Brian Cox Builds a Cloud Chamber - Wonders of Life - Series 1 Episode 3 Preview - BBC Two

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  • Опубликовано: 27 авг 2024
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    Cloud chambers are the earliest example of particle physics detectors and Brian builds one to show some of the natural processes that cause the structure of DNA to change.
    #bbc
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Комментарии • 222

  • @Worldwave
    @Worldwave 11 лет назад +76

    Never knew of what a cloud chamber is before this video. It's astonishing how it actually makes the traces of cosmic rays visible to the eyes, and how such a small little thing can mean so much to our interpretation of reality. Our universe is amazing.

    • @Asterra2
      @Asterra2 4 года назад +2

      Worth understanding that when a cosmic ray legitimately hits a cloud chamber, it leaves a much more vivid trail. Pretty rare but it does happen. The trails seen in this video are almost certainly entirely from Earth-bound background radiation, leaving the weaker trails typical of beta particles.

  • @ChimeraImagination
    @ChimeraImagination 11 лет назад +50

    Brian Cox is awesome. Never a dull moment. Always smiling!!
    He rules!

    • @k12rising
      @k12rising 3 года назад +6

      He rules the fools.

    • @omi685
      @omi685 2 года назад

      @@k12rising Well, you seem to be one obnoxious individual.

    • @ekspatriat
      @ekspatriat Год назад

      @@k12rising fool

    • @KK_on_KK
      @KK_on_KK Год назад +1

      ​@@k12rising boner

  • @conversiamo
    @conversiamo 3 года назад +9

    I wonder how a person who is constantly aware that we are just a combination of chemical elements, aware of the very limited time of our existence isn't depressed but, as it turns out, extremely happy and always smiling. Thanks for being such a cool cat, Professor Cox.

  • @dewinmoonl
    @dewinmoonl 9 лет назад +147

    sits on top of a beautiful mountain scenery.
    bury heads in a black box
    science.

  • @MichaelBarnathan
    @MichaelBarnathan 4 года назад +19

    This is really cool from a particle physics standpoint and I'm extremely impressed he was able to build a cloud chamber in the field like that, but most of the variance in humans comes from the "normal" processes of meiosis and crossover rather than de novo mutations. The average human has less than 10 de novo mutations that actually affect coding regions of DNA.
    Simpler, asexual organisms tend to have much higher mutation rates - mutations drive most viral evolution, for example. But for us, it's just not a major contributor.

    • @5577vob3
      @5577vob3 2 года назад +5

      I think he is inferring to how we became humans in the first place.

  • @bijouxbijouxbijoux
    @bijouxbijouxbijoux 3 года назад +10

    How could you dislike a video like this... This is just wonderfull and captivating ❤️

  • @brothersalt5827
    @brothersalt5827 3 года назад +5

    I love how he’s just a boy in wonder, the way he talks about this, but really he’s a super genius 😄

  • @sublime2craig
    @sublime2craig 3 года назад +9

    That just literally blew my mind! Most crazy things about science etc I can't visualize to well in my brain, so seeing something like this is just awesome 😎

  • @zinger52
    @zinger52 11 лет назад +5

    That was good to see and in fact I have never seen before making it doubly rewarding, I am learning thank you for the upload. BBC

  • @3D4Ureel
    @3D4Ureel 7 лет назад +15

    So, stars ruled our destinies after all.

  • @damoysamuel7149
    @damoysamuel7149 2 года назад +4

    nice :) It is possible to see a few cosmic rays, but at low altitude most of these tracks are probably from natural radioactivity in soil or materials. Even the ordinary glass contains traces of natural radioactive emitters like potassium 40 and thorium 232

  • @Prayukth
    @Prayukth 3 года назад +1

    This video will never age...never

  • @praveenraj2640
    @praveenraj2640 4 года назад +5

    In the past few days, I don't know why I get those videos in my suggestions. But damn I just now understand why I studied my science classes and these videos makes sense and made me more deep into these . Literally now I'm now more concerned in watching all videos by profs about theories like these...

  • @generalerica4123
    @generalerica4123 4 года назад +1

    DIY Cox. Delightful.

  • @Trackhat
    @Trackhat 5 лет назад +18

    **DEAFENINGLY LOUD SCREAMING**
    'y'hear that?'

  • @malcolmhardwick4258
    @malcolmhardwick4258 2 года назад +1

    Bit late for the party but how cool is that !

  • @digiconvalley
    @digiconvalley 11 лет назад +3

    Beautifullll.. U rock man!

  • @RifaOnGaming
    @RifaOnGaming 2 года назад +1

    Amazing

  • @slehcyo8223
    @slehcyo8223 6 лет назад +10

    I actually expected a cloud 💀

  • @Pwnchful
    @Pwnchful 11 лет назад +2

    Brilliant!

  • @mervviscious
    @mervviscious 11 лет назад +2

    amazing.

  • @genin69
    @genin69 9 лет назад +33

    Because cosmic rays are attracted to alcohol.. moral of the story.. drinking can possibly make you smarter and change your DNA..

    • @Duhya
      @Duhya 9 лет назад +3

      genin69 That's the liquor talking.

    • @piagenove6977
      @piagenove6977 7 лет назад

      genin69 really

    • @greezil
      @greezil 6 лет назад +1

      They aren't attracted to the alcohol. They're whizzing around all over the place. You can just see the trails they leave when they go through the alcohol.

  • @YoungManDub
    @YoungManDub 4 года назад +2

    Who is Benny Fischal?

  • @daveabh
    @daveabh 11 лет назад +3

    I still cant get over the fact he's almost 45!

  • @Latvianstyle
    @Latvianstyle 11 лет назад +1

    ProfBrianCox - the wonder number one in the Eart and between stars&planets

  • @arenotdiy7280
    @arenotdiy7280 2 года назад +1

    This just in, multiple people have been hospitalized with heat stroke and alcohol poisoning, after squatting in the desert with a black sheet over their heads and a fish tank full of ethyl alcohol for multiple hours.

  • @rocklobster1976
    @rocklobster1976 4 года назад +7

    i just made myself one about a week ago.
    my question is
    i tend to see particles traveling in a specific direction (just over about 1 hour of observation)
    why is that? i guess that's just the direction of the source, which, would change most likely depending on the time of day (the rotation of our planet)
    and any deflection caused by the magnetic field of the earth or nearby electric currents
    but what other affectors might i be over looking?

    • @julianstorey2699
      @julianstorey2699 4 года назад

      Did you look at it at different angles? Just thinking.

    • @JoshuaBrierton
      @JoshuaBrierton 4 года назад

      Source of the particles might be a factor. The sun is spewing a lot of stuff at us constantly and it's a heck of a lot closer to us than another star.

    • @rocklobster1976
      @rocklobster1976 4 года назад

      @@JoshuaBrierton god, I'm so retarded. and like..... it really couldnt be ANY BIGGER huh. (well, no, actuallly it could be way bigger, but, still big enough.)
      see thats why i got you, to remind me just how dumb i am
      thank you (i think the sun looses around is it 5 million tons of matter mostly as particles...... PER SECOND?

    • @ben00000100
      @ben00000100 2 года назад

      @@rocklobster1976 you’re not dumb at all mate, when observing something that mechanistically may be complicated to understand, it’s easy to then think complicated when identifying the source of it without contemplating the simple bits. Goes to show how things still being discussed in the cutting edge of scientific discovery, are just happening around us all the time, makes you wonder what else there is that we have yet to discover

  • @Eltoca21
    @Eltoca21 11 лет назад +1

    It is a real shame BBC America does not pick up a lot more programming from "BBC UK". Come on BBC America! You can do so much better.

  • @akymrinkovsky289
    @akymrinkovsky289 4 месяца назад +1

    Way to go Brain Cox. 🙏~ Its exactly what i needed 😉~ In fact it's even more than i had hoped for 🔮~ Abracadabra 👋~ Thank you buddy 🙇 ~

  • @stevephillips8083
    @stevephillips8083 6 лет назад +1

    Awesome! More!

  • @theviney
    @theviney 11 лет назад +1

    I think I just read 81 comments of either 'Objective reason versus Brick-wall subjectivity', or the most effective troll on the internet ever.

  • @DataWaveTaGo
    @DataWaveTaGo 11 лет назад +1

    re: I do understand what religion can do to the mind.
    And what the mind does with religion. Two mid-20th century Canadians looked deeply into the effects of consciousness. Northrop Frye "The Great Code" & "Anatomy of Criticism" (and many other works), and Marshall McLuhan "Laws of Media" (his last work). Their books are still in print. In their works Frye & McLuhan reveal the interplay of conscious & unconscious processes that give us our world view, as a species & individual.

  • @n1msu
    @n1msu 9 месяцев назад +1

    If only there was a simpler way to show ionising radiation than having to source dry ice etc to make a cloud chamber! Great to see though; gives some 'context' to what my geiger counter is detecting.

  • @venancioercoli
    @venancioercoli 11 лет назад +1

    Amazing!

  • @23forrestgump
    @23forrestgump 11 лет назад +1

    my brain just exploded

  • @Blackdragon5284
    @Blackdragon5284 11 лет назад +1

    Yeah, I've done that before too.

  • @DogsBAwesome
    @DogsBAwesome 11 лет назад +1

    and chocolate is slimming

  • @DataWaveTaGo
    @DataWaveTaGo 11 лет назад +1

    Oh My!!!

  • @shaneh1003
    @shaneh1003 2 года назад +1

    Why are we not all effected by different parts of space that we’re traveling through at such tremendous speeds? It seems there should be varying concentrations of different particles and effects in the new space we’re constantly entering that would saturate through our entire solar system and galaxy.

    • @nickhowatson4745
      @nickhowatson4745 Год назад

      because atoms are mostly empty space, the particles are incredibly small and dont interact very strongly.

  • @NxDoyle
    @NxDoyle 5 лет назад +1

    That's fucking cool.

  • @uncommonamerican
    @uncommonamerican 5 лет назад +1

    And dry ice sales skyrocket

  • @verticalsmurf
    @verticalsmurf 11 лет назад +1

    My bad, don't know how that happened, his comment turned up in my inbox and I just hit the reply back button. Sorry about that.

  • @Blackdragon5284
    @Blackdragon5284 11 лет назад +1

    I understand, but I just wasn't sure if he was really being serious. I haven't got as much experience as you, obviously, but I do understand the human mind to a slight degree, my mother was a Psychologist working in the mental health ward. A splendid field of science I must say. I myself study Physics, the best science for many reasons in my opinion. While I don't claim to be an expert, I do understand what religion can do to the mind.

  • @Konigszapfen
    @Konigszapfen 10 лет назад +1

    thats awesome!!!

  • @uncommonamerican
    @uncommonamerican 5 лет назад +1

    Anyone remember sliders? Episode where scientist were popular instead of. Sports stars

  • @knobovsossidge2022
    @knobovsossidge2022 6 лет назад +1

    What mechanism causes steel to make noise on cooling? Sounded more like the CO2 gas escaping as some of the dry ice sublimed on contact with the warmer steel.

    • @GoldSrc_
      @GoldSrc_ 6 лет назад

      It's pretty much the bouncing of the metal against the solid Co2 caused by the pockets of gas what causes that sound.

    • @VIKASHSINGH-hf3kt
      @VIKASHSINGH-hf3kt Год назад

      I think its rapid contraction of the metal......that sounded...

  • @simpsonmark
    @simpsonmark 11 лет назад +1

    Where is episode 1?

  • @kingthanos4964
    @kingthanos4964 11 лет назад +1

    me neither

  • @BertandLiv
    @BertandLiv 11 лет назад +1

    interesting..

  • @glenliesegang233
    @glenliesegang233 3 месяца назад +1

    Is your aquarium glass? Is there a risk of shattering?

  • @ohtheirony7723
    @ohtheirony7723 Год назад +1

    Question, how comes it appears as a single particle, I thought radiation is a wave?

  • @jackryan740
    @jackryan740 4 года назад +1

    My little mind had a explosion

  • @KumarKaneswaran-KumarKanes
    @KumarKaneswaran-KumarKanes 2 года назад +1

    How does this have 188k views and a Bieber video has 9 zillion, our priorities need to change.

  • @andyh8548
    @andyh8548 11 лет назад +1

    must of had some lucky dna from space

  • @KafshakTashtak
    @KafshakTashtak 6 лет назад +1

    Insert mind blown gif.

  • @palang2231
    @palang2231 6 лет назад +1

    Beneficial ?? I doubt it

  • @nathanw9344
    @nathanw9344 5 лет назад +1

    Neat

  • @brookstream
    @brookstream 11 лет назад +1

    "put hot water bottle on top"

  • @schinkdiesel
    @schinkdiesel 10 лет назад +1

    What if you make one of these and place it next to the LHC ?

    • @Spirit532
      @Spirit532 7 лет назад +2

      If you place it *right* next to the ring when it's operational, you'll probably see a thick cloud of lines, because the LHC emits lots of fun things when working.
      Same can be said for, say, a piece of uranium ore(which you can buy if you're in the US), or an ionisation-based smoke detector. The latter two will have to be placed inside the chamber though, because they mostly emit alphas.

    • @thekaxmax
      @thekaxmax 6 лет назад

      The detectors of the LHC are huge and sophisticated versions of exactly this.

  • @Blackdragon5284
    @Blackdragon5284 11 лет назад +1

    I meant I*

  • @DataWaveTaGo
    @DataWaveTaGo 11 лет назад +1

    LOL! I missed that response from you and it seems that is due to the fact many people flagged you as a spammer. Here are a few hints for you for evolution as science.1) Proton Gradient (If you watched Brian Cox to the end you'd see that). 2) Virus particles. 3) eukaryotes.

  • @CV_CA
    @CV_CA 6 лет назад +7

    Wish someone invented one that I only have to plug into the wall.

    • @SlumphYT
      @SlumphYT 5 лет назад +1

      wheres the wonder in that?

  • @MiNDx1er
    @MiNDx1er 11 лет назад +2

    Did I miss the religious fight? Darn! *Clicks another science video*

  • @Dylan_aM
    @Dylan_aM 3 года назад +3

    hello

    • @bmw325i_85
      @bmw325i_85 3 года назад +1

      Lol I knew you'd be here Dylan

    • @bmw325i_85
      @bmw325i_85 3 года назад +1

      Welcome class of 9K.

    • @Dylan_aM
      @Dylan_aM 3 года назад

      @@bmw325i_85 lmao

  • @sonpacho
    @sonpacho 3 года назад +1

    Why wouldn't they continue to cause mutations? If that happened and it's possible particles can hit/mutate DNA...we're still being hit by them, why haven't there been any more mutations?

    • @SandManEXP
      @SandManEXP 3 года назад

      It does and there are. Mutation doesn't mean like x men where someone gets claws growing out of their arms randomly. Its not nessisarly that noticeable but just thinking of negative mutations, think of all of the genetic disorders out there. It's also important to mention that this isn't the only way genes mutate. Theres errors in cell copying etc.

    • @sonpacho
      @sonpacho 3 года назад

      @@SandManEXP I'm no expert, I've heard of genetic disorders but I've never heard of them suddenly developing. That's what I'm assuming it would be like. There're so many particles passing through us that I would assume developing genetic disorders would be common - like seasonal allergies, colds, etc.

    • @SandManEXP
      @SandManEXP 3 года назад

      @@sonpacho They can suddenly develop. Its random. Not very likely though.
      It would depend on what type of particle and it doesn't nessisarily mutate your genes every time it hits one.
      "When ionizing radiation interacts with a cell, several things can happen:
      The radiation could pass through the cell without damaging the DNA.
      The radiation could damage the cell’s DNA, but the DNA repairs itself.
      The radiation could prevent the DNA from replicating correctly.
      The radiation could damage the DNA so badly that the cell dies. This is called apoptosis. One dead cell is not a big problem. After all, millions of your cells die every day. But if too many cells die at once, the organism could also die."
      "as many as 5% of an astronaut's cells might be killed during such missions."
      "Recently reported estimates of the human genome-wide mutation rate. The human germline mutation rate is approximately 0.5×10−9 per basepair per year."
      ^This is the closest I got for rate of mutations.

    • @sonpacho
      @sonpacho 3 года назад

      @@SandManEXP "Not very likely though." That's what I don't get. Just using the examples you listed and the amount of particles passing through us every second...it would seem more weird stuff would happen more frequently.
      The way my brain is understanding it is: we're basically walking on the bottom of the ocean without getting wet
      I understand he said it was only a 'theory.' So I'm not trying argue the point either way.
      Doesn't that also suggest if we [humans] went to a region of space with different concentration of particles we might unravel on a genetic level?
      The more I learn the more I'm convinced that NOTHING that actually wanted 'life' to succeed would've designed sh*t like this...lol!

    • @SandManEXP
      @SandManEXP 3 года назад

      ​@@sonpacho "Doesn't that also suggest if we [humans] went to a region of space with different concentration of particles we might unravel on a genetic level?"
      ^
      ^Yes, This is what happens to a person during a radiation leak in a nuclear power plant for example. They effectively melt as all their cells die, skin falls of etc and then their body kills itself. (Don't google images) This is also why people who are around a lot of radiation get cancer more often. Also sunbathers with skin cancer. UV radiation (from the sun or tanning beds) is the number 1 cause of skin cancer. Its a cell replication mutation. (Tumor)
      With the likelyhood of mutations in general its all up to chance, but the chances of a cell actually mutating after getting hit by a cosmic ray is clearly not that high. As well as this are a myriad of other things that can happen like I mentioned.
      I feel like we should be opperating under the assumption that nothing did design this seeing as we are talking about genetic mutations. A theory not supported by creationists. Btw "Theory" in science means "a fact as far as we know". There are no facts in science, only theorys. because it would imply you know everything. For example, gravity is a "theory".

  • @Lasv25
    @Lasv25 10 лет назад +2

    Where is the vostfr ????? :P

  • @Golem29
    @Golem29 11 лет назад +2

    Beats genesis any day

  • @PauloConstantino167
    @PauloConstantino167 6 лет назад +1

    Dream on.

  • @ElSombreroUnited
    @ElSombreroUnited 10 лет назад

    Why can we only use alcohol vapor?

    • @KennethJohnsonII
      @KennethJohnsonII 9 лет назад +1

      Alcohol evaporates at a reasonably low temperature to form the vapor needed to see the particle interactions

    • @Seabass-a
      @Seabass-a 6 лет назад +3

      The dry ice is used to super cool the alcohol vapor. In this state the alcohol vapor is 'super critical', it is cooled past it's normal condensation temperature. The vapor only needs a little "push" of energy to condence. The push comes from the high energy particles which crash Into the alcohol vapor and ionize it in little streaks. The ionized alcohol molecules then attract other alcohol molecules around it and condense into streak of alcohol droplets.

    • @leoverran311
      @leoverran311 5 лет назад

      sebastian ayala Thank you

  • @DataWaveTaGo
    @DataWaveTaGo 11 лет назад +1

    I've left two messages for dionstrezlecki, essentially inviting him to come down to earth and explain himself.

  • @14159james
    @14159james 11 лет назад +1

    'Sup. Atheist geneticist here, what exactly are we supposedly ignorant of, and how does DNA "prove" "creation" according to your particular episteme?

  • @shakeyste
    @shakeyste 11 лет назад +1

    Great show think the camera focuses on his face to much with the close ups and that

  • @andyh8548
    @andyh8548 11 лет назад +1

    i wonder if thats how jesus was produced or usain bolt haha

    • @thekaxmax
      @thekaxmax 6 лет назад

      Jesus was invented, possibly by a cosmic ray hitting a synapse in a Jewish elder

  • @DataWaveTaGo
    @DataWaveTaGo 11 лет назад +1

    answer = Higgs Field!
    Now I've looked at an item you "Like" - 'Origins - Science: The Whole Story with Dr. Danny Faulkner' and I have to tell you these characters are quite frankly, self-indulgent, arrogant, and narcissistic in the Extreme (Marshall McLuhan explained why this is so). Give me a link to an intelligent discourse on the findings and unequivocal data/facts that back up creationism (free of God-Fawning Clowns) and I'll give it serious attention.

  • @Zodiak34
    @Zodiak34 5 лет назад +1

    So thats what rodney mullen has been up to

  • @14159james
    @14159james 11 лет назад +1

    Jesus, if you're going to troll, at least try to be clever or original about it. There are actual idiots out there with real opinions that can be changed, and there's far more fun to be had engaging with opinions you find challenging than covertly scoring own goals against the uninformed but argumentative.

  • @Defrock78
    @Defrock78 9 лет назад +2

    he forgot to mention the dry ice ............... he said it merely consists of...........

    • @pedroaltomar
      @pedroaltomar 7 лет назад +1

      "Frozen carbon dioxide", he says. Basically solid CO2.

  • @Blackdragon5284
    @Blackdragon5284 11 лет назад +3

    Also, basic genetics? I study genetics in college, anybody who has passed school knows about genetics, something you obviously never did. Had you any knowledge of genetics, you would understand why we created the theory of Evolution, and why it links so well to our current knowledge of all Organisms. If Evolution never existed, we would still be like the neolithic humans who walked the Earth long before Homo Sapiens. Mutations in humans and animals are also proof of evolution.

  • @14159james
    @14159james 11 лет назад

    Try searching "Preparation for Introductory Biology: DNA to Organisms" on Coursera.
    I think you'd really appreciate the course, it's quite brief and not at all challenging. People like me have generally spent significant amounts of time reading ancient religious texts, contemporary hermeneutics, and generally trying to understand your culture. It'd be nice if you did the same. It'll save us from wasting time on the empirically proven basics. Unless, of course, that's what you're really after.

  • @DataWaveTaGo
    @DataWaveTaGo 11 лет назад +1

    LOL! You're still here. Are atoms themselves alive?

  • @dunsel5887
    @dunsel5887 9 лет назад

    Doesn't this prove that the Muon being detected on the ground is not do to relativity, but is do to that cosmic ray striking an atom lower in the atmosphere?

    • @greezil
      @greezil 6 лет назад

      I'm not sure what you mean. The Muons are produced higher up in the atmosphere and then some of them come hurtling toward the ground at high speeds where their effects can be measured in cloud chambers like this. The only reason they can reach the ground before decaying is due to time dilation.

    • @thekaxmax
      @thekaxmax 6 лет назад

      no-one detects things using relativity.

  • @Blackdragon5284
    @Blackdragon5284 11 лет назад

    Well, basically Evolution and Creation cannot be 100% proven, Evolution is a theory, and Creationism is a belief, in essence, also a theory. So, I have no idea why you are even arguing which is wrong, which is a lie, and all that crap. When one is either proven, or disproved, you can mouth off then, but not now. I didn't even insult Creation, so it would be nice if you wouldn't insult Evolution. Do you comprehend?

  • @MarioRugeles
    @MarioRugeles 9 лет назад +15

    10 people prefers gangnam style over science

  • @Skimopie13
    @Skimopie13 11 лет назад

    Even though things are only theorized that doesn't mean they're written in stone and are hard facts. Now I don't mind if people have imaginary friends that they follow and worship but that doesn't mean that they're to be followed by everyone. If you're here to force religion down our throats or any other opinion that is not theory, which in case you didn't know if an idea supported by large amounts of fact, then w're here to resist the lies you deem come from us but flow from you sir.

  • @verticalsmurf
    @verticalsmurf 11 лет назад +2

    Couple of problems here. First, its 'just' minus seventy degrees celicus - no worries love, I'll pop down to the shop for some milk, it's just minus seventy degrees celcius outside. No problem at all. Second, he is wasting alcohol. Naughty scientist.

  • @verticalsmurf
    @verticalsmurf 11 лет назад

    Explain to us how evolution is a religion

  • @trickdaddy0162
    @trickdaddy0162 3 года назад

    Wrong sir

  • @njrsa
    @njrsa 3 года назад

    So horoscope and astrology which relies on stars and their movements to predict a persons character traits are related to this anti matter theory?

  • @verticalsmurf
    @verticalsmurf 11 лет назад

    Religion involves worship. No-one worships evolution. Religion involves faith, there is no faith in evolution, just interpretation of physical evidence. Are you saying some deity put fossilised sea shells in the Himalayas just for funsies? I envy my friends who have faith. At the same time, they combine their beliefs with physical evidence. There may be a God that created all this, but it wasn't done as the religious texts say. Seven billion years, maybe, definately not seven days.

  • @Blackdragon5284
    @Blackdragon5284 11 лет назад

    Well, then. Explain to me how it isn't instead of just reiterating the same baloney over and over. You're giving me a point with no evidence, and without evidence, it isn't valid. Give me evidence that evolution is not science. You can't, because it is science. It's a scientific theory shaped by facts we currently know.

  • @Blackdragon5284
    @Blackdragon5284 11 лет назад

    Still, you haven't given me any evidence and have avoided my question by firing insults at me and calling us "blind" and "ignorant". If you wont give any evidence, every single thing you type has no meaning. Evolution or "myth", as you call it, has nothing to do with religion. It is science and knowing that you can't fight science with religion, you call evolution a religion just so you can argue it's credibility.Calling Evolution religion is calling science religion, and ultimately, Atheism too

  • @CyberhubCoNz
    @CyberhubCoNz 9 лет назад

    That being said it is still freaking awesome that you can build a simple device that enables you to see these particle. It is just has foundational belief system underpinning science is leading him to incorrect conclusions.

    • @godnesspunk7990
      @godnesspunk7990 9 лет назад

      you sir should read over those statement again, search online or read a book even on ACTUAL facts and then fix what you wrote. F-

    • @CyberhubCoNz
      @CyberhubCoNz 9 лет назад

      Godness Punk
      How are you? this is one of my favourite subjects that I have read many books on both for and against the belief system of evolution. The latest one I read is called Genetic Entropy & the Mystery of the Genome by Dr J.C Sanford great book. Dr Sanford is a highly qualified geneticist and points out many issues with the theory of evolution in relation to genetics. Are you aware that science has never demonstrated a mutation that can increase information in a genome based on that fact alone evolution should be abandoned as a science. Also the next point which is very interesting is that a majority of mutations are neutral or negative. If in the highly unlikely chance a positive mutation ever occurs the neutral or negative mutations cancel it out in a process called genetic drift. Plus there are many other observational evidence which does not fit the belief system of evolution such as soft tissue being found on dinosaur bones supposedly millions of years old.

    • @FrankHarrison12
      @FrankHarrison12 6 лет назад +1

      Soft tissue? That was explained already by the scientist who found the soft tissue (who happens to be a creationist as well). Iron acted as a preservative binding to the soft tissue and allowing it to retain its form indefinitely. They even replicated the process with ostrich cells, I believe, in which the cells soaked in iron were relatively unchanged after years at room temperature. A simple google search will net you dozens of articles describing "increasing information" through mutations, but it really comes down to what you mean by that term and how honest you are in what qualifies.

    • @thekaxmax
      @thekaxmax 6 лет назад +1

      Evolution is used every day in pharmacological labs, and they make billions of dollars doing it.
      It's observed in the lab and in the wild.
      It's used successfully in labs finding ways to get viruses to make batteries and other useful things.
      'Natural selection' means keeping the good mutations and throwing away the bad ones. You make our argument for us.
      It exists, it's a fact, denying it can't change that.

  • @DataWaveTaGo
    @DataWaveTaGo 11 лет назад

    The Creationist Strategy
    Call Creationism a science.
    Call the science of evolution a religion.
    BTW, if you don't care, why are you here browbeating and belittling people plus pontificating about creationism? The Christians who powered the Industrial Revolution through the power of principled ideas would find you a Vulgar Reprobate.

  • @Blackdragon5284
    @Blackdragon5284 11 лет назад

    We've been over this before. I'm the same person. Is this what you always do? Tell everyone the same revised phrase over and over? You're like a robot don't even reply to me again; it's irritating when you waste time on trying to help people when they don't listen.

  • @streetabix
    @streetabix 6 лет назад

    Could this csuse cancer ?

    • @greezil
      @greezil 6 лет назад

      Yes. Pretty frequently, your DNA is hit by some sort of ionizing radiation (some of which may be cosmic rays). When your DNA fails to repair itself after such a collision, it can result in a mutation. If that mutation causes the cells to rapidly replicate out of control, you have cancer. However, any individual collision is unlikely to cause cancer, and there really is no way to avoid exposure to some radiation since it is literally everywhere.

    • @streetabix
      @streetabix 6 лет назад

      Joel Frankford. cheers

    • @RahilSethi
      @RahilSethi 6 лет назад

      Joel Frankford No wonder I have heard that star light causes cancer :-D

  • @Blackdragon5284
    @Blackdragon5284 11 лет назад

    Wow, you've just proved to everyone here how stupid humanity can be.

  • @Blackdragon5284
    @Blackdragon5284 11 лет назад

    I'm the one saying it isn't religion. You want the other guy.

  • @DogsBAwesome
    @DogsBAwesome 11 лет назад

    Your ignoring of reality is rather sad.
    Evolution with a decent, modern, full education is an obvious truth, just look at the physiological similarities of various mammals, and that's before you bring out the big gun of species shared DNA

  • @Blackdragon5284
    @Blackdragon5284 11 лет назад

    Actually, I have. You learn about it in a place called School. If you had been there, you would have known. Don't assume things you have no clue about please. Also, if you are religious, which I highly suspect, then you have proved you are ignorant even to your own cause.

  • @KuznVinny
    @KuznVinny 5 лет назад

    No. DNA and cosmic rays are not how the life forms of earth are here in such an amazing array.