I read Neil deGrasse Tyson's PhD thesis...

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  • Опубликовано: 15 авг 2022
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Комментарии • 3 тыс.

  • @tibees
    @tibees  Год назад +425

    The first 1,000 people to use the link will get a 1 month free trial of Skillshare: skl.sh/tibees08221
    Apologies to today's patron cat (dog) of the day, Izzy, whose name was truncated from the end.

    • @qasimallahverdiyev5352
      @qasimallahverdiyev5352 Год назад +2

      Video idea: you should review the hardest exam in Azerbaijan (university entrance exam)

    • @barneyrubble1431
      @barneyrubble1431 Год назад +1

      Tibees,, I was really under the impression that you could not really read?,, somebody's space kit cadet thesis,, following around expanded english/not real communication in English but only is a deception,, meant to be/ nobody understands,?/meant to be that way/ kind of like string theory following all the strings around a big tangled ball of string lol! 🤗

    • @nilanjanchanda597
      @nilanjanchanda597 Год назад +1

      Want one video about Michio Kaku's PhD thesis next time..

    • @princeindrajitlawlaha7027
      @princeindrajitlawlaha7027 Год назад

      ! 💝 💯 👏 🎉 🙏 🚀 👍 🤖 🎅 ✝ 🌝 !

    • @barneyrubble1431
      @barneyrubble1431 Год назад

      @@nilanjanchanda597 LOL here's his thesis translated! I'm Michael cuckoo,, all tangled up in a ball of tangled up string,,/it's kind of like? being all tangled up in a black widow spiders web,, ready to eat you cuz you can't get away not funny,,,,,,,,,😇

  • @tier1solutions28
    @tier1solutions28 5 месяцев назад +396

    Neil wakes up his whole family to tell them he's going to bed

  • @useraccount2507
    @useraccount2507 Год назад +9263

    One of the first things I was told when doing a PhD was "you're not expected to change the world". A small contribution is a catalyst to greater knowledge over time.

    • @pootthatbak2578
      @pootthatbak2578 Год назад +188

      Im thinking..youre young, energetic and immersed in a subject..if youre going do anything it better be now. I guess your PHd is like getting a finger tip grasp onto the top floor of a members only club. It proves you may have some novel thoughts someday, given the chance, and youre commited.

    • @JoshSci
      @JoshSci Год назад +575

      I'm doing my PhD in chemistry.. so my small contribution is a catalyst

    • @taahasiddiqui1071
      @taahasiddiqui1071 Год назад +52

      @@JoshSci good luck fam

    • @anilkumarsharma8901
      @anilkumarsharma8901 Год назад +5

      @@JoshSci now you are become Clark super man or spider🕷 man or 🦇man 🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @mr.spinoza
      @mr.spinoza Год назад +39

      I'm doing a PhD (but in Philosophy) and my biggest problem is that I try to cram in too much. My supervisors often warn me about what you just said.

  • @hookbeak2321
    @hookbeak2321 Год назад +218

    Just like Neil deGrasse Tyson, you have an adept way of communicating your synopsis of his 370 page thesis to people such as myself, who failed miserably at their academic studies, but still enjoy learning from those who excelled to PhD level. Your voice is so gentle & pleasant to listen to which helps when trying to comprehend this complex subject.

    • @the_real_cookiez
      @the_real_cookiez 7 месяцев назад +8

      100%. I really hope Tibees also flourishes in this field of science communication and education. I don't like Neil cuz he has a very cocky demeanor that makes him come off as arrogant. Trying to listen to him speak makes me angry.

    • @vallano8970
      @vallano8970 6 месяцев назад +8

      @@the_real_cookiez I feel like this says more about you than him. But to each their own

    • @jjs8426
      @jjs8426 5 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@vallano8970Mmmm no, it's a warranted claim that merits substantiation

    • @RobertMJohnson
      @RobertMJohnson 5 месяцев назад +1

      a 370 page thesis HAS TO BE complete b.s. if you cannot convey your thesis in under 80 pages, you are full of b.s.

    • @jamescarter3196
      @jamescarter3196 4 месяца назад +1

      @@jjs8426 LMAO, there wasn't even any "claim" made and the big words aren't making you smart, at all

  • @mathiasthelander7834
    @mathiasthelander7834 Год назад +24

    ”So I became an expert i galaxies” 5 seconds in and the stakes are high..

  • @KateeAngel
    @KateeAngel Год назад +5374

    After reading the comments I see a very obvious problem with perception of scientists by general public:
    They expect literally every thesis and paper to be some "huge discovery" or "huge contribution" all by itself and every single scientist to have made some great discoveries...
    In reality almost noone's thesis is something truly special. Mostly it is just a summary of very routine simple work. I "love" how all people who are far from academia like to imagine that science is still done by lone geniuses, and that every step is some "revolutionary discovery". And if you fail to live up to that ridiculous standards, a lot of people will claim "you are not a real scientist". In reality it is all about having huge lab, with many trained people, expensive equipment and good financing. And almost all work is slow process of incrementally accumulating new facts bit by bit

    • @SMHman666
      @SMHman666 Год назад +275

      Kate S You summed up the problem quite well. People who criticise fields of study generally have little to no knowledge of those fields. They usually have unrealistic expectations and, in some, an agenda that goes against established scientific results. Tyson comes under regular attack because he's so public and will say what he thinks. He's an excellent communicator while never claiming to be an "Einstein" or "Galileo", rather just someone who's passionate about learning and science.

    • @MijinLaw
      @MijinLaw Год назад +121

      The irony is, if there is a "glamorous" field of science that is making incredible discoveries every day, it's astronomy. e.g. When I was born, we had no idea whether it was normal for stars to have planetary systems like our own, the existence of black holes was disputed, we didn't know whether the expansion was slowing down or speeding up etc etc. Now we've catalogued thousands of planets (and can infer that the great majority of stars have planetary systems), have photographed black holes, and measured the accelerating expansion. And even stuff that was recently thought impossible, like recording gravitational waves has been done.
      It's an amazing body of work, and the fact that it's a massive collaborative effort makes it all the more impressive IMO.

    • @fernandocarneiro804
      @fernandocarneiro804 Год назад +59

      Actually you sound like someone very naive when it comes to academia. Every phd thesis must have something new and relevant for the cientific world. Most PhDs do their researches almost 100% by their own.
      Obviously, people thinking that every PhD thesis must discover something like Theory of Relativity, Quantum Mechanics etc, are also very naive. But you are wrong for being on the other extreme.

    • @kausdebonair
      @kausdebonair Год назад +22

      Nail on the head here. Just wanted to ad with the current dilemma with populism. It's unfortunate that some people's distrust to authority or otherwise bleeds into science. While such distrust can be useful in some situations, it is unnecessary doing real research. The only distrust you seemingly need in that regard should be against your own bias.

    • @romualdaskuzborskis
      @romualdaskuzborskis Год назад +7

      Precisely. Phd thesis may as well be just a document that will at some point contribute to some sensantional metaanalysis. Its just as important.

  • @tigress63
    @tigress63 Год назад +3730

    Most Ph.D. Thesis in physics involves disproving someone else's theories. Even DeGrasse Tyson makes that clear in his introductory quote.

    • @KurtRichterCISSP
      @KurtRichterCISSP Год назад +103

      So much is (believed to be) known that finding something new may disprove another even if this is not the intent

    • @the_inquisitive_inquisitor
      @the_inquisitive_inquisitor Год назад +63

      Makes sense if you think about it, everybody is building off of and critiquing each other's work.

    • @fabianbernards7695
      @fabianbernards7695 Год назад +8

      I highly doubt that statement. Do you have evidence for this? If this is just your impression, I would be curious to know in which subfield of physics this appears to be the case.

    • @tigress63
      @tigress63 Год назад +12

      @@fabianbernards7695 Firstly read almost any physics thesis out there and you will discover in short order that disproving others is par for the course, particularly in Cosmology and Theoretical physis.

    • @fabianbernards7695
      @fabianbernards7695 Год назад +15

      @@tigress63 well in mathematical physics it surely is not the case. Neither is it in experimental physics. In theoretical particle physics or QFT it also does not seem to be the case. Neither in fields like theoretical quantum information or theoretical quantum optics. There may be groups within the physical community in which modeling takes an important role and where these models are frequently updated or corrected but without further evidence I don't believe that most ph.d theses involve disproving some physical theory.

  • @fisterB
    @fisterB Год назад +434

    Seems like a solid piece of work to me, thanks Tibees, for elaborating .:. I remember that time with my own thesis, an average thesis at best, but the hardest time ever in my life. Everything after seemed easy and, like Neil, I decided to pursue something very different. Somehow he learned to give the journalists the kind of language and story telling they wanted and he became the first person they would call whenever something spacey happened.

    • @paulmryglod4802
      @paulmryglod4802 8 месяцев назад +5

      Iirc, he mentioned that there was a major discovery or a comet nearing earth the day he was filling in for more prominent astronomers. Major new networks called his place of work for comment and explanation and he was the only one available.

    • @jamesthecat
      @jamesthecat 5 месяцев назад

      Did they ask him about Kevin?

  • @VivaMidnight
    @VivaMidnight Год назад +22

    Love this! Brief, calmly presented, and the projector really took me back..

  • @lswonke
    @lswonke Год назад +3842

    Neil was my Astronomy TA at the University of Texas and also a friend. He always has demonstrated an ability to take complex situations and make them understandable to anyone.

    • @Karuska22ps
      @Karuska22ps Год назад +19

      What was his gpa

    • @lswonke
      @lswonke Год назад +261

      @@Karuska22ps have no idea, he taught my class sometimes and his tutoring was exceptional. I was also on the wrestling team with him.

    • @jaspirita
      @jaspirita Год назад +45

      That is definitely his greatest gift to the world because he's making space more accessible to the everyman and I love it!

    • @crzyprplmnky
      @crzyprplmnky Год назад +87

      This is the only thing that matters. When my circuits class professor had hard to understand lectures, the TA in the course was incredible and I wouldn't have learned much in the course if not for him. A good TA can be MUCH more valuable to a student's career, inspiration, everything, than a professor.

    • @charlesyoungblood9414
      @charlesyoungblood9414 Год назад +115

      He's a charlatan, or entertainer at best.

  • @prschuster
    @prschuster Год назад +718

    This goes to show that science is a cooperative effort. 99+ % of professional scientists never make a name for themselves and are never mentioned in the history books. Fame is really hit or miss, but every one who becomes well known owes a great debt to all those who do the work. Neil found his niche as a communicator, and you also have a talent for that.

    • @danielxbox28
      @danielxbox28 Год назад +12

      @@RobertMJohnson but he is a Scientist , he has PHD. he obv could go into research...

    • @prschuster
      @prschuster Год назад +43

      @R Johnson He has a PhD in astrophysics from Columbia Univ and he has published several papers on the subject, but he's not a scientist?

    • @scottg6754
      @scottg6754 Год назад +5

      They make names for themselves. Just within the niche they work in. They are rock stars in their discipline. Ever heard of a wrestler(+real wrestling not soap opera wrestling) named Sudalaev? No. He is a legend, and an icon of 100's of million people. You are only an adherent of popular media and therefore limited in your scope of knowledge, success, and recognition. If it isn't on your favorite news medium then it doesn't count.

    • @prschuster
      @prschuster Год назад +3

      @@scottg6754 Are you trying to make a salient point? We all know that fame and fortune, in any particular endeavor, is arbitrary, like winning the lottery.

    • @gospeljoy5713
      @gospeljoy5713 Год назад

      It fascinating science without the original Sciencetist.

  • @adriendecroy7254
    @adriendecroy7254 8 месяцев назад +3

    Thanks @Tibees it's so great to see such a carefully thought-out and worded video.

  • @queueeeee9000
    @queueeeee9000 8 месяцев назад +16

    Crazy how different the "Top Comments" are, from a year ago, to "Newest First" comments, today, that show how poorly NDT's public perception is. He's the worst.

    • @user-xw2vy9vl6g
      @user-xw2vy9vl6g 8 месяцев назад +1

      Yep was just seeing it😂

    • @eingoluq
      @eingoluq 2 месяца назад

      no, people who dislike him are

    • @queueeeee9000
      @queueeeee9000 2 месяца назад

      @@eingoluq oh honey, I'll pray for you

    • @kajekage9410
      @kajekage9410 12 дней назад

      Funny how popular is for being "the worst."

  • @coniccinoc
    @coniccinoc Год назад +184

    Everything about this journey, getting a copy of the thesis, understanding the thesis and then making a video so others can follow is remarkable.
    Young Ms you are brilliant.
    Thank you for a wonderful lesson.

    • @f87115
      @f87115 Год назад +10

      I can get a copy of his thesis online ,,, I can also whisper in a bedtime story voice ,,, I just don’t see the point, prop up the sheep and they will fail you

    • @ko-Daegu
      @ko-Daegu Год назад

      So getting a copy of the internet and recording a video now is an achievement ??
      Brilliant like really ?
      Stop simping that’s pathetic

    • @Repudiate
      @Repudiate 7 месяцев назад

      ⁠​⁠​⁠@@f87115 You really don’t realize the work that’s been put in to make the video and the reason why? How are you this dense, among all the other commenters here?

    • @Banshuush
      @Banshuush 7 месяцев назад +7

      ​@@f87115but you won't do it. I suppose that's why set she's doing isn't so pointless.

    • @yash_renaissance_athlete
      @yash_renaissance_athlete 6 месяцев назад

      @@f87115 and yet you're doing nothing but dumping useless words in a youtube comment section. Just get out of here, your existence isn't needed anyway

  • @philpaine3068
    @philpaine3068 Год назад +1192

    While we justly celebrate the handful of geniuses who make profound breakthroughs in science and change the game, the meat and potatoes of science are the thousands of dedicated people who do the kind of work that Tyson did for his PhD. Without an abundance of such work, the supergeniuses would have nothing to make breakthroughs with. Most scientists know that they will labour in relative anonymity, their work known to only a handful of colleagues in their field. They do their work out of love for it, not just to become bigshots.
    However, Tyson did become a sort of bigshot in a particular specialty: science communication and popularization. It's a crucial job, since without it, we would not get any scientists at all. Someone has to inspire that kid with a backyard telescope to pursue their dream of becoming an astronomer, or that other kid with a butterfly collection to become a biologist. Few people have the necessary skill for this, and we should respect that skill. Really good ones don't show up very often. Isaac Asimov's thesis was so lame an item that it garnered a grand total of two citations, and his career as a researcher was nothing remarkable --- yet when he died, there were headline obituaries in every major newspaper in the world, with good reason.

    • @Nollis
      @Nollis Год назад +87

      Also a shout out to all the technicians and undergrads that support the aspiring doctors with their PhDs, even when the result is unlikely to be groundbreaking. Science is a collaborative effort that allows exceptionally brilliant minds to shine bright.

    • @Em0killer13
      @Em0killer13 Год назад +5

      Disagree.

    • @aarondcmedia9585
      @aarondcmedia9585 Год назад +11

      "science communication and popularization. It's a crucial job, since without it, we would not get any scientists at all. "
      If that were true, where did the first scientists come from, decades or centuries before "science communication and popularization" became a thing?
      I think your hypothesis is not grounded in reality.

    • @MechAArma
      @MechAArma Год назад +2

      Brilliant comment .

    • @justrandomthings8158
      @justrandomthings8158 Год назад +13

      @@Em0killer13 ok? Lmao

  • @ColeRees
    @ColeRees Год назад +32

    Thank you for this information. I am an amateur astronomer that is wanting to get into professional, scientific research. I have spent months trying to learn about many of these things and seeing Neil discuss his specific research is exactly the details I’ve been looking for. Someone who is reporting exact observations with tools I understand how to use. I can’t wait to comb through his entire thesis to start coming up with observations of my own to start working on. I can’t wait to go back to school to start putting my work into practice!

    • @tonyvelasquez6776
      @tonyvelasquez6776 Год назад +1

      so look up recent physics and astrophysics dissertations

    • @ColeRees
      @ColeRees Год назад

      @@tonyvelasquez6776 yeah that’s exactly what I’m gonna do!

    • @alnatsya
      @alnatsya 4 месяца назад

      I want to get into astronomy too but I don't know where to start

    • @ColeRees
      @ColeRees 4 месяца назад

      @@alnatsya I’m now qualified to answer this question! If I were just starting out, I would begin by looking into B-V calculations using photometry. You can use research telescopes services like Slooh that give you access to telescopes for an affordable monthly price. This is a great place to start for all amateurs because it costs almost nothing. If you’d like to take pictures you should start with whatever camera you already own (including your smart phone!)

  • @robertduran5920
    @robertduran5920 Год назад +7

    Wow. You took that whole thesis and presented it in a way even i can understand. You're amazing. Thank you!

  • @Diachron
    @Diachron Год назад +39

    Great to see you still putting out content, Tibees. You continue to be an inspiration.

  • @TradinTigerJohn
    @TradinTigerJohn Год назад +872

    Fundamental to science communication is knowing the science so you can communicate it. Tyson obviously did some quality science. Just successfully competing for observation time at a world-class observatory puts you in an elite class of astronomers and astrophysicists. He built a solid foundation for his future success as a science communicator where he has excelled.

    • @serronserron1320
      @serronserron1320 Год назад +7

      The question is is the Milky Way galaxy fake

    • @anameyoucantremember
      @anameyoucantremember Год назад +25

      @@serronserron1320 The real question is .. is math related to science?

    • @seetheanimal5867
      @seetheanimal5867 Год назад

      He has shown himself to be an intellectual imbecile … he is in fact a glorified entertainer a planetarium host … much like bill nye. He was also speaking allot of low IQ dribble about Corona … being a parrot of the gov and using the word “science “ in a way as to be heretical to science in route .
      You need to work on your assessment abilities sheeeesh

    • @seetheanimal5867
      @seetheanimal5867 Год назад +5

      @@serronserron1320 the question is how many think that guy is anything but a bad joke

    • @biggentallen
      @biggentallen Год назад +18

      @@seetheanimal5867 far less of a joke than any of us commenting.

  • @iammrbeat
    @iammrbeat Год назад +1

    I love the projector scenes

  • @daneandorfer6187
    @daneandorfer6187 7 месяцев назад +1

    I've had a passion to learn history my whole life, absolutely dreaded math and tried to understand science. Listening to your soft voice explain complex topics is a great way to wind down and still learn. Thank you

  • @guillaumerenou4188
    @guillaumerenou4188 Год назад +190

    Merci Tibee for bringing all these remarkable works and explaining it.

  • @Sam_on_YouTube
    @Sam_on_YouTube Год назад +730

    Tyson is not famous for being a good physicist. I mean, I'm sure he's pretty good. Good enough that he got a PhD, while I dropped the major as an undergrad. And he was good enough to get the positions that lead to his rise in the field where he actually shines, science communication.
    But he'll tell anyone who mentions his wife that she's the better scientist in their marriage by far and anyone who knows them both seems to agree.

    • @charlesspringer4709
      @charlesspringer4709 Год назад +70

      At Cornell the phsysics dept. "encourages" the less than stellar students to move into astrophysics and astrophysics encourages the not so capable to try Planetary Sciences - Sagan's wing. And Sagan had the best weed on campus. That said, IIRC Tyson met Sagan when he was pretty young and became a protege and was not pushed down the chain like many others. The downside for working with Sagan was his terrible academic reputation for jumping peer-review and going public to the popular press with research and leaving other researches high and dry. It is how he was fired (refused tenure) at Harvard and would up in Drake Equation land. His education is very impressive and the people he learned from and worked with were top shelf. He was really quite brilliant. But he rubbed many of his peers the wrong way. They generally do not approve of publicly making lots of guesses about unknowns then when one of them is true, claiming "I was right and the first one to see this". And this was a theme in his work with NASA on planetary science. Issac Azimov had one of those unmeasurable IQ's and was a figure in the Mensa organization. He said Sagan was obviously smarter than himself.

    • @MoldingMatty
      @MoldingMatty Год назад +44

      @@charlesspringer4709 I lost you at the end there

    • @HappytreeLuis
      @HappytreeLuis Год назад +40

      @@charlesspringer4709 How is this relevant?

    • @HopDavid
      @HopDavid Год назад +1

      @@charlesspringer4709 You're from Cornell? Do you know Don Barry?

    • @charlesspringer4709
      @charlesspringer4709 Год назад +10

      @@HappytreeLuis How is your question relevant? (Asking for a friend.)

  • @patrickpauley585
    @patrickpauley585 Год назад +3

    You are brilliant for dissecting this and explaining it to the common person like myself to get a basic understanding of his PhD thesis. Thank you.

  • @alexmartinez3683
    @alexmartinez3683 Год назад

    This is the first time I came across your channel. It sounds like you are constantly trying to hypnotize me with how soothing your voice is.

  • @shaunhall960
    @shaunhall960 Год назад +240

    When I was in high school I started watching Carl Sagan's Cosmos and got hooked. The thing I love about science is we build on our knowledge over time on what others have learned before us. I think for this very reason this is what makes us shine.

    • @citrus4419
      @citrus4419 Год назад +4

      Jesus made it all

    • @Salmonell.a
      @Salmonell.a Год назад

      @@citrus4419 shut it you’re delusional

    • @nyc220guy
      @nyc220guy Год назад +50

      @@citrus4419 imagine, you're literally on a page dedicated to science literacy and further understanding.. and that is the extent of your contribution. Sad.

    • @GRMREAP3R97
      @GRMREAP3R97 Год назад +26

      @@citrus4419 he clearly didnt make you. if he did, you'd be smarter and more successful.

    • @scottg6754
      @scottg6754 Год назад +7

      @@citrus4419 It was Zues.

  • @aresmars2003
    @aresmars2003 Год назад +147

    Kudos to you for your deep dive in Tyson's research and communicating to the world in under 15 minutes!

    • @TheJhtlag
      @TheJhtlag Год назад +5

      Amen, if I learned one thing, it's that to and astronomer everthing that is not H or HE is a metal! But the meaning here of a metal is an element created in the star. (and presumably the whole chains of increasingly larger atoms being formed)

    • @aresmars2003
      @aresmars2003 Год назад

      @@TheJhtlag And I also heard recently that some lithium (element 3) was also created in the early Big Bang nucleosynthesis, but I suppose too small to worry about.
      Wikipedia says "Lithium-7 and lithium-6 produced in the Big Bang are on the order of: lithium-7 to be 10^−9 of all primordial nuclides; and lithium-6 around 10^−13."

    • @itoibo4208
      @itoibo4208 Год назад +3

      I could do without the ASMR vibe. She sounds like she is trying to whisper so her parents will not discover she is making videos in her room.

    • @dusandragovic09srb
      @dusandragovic09srb Год назад +1

      Forget about it fast.

  • @DorGreen1
    @DorGreen1 Год назад +3

    That video is some good work! It takes a team of professionals to do what you do, well done

  • @paulmarsland2911
    @paulmarsland2911 Год назад +1

    Many thanks for your diligent study of NdGT's PHd Thesis and for communicating it so clearly!

  • @MoldingMatty
    @MoldingMatty Год назад +703

    Neils work in science communication is stellar, it is interesting to see what he did do in academia but I don't think it's the main focus of his career.

    • @HopDavid
      @HopDavid Год назад +66

      Neil may be entertaining but he often gets it wrong. This makes him a poor science communicator.

    • @Jacob-Simonsen
      @Jacob-Simonsen Год назад +80

      @@HopDavid He makes people interested in science.

    • @MoldingMatty
      @MoldingMatty Год назад +22

      @@HopDavid example?

    • @sawspitfire422
      @sawspitfire422 Год назад +80

      Perhaps more entertainer than science communicator. He jumps to false conclusions a lot. Most of his errors could've been avoided if he didn't have such a neurotic need to sound smart

    • @HopDavid
      @HopDavid Год назад +24

      @@Jacob-Simonsen It’s easier to make your material interesting when you’re not constrained by a need for rigor and accuracy.

  • @MidwestWind
    @MidwestWind Год назад +11

    The in-thumbnail title got me

  • @dougholliday467
    @dougholliday467 Год назад

    Thanks a bunch Tibees. Keep up the great work.

  • @dearfrankg
    @dearfrankg Год назад +2

    The video was a pleasure to watch. You have a lovely voice and communicate so clearly.

  • @FongYuLiu
    @FongYuLiu Год назад +85

    This video is SO GOOD! Thank you Tibees for quick walk-through of NDT's PhD thesis -- and interesting enough, his academic career!

  • @jsha129
    @jsha129 Год назад +3

    loving your creative ideas and content! keep it up :)

  • @Trandunz
    @Trandunz 8 месяцев назад

    I really enjoy how soft your voice is! the science is billiant and its super easy listening (even though the material is very complex). Thank you Tibees! I will be coming back :)

  • @tesla-spectre
    @tesla-spectre Год назад +6

    I started a PhD 4x : first I had a stipend but then dropped it to take a job (typical working class decision as I later learned). then twice during my work but both times simply the topic was not good enough to keep me up and I lacked the will.
    Finally then I did the most difficult one, going for a PhD in Britain next to my job as a managing partner and I finished successfully. it helped that the topic was close to my work and kept me interested... never regretted it

  • @SMHman666
    @SMHman666 Год назад +44

    Thank you Toby. That was very well explained and easy to listen to. Clear, concise and nicely paced. It makes a change from many creators who seem intent on ramming as much information down your throat in as short a time as possible. Subbed.

  • @roberthellebush8775
    @roberthellebush8775 Год назад +92

    I could listen to you for hours... and, I actually do! Keep up the great work explaining these complex ideas such that I can understand!!

    • @Lank55
      @Lank55 Год назад +2

      Came here to say the same thing.

    • @stefanschleps8758
      @stefanschleps8758 Год назад +1

      Agreed. Tibee is the Goddess of physics. Her voice is golden honey, anything to get me to pay more time studying the sciences. Thank you Tibee!

    • @tomriddle8933
      @tomriddle8933 Год назад +3

      Practically ASMR.

    • @ko-Daegu
      @ko-Daegu Год назад

      Simp

  • @jeffnogo
    @jeffnogo Год назад +7

    I'd never really looked that closely at his published work before, but I've always heard that for someone of his renown, he has a relatively small number of publications. It was interesting to see, though, that his co-author on his first paper was a collaborator I worked with frequently throughout the years. While one astronomer of his acknowledgments in his dissertation was another frequent collaborator. I wonder if they have any stories about him, but I haven't really spoken to either of them in some time.

  • @the_inquisitive_inquisitor
    @the_inquisitive_inquisitor Год назад +5

    I'm about to start a Bachelor's Degree program in Metallurgical Engineering off the back of a Trade School degree in Welding and Fabrication Technology.
    I was the worst student ever when I was younger, spent 10 years working low skill jobs until I saved up enough to go back to school.
    I have tons of respect for people who can excel in their fields of science, I can't seem to learn without getting my hands on things.

  • @cicad2007
    @cicad2007 Год назад +9

    Thanks Tibees for another fine, informational video. Glad I help sponsor you. 🙂

  • @benjaminkocsis2983
    @benjaminkocsis2983 Год назад +284

    I hear a lot of what I see as undeserved criticism towards NDT that follows a similar pattern from scientifically literate people . Id like to explain my view on where this may come from and why I think the criticism is undeserved.
    Most of his science communication is aimed at the american general public, a group that tends to know very little about science. NDT is very good at explaining interesting science topics to this audience in a way that communicates how exciting science can be. When someone working in a STEM field or is otherwise pretty scientifically literate sees NDTs content, they may see it as just communicating ideas that are obvious, simple, needing no explanation, etc. because theyve already learned the vast majority of what he is explaining, if not all of it.
    An average scientifically illiterate american has likely forgotten just about all the chemistry, biology, physics, math, etc. that they've ever learned. Many simply never learned what they should have in school in the first place. So when NDT has a video explaining the properties of water, the lunar cycle, the scale of the solar system etc., many scientifically literate people may see it as being devoid of valuable information because they already know all the building blocks that make up the concepts like avagadros number, newtonian physics, fundamental forces, etc.
    The value of NDTs content isnt the facts themselves. Anyone can easily google the scale of the solar system, or what the definition of a planet is, or what the properties of water are. This information isnt anything unique. The purpose of NDTs content isnt to teach high-level astrophysics to working scientists and straight A STEM students, its to reach that person that made Cs in all their science courses in high school and thought their teachers were boring. To take what curiosity they have left and reignite it, to show them how interesting science can be.
    Going to NDT and complaining that he doesnt teach complex enough subjects, his lessons are no-brainers, etc. is like walking into a middle school algebra class at a public school and complaining that what they are doing is too basic and the teacher is overrated bacause theyre just teaching algebra and not vector calculus. The teacher may or may not be great at making new discoveries in or teaching vector calculus, but their goal is to teach algebra to middle schoolers so that criticism is pretty irrelevant.
    Its also important to remember that being a great academic scientist and being a great science communicator to the public are different skills. Ive had professors that have good academic reputations when publishing literature that are bad at teaching concepts to students, as well as professors that dont seem particularly accomplished academically but are great at teaching to students.

    • @bryandraughn9830
      @bryandraughn9830 Год назад +57

      Lots of critics out there.
      An activity that requires little to no skills at all.

    • @tkk3852
      @tkk3852 Год назад +42

      Well said. I have noticed this criticism towards NDT from nameless and faceless people on youtube pretending to be academics. It is probably just jealousy or something worse that I can't mention.

    • @zetenybacso362
      @zetenybacso362 Год назад +4

      Abszolút egyetértek veled, szerintem is keverik a szezont a fazonnal (illetve elég sznob hozzaallas a tudkom lenézése).

    • @seantaylor1568
      @seantaylor1568 Год назад +2

      👏

    • @nyc220guy
      @nyc220guy Год назад +13

      Thank you Benjamin. Finally, out of all these silly "hating" comments, someone actually gets it. NDT's goal In all of this has always been to reach the people that "know that they don't like science". He literally says it in many of his public engagements.

  • @Chesterton7
    @Chesterton7 Год назад

    Fascinating and well done. Thanks!

  • @mencken8
    @mencken8 Год назад +12

    Since it’s perfectly possible to fantasize that I might read such a document under an extreme of duress I can’t imagine at the moment….thank you so much!

  • @luc7478
    @luc7478 Год назад +188

    There are Ten thousands of PHD on Astrophysics at Least in the world.
    NDT wasn't famous because he Impacted the science of physics as the medias trying to make us believe.
    It's simply because of his methods of explaining complicated things with manner that everyone could understand, like his Documentaries

    • @europaeuropa3673
      @europaeuropa3673 Год назад +7

      He's a Carl Sagan copy cat.

    • @luc7478
      @luc7478 Год назад +4

      @@europaeuropa3673 he was his University's teacher at some point

    • @kreek22
      @kreek22 Год назад +12

      There are not tens of thousands of PhD astrophysicists in the world. The number is less than ten thousand.
      You're right about Tyson: a mediocre scientist with enough charisma to be a good communicator.

    • @jadoctor
      @jadoctor Год назад +1

      He sure drinks the 2030 reset garbage. Wonder if he knows that the goal is the Gov will be to tell you what job they want you to do.......so he would be a computer salesman if he was born today.

    • @csnoopy
      @csnoopy Год назад +3

      NDT said there are about 7000 astrophysicists worldwide. So those who have PHDs should be less

  • @satireofcircumstance6458
    @satireofcircumstance6458 Год назад +37

    To my mind, deGrasse Tyson never really recovered from getting KO'd by Buster Douglas. He went off the rails a bit after that. Oh well, we've still got the old videos and his PhD thesis I suppose.

  • @amandasmith4089
    @amandasmith4089 Год назад

    I loved this video, thank you
    Tibees!!

  • @nikirick
    @nikirick Год назад +1

    This is very interesting. Thank you for making this video.

  • @kumardigvijaymishra5945
    @kumardigvijaymishra5945 Год назад +9

    Wow 360 pages... whew!! Thanks Toby for giving a glimpse of Neil's work. I didn't understood much of it. I appreciate the philosophy of not worshipping, but understanding the work of creators. Respect for engineers who build the telescope in Chile to give us sneak peak into the galaxy.

  • @X00000370
    @X00000370 Год назад +111

    This review will give a lot of graduate students hope that they can also produce a Ph.D. thesis paper.

    • @seetheanimal5867
      @seetheanimal5867 Год назад +11

      If someone who is so intellectually average can do it it is both motivating to the masses but scary for the future of humanity

    • @karabomothupi9759
      @karabomothupi9759 Год назад +65

      @@seetheanimal5867 Average compared to the top scientists. He is far superior intellectually compared to you and I.

    • @seetheanimal5867
      @seetheanimal5867 Год назад

      @@karabomothupi9759 speak only for yourself. He is noticeably slower of mind than I. Hence I see his faults and am annoyed by those faults being celebrated as intelligence by as you self describe a lower intelligence person.
      I would truly knock your teeth out if you said such a thing to my face bro. Speak only on yourself unless you have a data set to work with. Being you have no real data to work with on me at best you can make no assumption.
      Your largest mistake is the most common. You projected your self your severe limits into others. Where I project holding people to accountability as I assume that they like myself have the capacity to see and change themselves. They like you can not.
      SMH people like you are evidence that bullying is good and needs to come back

    • @archimedes2261
      @archimedes2261 Год назад +10

      @@karabomothupi9759 A top Scientist is someone that can formulate his own ideas beside well known discoveries and goes beyond that in a captivating manner to students or audiences, Neil does that quite well. This makes Neil a top Scientist also in the end it takes decades and newer understandings, to understand the Universe is not an overnight mystery unwrapping. That’s why they have something called quantum mechanics fields, String theories, inflationary theory, blackholes and dark matter, all of which have not been concretely proven, yet they are all subject of further studies. In short the Universe as a whole still has plenty of mysteries to reveal to us 😆

    • @Harry-uq9qd
      @Harry-uq9qd Год назад +25

      @@karabomothupi9759 most people fail to realize or refuse to acknowledge this, it's like everyone here is a cream of the crop academic, haha!

  • @vencislav_krumov
    @vencislav_krumov 6 месяцев назад

    Many thanks for the great review. The internet definitely needs more like them! 👍🏻

  • @Messier45_Pleiades
    @Messier45_Pleiades 4 месяца назад

    I never had the opportunity for much education. Videos like your are so important to me and are a great source of learning and pleasure. Thank so much.

  • @patmcc7758
    @patmcc7758 Год назад +59

    As someone who has a PhD (in economics), who then spent a number of years in academia before moving into consulting, a PhD is like a preparation for a career in academia, where you learn about the process of doing research and most importantly authoring papers capable of being published in refereed journals. It's like an entry test for becoming a university lecturer/academic. It's both a challenging and a rewarding experience where the relationship between student and superviser is paramount. When you get through your viva/defence examination, the sense of achievement is tremendous. You'll have it for the rest of your life.

    • @soulcells
      @soulcells Год назад +3

      The man is a shill you fool. He's never DONE anything.

    • @gcg8187
      @gcg8187 Год назад +2

      ​@@soulcells But he has a PhD that makes him a great scientist right?

    • @soulcells
      @soulcells Год назад +1

      @@gcg8187 The BEST scientist! Except for Fauci or course.

    • @ko-Daegu
      @ko-Daegu Год назад

      @@soulcells I’m surprised no one mentioning it
      He’s just popular
      Good for him he knows how to talk and sell he’s good as a sale man that’s it

    • @jstnnn
      @jstnnn Год назад

      @@soulcells are you mentally ill?

  • @JLandavega
    @JLandavega Год назад +4

    Incredible information, thank for sharing the content.
    Greetings from Texas, thoroughly enjoy the channel.

    • @GWulf47
      @GWulf47 Год назад

      "Incredible"... do you understand the meaning of the word?

  • @DonLuc23
    @DonLuc23 Год назад +1

    Thank you for your time and explanation from a commoner.

  • @femtogab
    @femtogab Год назад

    this is very relaxing to watch. Thank you

  • @hasanimason
    @hasanimason Год назад +6

    This is awesome 👏🏽

  • @harootpashayan
    @harootpashayan Год назад +4

    Thank you, I am also an Astrophysicist without a PhD and I agree with you. Hence maybe writing some better software to model and track objects might be a better idea. Maybe work on geometry or particle physics. Maybe E&M and its relationship with the quasars and filaments.

  • @sonyse2t5
    @sonyse2t5 Год назад

    Enjoyed the narrative reading on a very difficult subject.
    You are super smart and a tranquil beauty....your voice is hypnotic.

  • @abrahamcano6195
    @abrahamcano6195 8 месяцев назад

    Super! Great video, Tibees!

  • @annegajerski-cauley7624
    @annegajerski-cauley7624 Год назад +62

    Hi
    I found myself accidentally on this site and just had to see why someone would take an interest in the details of NDT's thesis. It is a fine piece of practical research work that adds to the base of understanding of our and other galactic systems. In the end though it is "just another" spectroscopic survey of galactic stars, (something that by no means, I am quick to add, represents a trivial level of observational labour.) As reader Springer notes below, physics students that don't quite reach the sophistication to do particle, nuclear or condensed matter work often get offered astronomy as way to make their contribution as scientists. So while there are and have been very powerful minds ( Eddington come to mind, for one) who undertake "astrophysics" out of shear love of the literally cosmic scale problems, fresh interpretations of the "physics in the sky" most often must come from the fundamental physics side alluded to. NDT in particular seems to me a chap who has done PhD level slugging to earn his rank, but has found his best calling after all as a popularizer. Not many doctorates find themselves to be scientific ground breakers, and find satisfaction in other creative ways.
    best regards,
    D. Barillari

    • @tkk3852
      @tkk3852 Год назад +8

      Alot of these nameless and faceless haters coming here to criticise NDT and we aren't even sure whether they themselves have Phd in particle physics.

    • @DMitsukirules
      @DMitsukirules Год назад

      Yeah no. Take your backhanded bullcrap and sod off.

    • @DJWESG1
      @DJWESG1 Год назад +2

      It's not sophistication.

    • @archimedes2261
      @archimedes2261 Год назад +1

      @@qed100 Particle Physics is not that complicated it’s just the fundamental building blocks of all matter in the Universe at nano scale , basically you’re breaking down an object that already existed in order to try and explain its origins.

    • @gringo1723
      @gringo1723 Год назад

      My dear Anne; You NAILED IT!
      Keep up the good CRITIQUING!!! 😎

  • @dylanparker130
    @dylanparker130 Год назад +25

    Love these retrospectives :)
    PS 2000 citations of a thesis sounds pretty sensational to me!

    • @morganmitchell4017
      @morganmitchell4017 Год назад +11

      She said 2000 citations across his 13 papers. That still sounds high, though!

    • @dylanparker130
      @dylanparker130 Год назад +2

      @@morganmitchell4017 Ah, sorry! Even so, most people would be thrilled!!

    • @theastuteangler
      @theastuteangler Год назад

      @@dylanparker130 a million idiots squawking doesnt make them any less idiots

    • @tkk3852
      @tkk3852 Год назад +16

      @@morganmitchell4017 2,000 citations for 13 papers is crazy high. I don't understand why Tibees thinks it is nothing.

    • @morganmitchell4017
      @morganmitchell4017 Год назад +11

      @@tkk3852 Yup. That's 150 citations per paper. If I got 150 citations on even one of my papers, I'd be over the moon!

  • @MeeshGuitar
    @MeeshGuitar Год назад +2

    I like how you break it down. Great video 🙂

  • @davidh4379
    @davidh4379 Год назад +5

    From the first line of his intro, I'm glad Dr. Tyson was not totally discouraged from academia. Skilled communication of science is underrated.

  • @harshakalluri4455
    @harshakalluri4455 Год назад +6

    I love your videos❤️❤️🌹

  • @Melbourne_Approach
    @Melbourne_Approach Год назад

    Hi I just found ur channel through this video and watched almost everything on here. Super good videos. New sub ❤

  • @Timothy-remembers
    @Timothy-remembers Год назад

    I’m so glad I found this. Thank you ~

  • @fefifofob
    @fefifofob 6 месяцев назад +4

    He's an expert at sounding like he knows what he's talking about.

  • @SAMZIRRA
    @SAMZIRRA Год назад +11

    This was quite enjoyable to watch and listen to. Really interesting. The Universe’s research ability is as never-ending as those outer arms.

  • @ryanjbuchanan
    @ryanjbuchanan Год назад

    Wow, lot of research. Nice one Tibees!

  • @rogerarrysheldon8394
    @rogerarrysheldon8394 Год назад

    This is just wonderful poetry. I don't know why I haven't been commenting... It's just, it's so indulgent... It's just, it's such a music and so cerebral... These videos are so outstanding it is challenging to adequately compliment them.

  • @creativesource3514
    @creativesource3514 Год назад +145

    In summary I have learnt that:
    1) He is a legit physicist earning a doctorate in a solid field of study from a reputable university
    2) He fought to acheive it and it didn't come easy
    3) He is a special teacher who can connect to the common man. This is his greatest ability.

    • @jaywoodside0731
      @jaywoodside0731 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@A_R_B_Gyou're a liar

    • @dawnfire82
      @dawnfire82 8 месяцев назад

      So? Having a doctorate doesn't prove you're smart, and not having one doesn't prove the opposite.
      NDT is an egotistical liar, who thought it was funny to false stories about President Bush bc it made Democrats like him. Bush, who awarded him the Medal of Freedom for his contributions to science and education, BTW, so he was also ungrateful.
      Imagine giving someone a prestigious award because you think they did something great, and they start telling lies about you. That's Tyson.

    • @joel2628
      @joel2628 8 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@A_R_B_Gsmarter? Yes. More intelligent? No.

    • @baileescott401
      @baileescott401 8 месяцев назад

      smart is a synonym for intelligent... your comment proves you to be neither@@joel2628

    • @markwildt5728
      @markwildt5728 8 месяцев назад +4

      @@A_R_B_G well NDT thinks gender is on a spectrum, so....🤷‍♂

  • @starfishsystems
    @starfishsystems Год назад +4

    I was hanging out for an hour one afternoon with the director of my research lab when he took a call from someone inquiring about taking a Ph.D there.
    Of course, I only heard one side of the conversation, and I don't recall most of that. But what's stuck with me, to this day, is the observation that "A Ph.D is an exercise in depth, not breadth."
    This is an important and sobering observation. We'd all love to be at the point of synthesis, right? When everything comes together and all the fragments of (OMG, perhaps interdisciplinary!) knowledge finally make harmonious sense when seen as a whole. But that's not what a Ph.D is for. It's for showing that you have the perseverance to dig deeply into a subject and find a small nugget of pure truth, or anyway as pure and enduring as we know how to refine it. It's not a place for grand epiphanies.
    Such epiphanies do take place, but seldom according to plan, and rarely when working toward a graduate degree. It's not that the sand has already been sifted by generations before you. There is, in fact, still much unknown terrain. But we simply don't have enough experience to engage in synthesis of any significance at the beginning of our careers. At least, the rare few who manage to do this seem to more or less step into the moment, in the same way that Newton and Leibniz arrived at the idea of calculus at nearly the same moment. The ideas were already being developed all around them. They just happened to be the first to see it.
    I didn't particularly like hearing that graduate work is an exercise in depth, not breadth. But that is, evidently, the way the system works best. And because NDT likewise made his contribution, in his turn, in that spirit, it may not rock your socks off.
    In fact, it may only make sense to his thesis committee and a handful of others. That's depth for you. But what an excellent preparation it was, nevertheless, for someone who chose to make science more available to the public! You rarely earn tenure this way, but its importance can't be overstated.

  • @mark2359
    @mark2359 Год назад

    You are amazing..hope you go far.

  • @ascendedchimp143
    @ascendedchimp143 Год назад

    Thanks for covering this

  • @slvrsrfr92
    @slvrsrfr92 Год назад +10

    I love this video! My understanding of any of any of this pale in comparison to you. And obviously Niel's. But I love learning from you guys/gals. You are the unsung heroes of our generation. Keep up the good work and keep the science coming!

  • @skrayraja
    @skrayraja Год назад +40

    I think you indeed put in lot of hard work to understand his thesis and then explain it in more simpler layman's language. I didn't understand everything but enough to appreciate what Tyson actually did. Thank you very much

  • @phxmiller
    @phxmiller Год назад +1

    I’m always fascinated by people who understand such complicated topics.

  • @johnkochen7264
    @johnkochen7264 5 месяцев назад

    It’s been ages since I have seen someone use an overhead projector. Props to you!

  • @LightCrasher
    @LightCrasher Год назад +20

    Exellent video. Asmr voice, simple pitching, straight to the point. Love it.

  • @dodsjanne
    @dodsjanne Год назад +3

    Your voice is amazing. Love listening to it and learning at the same time 🍀

  • @drhossawy
    @drhossawy Год назад

    Nice effort!! Looking forward to your video on Michio Kaku😉

  • @bertthomas1016
    @bertthomas1016 Год назад

    Very great explanation..and lovely as well

  • @quantgeekery6358
    @quantgeekery6358 Год назад +7

    When I was in school for math I looked up how long it often took to get a PhD in Math/Physics: It can take 5-7 *years* to complete the research for a Physics PhD. It has likely gotten worse

  • @jcgaray6725
    @jcgaray6725 Год назад +13

    Very well put forth! It is true Neil deGrasse Tyson is an excellent communicator. I don't even have a college degree but I've always been curious about the universe and all the workings thereof. When I listen to him I can fathom it, I can imagine it and some of it actually makes sense to me. Thank you so much for sharing!

  • @thomasherbig
    @thomasherbig 8 месяцев назад

    Very nicely done! You got the science right and explained it well. Thanks

  • @geechisuede98
    @geechisuede98 Год назад

    Thank you. Solid content that makes me a little bit smarter. Excellent.

  • @victorialindstrom1522
    @victorialindstrom1522 Год назад +33

    I was quite surprised that he did not thank Carl Sagan in his thesis for being an early mentor as Neil recounted in his newer version of Cosmos. Either way, I have much gratitude to them both.

    • @gcg8187
      @gcg8187 Год назад +2

      I heard he's not really the apprentice of Carl Sagan that he implies he was.

    • @jayeff6712
      @jayeff6712 Год назад +20

      @@gcg8187 There are rumors that you like to claim that people implied things they never implied.

    • @mcdirty311
      @mcdirty311 Год назад +1

      @@jayeff6712 there are rumors that you like to claim that people like to claim that people implied things they never implied

    • @jayeff6712
      @jayeff6712 Год назад +8

      @@mcdirty311 Those are just rumors. I do not like to claim that people like to claim those things. Only if they do claim those things without any base for it I make those claims. I rather prefer not to be in a position where I feel I have to make those claims.

    • @mcdirty311
      @mcdirty311 Год назад +1

      @@jayeff6712 lmfao 🤣

  • @jairozalexis4989
    @jairozalexis4989 Год назад +5

    He just famous, that doesn't mean he's a good scientist.

  • @michaeldhknight7569
    @michaeldhknight7569 Год назад

    Thank you for this!

  • @JayJay-de5jv
    @JayJay-de5jv Год назад

    Great review👍🏿👍🏿

  • @chairde
    @chairde Год назад +7

    The comment section is the greatest collection of experts in the history of our universe. We are so fortunate.

    • @gringo1723
      @gringo1723 Год назад +1

      Compliments on a well constructed Sarcasm! Trust an Irishman to excel in derision of commentary.
      You've the tongue as sharp as Freagarthach, “The Answerer” !!! Bhuel a dúirt, a Thiarna O'Hare! 😎

  • @SBphd
    @SBphd Год назад +17

    I earned a PhD and trust me, the research is not as important as simply finishing the PhD.

    • @seetheanimal5867
      @seetheanimal5867 Год назад +1

      Yup he is not smart. Just the right paper with right skin color at right time

    • @gringo1723
      @gringo1723 Год назад

      Often the PHD is simply a get out of jail card / You may pass GO kind of achievement.... Ah, THE PAPER CHASE.... the recurring fact is those who can, DO... those who can't, TEACH..... as noted above there are Literally tens of thousands of PHDs running around the Scientific communities throughout the World, yet few of them (VERY FEW) do the cutting edge work...
      Tyson should be awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Media Technocrat Blah Blah( M.T.B.B.)

    • @PeteQuad
      @PeteQuad Год назад +30

      @@seetheanimal5867 What a ridiculous comment; NDT is clearly an intelligent man. Slogging through years of college level physics (not to mention graduate level studies) is not something an average Joe can do. I am also not sure why you are responding to a statement that you clearly do not understand since it has nothing to do with your comment.

    • @ABCD-rn6tk
      @ABCD-rn6tk Год назад +1

      @@seetheanimal5867 much smarter than you with 10 iq

    • @crzyprplmnky
      @crzyprplmnky Год назад +8

      @@seetheanimal5867 it's okay buddy, life can get better, people can care about you and listen to you without having to write things like this, just because you are a person you are worthy of respect and understanding

  • @dingdingdingdiiiiing
    @dingdingdingdiiiiing 8 месяцев назад +2

    How remarkably ironic that for the very first words of the thesis, Tyson selected the quote "It is important not to worship what is known, but to question it." Now, having gotten his phd, decades later, he is insufferable when anyone questions anything that he talks about, and he (with authority and arrogance) only talks about things that are "known".

  • @javimelecio
    @javimelecio 5 месяцев назад

    this was wonderful, clear, and delightful to watch!!

  • @Name-ot3xw
    @Name-ot3xw 7 месяцев назад +3

    The way it was explained to me is that the point of your masters is to learn how to properly ask a question and the PHD is to learn how to properly answer a question. The undergraduate is where you gain the knowledge to be able to do the previous two things.

  • @33Donner77
    @33Donner77 Год назад +72

    Thanks for the explanation. Was his thesis "great and original", as in the Copernicus' system where the Sun is at the center, with the planets circling it, and the stars are well above the planets? What would be original today? Explaining how to travel through time-space without fuel propellants? Studying an interstellar alien civilization? On a more practical level, his thesis may be good and on par with probably many good and acceptable theses, but he also brought the subject to millions in the general public, which is probably his most significant achievement.

    • @moriyokiri3229
      @moriyokiri3229 Год назад +2

      Millions in the general public read his thesis? You’re having a laugh.

    • @azuth20
      @azuth20 Год назад +21

      @@moriyokiri3229 no, they’re saying he brought the subject to millions in public due to his public communication and outreach that he does.

    • @Number6_
      @Number6_ Год назад +1

      You don't have to be ground braking to be new, as in your examples; just different.

    • @33Donner77
      @33Donner77 Год назад

      @@moriyokiri3229 He brought the subject of astronomy, not just his thesis, to millions in the general public,

    • @33Donner77
      @33Donner77 Год назад

      @@Number6_ I would have been more impressed with a thesis on powering space vehicles by reversible electro-magnetism. The answer is probably sitting right in front of us, to be discovered by some high school student as a science project (and that's not necessarily public schools. It may be a home schooler.)

  • @Dr.Scorpio
    @Dr.Scorpio Год назад

    Great video. Thank you 😊

  • @DVX100
    @DVX100 Год назад

    I appreciate the old school projector drawings over computer graphics. Nice warm and familiar throwback :)