The JMG and Event Horizon TH-cam Membership or Podcast is here! Join for early ad free audio episodes, bonus episodes, sleep focused content, and full archive of both channels on podcast. Podcast Apps and Spotify: anchor.fm/john-michael-godier/subscribe Apple Podcasts: apple.co/3CS7rjT TH-cam Membership: th-cam.com/channels/z3qvETKooktNgCvvheuQDw.htmljoin
These bubbles of universe is what is discussed in my book the tau ceti anomaly. I’ve honestly not heard these idea before but for me made perfect sense. I also discuss life origins from Mars. My thinking clearly follows your guests thinking. It’s spooky. I’m a lowly engineer. Please look it up Michael.
Just to be clear, I do think it was a good idea to explain it, I was just making a tongue in cheek comment about the shared knowledge base of the EH audience 🙂
Nice..Paul Davies on Event Horizon! Time to make a sandwich and settle in for some awesomeness. I f**king love Thursday! This is seriously one of the best channels on TH-cam!
I truly hope, with all of my existence, that the question of are we alone is definitively answered before my time on Earth expires. I don't want to die until that answer has been proven or disproven. I also feel the same for seeing the first human beings stepping foot onto the Martian surface. At 43 I can only hope I am lucky enough to endure time to witness these events.
If you eat right and exercise, I bet you'll live to see humans walk on Mars and the discovery of life on exoplanets (plural). (I'm not so sure about finding intelligence, it may or may not be rare.)
Im 42, and i hope we are alone in intelligent life. Carl sagen felt the fact of being alone AND also not alone is equally terrifying. Im all for finding semi intelligent life, but the chances of finding a far more advanced life form, scares the crap out of me frankly. What we did to less 'civilized' humans here on earth is abhorrent.
Dinosaurs made rockets? I went to laugh, but pondered that statement for a while, and suddenly I got scared. Imagine a UAP/UFO landing here on Earth, with a T-Rex behind the wheel, screaming, "we were here first!!!" :D
Thanks as always for top notch “make you think” content. Talks like this keep my brain from getting old and stagnant and bored with life! You’re keeping our childlike wonder alive.
Atlantis was used as hypothetical an argument in a discussion by Plato I believe and the myth have grown since then. In the modern day we could just as well use an example from an movie.
@@michaelpettersson4919 Yes, I did not mean that he literally had in mind Plato's story, just that he speculated about a hyper-advanced ice age civilization. I was trying to be a bit cheeky
@@Scifi_Ape Yeah, but a little too slick and not longform interview style. Also, I think he's on the faculty somewhere and feels the need to stick to the scientific consensus. If I want that I can read a review paper 😂
@@10000words1 Actually I answered before listening through the whole thing and as such expected him to actually mention Atlantis. I STRONGLY doubt that there had been a pre ice age advanced civilization. It could be possible, perhaps that locally some people managed to barely reach out of elder stone age technology. It is suprising how advanced you can get with stone age technology if you really try.
Enjoyed this interview…. Paul Davies is a fellow Australian and always goes to the edge of science and has a look around. The dinosaur lunar scenario is a good example of thinking outside the toroid
@@suecondon1685 Paul was indeed born in England, but we like to think of Davy boy as an Aussie. He did take out Australian citizenship but I believe he still held onto to his British Citizenship. I am not certain if he has taken US citizenship.
17:50 - We must remember Fred Hoyle, much maligned. The Universe could be far older than we realise. If an anomaly started the Universe, it would have begun by creating a single iteration of a particle (electron) that kept running back and forth in time, or was being created in the same spot, through a reiteration of that creation moment (time-ceation anomaly). The endless creation of that particle (electron) in the same space and time would necessitate a displacement of the previous iteration, thus creating a "desire" of the "displaced iteration" to return to it's "spot of creation" - a "philosophical" description of gravity. When the accumulation grew so massive that the pressure was too great, there was an initial bang, a consequent "springing apart" of the accumulated "iterations", followed by a rebound pause in which more particles were created, leading to ever bigger bangs, until the total mass had enough "rebound energy" to create a sustained "bang" (Big Bang) which, with the help of the original particle creating "mechanism" keeps the Universe ever expanding. We still experience that "desire" to return to the "creation point" as Gravity!
Do like Paul Davies. Always level headed. Profound philosophical questions we basically have no idea about. "The universe is very large." Has to be the understatement of the year, if not, ever. Needed cheering up. Thanks.
Oh. My. Gawd. It has finally happened! I checked my calendar and I was overdue for a comment asking when Event Horizon and JMG would be available as podcasts. Today is a great day.
@@mikedrop4421 I don't just embrace it, I love it. Think about how awesome it is to help thousands of people conquer sleep problems and drift off to peaceful science and just escape the day. I really like that aspect of what I do :)
This was excellent. Lots of the obvious questions were asked that others are often afraid to ask, perhaps for fear of sounding stupid or just not understanding the subject, and he explained things in ways that other 'experts' often fudge, probably because they do not know the answers or understand the theories enough themselves either. It will definitely get a second listening today and I will point others to it. Thanks, as always.
Here we go guys and gals.. It's Thursday! 🙏 Always my favorite time of the week.. The only subscription I actively wait for 😁 Time to fire up the bong and fall into.. The event horizon 👽
I picture the multiverse as a giant flower field, where each flower is a separate (bubble) universe and each petal on the flower is a separate reality (like the branching off timelines in Many Worlds theory).
@@OmegaWolf747 Its a theory of Professor Lee Smolin, look up cosmological natural selection. Disculogic also has a cool video on it. Personally I think maybe Penrose was onto something when he suggested after heat death and all matter decays into photons, and after black holes evaporate and only photons are left it sets off another big bang to recreate matter and this just happens infinitely maybe.
I love listening to this channel and sitting outside in my backyard late at night. I find myself looking up at the stars (currently mesmerized by Beatleguis) smiling 😌 What's out there?
“We do not live in the best of all possible worlds…” More than three hundred years later and people are still trying to refute Gottfried Leibniz. I believe Voltaire’s ears perked up at that statement.
I 💜🧡💚 this channel! To me it's the best body of work in the youtube verse. Jhon is the best interviewer ever. His ego is so beautiful. Thank you so much Event Horizon!🧡💜💚
This is the best video I've seen for years. And I've seen a lot of videos. Paul Davies is interested in all the same mad stuff I am. Approaching the most insane questions with flawless logic.
Gosh darn JMG.. i asked for more aussie content and you said you might, and dammit you provided in spades 🤣 thank you mate. :) you bought out the big guns. Paul Davies, one of the pointy ends of his field too. Super duper impressed mate 👌👌👌
Ahh I finally found your channel! Thank you for providing such excellent content! I had found your channel by chance (using my desktop) but didnt have the way to subscribe. So now I've been reunited!
Sorry I can't be of help but I really do recommend an ereader device. Being able to get literally any book that's been written within seconds (for free if you are so inclined to use channels other than Amazon for acquisition of books, there are a lot of very generous people out there sharing their digital libraries as one might do with a public library) is just so convenient. Not only that but its much easier to find digital copies of rare or banned books, books out of stock locally which seems to be your problem, and its rather nice not having to shell out for textbooks if you're a student. Though of course I understand that nothing quite replaces the look, smell, feel, and sound of ink on paper. I wish you luck in your quest for the enigmatic paperback.
Brick, you know, I think it's all about how high international postage has gotten. It used to be I could have sent you a signed copy by sea mail and while it would take 6-8 weeks, it was at reasonable cost. But now, that's all gone, and charging someone over $50 usd for shipping is just something I can't in good conscience offer. My signature is free and my books are supposed to be priced reasonably and I'm guessing Amazon just hasn't found a way to make that work. That said, if I get back to visiting Europe post-pandemic, I'll bring copies and sign them directly wherever I'm at.
@@barahng You do understand,that if you "buy" an ebook, you actually don't buy and own an ebook, but just obtain a temporary usage right, which may be revoked any time for reasonable cause, and it might be deleted at any time by Amazon right ? Has happened before (eg with 1984 by Orwell, Amazon had a licence issue, and thus globally deleted the ebooks it had sold on all kindles remotely). In contrast a physical object like a classical book is legally owned by you. Of course not the content in it, but the physical object. That's legally a true ownership and can also be transferred (aka resold). In general: buying a digital asset never obtains ownership, like physical media do, but only gets you a (revocable) usage licence. If you don't care, that's fine, but you should understand the difference. It's somewhat like buying a computer game, that requires online authentication. Sooner of later the publisher will shut down the servers and your game will become unplayable. If you know and accept that, that's perfectly ok. but you should be aware that it will happen and that it might be the day after you bought the game. Imho it's also just a matter of time until the first authoritarian regimes and later possibly even democracies will use this capability for censorship purposes, deleting unwanted content.
Just saying smoking some weed(legal in 🇨🇦) waiting till it kicks In and then hearing that intro is my favourite thing about Thursday nights. The best sleeps afterwards
Nothing is eating the universe. Matter follows the same principle as bubbles in a bubble bath. The only difference is that space itself contains a dark energy principle whereby voids expand.
The question of are we alone has never troubled me..one could say I have faith believe without a shadow of a doubt life permeates the universe our search 🔍 is just beginning. Thank you John🎩 enjoyed the interview and your content in general.
I visualize the the big bang being in the middle of a fluxfield, like in the middle of a magnet. all matter is at its most dense position, we are moving away from the middle and while following fluxlines everything apears moving away from each other, in the end we will end up on the other side of the big bang where all matter is moving closer toward itself...
With sufficient time a civilization already could and, presumptively, already did spread throughout the galaxy. The method is simply to travel from one star's system to whatever other star system happens to occasionally pass by close enough to be reached with whatever tools of space travel they may have available at the time the opportunity arises.
So in an infinite universe, every conceivable religion would also be provable. So therefore a flying spaghetti monster god is out there somewhere. Cool.
If you google 'fine tuning' and learn what it actually refers to, you might actually come delete your comments. You'll be embarrassed that you don't know and are showing everyone that you don't.
It is possible that we are the first or the only at this time from our perspective. At some point life was first on some planet. It is possible it is us, but highly improbable.
These bubbles of universe is what is discussed in my book the tau ceti anomaly. I’ve honestly not heard these idea before but for me made perfect sense. I also discuss life origins from Mars. My thinking clearly follows your guests thinking. It’s spooky. I’m a lowly engineer.
Any chance your next book describes how our world was "prepared" for learning we are not alone set in a post contact near-futire? Keep up your good work.
Wifey listened to this guy's resume at the start " dafaq this how you get so smart listening to these ledgends ? Well self taught but yea listening to JMG excersicres my mind in stuff I was already interested. And thanks for the topic that you havnt touched on latley mind blowing stuff... sry 3 am ramblings
Consider the vast volume of the universe, then look at the volume in that universe that we know contains life. Only a few cubic kilometers of space From just under the floor of the ocean, to a few kilometers above the solid and liquid surface can support like. Even if we assume there are trillions of Earth like planets in the universe that support lifeforms, the total volume in the universe that can support life is vanishingly small compared to the total volume of the known universe. The universe seems to be just beardly able to support life in a very limited space.
Agreed. And carbon that makes us up didn't form till stars coalesced, and then exploded and then reformed......... It's evolving and the universe may continue to change till it can no longer support organic life.
@@danielpaulson8838 My point is, right now the universe can support life, but only just barely. The chance that you could be relocated, naked, to some other random point in the universe, the chances that you would end up someplace you could survive long than a few seconds would be so low it might as well be considered impossible. Yet the chances you would be born in an environment you can survive in are nearly 100% This is because for your mother to give birth she already had to be in an environment where she could live.
@@bozo5632 When they talk about suitability for life, they mean the weak and strong nuclear forces, the gravitational forces, etc. The forces required for matter/atomic structure, to even form. If the gravitation was off just a bit for example, atoms could not form, Etc. It's not about the cosmic empty space. You could still have life there if you import the elements.
@@erictaylor5462 I get that. I was adding to it. It's a bigger picture than just having a temperate water environment with active bio chemistry. No, we can't live in almost all of our cosmic space. But if you imported a galaxy and solar system to that empty space, we could exist there. That is because the laws of this universe allow atoms to form among other things. Reduce gravity, and all comes apart. Life could not exist anywhere. You guys aren't understanding the term correctly. Life can exist anywhere in this universe where the matter is present. It cannot exist in a universe where matter is not present. And I mean life as we know it.
I understand there's no such place as outside of the Universe or 'before' the big bang. But it sure would be interesting to see what happens if you could approach the edge of the Universe
I can remember when steady state was a thing, and time was only on the inside of the Universe. Back then the more Universe you put in your head the more it didn't work.
That was an interesting take on the multiverse! If you consider our 3-dimensional universe as one of many in a higher spatial dimension, and time as an emergent property of that 3-dimensional universe evolving within that higher spatial dimension, then one "bang" and its ensuing bubble will eventually dissipate its energy through that higher spatial dimension, and provide it with enough energy to create another "bang"!
Doctor Davies' assessment that we live in a universe which is is not great but is good, reminds me of the accounts of Creation in Genesis: "...and God saw what he had made, and said, 'It is Good." Not to start a whole big deal about Creationism or anything like that. I know better than to read the Bible as some sort of history textbook. I just find the doctor's words to be...an interesting choice.
the first proto planets, the number of semi synchronistic inceptions of forms and sentient life as you know it to appear upon them, the shape that can represent said inceptions of planets with life on them, the e 8 geometry, and the idea that complexity may be just a manifestation of a supreme order, but what we see is the complexity, not what lies behind said complexity.
The JMG and Event Horizon TH-cam Membership or Podcast is here! Join for early ad free audio episodes, bonus episodes, sleep focused content, and full archive of both channels on podcast.
Podcast Apps and Spotify: anchor.fm/john-michael-godier/subscribe
Apple Podcasts: apple.co/3CS7rjT
TH-cam Membership: th-cam.com/channels/z3qvETKooktNgCvvheuQDw.htmljoin
@@hiqhduke we were testing out TH-cam's auto time stamps, they didn't do the job. Also, we were up at 4am recording an interview.
I am still having problems to sign up in Spotify: it says that this podcast has no content yet. Is there any region restriction? I am in Brazil.
These bubbles of universe is what is discussed in my book the tau ceti anomaly. I’ve honestly not heard these idea before but for me made perfect sense. I also discuss life origins from Mars. My thinking clearly follows your guests thinking. It’s spooky. I’m a lowly engineer.
Please look it up Michael.
Hi Daniel, it may not be available in your country. You can join our patreon at the $5 level and you will get an RSS feed you can use in podcast apps.
Oooh, a banging video from JMG and Davies on a most excellent Arthursday? Life is grand!
Paul Davies thinking he needs to explain the Kardashev scale to the event horizon audience, aww bless.
Yea I was thinking that 🤔 and John patiently being a good interviewer and the Paul suprises with bam why not a level 4 civ that's a God
Comments like that keep the new minds away. Understand that together we are stronger and brighter x
@@voteneil5408 your comment is the shit dude. I like this.
I did laugh a little at the parent comment. I kinda feel bad now
Some may have not known
Just to be clear, I do think it was a good idea to explain it, I was just making a tongue in cheek comment about the shared knowledge base of the EH audience 🙂
Nice..Paul Davies on Event Horizon! Time to make a sandwich and settle in for some awesomeness. I f**king love Thursday! This is seriously one of the best channels on TH-cam!
Thank you for watching Matt!
@@EventHorizonShow Absolutely! I can't get enough of your content!
I truly hope, with all of my existence, that the question of are we alone is definitively answered before my time on Earth expires. I don't want to die until that answer has been proven or disproven. I also feel the same for seeing the first human beings stepping foot onto the Martian surface. At 43 I can only hope I am lucky enough to endure time to witness these events.
Same. It’s literally the only question I want answered before I die. I’m 44 - get Enceladus probed stat.
I think we all know what the answer is. And that answer is yes. I'm 38 and I am certain of us not being alone . Even here on earth
If you eat right and exercise, I bet you'll live to see humans walk on Mars and the discovery of life on exoplanets (plural). (I'm not so sure about finding intelligence, it may or may not be rare.)
If we are alone, us humans will not get confirmation of this for 10s of thousands of years if ever.
Im 42, and i hope we are alone in intelligent life. Carl sagen felt the fact of being alone AND also not alone is equally terrifying. Im all for finding semi intelligent life, but the chances of finding a far more advanced life form, scares the crap out of me frankly. What we did to less 'civilized' humans here on earth is abhorrent.
Dinosaurs made rockets? I went to laugh, but pondered that statement for a while, and suddenly I got scared. Imagine a UAP/UFO landing here on Earth, with a T-Rex behind the wheel, screaming, "we were here first!!!" :D
What if we are all on stolen land. Watcha gonna do than? Right, nothing. cuz we are.
I just ate dinner. *I AM LITERALLY EATING THE UNIVERSE*
I mean, I guess the universe is eating itself...
Thanks as always for top notch “make you think” content. Talks like this keep my brain from getting old and stagnant and bored with life! You’re keeping our childlike wonder alive.
Once again, best content on TH-cam. I did not expect Prof. Davies to speculate about the existence of Atlantis!
Spoilers man. Spoilers!
Atlantis was used as hypothetical an argument in a discussion by Plato I believe and the myth have grown since then. In the modern day we could just as well use an example from an movie.
@@michaelpettersson4919 Yes, I did not mean that he literally had in mind Plato's story, just that he speculated about a hyper-advanced ice age civilization. I was trying to be a bit cheeky
@@Scifi_Ape Yeah, but a little too slick and not longform interview style. Also, I think he's on the faculty somewhere and feels the need to stick to the scientific consensus. If I want that I can read a review paper 😂
@@10000words1 Actually I answered before listening through the whole thing and as such expected him to actually mention Atlantis. I STRONGLY doubt that there had been a pre ice age advanced civilization. It could be possible, perhaps that locally some people managed to barely reach out of elder stone age technology. It is suprising how advanced you can get with stone age technology if you really try.
Great show... Please have Paul Davies back as many times as you and he have opportunity!
Enjoyed this interview…. Paul Davies is a fellow Australian and always goes to the edge of science and has a look around.
The dinosaur lunar scenario is a good example of thinking outside the toroid
I'm still waiting for you guys to take Ken Ham back down under....
Paul Davies is English...
@@suecondon1685 Paul was indeed born in England, but we like to think of Davy boy as an Aussie. He did take out Australian citizenship but I believe he still held onto to his British Citizenship.
I am not certain if he has taken US citizenship.
It plays in the background! Hooray! 🖤
Thank you so much to mr davies and toyou JohnMichael. You know not how much i appreciate both of your works.
A day off and two episodes of Event Horizon to watch. Life does not get much better than this.
Fantastic interview! I'm going to get his book. Thanks for the episode.
Speaking of books, John do you sell autographed copies?
'The Universe is Stranger than we can imagine'
17:50 - We must remember Fred Hoyle, much maligned. The Universe could be far older than we realise. If an anomaly started the Universe, it would have begun by creating a single iteration of a particle (electron) that kept running back and forth in time, or was being created in the same spot, through a reiteration of that creation moment (time-ceation anomaly).
The endless creation of that particle (electron) in the same space and time would necessitate a displacement of the previous iteration, thus creating a "desire" of the "displaced iteration" to return to it's "spot of creation" - a "philosophical" description of gravity.
When the accumulation grew so massive that the pressure was too great, there was an initial bang, a consequent "springing apart" of the accumulated "iterations", followed by a rebound pause in which more particles were created, leading to ever bigger bangs, until the total mass had enough "rebound energy" to create a sustained "bang" (Big Bang) which, with the help of the original particle creating "mechanism" keeps the Universe ever expanding.
We still experience that "desire" to return to the "creation point" as Gravity!
Do like Paul Davies. Always level headed.
Profound philosophical questions we basically have no idea about.
"The universe is very large." Has to be the understatement of the year, if not, ever.
Needed cheering up. Thanks.
Oh. My. Gawd. It has finally happened!
I checked my calendar and I was overdue for a comment asking when Event Horizon and JMG would be available as podcasts.
Today is a great day.
It has happened! Which platform did you sign up on?
Spotify.
They even embraced the fact so many of us use it to help us sleep!
@@mikedrop4421 I don't just embrace it, I love it. Think about how awesome it is to help thousands of people conquer sleep problems and drift off to peaceful science and just escape the day. I really like that aspect of what I do :)
Excellent as always. Always love listening to Davies.
Brilliant guest! I loved hearing his insights and speculations. Thanks!
In the beggining, the Universe was created. This made a lot of people angry, and has been widely considered a "bad move"
@@michaeljf6472 for the win.
This was excellent. Lots of the obvious questions were asked that others are often afraid to ask, perhaps for fear of sounding stupid or just not understanding the subject, and he explained things in ways that other 'experts' often fudge, probably because they do not know the answers or understand the theories enough themselves either. It will definitely get a second listening today and I will point others to it. Thanks, as always.
Paul Davies is so amazing, great episode.
Here we go guys and gals.. It's Thursday! 🙏 Always my favorite time of the week.. The only subscription I actively wait for 😁 Time to fire up the bong and fall into.. The event horizon 👽
Fantastic channel and content. Event Horizon is a joy to listen too and it graciously lacks ideology. Thank you JMG for you efforts!
Mirror life is an interesting concept, I've thought about that as a chemistry student back in school
John, you're an excellent interviewer and you ask the right questions. This is just bliss for me to listen to.
I picture the multiverse as a giant flower field, where each flower is a separate (bubble) universe and each petal on the flower is a separate reality (like the branching off timelines in Many Worlds theory).
Sounds kind of like black hole genesis theory.
@@tri3183 Is that where our universe formed inside a black hole in a different R universe?
@@OmegaWolf747 Its a theory of Professor Lee Smolin, look up cosmological natural selection. Disculogic also has a cool video on it. Personally I think maybe Penrose was onto something when he suggested after heat death and all matter decays into photons, and after black holes evaporate and only photons are left it sets off another big bang to recreate matter and this just happens infinitely maybe.
I liked this particular conversation enough to save it for a later re-listen. good show.
excellent as always john. loving your work mate. cheers!
I love listening to this channel and sitting outside in my backyard late at night. I find myself looking up at the stars (currently mesmerized by Beatleguis) smiling 😌
What's out there?
That sounds perfect!
I adore this channel. You are allowing me to learn and question through the guests you have on x
“We do not live in the best of all possible worlds…”
More than three hundred years later and people are still trying to refute Gottfried Leibniz. I believe Voltaire’s ears perked up at that statement.
I 💜🧡💚 this channel! To me it's the best body of work in the youtube verse. Jhon is the best interviewer ever. His ego is so beautiful. Thank you so much Event Horizon!🧡💜💚
And thank you for taking time to listen :)
I remember a pocket of space time that didn't yet include John Michael Godier and this channel. Dark times that no longer dark matter!
I´m nestIng myselfs in for a ..great science adventure , by the best space narrator on the interwebings .
Grtzz from the Netherlands Johny geerts
Starts at 1:38
This is the best video I've seen for years. And I've seen a lot of videos. Paul Davies is interested in all the same mad stuff I am. Approaching the most insane questions with flawless logic.
LOVE Paul Davies.
His book how to build a time machine is what got me into physics as a kid. He's a legend
Gosh darn JMG.. i asked for more aussie content and you said you might, and dammit you provided in spades 🤣 thank you mate. :) you bought out the big guns. Paul Davies, one of the pointy ends of his field too. Super duper impressed mate 👌👌👌
Gonna be much more. All sorts of good things happening in Australia, not the least of which is the development of the Square Kilometer Array.
@@JohnMichaelGodier yessss, pathfinder is going operational next year its a really exciting time here right now. Thank you for bringing it up mate :)
The void are created by the great attractor. Galaxy move in direction of the attractor so it create void
Exactly. Not to mention space expanding and making more space. What kind of clickbait nonsense is this title.
I love that this comment was typed in the way that a caveman would say it, like a cro magnon ;)
@@elgoblinocoolio4378 I just discovered fire a week ago. Just typing on my cavepad is genius
Ahh I finally found your channel! Thank you for providing such excellent content! I had found your channel by chance (using my desktop) but didnt have the way to subscribe. So now I've been reunited!
John, an entirety unrelated question: where can I get "the Salvagers"? Amazon in Europe only has the Kindle version, the paperback is unavailable.
Sorry I can't be of help but I really do recommend an ereader device. Being able to get literally any book that's been written within seconds (for free if you are so inclined to use channels other than Amazon for acquisition of books, there are a lot of very generous people out there sharing their digital libraries as one might do with a public library) is just so convenient. Not only that but its much easier to find digital copies of rare or banned books, books out of stock locally which seems to be your problem, and its rather nice not having to shell out for textbooks if you're a student.
Though of course I understand that nothing quite replaces the look, smell, feel, and sound of ink on paper. I wish you luck in your quest for the enigmatic paperback.
Brick, you know, I think it's all about how high international postage has gotten. It used to be I could have sent you a signed copy by sea mail and while it would take 6-8 weeks, it was at reasonable cost. But now, that's all gone, and charging someone over $50 usd for shipping is just something I can't in good conscience offer. My signature is free and my books are supposed to be priced reasonably and I'm guessing Amazon just hasn't found a way to make that work. That said, if I get back to visiting Europe post-pandemic, I'll bring copies and sign them directly wherever I'm at.
@@JohnMichaelGodier lol John where night owls
I was just thinking if I could ever get supermind signed as you where typing that comment.
@@barahng You do understand,that if you "buy" an ebook, you actually don't buy and own an ebook, but just obtain a temporary usage right, which may be revoked any time for reasonable cause, and it might be deleted at any time by Amazon right ? Has happened before (eg with 1984 by Orwell, Amazon had a licence issue, and thus globally deleted the ebooks it had sold on all kindles remotely).
In contrast a physical object like a classical book is legally owned by you. Of course not the content in it, but the physical object. That's legally a true ownership and can also be transferred (aka resold). In general: buying a digital asset never obtains ownership, like physical media do, but only gets you a (revocable) usage licence. If you don't care, that's fine, but you should understand the difference.
It's somewhat like buying a computer game, that requires online authentication. Sooner of later the publisher will shut down the servers and your game will become unplayable. If you know and accept that, that's perfectly ok. but you should be aware that it will happen and that it might be the day after you bought the game.
Imho it's also just a matter of time until the first authoritarian regimes and later possibly even democracies will use this capability for censorship purposes, deleting unwanted content.
Always awe inspiring content with professor paul davies!
Maybe there's a monolith on phobos
Just saying smoking some weed(legal in 🇨🇦) waiting till it kicks In and then hearing that intro is my favourite thing about Thursday nights. The best sleeps afterwards
This is something I can like too! ☮️
I'm pretty sure it's Langoliers.
I love the multiverse hypothesis it really is mind boggling!
The entire multi-verse thing is so over my head.
JMG - best content!! THANK YOU 🙏
Now I can't stop imagining aliens finding Armstrong's bucket 😂🤣 thanks John 🎩
The void of my ex gf's soul is eating the universe, I'm afraid.
F
I knew it had to be something caused by a woman...it all makes perfect sense now
Nothing is eating the universe. Matter follows the same principle as bubbles in a bubble bath. The only difference is that space itself contains a dark energy principle whereby voids expand.
The question of are we alone has never troubled me..one could say I have faith believe without a shadow of a doubt life permeates the universe our search 🔍 is just beginning. Thank you John🎩 enjoyed the interview and your content in general.
I visualize the the big bang being in the middle of a fluxfield, like in the middle of a magnet. all matter is at its most dense position, we are moving away from the middle and while following fluxlines everything apears moving away from each other, in the end we will end up on the other side of the big bang where all matter is moving closer toward itself...
That's an Intriguing analogy in my opinion.
Thats a VERY interesting way to look at it. Thats actually one the best interpretations I've heard.
With sufficient time a civilization already could and, presumptively, already did spread throughout the galaxy. The method is simply to travel from one star's system to whatever other star system happens to occasionally pass by close enough to be reached with whatever tools of space travel they may have available at the time the opportunity arises.
So in an infinite universe, every conceivable religion would also be provable. So therefore a flying spaghetti monster god is out there somewhere. Cool.
Ramen to that
That would totally be awesome and frightening at the same time.
Had the same idea many years ago, well done, friend.
@ That's really very good.
Huge fan of Davies. Thanks again JMG.
Listening to Event Horizon and ate an edible. Gonna be a great hour of relaxation
Godier talking multiverse?
Yes please!
the mass gap problem, the hawking radiation, the anisotropy... black holes can also be studied as virtual objects...
There's a school of thought that all information in the universe is slowly being replaced by clickbaity titles.
"You won't believe!"
Fine tuning is the result of seeing where the arrow landed then painting a target around it.
If you google 'fine tuning' and learn what it actually refers to, you might actually come delete your comments. You'll be embarrassed that you don't know and are showing everyone that you don't.
@@Randomguy-ep7zl Nonsense. I understand what it means.
@@bozo5632 Google it. You sound like you're home schooled.
One of my favorite episodes
I'm sure universes bang all the time
This guy is amazing!!
It is possible that we are the first or the only at this time from our perspective. At some point life was first on some planet. It is possible it is us, but highly improbable.
Yo, its awesome to hear from Big Paul.
These bubbles of universe is what is discussed in my book the tau ceti anomaly. I’ve honestly not heard these idea before but for me made perfect sense. I also discuss life origins from Mars. My thinking clearly follows your guests thinking. It’s spooky. I’m a lowly engineer.
Any chance your next book describes how our world was "prepared" for learning we are not alone set in a post contact near-futire? Keep up your good work.
Wifey listened to this guy's resume at the start " dafaq this how you get so smart listening to these ledgends ? Well self taught but yea listening to JMG excersicres my mind in stuff I was already interested. And thanks for the topic that you havnt touched on latley mind blowing stuff... sry 3 am ramblings
Rewatching this at 3am a year later😅
Very interesting, thank you 👍
Best channel on youtube.
Excellent, as always.
We are literally eating the universe every single day… nom nom nom 😋
21:00 - So about 10^-6? Fascinating
Consider the vast volume of the universe, then look at the volume in that universe that we know contains life.
Only a few cubic kilometers of space From just under the floor of the ocean, to a few kilometers above the solid and liquid surface can support like.
Even if we assume there are trillions of Earth like planets in the universe that support lifeforms, the total volume in the universe that can support life is vanishingly small compared to the total volume of the known universe.
The universe seems to be just beardly able to support life in a very limited space.
Agreed. And carbon that makes us up didn't form till stars coalesced, and then exploded and then reformed......... It's evolving and the universe may continue to change till it can no longer support organic life.
Statistically zero percent of the universe is suitable for life, accurate to a dozen or more decimal places.
@@danielpaulson8838 My point is, right now the universe can support life, but only just barely.
The chance that you could be relocated, naked, to some other random point in the universe, the chances that you would end up someplace you could survive long than a few seconds would be so low it might as well be considered impossible. Yet the chances you would be born in an environment you can survive in are nearly 100%
This is because for your mother to give birth she already had to be in an environment where she could live.
@@bozo5632 When they talk about suitability for life, they mean the weak and strong nuclear forces, the gravitational forces, etc. The forces required for matter/atomic structure, to even form.
If the gravitation was off just a bit for example, atoms could not form, Etc.
It's not about the cosmic empty space. You could still have life there if you import the elements.
@@erictaylor5462 I get that. I was adding to it. It's a bigger picture than just having a temperate water environment with active bio chemistry.
No, we can't live in almost all of our cosmic space. But if you imported a galaxy and solar system to that empty space, we could exist there.
That is because the laws of this universe allow atoms to form among other things. Reduce gravity, and all comes apart. Life could not exist anywhere.
You guys aren't understanding the term correctly. Life can exist anywhere in this universe where the matter is present.
It cannot exist in a universe where matter is not present.
And I mean life as we know it.
Janeway and 7 of 9 got trapped in a void it was alful.
One of the best guests you have ever ever had on. Maybe second to the passionate NASA guy with the southern accent 😉
Great stuff! Thanks.
I'm ready. ❤️💕
Thanks so much for the video and amazing talk.
I Hope you one Day can have a talk about our BIG OCEAN...So much we don't know.
I wish All the best.
Let’s just be clear - there is with a probability bordering on certainty no life on Venus.
Thanks
Great content again John and congrats on the new venture hope it all goes great for ya you deserve it 👍💪☘️
Thank you Ryan. Love our Irish fans.
The hadrosaur that's coming to dinner.
Yeah! My favorite topic! Politicans... err, Super Voids!
Love the entry music.
7am, well I guess I could use a nap
I understand there's no such place as outside of the Universe or 'before' the big bang. But it sure would be interesting to see what happens if you could approach the edge of the Universe
I can remember when steady state was a thing, and time was only on the inside of the Universe. Back then the more Universe you put in your head the more it didn't work.
That was an interesting take on the multiverse! If you consider our 3-dimensional universe as one of many in a higher spatial dimension, and time as an emergent property of that 3-dimensional universe evolving within that higher spatial dimension, then one "bang" and its ensuing bubble will eventually dissipate its energy through that higher spatial dimension, and provide it with enough energy to create another "bang"!
I assume it's a mega Ai who's eating up stars for energy lmao
Doctor Davies' assessment that we live in a universe which is is not great but is good, reminds me of the accounts of Creation in Genesis: "...and God saw what he had made, and said, 'It is Good." Not to start a whole big deal about Creationism or anything like that. I know better than to read the Bible as some sort of history textbook. I just find the doctor's words to be...an interesting choice.
the colored digits of pi, the overlap, of similar tangents, the modulous, the sieve of eratosthenes, the cellular automata..
the universe is a giant forloop with an if statement that breaks out on the content creation. :-)
Error: NullReferenceException: "Object reference not set to an instance of an object"
Nope it's turtles.
@@jimgraham6722 i like turtles
The human brain looks for one answer. Maybe you're both right.
the first proto planets, the number of semi synchronistic inceptions of forms and sentient life as you know it to appear upon them, the shape that can represent said inceptions of planets with life on them, the e 8 geometry, and the idea that complexity may be just a manifestation of a supreme order, but what we see is the complexity, not what lies behind said complexity.
Space is definitely not suited for life
Space is possibly suited for creating life.
PD is in my opinion one of the top 5 minds in Physics who are alive today.
Too much to comment on. Thanks JMG