Paul A. M. Dirac, Interview by Friedrich Hund (1982)

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  • Опубликовано: 16 фев 2023
  • Interview with Paul Adrien Maurice Dirac (1902-1984), Nobel Prize in Physics 1933, "for the discovery of new productive forms of atomic theory". Topics discussed:
    Symmetry as central concept in theoretical physics.
    Space and time according to Lorentz.
    Matter and anti-matter.
    Dirac's definition of symmetry.
    Fermions, Negative energy levels.
    Einstein's general theory of relativity.
    Natural times and lengths.
    Cosmology and gravitation.
    Relativistic quantum mechanics.
    Atomic constants.
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Комментарии • 411

  • @TheCinematicGamer
    @TheCinematicGamer 2 месяца назад +141

    This is why I love RUclips. Thank you for posting this!

  • @jfffjl
    @jfffjl Год назад +299

    Someone I had regarded as strictly a historical figure has been presented to me as an actual person! Thank you mehranshargh, thank you RUclips!

    • @dazzassti
      @dazzassti Год назад +6

      same... Having read the strangest man, I actually didn't realise this even existed, brought the man to life

    • @SumanBiswas-vj3cb
      @SumanBiswas-vj3cb 11 месяцев назад

      It has happened because of you what you trying to mean in a little hiding manner what you really want to say.

    • @jfffjl
      @jfffjl 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@SumanBiswas-vj3cb Well I guess you told me.........something.

    • @robertm3561
      @robertm3561 2 месяца назад +1

      Thanks for your comment, pretty much my thoughts also!

    • @wokeupina
      @wokeupina 2 месяца назад

      I never thought he had a video of himself i’m amazed, he was younger than einstein right…

  • @dominiquepaul6877
    @dominiquepaul6877 Месяц назад +35

    Two incredible scientists Mr Dirac is 80 in this video and Mr Hund 86 years old! They were beautiful persons! Mr Hund died in Göttingen at 101

    • @spartaleonidas641
      @spartaleonidas641 4 дня назад

      I was like who is this guy. Turns out another world class physicist! Hunds rule came alive

  • @danbotez1307
    @danbotez1307 Год назад +243

    Paul Dirac was the strangest man according to Bohr, yet during his time he was the man closest to truth in physics. A true genius !

    • @birdman4274
      @birdman4274 11 месяцев назад +9

      In what way. Did Bohr explain why ?

    • @GoblinMode3004
      @GoblinMode3004 9 месяцев назад

      ​@birdman4274
      This is conjecture on my and many others part, so take this as you will, but as someone with ASD it appears clear to me that Dirac had a form of Autism or other such disorder. The way his mannerisms, behavior, thought, speech, everything he did and how he went about it tells me his 'eccentric' nature came down to not only how he saw the world, but interacted with it as well.
      I have no proof of these claims (Dirac himself I believe was never tested, nor gave any personal account therein), but from an outside perspective with firsthand insight into the nature of ASD I would confidently say Dirac was on the spectrum, as I've found similar occurrences in other major mathematical minds.
      Perhaps I am well off base and he was simply an intelligent man who could not connect with people due to his personal understanding of human nature and the world at large, but to me that is a moot point considering his other behaviors (reclusivity, very little speech unless he "had something meaningful to say", particular routines (I believe he had even scheduled his walking/thinking time and stuck to it religiously), et cetera).
      I simply believe these factors are the cause for many people viewing Dirac as strange, eccentric, weird, and above all intelligent. He had such a beautiful mind and the world is left not only better due to his legacy, but also worse because there has not been another great mind like his in decades.
      RIP P.A.M. Dirac

    • @carl7664
      @carl7664 5 месяцев назад +9

      @@birdman4274He was very much a private person, introverted and barely talked.

    • @birdman4274
      @birdman4274 5 месяцев назад +30

      @@carl7664 His colleagues in Cambridge jokingly defined a unit called a "dirac", which was one word per hour.

    • @Elvisism
      @Elvisism 4 месяца назад +1

      There might be a correlation aha

  • @eternalray8194
    @eternalray8194 Год назад +262

    Such a marvellous sight of conversation. I can't believe how bright and sharp Dirac is at this age answering every question that Friedrich posed very eloquently.

    • @tarekazzam389
      @tarekazzam389 Год назад +3

      Good Morning:
      Is that Norbert Dragon speaking?
      It's because only Norbert Dragon of Karlsruhe & Hannover, John Singh from Ireland and maybe Jürgen Ehlers are the Ray Experts here!

    • @musabsalamah4386
      @musabsalamah4386 Год назад

      Are you Dr. Tarek Azzam ?

    • @dokonidanko
      @dokonidanko Год назад +1

      legends

    • @zack_120
      @zack_120 Год назад +4

      And instantly without delay or hesitation

    • @nikitaegorov3993
      @nikitaegorov3993 9 месяцев назад +3

      Friedrich Hund was 6 years older than Dirac and outlived him (he died aged 101)

  • @timidlove
    @timidlove 9 месяцев назад +76

    Dirac is very charming to me...never interrupts others and miminal when he himself speaks.

    • @Bluefalconspiracies
      @Bluefalconspiracies Месяц назад +1

      People don’t like that. They like loud clowns

    • @appsenence9244
      @appsenence9244 19 дней назад

      @@Bluefalconspiracies Ye, f dirac, why utube suggest this video to me, he sounds like dementia boy

  • @kevinwallace3415
    @kevinwallace3415 2 месяца назад +16

    I read about quantum physics, trying to understand the concepts, but I'm not educated enough to be able to understand the mathematics. Hearing Dirac put his knowledge into words is quite amazing and interesting for me. I never expected he'd agree to be interviewed and filmed!

  • @khepri3266
    @khepri3266 10 месяцев назад +31

    It really is amazing that humanity got to experience the minds of Einstein and Dirac so closely together.

    • @capri2673
      @capri2673 Месяц назад +2

      Indeed As well as Schrodinger

  • @dieago12345
    @dieago12345 Год назад +101

    Fascinating conversation and an utter joy to listen along. Dirac was the humblest of scientists and brilliant in so many ways.

  • @ougoah
    @ougoah Год назад +107

    Dirac seems like a calm and gentle person.

    • @wargreymon2024
      @wargreymon2024 Год назад +2

      Only bc of age

    • @TheLuminousOne
      @TheLuminousOne Год назад +6

      he had little choice, he was old and had health problems

    • @beniocabeleleiraleila5799
      @beniocabeleleiraleila5799 2 месяца назад +6

      @@wargreymon2024 He was always like that, just read his story, the act of talking was a lifetime trauma to him, because his father would spank him every time he missed a word gender or verbal time (his language is French). When his brother commited S, he said "i didnt understood why my parents were so sad at the moment, but later on i understood that this is a normal thing" because he literally never understood the concept of love. His friends created a meme constant called "dirac constant" that represent 1word/hour.

    • @NomenNescio99
      @NomenNescio99 Месяц назад +4

      ​@beniocabeleleiraleila5799 I came to the comment section just to see if someone mentioned the 1 word per hour dirac unit.
      Dirac was also married to Wiegner's sister.

    • @seank921
      @seank921 Месяц назад

      Best comment on any vid on YT

  • @xepho8205
    @xepho8205 Год назад +26

    Unlike what today's "thinkers" seem inclined to believe this video shows that real great thinkers didn't need to speak fast in order to prove their points

    • @philldavies7940
      @philldavies7940 Месяц назад +3

      Dirac was famously taciturn. His colleagues at Cambridge coined a new unit "the Dirac" as the minimum needed to partake in a conversation, a "Dirac" was one word per hour.

  • @Molekuelorbital
    @Molekuelorbital Год назад +20

    Oh my God, what a wonderful video! I am so greatful finding here on this channel! It is really amazing! And the two interview partners are absolutely divine, both Paul A. M. Dirac and Friedrich Hund! ❤❤❤✨️✨️✨️🍀🍀🍀✨️✨️✨️🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻

  • @yp77738yp77739
    @yp77738yp77739 Год назад +18

    Feel honoured to be able to enjoy this.

  • @athenianheretic3395
    @athenianheretic3395 Год назад +94

    Dirac, this shy genius, perhaps spoke a lot more during this interview than he had spoken during his whole previous life. With his silence and dedication he made humans a better species.His work and contributions to quantum physics will be taught for several thousand years from now.

    • @stoicepictetus3875
      @stoicepictetus3875 10 месяцев назад +3

      Well said !

    • @user-iw1qn3mt7e
      @user-iw1qn3mt7e Месяц назад +3

      Much like how children at school now learn the Pythagorean theorem. Thousands of years after its discovery 🤭

  • @WhySoSquid
    @WhySoSquid 10 месяцев назад +12

    A darling man to watch and hear speak 🥹 Thank you for the upload!

  • @shubhamkumar-nw1ui
    @shubhamkumar-nw1ui Год назад +39

    The people who built our world , The people who uplifted our conscience ,the people who made us evolve ❤

  • @qwadratix
    @qwadratix 2 месяца назад +6

    It's interesting to observe how the concept of symmetry has changed subtly since this discussion.
    Dirac is talking about a symmetry between space and time as though these are two different things having a connection whereas these days I think we regard space-time as a continuum and the symmetries we talk about are 'internal' symmetries as understood by Noether.

  • @starriet
    @starriet Год назад +13

    Wow.... is he Dirac....? Is he...? What a wonderful world I can see one of the great guys in physics history like this...
    I was thinking it's his very old days considering his pictures in many books, but... after searching, yes, this video was recored just 2 years before he died...

  • @GEOFERET
    @GEOFERET Год назад +39

    What a wonderful person! This is humanity at its best!

  • @mdabutoha5102
    @mdabutoha5102 Год назад +9

    This is a not a lecture rather than it's a jewel 💎 for thinkers 🤔💭

  • @stupidguy97
    @stupidguy97 Год назад +23

    I never thought color videos of this guy existed. It’s nice to hear the thoughts of a genius.

    • @_Nibi
      @_Nibi Год назад +1

      I always imagined dirac died like a a hundred years ago lol

  • @tomsmith7429
    @tomsmith7429 Месяц назад +15

    He went to the same high school as Nobel Prize winner Peter Higgs

  • @stefanoromagnoli9891
    @stefanoromagnoli9891 Год назад +63

    beautiful conversation between great creators of physics; thanks for uploading this video!

  • @s.k634
    @s.k634 Год назад +84

    Two brilliant minds .RIP to both of them

  • @davidpalin1790
    @davidpalin1790 10 месяцев назад +14

    Paul Dirac the greatest physicist that nobody has heard of 😢😢
    He was a living legend 🙌 😮

  • @0xGEEK
    @0xGEEK Год назад +20

    May this be availably to humantity for ever! Imagine we could watch and listen to Plato explaining the Cave Anology! Sapere aude... ThanX4TheUpload!

  • @artdonovandesign
    @artdonovandesign 11 месяцев назад +7

    Its wonderful to see and listen to Dirac. Thank you for posting this great video!

  • @chrismac2234
    @chrismac2234 Год назад +21

    Huge impact to our lives and most people have never heard of him. He reminds me of Roger Penrose

    • @r3b3lvegan89
      @r3b3lvegan89 Год назад +1

      Even Penrose is only touching the tip of the iceberg but yes most people sadly don’t even read at all. This is all old news tho

    • @chrismac2234
      @chrismac2234 Год назад +2

      @@r3b3lvegan89 I meant the accent and general demeanor.

    • @user_2793
      @user_2793 Год назад +1

      Dirac is such a fucking icon man I swear

    • @hassanawodi5888
      @hassanawodi5888 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@r3b3lvegan89Dirac’s equation is not something one randomly reads but yes, people hardly read now.

  • @captainjack_sparrow2391
    @captainjack_sparrow2391 8 месяцев назад +5

    Dirac, a legend who lives on for the many centuries to come.

  • @tayranates3611
    @tayranates3611 Год назад +10

    Rest in peace Paul Dirac and Friedrich Hund.

  • @fiorellasky5679
    @fiorellasky5679 3 месяца назад +13

    I wonder how long it takes to have another human being like him on earth, wonderful mind, wonderful human

  • @tsjoyotu
    @tsjoyotu Год назад +15

    Thanks for uploading. It is a gem.

  • @Robinson8491
    @Robinson8491 Год назад +10

    Awesome discussion and footage 👏

  • @susilgunaratne4267
    @susilgunaratne4267 Год назад +8

    Grest discussion! not only on content wise but also for the trilingual sense i felt.

  • @kjr2868
    @kjr2868 12 дней назад

    Such a lovely and profound interview! Two great minds discussing the nature of the universe and life. The humility in conversation, where both men are so aware of what they don't know! So RARE to see in this age of social media where opinion is presented as fact!

  • @KevTheImpaler
    @KevTheImpaler Год назад +9

    I wonder whether Douglas Adams was thinking of the Fine Structure Constant when he wrote about the ultimate answer to life, the universe and everything.

  • @freddyrosenberg9288
    @freddyrosenberg9288 Год назад +5

    I never thought I would hear Dirac speak on camera. I was so wrong about his lifespan.

  • @Spiegelradtransformation
    @Spiegelradtransformation Год назад +2

    Danke für das hochladen.🙂I am really impressed on great thinking.

  • @evgenistarikov3386
    @evgenistarikov3386 Год назад +1

    Here, it is about how the both undoubted and esteemed Peers are in fact recalling the ways of how the Professional Mankind could aptly circumvent the over-all ignorance as to some important points to nonetheless duly succeed with all their epistemic exercises, however, still without clearly answering important basic posers.
    A very nice illustration of the general trend... Many sincere thanks for posting this!

  • @aldrincanares8077
    @aldrincanares8077 Год назад +1

    Thank you for uploading this video.👍

  • @saulsavelis575
    @saulsavelis575 Год назад +32

    Hund discovered the so-called tunnel effect or quantum tunneling and Hund's rule of maximum multiplicity....First discovery is a simple description of interaction of charged (magnetic) particles at the proximity and the second discovery is a simple energy law related to the thermal motion of atoms/ions/molecules in the closed volume adapted to the spin possessing particles...these rules are naturally appearing in the mind when posing correct questions and knowing what electron is

  • @LuciFeric137
    @LuciFeric137 Год назад +12

    Very interesting. Magic to see the old master expounding.

  • @Findmylimit
    @Findmylimit Месяц назад +1

    that was a great interview/lecture. Thank you.

  • @H.S909
    @H.S909 7 месяцев назад +2

    Wow. Real voice of a historical figure who worked in the time of the WW2. There are many of this era whose voices I would like to hear.

  • @ashraf2661
    @ashraf2661 Месяц назад +1

    What a classic and wonderful interview between 2 charming men !!

  • @2010sunshine
    @2010sunshine Год назад +7

    Interview with legendary Paul Dirac. Excellent 👌👍

  • @seanrm
    @seanrm Год назад +6

    Interesting aside:
    Dirac and Cary Grant playing in the same playground at Bishop Road Primary School (Bishopston, Bristol) in the early 1900's.

  • @lastchance8142
    @lastchance8142 29 дней назад

    Blown away. I just wish Dr. Hund had let Dirac speak more than him. Every word out of his mouth is a treasure.

  • @bobbwc7011
    @bobbwc7011 Год назад +26

    Fun fact: Back in the Leipzig days, when Leipzig was the world's epicenter of theoretical physics, Heisenberg and Hund did a series of shared lectures. It was called "Heisenberg mit Hund" (literally: "Heisenberg with his dog"). It was a well received event and probably of greater impact and reputation than Feynman's lectures later. The title was a pun in German, but it showed that Heisenberg outranked anybody at the institute.

    • @hut8_newzealand361
      @hut8_newzealand361 Год назад +5

      He was more of a dog person than a cat person then. He left his cat in a box - unsure if it was dead or alive.

    • @paulgibby6932
      @paulgibby6932 Год назад +2

      @@hut8_newzealand361 badump-bump

    • @robjohnston1433
      @robjohnston1433 Год назад +3

      ​@@hut8_newzealand361WHAT?!?!?!!! I DO hope the "Cat Protection League" was alerted!

    • @carl7664
      @carl7664 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@hut8_newzealand361 that’s Schrödinger

    • @MicroageHD
      @MicroageHD Месяц назад +3

      No, it's not "literally Heisenberg with his dog"... It's just Heisenberg with dog. They were not this disrespectful, come on.

  • @jo0ls
    @jo0ls 2 месяца назад +2

    I thought this might show his legendary weird personality but he just seems to be a very good listener here.

  • @jamesdean1143
    @jamesdean1143 Год назад +5

    Love the inverted pencil in the top pocket !

  • @australianmade2659
    @australianmade2659 Год назад +11

    Dirac should be a name every child learns

  • @lowellhanson5800
    @lowellhanson5800 Год назад +2

    Prof Hund's statement concerning unification is just as valid today in 2023.

  • @pauljonze
    @pauljonze 2 месяца назад +1

    Incredible, first time I've heard the great man talk

  • @Caturiya
    @Caturiya Год назад +2

    this sincere work in hysics has brought them automatically to a heartfull attentivity . Unfortunatey they did not go ahed with this.

  • @BinanceUSD
    @BinanceUSD 2 месяца назад +3

    Hund kept interrupting not letting Dirac finish his sentence but wonderful recording

  • @ronniechilds2002
    @ronniechilds2002 3 дня назад

    I read a fairly recent biography, but this is the first time I have ever heard and seen him speak. Cool.

  • @MrAllada
    @MrAllada 27 дней назад +1

    This is what going to the source means and why it is important; words directly said by the speaker instead of relying on the words of another who claims to have witness this talk.

  • @ynwicks7142
    @ynwicks7142 Год назад +10

    One of my grad school professors hosted him in the early 1980s and told us several stories about him. Apparently he hardly ever spoke.

  • @WAP1FM2
    @WAP1FM2 Год назад +11

    With highest regards to Prof Dirac....an exponent of Physics.

  • @billfrug
    @billfrug Год назад +7

    So what was the conclusion of the Viking lander / Mars radar wave experiments?

  • @pauldirac6243
    @pauldirac6243 Год назад

    Great find. Thanks.

  • @emilioughetto6716
    @emilioughetto6716 Год назад +2

    Thank you Mr Dirac. I love you

  • @Yotrek
    @Yotrek Месяц назад +1

    A Dirac: a unit of silence. The least number of words that can be spoken to convey an idea.

  • @jkvoot
    @jkvoot Год назад +3

    Their personalities come together the way negative and positive charge attracts.

  • @sujitmohanty1
    @sujitmohanty1 Год назад +3

    Two great mind! Living forever in every inquiring mind!

  • @KeithJones-yq6of
    @KeithJones-yq6of Год назад +7

    Dyson and Dirac were probably the best applied mathematicians in history

    • @robjohnston1433
      @robjohnston1433 Год назад +1

      Don't forget Sir Isaac!!!

    • @verbalium5517
      @verbalium5517 6 месяцев назад +1

      Hamilton is up there too!

    • @tgmtf5963
      @tgmtf5963 2 месяца назад

      I enjoyed using my Dyson Air Purifier 😊

    • @KeithJones-yq6of
      @KeithJones-yq6of 2 месяца назад +1

      @@robjohnston1433 Newton was probably the best Physicist in history in all fairness. He was more physics than maths

    • @brb4903
      @brb4903 Месяц назад

      exchange Dirac with Neumann and you're there

  • @paulvalletta01
    @paulvalletta01 12 дней назад

    wow, what a fantastic discussion.

  • @KrossFire330
    @KrossFire330 23 дня назад

    Paul Dirac was brilliant in ways I will probably never really understand.

  • @DMAOZO
    @DMAOZO 2 месяца назад +3

    "Once, Kapitza gave Dirac an English translation of Dostoyevsky’s Crime and Punishment and asked him to read it. Later, when Kapitza asked if he had enjoyed the book, Dirac’s only comment was: “It is nice, but in one of the chapters the author made a mistake. He describes the Sun as rising twice on the same day.”"

  • @miguelfelix2684
    @miguelfelix2684 Месяц назад

    This is excelent essence material! Much oblige

  • @erikpeterson25
    @erikpeterson25 Месяц назад

    The guy is still very sharp ...great interview and insight 👍

  • @daisuke6072
    @daisuke6072 Год назад

    fascinating insight into thinking at that point in time

  • @tarnopol
    @tarnopol Месяц назад +1

    Huge upload!

  • @nemo4479
    @nemo4479 Год назад +2

    17:39 On "renormalization" - A must see for theoretical phisicists...

  • @blancaroca8786
    @blancaroca8786 11 месяцев назад +3

    at around 15.30 to 16.00 Hund talks about Dirac large numbers 10to40 and 10to80 but the subtitles wrongly show 10to14 and 10to18 . An auto generation confusion and sometimes non-natives too.

    • @mehranshargh
      @mehranshargh  11 месяцев назад

      Thank you! I just fixed those numbers.

  • @johnkochen7264
    @johnkochen7264 8 месяцев назад +4

    Einstein had the great advantage of being well acquainted with Emmy Nöther’s work on symmetries.

  • @douglasrodenbach8000
    @douglasrodenbach8000 26 дней назад

    How does this only have 270,000+ views?? How??

  • @The22on
    @The22on Год назад +4

    This is what it looks like when 2 people care only about the science. Not about correctness, politics, reputation, etc. All that matters to them is what Feynman once said, "It does not matter if a theory is elegant. It only matters if it's actually going on in the real world." (I may not have the exact wording). These 2 brilliant men only cared about describing how the universe actually operated.

  • @paulkestyn518
    @paulkestyn518 Год назад +1

    I'm still fuzzy on the wavefunction/spin dualism (not enough to confuse iso-octane.)

  • @davidpalin1790
    @davidpalin1790 10 месяцев назад +3

    Paul Dirac a true genius 😮😮😮

  • @petrofilmeurope
    @petrofilmeurope Год назад +2

    Excuse me, but who is interviewing whom here? Thank you from Oslo.

  • @tubalcain1039
    @tubalcain1039 22 дня назад

    Friedrich Hund was famous for the Hund rules. Gottingen had a lot of brilliant people back in the 1920s and before.

  • @MK-wn6hl
    @MK-wn6hl 2 месяца назад

    Legendary man !! Paul Dirac.

  • @adbit007
    @adbit007 2 месяца назад

    Seeing them in video is amazing experience....only heard read their names in books....they are blessed by god

  • @billeckman7332
    @billeckman7332 Год назад +4

    Dirac was born and raised in Bristol England yet, he has a very pronounced accent. I wonder what the story is behind it.

    • @sabahattinsakman7985
      @sabahattinsakman7985 Год назад +3

      His father was a French-Swiss and forced his family speak French at home. That may be a reason.

    • @GHOSTDOG637
      @GHOSTDOG637 Месяц назад +1

      @@sabahattinsakman7985I heard a French physicist visited Dirac and practiced his weak English for many weeks prior to the visit so as to better converse with the Englishman. When leaving after an apparently frustrating discussion due to the language barrier, Dirac turned and spoke in perfect French to a housekeeper.

  • @RtB68
    @RtB68 Год назад +3

    A lot of this is, obviously, well out of date. The introduction of the Rockwell Retro Encabulator saw an end to such esoteric discussions between intellectual giants, largely as a result of the malleability of the hydrocoptic marzelvanes and the logic output of many differential girdlesprings into the college undergraduate physics syllabus.

  • @001firebrand
    @001firebrand Год назад +1

    "Physical theory must have mathematical beauty" 💖

  • @wilfredoriverajr.
    @wilfredoriverajr. Год назад

    what did we get from that radar deal?

  • @antoineah1
    @antoineah1 Год назад +3

    Great man

  • @tantratron
    @tantratron Год назад

    So fascinating

  • @warrendsmith6832
    @warrendsmith6832 Год назад

    is there a transcript of this interview?

    • @jeffwads
      @jeffwads Год назад +2

      You see those 3 dots? Select them and choose "show transcript".

  • @terencemeikle534
    @terencemeikle534 9 месяцев назад +2

    If anyone fancies a nice deep dig into the biog of this wonderful human being, I recommend Graham Farmelo's book, 'The Strangest Man'. Somewhere in the book's notes, you'll find a formula Dirac invented that totally ruined a college mathematical game for good.

  • @matiasjones1125
    @matiasjones1125 8 месяцев назад

    outstanding!!!

  • @reinerwilhelms-tricarico344
    @reinerwilhelms-tricarico344 21 день назад

    Now I wonder whether the questions about the mass ratios between proton and electron and other particles were ever settled.

  • @GreatVomitto
    @GreatVomitto 28 дней назад

    I like the fact that they hope to get unified theory pretty soon. I started reading about this topic in the 90's and physicists hoped we will get the theory soon after year 2000. Now over quarter in the 21'st century we are still nowhere near.

    • @maalikserebryakov
      @maalikserebryakov 21 день назад

      We haven’t had anyone like Paul dirac or people on his level since then.
      People now have become more selfish.
      The brightest people just take a medicine, computer sci or engineering degree just to make money.
      The culture of contributing to Physics and it’s natural philosophy is dying.
      I guess it makes sense for a subject like physics which won’t technically bring personal benefit. Sad.

  • @RiddlerBel
    @RiddlerBel Год назад +1

    Gentleman geniuses modest to the last. Where are they now?

  • @user-cu9ww9tj4i
    @user-cu9ww9tj4i 25 дней назад

    마치 끝나지 않는 퍼즐처럼 지금도 살아있는 확신이 듦.

  • @d-nihilus4422
    @d-nihilus4422 11 месяцев назад +3

    Poor Poincaré never gets credit for Relativity even though it was he who first discovered the symmetry contained in Lorentz's work, not Einstein. And it was Poincaré's work that Minkowski relied more heavily on in building his models of spacetime.

    • @rayfranco1256
      @rayfranco1256 10 месяцев назад +1

      But Poincare missed the most revolutionary aspect of Einstein's Relativity: that time is not constant. This allowed the full understanding of the revolutions of QM and GR.

    • @d-nihilus4422
      @d-nihilus4422 10 месяцев назад

      @@rayfranco1256 He did so in his essay "The Measure of Time" of 1898. He concluded with the measure of time writing: The simultaneity of two events, or the order of their succession, the equality of two durations, are to be so defined that the enunciation of the natural laws may be as simple as possible. In other words, all these rules, all these definitions are only the fruit of an unconscious opportunism.

    • @mimilagrayloise7980
      @mimilagrayloise7980 Месяц назад

      @d-nihilus4422 👍👍 On peut même dire que Minkowski a carrément plagié les travaux de Poincaré, notamment " le mémoire de Palerme" !!!

  • @G0ingN0va
    @G0ingN0va Месяц назад

    A man from my home town. I wonder what he would make of the Zero Function?