This Old Book Predicted Everything
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- čas přidán 27. 08. 2020
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About Thoughty2
Thoughty2 (Arran) is a British CZcamsr and gatekeeper of useless facts. Thoughty2 creates mind-blowing factual videos, on the weirdest, wackiest and most interesting topics about space, physics, tech, politics, conspiracy theories, and opinion.
#Thoughty2 #Informational
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Editing: Matt Murray / Ocular Visuals
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Gamer
I may be...
You make great videos, Thoughty. Thanks, man.
thoughty got scamed
Get your tongues out his ring piece , that's my job 💩
“History doesnt repeat itself but it does rhyme” - Mark Twain
Historia ipsa non iteratur, remigat!
@@Nahobino777 same
A man also ahead of his time
Damn, Mark Twain took all the good quotes. 😤
That is one of the shittest Mark Twain quotes I've ever heard.
Science fiction authors try to predict the future, but end up designing it.
🎯 the elite filth use it
My family has always said that
And in the last couple days they have completely stopped even hiding their agenda. Somehow the idiots are eating the censorship and doxxing right up.
True. And poets are the unacknowledged legislators of the world.
👍👏👏👏
Mentioned books:
George Orwell 1984 4:18
Jules Verne Travel To The Center Of The Earth 6:29
Jules Verne 20000 Leagues Under The Sea 6:33
Jules Verne From The Earth To The Moon(1856) 6:34
Isaac Asimov I Robot (rly good) 8:57
Herbert George Wells War Of The Worlds 9:07
Herbert George Wells The Shape Of Things To Come 9:16
Neil R Jones Space War (not sure) 10:18
Aldous Huxley Brave New World 11:12
Hugo Gernsback Ralph 124 C41+
Victor Appleton Tom Sviwft And His Electric Shock Rifle 15:30
You're the best
What about the bible whose predictions have mostly
have come to pass?
@@cathyhamlin3611 wasn't in the video
@@cathyhamlin3611 which predictions?
What about Fahrenheit 451@ 16:40
Originally published in London in 1892, Golf in the Year 2000 is the story of Alexander John Gibson, a golf afficionado who "fell into a trance on the night of Thursday, March 24, 1892" and awoke 108 years later on March 25 in the year 2000. This amazing book predicted television, digital watches, bullet trains, and more.
The movie “idiocracy” is the single most accurate prediction movie... hands down!
water? like from the toilet?
Brawndo got what plants crave!!!
People n fruit n shit. LoL.
@@harukasatou1359 us just hit 250,000 deaths i dont think its over lmao
When that movie came out I said that debt is the direction this country is going if we don't start doing our homework
“It’s easier to fool people than to convince them that they have been fooled”
~{Mark Twain}~
yep
''it's not what you don't know that gets ya' into trouble...it's what ya' know for sure...that just ain't so'' Mark Twain
Well said,thank you.
@thomas fraley well to be honest,it's an illusion...you only think you have a choice ,the TRUTH is the people that actually run this planet they have already made a choice they know exactly who is going to be their little public puppet,,,get my drift yet,now you know...
@Dylan Rogers what do you disagree
Now I’m not sure if these authors “predicted” anything or if the coming generations of scientists were influenced by the “predictions” 🧐 Great video
Roko's Basilisk Thought Experiment.
I've often wondered the same of the Bible 😏
@@jaeno1 That's mostly just pure delusion.
Both.
Or the "scientists" were directed by the "thinkers", the WEF has been playing a century long game of takeover the globe... Klaus Schwab was directly funded by the German NAZI party, even his Ivy League education was a CIA programme... the "young leaders" system is revolting...
Imagine being frozen for 40,000,000 years and waking up to *awwwwww hell nah, what is SHE doing her?!?*
Imagine what god would think if he could see through someone's eyes 😂
🐱
@z borg why did you have to send me dark magic music lol. Doesn't help me at all cause I saw apophis on a heavy mushroom trip.
The crucified star is coming
@@deathbydeviceable he can
Someone needs to tell the government that Orwell's book was a warning not a how to manual.
I have said this exact thing many times.
@@KevinHudsonL They based it on his work and improved on it, so people can't have a chance like in Orwell's book
Mario W excuse me? Winston and his buddies actually had a chance? You are funny.
The problem is us, as citizens, are doing it to ourselves. Big brother is watching because we invite him with us everywhere we go. Alexa and Siri, smart phones, gps... we pretty much beg to be watched! From there everything else that happens is just falling dominos
@@Chris-rj4fs , Someone has been keeping their eyes open. Stay strong.
Yoooh you tricked me into watching your whole sponsor, didn't even realise it was one until the end. Well played man well played
Masterful writing right there 🌟
It was *S M O O T H*
@Jeremy Sheppard you South African bro?
Was it smoother than a brew sponsor?
Well a man stuck a stick in the ground and found out that it was 40,000km around sooooo.
As always, a good presentation. I remember a discussion with a learned professor and him totally rejecting the thought of science fiction writers predicting the future. He has passed on since but I would have liked him see this presentation - vindictive of me, I know, but ...
Well in most of these cases he would be right because they more inspired the future than predicted it
Your quality contributions and comedic input are both fascinating, informative and so entertaining!! Thank you!
When I was young I read a sci fi short story about a tablet that two children found that taught them things on its screen. When my granddaughter told me about a a thing with a screen that could hold many books in it, before I could believe it, she had to show one to me. I live in a sci fi world!
@Linda Anderson.....as do we all, my dear!
And this is so normal for us
@@augustuscampbell1313
Some days it’s just so surreal! Freaky.......
@@augustuscampbell1313 yes, it is so normal for us. And no escape seems possible.
When I was young we had cassettes with games. I'd hook my receiver up to a recorder and get my friend to hook his up to the mic and play for me to record or vice versa. The internet in Scotland circa 1983.
"You don't freeze both your wives, just your favourite one" - Thoughty2, 2020
can be taken out of context
@@joshclark756 That would make him look like a psychopath.
You freeze them both, but only thaw out one.
Really though, the well timed humor makes it easier to get through the video without existential crisis lol
@@caseyiversen6543 lmao agreed
I found this episode very enjoyable as you featured some of my favorite Sci-Fi novels and authors. You did not mention though that when Professor Jamison was reanimated 40 million years later, it was in a mechanical body - like the illustration of the Zoromes that you used. Only his brain was saved.
One of my favorite book series in the 60s was the Lensmen series by E.E. (Doc) Smith. His heroes had "lenses" that were worn like watches which allowed communication - albeit by telepathy and which also allowed mind reading. Something I would hope is not invented. He missed the boat entirely though by thinking vacuum tubes would still be in use in the era of space travel.
I loved Jules Vern from my childhood :) His story of not going out and designing cars, submarines, 80 days around world, etc fascinated me : ) he is been a great inspiration in my life :) thank you
"This Old [and New] Book[s, movies, people, and TV shows] Predicted [or inspired] Everything"
0:22 Leonardo DaVinci
3:24 Minority Report
4:14 1984
6:23 Jules Verne
8:11 Metropolis
9:08 HG Wells
9:38 Arthur C Clark
10:19 Niel R Jones
11:19 Aldous Huxley
12:05 Ralph124C 41+ by Hugo Gernsback
12:55 2001 A Space Odyssey
14:17 Star Trek
15:31 Tom Swift and his Electric Rifle by Victor Appleton
16:43 Fahrenheit 451
17:42 4338 by Vladimir Odoesvky
19:00 Stand on Zanzibar by John Brunner
20:42 The Simpsons
thank you!
Olaf Stapledon's "First and Last Men" would be a good addition to this list but it's more of a future history, from the 1930's on.
"We haven't been enslaved by skynet"
2020 ain't over yet
China has
Ohhhhhhhh idc
Skynets just your phone. Zombieland happened two decades ago.
Can you honestly say the human race isn't being controlled by "androids?"
@@derpderpus6075 all hail my Android overlord! May it rein NOT!
I very much enjoy your inputs on modern time as well as giving the history. And how when your videos are sponsors, you tie it in very well with essentially the core of you and your channel.
excellent piece, i enjoyed it greatly. I was surprised since you were covering Science Fiction writers, and what came to pass from their Writings, that you didn't mention the very first novel to combine Science and Fiction "the Modern Prometheus: Frankenstein" by Mary Shelly in 1816 which predicted organ and limb transplants, or Phillip K. Dick and Androids, but I'm sure there's only so much one can fit into a video that has so very much to offer. I love your body of work, educating and entertaining at the same time. Your cadence is exquisite, a pleasure to the ear.
it's always important to remember that every great scientific ivention first started with an idea which came from a wild and vivid imagination.
This. People imagining the future inspires technology.
A Lot of times while dreaming..
and also a lot of failure
My brother Interprets my wild and vivid imagination as "not making adult decisions..."
@@classifiedinformation6353 - That's a sad state of affairs.
Life hack: have no online presence
"Pull the plug"
that's on par with going outside, why on earth would you do such a thing?!
Agreed. But we're here now aren't we
thats impossible
Lol ah telling yuh
I just love this man -makes my day . Evrery piece of work is so cleverly delivered and full of great content x
"the book were crystals with recorded contents. They can be read with the aid of an opton, which was similar to a book but has only one page between the covers. At a touch, successive pages of the text appeared on it. "
Stanisław Lem, 1961
His video titles are like bitcoin, they’re difficult to trace back.
they always change am i crazy or what
"This book perfectly predicted the future"
11 hours ago it was This Man Perfectly Predicted The Future
@@meyomix2816 its automated so it can maximum views
@Lalalola to generate more views. Basically he tries to make it more click baity
"He made a serious novice mistake:
You don't freeze both of your wifes, you only freeze your favorite one."
This man is spitting straight facts
no. he can have a harem.
Here I thought he was going to say that they forgot to install emergency generators and a blackout caused terminal thawing...
@@revwroth3698
s a m e
@@smug1798 you can in utah! Convert to mormonism today and have as many wives as you like and make jesus your personal savior!
**gives you a paper and pen for signing up**
wives
Even an episode of the Jetsons cartoon in the 1960's has one of Elroy's friends watching TV on a wristwatch. Fascinating episode as always..
Love your videos my dude! Always informative, and very well made!
If there's 1 in a billion chance to predict the future, there are still 7 people who will!
I predict that you will breathe air
I predict you will did
I dib a dibble!
Watch as the IQ lvls drop with each consecutive post...
INCLUDING MINE WOLOLOLOLOL
Actually it’s practically 8 people now
Re-reading Jules Verne's Time Machine, I immediately thought his ' Eloi', could indeed be a future prediction about society; the stupid will inherit the Earth ahhhh!
Much much sooner than even Jules Verne could predict .
It was HG Wells who wrote the Time Machine. But your point is perfect. So long as the majority are content with their likes on social media and can even get fast food delivered to their front door, they happily let themselves become useless and clueless.
The stupid will inherit the earth. It says so in the bible.
I'm glad YT peeps such as yourself do what you do. TY
I can’t believe you got through this whole thing without mentioning A Logic Named Joe, which predicted google and search engines in general, something like Chrome OS, A form of cloud computing, and a concept not unlike Wikipedia.
Erased by Google, all search engines, chrome OS, cloud computing and Wikipedia because of copyright infringement and royalties
RomanoProductions I just googled it and the Wikipedia page came right up.
@@SeventhSaucer obviously yes, easy to find but I was joking about the erased knowledge by Google and the leftist media to hide the truth
duckduckgo.com/?t=ffcm&q=A+Logic+Named+Joe&ia=web
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Logic_Named_Joe
My grandad predicted the Wall Street crash- in 1932, he also predicted the sinking of the Titanic- though he was in the cinema at the time.
A Logic Named Joe, published in 1946! Here it is, good old Baen Books ... www.baen.com/chapters/W200506/0743499107___2.htm
Lester Del Rey wrote a book, “Rocket Jockey” back in 1952 which opened with the memorable sentence “When Major Armstrong landed on the Moon in 1969…”
The cake is a lie
I'm commenting to get notifs don't mind me
His first novel “Marooned on Mars”.Throw in the plot of “Capricorn One” and...just sayin’.
Almost, but not quite. "When Major Armstrong landed on the moon in 1964,
his first words over the radar to Earth were: 'Who
won the Indianapolis Classic?' "
Lana Del Rey?
Always love your videos! Thanks!
Dr. Floyd, as portrayed by Roy Scheider (as shown), was in the 1984 sequel "2010: The Year We Make Contact". In the original "2001" movie, Dr Heywood Floyd was played by William Sylvester.
He says 42 in the begining because that’s how many times he changes the title of the video.
AzurTG I was gonna comment about “42” for the first time, despite it always having been comment worthy. What a coincidence you beat me to it!
FuranDuron I swear I be scrollin on his channel and think it’s a new video and it’s just an old video I already saw but with a new thumbnail or name. I end up watchin the same videos over n over without even realizin it’s the same video.
I heard it too. He said 42 and I was like what and then I check his channels name but its Thoughty2😂
AzurTG
Well, that’s one of the good
parts of having Alzheimer’s.... 🐥
i also hear him say Fourtytwo here, when he actually says Thoughty2 here 😅
"You dont freeze both your wives, just your favorite one" 😂 I can't
Maybe he was a Mormon!
Typical beginner mistake.
another 50 years when they thaw them out they will take one look at the world be like "Oh gawd freeze me back up again now!!"
simp
🤣🤣🤣🤣
I love this guy, his voice and information are just so soothing.
Im pretty sure the "digital wall" mentioned when talking about Fahrenheit 451 was actually predicting the flatscreen tv, not a social hub like facebook.
"Telephot" also sounds like a prediction of OnlyFans.
That'd be Telethot
Well done!
I so knew I was going to find this here lol
Telephotography was what they called pictures sent over wire for newspapers. Was forerunner of the later fax machine.
TeleTHOT :D
I often think about the "Dick Tracy" comic strip and his 2-way wrist radio, and how unreal that seemed at the time.
The shoe phone was also another great contribution to society.
@@dankmheems290 Aww you stole my comment.
Dank Mheems especially if you watch the pilot episode intro. Mel Brooks really understood social reactions to cell phones. What a genius.
I was thinking the exact same thing. 😊
It just like an I watch of this age too. Uncanny must be time travellers
That was fascinating I love stories on predictions of the future some are so accurate it's scary thanks again from Melbourne Australia
Another intriguing, educational and entertaining piece. Your channel rocks!
_A Princess of Mars,_ written by Edgar Rice Burroughs in 1912, absolutely astounded me with its mechanical predictions. The entire Barsoom series is chock full of stunningly accurate predictions. One that comes to mind is what we would now call instant messaging, or email
I recently listened to this book. It is amazing.
The entire Fighting Man of Mars series is an amazing technological read, it made me smile when they made that movie man.
Love this series ❤️
Best high quality information and entertainment channel on yt. Depending on how tired I am, you can also be the best sleep aid as well 😁😆
Haha, true
There are a lot of channels I listen to to go to sleep. This one wouldn’t qualify, even though he has a cool voice, just because the vids aren’t long enough
Gett'em good! 🤣
Fellow Italian.
@@ReligionAndMaterialismDebunked creepy. You're high jacking and copy paste a block of text to sling your beliefs. No wonder people think vegans are annoying. Kinda like religious fanatics.
Actually, the first science-fiction book is Mary Shelly's Frankenstein published in 1812.
I remember reading a book years ago which featured a computer which could be with around the neck and was disguised as a necklace. It used a hologram for a screen and projected a keyboard onto any flat surface using a laser. Of course we do have laser keyboards now though no doubt the rest of it is a few years away yet, though computers can be fitted into a usb drives. I suppose it was also a prediction of wearable technology.
If you brought DaVinci to this time, and sat him in front of a laptop, about 15 minutes later he would be using it like a professional, and saying; "I think I have some ways to make this work faster."
Sure, why not
He was not born in this time for a reason...
Nope. Even the programmers at Microsoft haven't been able to figure that out. If people of Da Vinci's calibre would have created the current-day Personal Computer, they wouldn't have started with convoluted systems to begin with.
If we could, we would have conquered space travel....or the government would have killed him, since he's too smart.
I doubt that....but close !
An actual social rating system is a terrifying concept. It's already rough having to live in a culture where a "credit score" determines your fate, but at least that's sort of a "first world worry" that you can mitigate or even escape from if you're lucky. Even though the financial situations you're born into heavily influence how your credit score plays out, you still have a quasi-blank-slate when you're born into that system.
There are so many parameters like that forced onto us by the existing societies we are born into, and we're all more or less told that we just have to deal with it because we are also born into so many supposed benefits and privileges (everyone is expected to contribute to society or die trying, etc.); just imagine being born into what amounts to a numbers-game caste system. Your parents were both ranked at three, you're born at three until you can earn a higher number, ah, but you've got an invisible disability that's difficult or impossible to properly diagnose, so you'll inevitably be ranked down for merely drawing breath.
Life is and was always a numbers game
The credit score I somewhat understand, as if I was the one lending someone else money, I'd like to know how responsible they are financially. It also doesn't take into account anything that we might say or do, provided that we don't get into too much trouble with the law (ie murder). It doesn't matter how "free" a society or what type you're born into, you're beholden to it to some extent if you wish to be a part of it.
@@steeldriver5338 It's never been about fiscal responsibility. The fact that, for a very long time, just checking it could lower it? That's ridiculous. It's also proof that it's a method of control more than a simple matter of responsibility. When the most successful people want to hold "the lower classes" to a higher standard, that's control, not accountability. It's no different than when political elitists (left or right) try to unfairly permanently destroy someone's reputation. If it were a fair system that didn't have people living in constant fear of permanent repercussions for isolated mistakes, then I would agree with you.
@@Pensive_Scarlet Checking it won't lower the credit score, though I do acknowledge that that was a thing in the past. As for the rest of your post, this is a topic which I believe could be viewed differently, and I respectfully disagree. As far as I'm concerned, it's the same thing as giving your word, such as signing a document saying what you'll pay back and when. If you break your word, there're consequences.
Most mistakes that affect the credit score aren't permanent, and many don't have a sizable impact on it. Missing a bill isn't going to drop my score 50 points or whatever. For a while, I didn't even care about my score, and I still stayed in the high 600s. I personally think that you're making the consequences out to be worse then they actually are, though your experiences may differ.
This is nothing new. Money is social credit.
1:52 imagine rejecting the design of the smartest man on Earth because you think your money and status make you equally intelligent
I was waiting for Stand on Zanzibar the whole time and literally yelled when it came up. That's the book I always reference when talking about scifi predicting the future despite there being much better known examples to choose from.
When Leonardo da Vinci's flying machines were mentioned I immediately thought 'Shoot! Shoot the flying demon!'
I've played a lot of Assassin's Creed during lock down. Lol.
hahaha witch one is that tho?
I think it should be from the etzio trilogy
excuse me k never played anything before black flag (except for the first)
@@phantomwolf2141 from assassin's creed 2
Atlantis from Odyssee is nice
I remember failing that mission countless times ! I too have “SHOOT SHOOT THE FLYING DEMON” burned in my brain
"eating too much and playing the Sims"
Me: I'm in this photo and I don't like it
lol
There used to be a TV program in the early 60's that had a maid robot, a flying car, food replicator, mobile phone and a robot dog. You wanna know what this TV program was....The Jetsons!
I read this book when i was 15 y old in Russian , was fascinated with predictions that came through and even told it to my children , however remembered only part of this book title and didn't remember who wrote it. Thank you for this knowledge now.
3:30 another part of the movie that has come true is "pre-crime" in china they collect so much info about citizens they believe they can predict who might commit what crime in the future...scary shit
Sounds like westworld
Pre-crime exists in Los Angeles, CA in the form of a relationship map for street gangs that have police stopping "possible" miscreants just because they know each other.
Books & Authors List:
Leonardo da Vinci, 1452-1519, Italian.
Philip K. Dick, The Minority Report 1956, American.
George Orwell, Nineteen Eighty-Four 1949, English.
Jules Verne, From the Earth to the Moon 1865, French.
Thea von Harbou, Metropolis 1925, German.
Isaac Asimov, I, Robot 1950, Russian.
H. G. Wells, The Shape of Things to Come 1933, English.
Neil R. Jones, The Jameson Satellite 1931, American.
Aldous Huxley, Brave New World 1932, English.
Hugo Gernsback, Ralph 124C 41+ 1911, American.
Arthur C. Clarke, 2001 A Space Odyssey 1968, English.
Edward Bellamy, Looking Backward 2000-1887 1888, American.
Star Trek, 1967-present.
"Victor Appleton" pseudonym, Tom Swift and His Electric Rifle 1911.
Ray Bradbury, Fahrenheit 451 1953, American.
Vladimir Odoyevsky, The Year 4338 1835, Russian.
John Brunner, Stand on Zanzibar 1968, English.
Kevin MacDonald, A Culture of Critique, 1998, American.
Issac Asimov was born in Russia but grew up in America.
Mary Shelley's Frankenstein 1818 predicted bring people back to life using both human and animal parts and also electricity.
Hands down one of your greatest episodes T2. Ooh... D'oh! Hope that's not a copyright infringement :(. Bravo!
You make some of the most quality youtube videos. Job well done sir. You truly are a master of your craft. :)
“Around the world thoughts shall fly
In the twinkling of an eye.” - Mother Shipton (1641).
Many of these predictions are less “look how accurately the science fiction author predicted this technology” and more “look how many engineers are science fiction fans who really wanted one or another cool gadget he read about as a kid”.
did the authors "predict" the future or "inspire" it -- aka, would you have broken that vase if I hadn't said anything?
Tim Q both past and future exist simultaneously to each other.
I'm still waiting for Rosie the robot maid...
@@timq6224 that reminds me, there's a sadistic meme-like mind game some futurists tell each other called roko's basilisk where supposedly in the future there's gonna be an AI that will help save the world and humanity but at the cost of retroactively punishing and torturing everyone who didn't help it come into existence, and that also includes anyone whose just heard of this mind game. and the only way to escape future punishment is to help make it come into existence.
science fiction resembles actual advancements because most scifi writers are technophiles who are up to date on the latest research and can infer applications that are on the fringes of reasonable, but not completely impossible. The best Scifi is always based around a seed of reality. where everything is normal except the one or two fantastical technological advancements that make the story possible.
In this way, sci-fi also inspires new generations of engineers and scientists, almost challenging them to make that fantasy tech a reality. look at all the people trying to make real light sabers, for example. Others are working on matter transportation and warp drives, among other fantasy tech that could actually be a thing some day.
Its all one big case of Art imitating life imitating art.
I have actually run into a problem because of that... For a game idea I have I picked a fairly close solar system and wanted to have a few generations of time for the people to get there and settle a (nonexistent) earth like planet there. So I looked up how long it would take to get there and it turns out it takes thousands of years to travel 11 light years which is far longer than I wanted. So I tried to research theoretically how fast we could go and it was all just can we go at light speed? Which is WAY faster than I want 🤦♀️😆 So I just decided to do whatever I want with the amount of time it takes them to get there.
I think Stanislaw Lem is also worth mentioning in the topic od sci-fi predictions. His most famous one is ebook
Thoughty2: Its more important than ever before to protect your data
Me: *Something's* *wrong,* *I* *can* *feel* *it*
weird I came across your comment right as he said that..
I'm learning how to do my make up in a way that changes my face, contact lenses etc etc etc
The big brother system is already set up, cameras with facial recognition all over the place. He's right. Fuck.
That was the SMOOTHEST sponsor segway i've ever seen
Too smooth. Made me feel like the whole thing is one long commercial.
~ Segue. *
I think I might have missed it... Surely a timecode?
Indeed xD I only knew that it was one Cos of the amount of comments mentioning it
Ninad Mahesh 4:44 - 6:13
I was hoping you’d mention Fahrenheit 451, I was blown away when I read about the earbuds! I’ll have to put some of those on my reading list.
Thanks for the great video. Well done well researched
Card's "Ender's Game" series had some interesting predictions about the internet
it really do tho
And video games.
It really does, I consider myself somewhat of an expert on the “Ender Verse” as I’ve read most of the released content. In the Formica war novels there is heavy emphasis on the acceleration aspect of deep force travel and its effects on humans. Atrophy is a common issue, and they even do a high speed acceleration with a newborn infant! It’s amazing how much they predict ans it is so grounded in reality I see it in the future.
Honestly first time I read the book I thought it was written in the early 2000s or something, it seemed very contemporary.
That dumb kids think they are smarter than adults and the adults do too?? Cool story bro
I predict your mustache will go down in history as the most iconic mustache of all time. Thanks for the video!
Mumbo jumbo
bruh it was such a mindfuck when it first appeared out of nowhere
@Llewellyn Post Nietszche is laughing his mustache off at your comment
@Llewellyn Post A.H.
@@meyomix2816 literally g
Been ages since I've seen 2001, but, the bit you show of Doctor Floyd putting in the Credit Card, or at least the actor you put with the name, is from 2010 The Year We Make Contact. That's the sequel from 1984, also a great film, though totally different in style.
Fun and interesting video aside from that. Kinda wish you'd have thrown a list of all the books/movies/shows you mention in the about section, easier to look back at the ones I've not gotten around to reading yet.
Vernes first "SF" novel was published in 1863. Mary Shelly's Frankenstein was first publised in 1818, the first SF novekl, its plot driven by "science."
I like how the heat ray in HG Wells' War of the Worlds is pretty much a perfect description of a weaponised laser.
This kind of "future" we live in is disconnecting people from reality.
yes or disconnecting people from people
You can't tell people the future, because then they have no future.
What is reality?
@@AFMR0420 everything that exists...
Social media is newspeak for tearing society apart.
Wonderfully detailed discussion of the myriad of predictions that have come true
One of your best Arran! Amazing!
" if youve been eating too much and playing the sims" i didnt know i was attacked
Damn man.
You slid that advertisement in there so slick, I didnt even know it was an ad until you said to look at the link below, and then the little message box appeared at the bottom. wow.
Sci fis are fascinating for what they predict (& also the ideas they supply to science). I read (imo) a brilliant sci fi novel a long time ago that I have been trying to find again ever since. I think it was written in 70s-80s, and published by one of the well known sci fi publishers (it may have been a Nebula or Hugo award winner or nominee). It doesn't seem to be well known though, and I have forgotten the title and author, but it's one of the most epic sci fis, in terms of scale, I think I've ever read (and I've read most of the classics). It also makes some predictions, or at least puts forth some interesting future scenarios.
The story starts with 70s-80s era earth being revolutionised by the discovery of a new element/super-material which not only settles the energy crisis on earth but also skyrockets humanity into the stars and enables the widespread colonisation of the solar system. As the story progresses it jumps from era to era, detailing how humanity and societies, with ever growing populations, might evolve out in space and on other planets, moons, etc. Then, a big plot twist comes. Without giving too much away (just in case someone here might want to find this book and read it, and hopefully tell me its name/author) it later involves humanity embarking on an epic journey further out into the galaxy by hollowing out asteroids and creating giant self-sustaining mobile galaxy-exploring colony space-craft. A number of them set off in different directions to various hopeful nearby star systems on generation-long journeys. I can't remember much more, except that the story eventually stretches billions of years into the future, a very daring thing to do for a sci fi author, requiring great imagination.
The asteroid colony space-craft are what impressed me the most in the book, and its grand scale, though I recall that there is also an idea in it very similar to the internet and social media, and/or what it might become (eg, a collective/hive-mind).
There's so much in it though, and I'm constantly reminded of it. Wish I knew its name.
Headphones, even little ones like earbuds, existed in 1953. Bradbury wasn't inventing that. They simply weren't wireless yet, but that's no great leap. That's right at the time when TVs were showing how anything (movies) would eventually be wireless.
Social credit scoring system is just a bad idea. "Freedom of speech" is completely out the window
The only way to combat such a thing... is for EVERYONE to be as socially INCORRECT as possible...
Such a shame.
You have the freedom to say whatever you want. You don't have the freedom to use someone else's platform to broadcast it. Fixed it for you.
@@timq6224 There's a legal difference, in the US at least, between a platform and a publisher. A platform is given immunity from the liabilities a publisher would normally face when they publish something either in print or digitally. This immunity should not be abused. It is not a license to engage in wholesale viewpoint discrimination, which is exactly what large influential tech firms do today. They claim to offer a platform available to the general public, yet once they reach a critical size - that some would say is a de facto monopoly - they suddenly begin enforcing their own version of political correctness. This is essentially an attack on free speech since digital spaces have become the new public square. So there is plenty of legal precedent and actual regulation in the US to support the view that social media platforms should not have a free hand to stifle speech.
MillionthUsername yeah, and now this yankee BS is actively undermining liberal democracies the world over. And don’t give that crap about political correctness. It’s not a coincidence conservatives tend to lie their asses off about everything from viruses to where their country’s leaders were born. Giving those lies a platform is how you resurrect the Nazi movement Hitler started nearly a century ago in Germany. Hell, the US has a Fascist leader right now of German heritage, coincidentally enough! Who would have ever thought!?
@@ravenwraith1017 The US has a "fascist" leader, huh? Do you even know what fascist means? or does it just mean "asshole" to you in fancy speak? Also Hitler at least had a vision and some "noble" goals, don't compare my boi to trump, who is nothing but a meme. Also Hitler was Austrian, not German.
I think “A collection of books that predicted the future” would have been a more correct title, though not as catchy I must admit.
How about "these books predicted the future"?
'These old books' would've been just fine.
Or "a series of books that influenced the future" we temd to mysticize things when theres a more reasonable boring explanation
@@mattball420 Definitely influenced, rather than predicted. Star Trek didn't predict the ipad, it influenced. Jules Verne influenced space travel. Da Vinci influenced aerospace.
I kept waiting for the video to come to the point, right up until I realized there was less than a minute left, lol
Verne described what eventually became the periscope so well there was legitimate court intrigue about whether the person credited for inventing it was allowed to patent it or not
My first viewing of your stuff and I really like your lighthearted angle. So sad that the powers that be are inspired by literature and Hollywood. ..etc,etc!
"this man perfectly predicted the future". he changed man to book.
And replaced the man's face with his own in the thumbnail
Hey I was finally early enough to see the change! Lol
He does it every time he posts a vid. Noticed it yesterday too
@@anonanon9009 was just wondering the same. I refuse to accept the idea he's just indecisive about his possible choices, must be some tactic to lure viewers in, hmmm...
Maybe it shows again in recommendations if he does that?
Thoughty, thank you for this video. I have stated elsewhere, but will say again, your excursions of late into more "edgy" areas of investigation has raken insight, farsight, curiosity, daring, faith in people, and courage. So your having done so has given me faith that perhaps all is not lost for humanity. I once designed and then taught an English class called,, "Science Fiction, a Literature of Prediction." It wasn't terribly popular, but enjoyed some not small enrollment of about 15 students. I didn't overwhelm them but instead wished to challenge them. For I believe a single person can make a difference, if the right action is carried out at the right moment. Anyhow, your taking this topic up is inspiring! Excellent!
I think Fahrenheit 451 is more accurate to today than 1984 was. People living life glued to screens having “conversations” with their “family” and no one reads books anymore. And it’s not to hard to imagine physical paper being outlawed (for conservation)
Love your vids quality quality love it!
Small minds have significantly deterred the greatness that humanity could become.
A lot of past decisions lead up to that... atrophy of right brain creativity given away to left brain rationalizing and technology and education geared towards corporate development over individual creativity and enlightenment.
Thats a pretty smug statement. It ignores the fact that greatness is subjective. There were quite a few horrific events in our past that were attempts at "greatness" and there will inevitably be many more horrific events in the future under the guise of greatness or "good of humanity".
@@midget9629 You've miss understood my statement. I was being facetious. But no matter. There seems to be a whole hell of a lot misunderstanding these days. And being facetious is my way of dealing with it.
"He made a grave mistake he froze BOTH his wives" everyone knows "you only freeze your favorite ONE" I could not get off the floor for five minutes I laughed so hard
Notice there was no frozen mother-in-laws..
Lmfao same 😂😂😂
That's going to be an awkward conversation when they wake up
That was the smoothest transition to the sponser.
That explains why a few times I went to post a live video on FB but couldn’t because the ‘Live’ button wasn’t available.
“We haven’t been enslaved by sky net yet”
2020: hold my beer
ahmed elsheikh no
George E1907 wdym “no?”
2020: I'm sooo inconvenient! The world is literally going to end!!!!11
all of prior history: can't even comprehend the level pathetic that is to come
"I Robot" wasn't a single story, but a collection of short stories sold as an anthology. Seriously, go read it! The stories are excellent!
Don’t watch the movie lol
I read the book years before the movie was made and I don't remember anything from the movie in the book except for a little girl named Susan Calvin. I Am Legend was even more disappointing...
@@revwroth3698 The only thing they kept from the books were the laws of Asimov.
"The Veldt" by Ray Bradbury sent shivers down my spine when I read it as a teenager but still felt like a fantasy. Now, it seems as a not-so-distant horror reality.
Loved this. Great video.
"You don't freeze both your wives..just your favourite one" damn!!! 🤣🤣🤣🤣
That's a very good point!
What I need, is a self diagnosis machine at home so I don't have to wait 56 hours to see a doctor.
Stop being a hypochondriac
They’ve already done that like 20 years ago and has already passed fda. But it’s primarily used for patients that actually need it. That need 24/7 monitoring like diabetics. But if your looking to just use it when you need it your best bet is google they’ve been more accurate then the primary physicians. Besides good doctors that step out the room to google your symptoms.
vimeo.com/400221923 this short film is all about that :)
@Grandson Of Cherve his issue is time not cost....
Free healthcare often leads to far out appointments and long waiting times... This is actually the case in the uk, cuba, canada. Vietnam, china, etc
It's probably less expensive too.
Man, the bit about divincis bridge made me tear-up
Talking about the tiny earbuds from Fahrenheit 451 would have been a perfect segue for a Raycon ad-sponsor read