knowledge of the field whatsoever.
      *For example: the Earth orbits the Sun, and an object can only orbit something much heavier than itself.

    • @kaidenwatts528
      @kaidenwatts528 Год назад +42

      I can’t even begin to understand how much they lack a basic education but are going to university…

    • @kaidenwatts528
      @kaidenwatts528 Год назад +11

      I’m 16 and know way more about all of these things than nearly everyone interviewed

    • @mvmlego1212
      @mvmlego1212 Год назад +19

      @@kaidenwatts528 -- As for how they got into college: there's been a building anti-meritocratic sentiment among college administrators for decades, so they're often not interested in selecting the most academically successful students.
      COVID drove the final nail into the coffin, then added a few more just for good measure, mainly by lowering academic standards even further.

    • @JanHavel
      @JanHavel Год назад +3

      I get why they are making those mistakes as moon is larger than sun or stars when viewed from Earth but Im very dissapointed by the quality of education :/ ... I gues its more important to know about some guy in 18 century who wrote few poems (thy will not remember that after few years either tho) ...

  • @judsdragon
    @judsdragon Месяц назад

    great vid and i learned a few things here even tho i thought i knew quite a lot about "upstairs", what amazes me is there will still be people arguing that the earth is flat lol