Well edited, well put, good job. I hope to see you do more and more ! much love from a guy that watched 60-80% of all educational channels on youtube. c: I hope you stick towards more medical/chemical/phyisics, there are tons of amazingly wholesome/tragic stories through time. And it's less political, so all people around the world will love education without "messy waters".
In order to express the idea that I needed (questions about the meaning of life), a conversation about rights and financial compensation for cells would have been redundant. Especially since Rebecca Skloot covered this topic beautifully in her book
Life is full of beautiful moments of love, compassion, awe, and connection but its also full of hate, intolerance, indifference, and loss. You can have too much life and death is the next step to evolve even if it is as particles bringing nutrients to a tree of grass that intern nourishes the land.
Well edited, well put, good job. I hope to see you do more and more ! much love from a guy that watched 60-80% of all educational channels on youtube. c:
I hope you stick towards more medical/chemical/phyisics, there are tons of amazingly wholesome/tragic stories through time. And it's less political, so all people around the world will love education without "messy waters".
Thank you!
As the author of a channel with 66 subscribers, it is really important for me to hear these words.
Of course I'll do more and more...
kinda sucks that you omitted all the controversy about consent and compensation for her cells
In order to express the idea that I needed (questions about the meaning of life), a conversation about rights and financial compensation for cells would have been redundant. Especially since Rebecca Skloot covered this topic beautifully in her book
@@shcherbakov.sergey the thing is, you barely mentioned it
Life is full of beautiful moments of love, compassion, awe, and connection but its also full of hate, intolerance, indifference, and loss. You can have too much life and death is the next step to evolve even if it is as particles bringing nutrients to a tree of grass that intern nourishes the land.
In such a context, one inevitably comes to the question: “Where do the boundaries of one’s own self end?”