The Greatest Scientist in History Was Hiding a Deadly Secret

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 21. 05. 2023
  • Thoughty2 Audiobook: geni.us/t2audio
    Thoughty2 Book: geni.us/t2book
    Support Me & Get Early Access: bit.ly/t2club
    Thoughty2 Merchandise: bit.ly/t2merch
    Follow Thoughty2
    Facebook: / thoughty2
    Instagram: / thoughty2
    Website: thoughty2.com
    About Thoughty2
    Thoughty2 (Arran) is a British CZcamsr and gatekeeper of useless facts. Thoughty2 creates mind-blowing factual videos about science, tech, history, opinion and just about everything else.
    #Thoughty2
    Writing: Steven Rix
    Editing: Jack Stevens

Komentáře • 2,4K

  • @attila535
    @attila535 Před rokem +900

    It is a small miracle, that he lived that long with that much heavy metal in his body.

    • @trelometallo
      @trelometallo Před rokem +31

      He was a fan of Holocaust band before they even existed😂

    • @Kylielifts6379
      @Kylielifts6379 Před rokem +58

      Bro built like Ozzy Osborne

    • @savage-traveler
      @savage-traveler Před rokem +35

      Dude was metal af

    • @myscreen2urs
      @myscreen2urs Před rokem +40

      It was only heavy metal, not death metal🤘🙃

    • @majorkramer
      @majorkramer Před rokem +8

      I love the b.s. drip. But all geniuses are a little mad. Just a little.

  • @malverdeislove
    @malverdeislove Před rokem +1170

    I never get tired of hearing that Isaac Newton was a fan of heavy metal. 🤘

    • @stephenpmurphy591
      @stephenpmurphy591 Před rokem +39

      Only British heavy mental.

    • @miusukamadoto6805
      @miusukamadoto6805 Před rokem +31

      @@stephenpmurphy591 I'm sure he would've had appreciated Scandinavian heavy metal too :)

    • @stephenpmurphy591
      @stephenpmurphy591 Před rokem +5

      @@miusukamadoto6805 Touche'

    • @catman7153
      @catman7153 Před rokem +33

      He had the hair for it, for sure!

    • @davidelliott5843
      @davidelliott5843 Před rokem +20

      I’m sure his friends were Thunderstruck but Nothing Else Matters on the Stairway to Heaven.

  • @terryhayward7905
    @terryhayward7905 Před 9 měsíci +83

    "There is a thin line between genius and madness" And you have to live on that line to be able to turn a mad idea into true science.

    • @charlesbrightman4237
      @charlesbrightman4237 Před měsícem

      IN THE INTEREST OF FINDING THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING:
      SOME THINGS MODERN SCIENCE DOES NOT APPARENTLY KNOW:
      Consider the following:
      a. Numbers: Modern science does not even know how numbers and certain mathematical constants exist for math to do what math does. Surely the very nature of reality has to allow numbers and mathematical constants to actually exist for math to do what math does in this existence. (And nobody as of yet has been able to show me how numbers and certain mathematical constants can come from the Standard Model Of Particle Physics).
      b. Space: Modern science does not even know what 'space' actually is nor how it could actually warp and expand.
      c. Time: Modern science does not even know what 'time' actually is nor how it could actually warp and vary.
      d. Gravity: Modern science does not even know what 'gravity' actually is nor how gravity actually does what it appears to do. And for those who claim that 'gravity' is matter warping the fabric of spacetime, see 'b' and 'c' above.
      e. Speed of Light: 'Speed', distance divided by time, distance being two points in space with space between those two points. But yet, here again, modern science does not even know what space and time actually are that makes up 'speed' and they also claim that space can warp and expand and time can warp and vary, so how could they truly know even what the speed of light actually is that they utilize in many of the formulas? Speed of light should also warp, expand and vary depending upon what space and time it was in. And if the speed of light can warp, expand and vary in space and time, how then do far away astronomical observations actually work that are based upon light and the speed of light that could warp, expand and vary in actual reality?
      f. Photons: A photon swirls with the 'e' and 'm' energy fields 90 degrees to each other. A photon is also considered massless. What keeps the 'e' and 'm' energy fields together across the vast universe for billions of light years? And why doesn't the momentum of the 'e' and 'm' energy fields as they swirl about not fling them away from the central area of the photon? And why aren't photons that go across the vast universe torn apart by other photons, including photons with the exact same energy frequency, and/or by matter, matter being made up of quarks, electrons and interacting energy, quarks and electrons being considered charged particles, each with their respective magnetic field with them?
      Electricity is electricity and magnetism is magnetism varying possibly only in energy modality, energy density and energy frequency. So why doesn't the 'e' and 'm' of other photons and of matter basically tear apart a photon going across the vast universe?
      Also, 'if' a photon actually red shifts, where does the red shifted energy go and why does the photon red shift? And for those who claim space expanding causes a photon to red shift, see 'b' above.
      Why does radio 'em' (large 'em' waves) have low energy and gamma 'em' (small 'em' waves) have high energy? And for those who say E = hf; see also 'b' and 'c' above. (f = frequency, cycles per second. But modern science claims space can warp and expand and time can warp and vary. If 'space' warps and expands and/or 'time' warps and varies, what does that do to 'E'? And why doesn't 'E' keep space from expanding and time from varying?).
      g. Energy: Modern science claims that energy cannot be created nor destroyed, it's one of the foundations of physics. Hence, energy is either truly a finite amount and eternally existent, or modern science is wrong. First Law Of Thermodynamics: "Energy can neither be created nor destroyed." How exactly is 'energy' eternally existent?
      h. Existence and Non-Existence side by side throughout all of eternity. How?
      * ADDED NOTE: My current TOE idea can potentially answer all of these above items, and more, in a logical, coherent and inter-related manner. And wouldn't one expect the true TOE of existence itself to be able to do that? What other TOE idea in known existence can currently do that? Surely not the General or Special Relativity Models nor even the Standard Model of Particle Physics.
      TOE IDEA: (Short version): [currently dependent upon the results of my gravity test]:
      The 'gem' photon is the eternally existent energy unit of this universe.
      The strong and weak nuclear forces are derivatives of the electromagnetic ('em') interactions between quarks and electrons. The nucleus is a magnetic field boundary. 'Gravity' is a part of electromagnetic radiation, gravity acting 90 degrees to the 'em' modalities, which of course act 90 degrees to each other. 'Gravity' is not matter warping the fabric of spacetime, 'gravity' is a part of spacetime that helps to make up matter. The gravity and 'em' modalities of matter interact with the gravity and 'em' modalities of spacetime and the gravity and 'em' modalities of spacetime interact with the gravity and 'em' modalities of matter.
      I am open to any and all theory of everything ideas that can potentially answer all those above items in a logical, coherent and inter-related manner. Currently, as far as I am currently aware of, there are no others but my own.
      GRAVITY TEST: (Short Version):
      Direct a high powered laser 90 degrees through an electric field and magnetic field polarized as such to nullify the 'em' of the laser. "IF" my current TOE idea is correct, a gravitational black hole would become evident. (The 'gem' photon being the energy unit of this universe that makes up everything else in existence in this existence.)

    • @nyb_ok
      @nyb_ok Před 9 dny

      Wow well said

  • @jaaps772
    @jaaps772 Před rokem +104

    A quart mug is a type of drinking vessel that has a capacity of one quart, or 32 fluid ounces, which is equivalent to four cups or two pints. This unit of measurement is commonly used in the United States and is sometimes used to serve beer or other beverages in pubs or restaurants. The size of a quart mug can vary depending on the specific design, but it typically has a wide, rounded shape with a handle for easy drinking. In fact, Isaac Newton's mother famously claimed that his head could fit inside a quart mug.

    • @Pisti846
      @Pisti846 Před rokem +7

      That makes sense since the English System of measure is the system we currently use in the US and was the system used in England during Newton's life time. The US continued to use the English System after Great Britain and Canada switched over to the British Imperial System in the 19th century. When I was in elementary school in the 1960s we still called it the English System. Nowadays it is called the US Customary System. I am surprised Thoughty didn't know what a quart is.

    • @advancetotabletop5328
      @advancetotabletop5328 Před rokem +4

      Maybe if Mountain Dew was invented in Britain, everyone there would know what a quart mug was. :D

    • @rogersmith8339
      @rogersmith8339 Před rokem +3

      The US quart is very close to a litre which is smaller than a Imperial quart by around 10%

    • @robertewalt7789
      @robertewalt7789 Před rokem +3

      A quart in UK (and Canada) is bigger than in the US. Back when UK used pints and quarts.

    • @Pisti846
      @Pisti846 Před rokem +1

      @@robertewalt7789 Not when Newton was alive.

  • @calebchanda569
    @calebchanda569 Před rokem +285

    His humanity and his vanity only makes his work even more legendary. Dude had family issues and still found a way to screw engineering students with calculus; that's determination!

    • @erynlasgalen1949
      @erynlasgalen1949 Před rokem +9

      He also screwed one aspiring architect, me, with calculus, which I cannot for the life of me understand could be useful in constructing a building that won't fall down.

    • @2MinuteHockey
      @2MinuteHockey Před rokem +11

      @@erynlasgalen1949 it's not about the building not falling down, it's about using less material and optimizing the design. It's an iterative process that directly uses calculus principles

    • @tedmitchell226
      @tedmitchell226 Před rokem +3

      My second oldest son would vomit before calculus class, his major computer science

    • @alpheusmadsen8485
      @alpheusmadsen8485 Před rokem +7

      It's a misnomer that calculus makes engineering and physics harder. It actually makes certain problems in physics and engineering *easier* . Indeed, many problems are far more difficult, if not outright impossible, without calculus.

    • @waits4noone23
      @waits4noone23 Před rokem

      When you take the negative patterns that are playing out in the pendulum of your mind and transmute that energy into motivation, inspiration or art, that is alchemy. That is how you turn darkness into light. Thoughty 2 could do with showing a little respect for magi. Just because you don't understand something, doesn't make it delusional bullshit, just makes you ignorant.

  • @kensurrency2564
    @kensurrency2564 Před 6 měsíci +32

    The thing about alchemy is that, yes, it was literal in the sense that they were trying to turn base metals into gold, which would have undermined the ‘system’ but it is also metaphorical: if we are able to learn the secrets of life and reality, that would also undermine the system, in a much more fundamental way. I would argue that mysticism is much more dangerous to the ‘system’ than any quantity of physical gold. Part of the reason for witch trials and persecution of unorthodox ideas over history.

    • @wolvulus
      @wolvulus Před měsícem +1

      😊

    • @k1mpman
      @k1mpman Před 21 dnem

      This was my understanding of alchemy too. It was sometimes used as a guise to veil the fact that they were transmuting their mind to such an extent they would be considered mystics in the Indian tradition. The different elements, the syntax of their concoctions and other general terms had a mystical translation.

    • @manuelaguirre1062
      @manuelaguirre1062 Před 4 dny

      @@k1mpman watch : Bertrand Russell: The Golem of Venice. It talks about Newton and Galileo being overrated.

  • @ernestweaver5544
    @ernestweaver5544 Před 6 měsíci +4

    Excellent Job Thoughty.
    I learned a lot more about Issac.
    Thank You.

  • @syrusangi8743
    @syrusangi8743 Před rokem +224

    I haven't been watching your videos as often for quite some time now but revisiting your channel has really reminded me of how awesome a storyteller you are n how your able to keep my attention no matter how confusing or bizarre the subject of discussion can be.
    I guess i can see this as a good thing cuz now i have tons of videos in storage to catch up n enjoy.
    With that being said, keep being awesome, Thoughty2. Keep being you 😊

    • @hiphopbop3908
      @hiphopbop3908 Před rokem +8

      Same!

    • @helloimclaudio
      @helloimclaudio Před rokem +8

      Same, and I’m not a fan of English accents, but Mr. 42 is an exception… 😂

    • @yoshimitsu8643
      @yoshimitsu8643 Před rokem +3

      @@helloimclaudio fun fact
      If you ask chatgpt to write a script of which ever choosing on the way Thoughty2 does
      It gives you exactly that.
      You can edit the details of your plot

    • @helloimclaudio
      @helloimclaudio Před rokem +1

      @@yoshimitsu8643 I’m sorry, I don’t mean this in a troll like manner, but I don’t quite understand your message. Who or what is chatgpt ?

    • @its_dey_mate
      @its_dey_mate Před rokem +4

      @@helloimclaudio I don't understand the exact thing Yoshimitsu is talking about, but ChatGPT is an AI that upon being presented with a prompt will respond. You can ask it anything and it will tell you (though there are *plenty* of subjects it will give wrong information about).
      In this context, if you give a prompt to ChatGPT about writing a video about X topic in the style of Thoughty2, it will give its best try to make the text in a way similar to how Thoughty does.

  • @PrairieWolf62
    @PrairieWolf62 Před rokem +70

    Thoughty2 could make dryer lint an interesting and educational subject and I'd listen.

  • @melodiejohnston9528
    @melodiejohnston9528 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Thank you. Brilliant as always.

  • @acidcharon
    @acidcharon Před rokem +597

    If you havent ever read Principia Mathematica, no matter if you are good in mathematics/physics its more than worth reading it. His observations and how he was seeing and understood the world around him, is beyond mind blowing.... His brain was on completely different level, its astonishing.

    • @brinavarro13
      @brinavarro13 Před rokem +20

      It’s for free on Google😃🤓🤓🤓

    • @omo568
      @omo568 Před rokem +14

      Putting it on my to read list

    • @markhughes7927
      @markhughes7927 Před rokem +14

      I was blown off the planet for two years reading Buckminster Fuller’s mathematics - back in ‘87.

    • @ChickenPermissionOG
      @ChickenPermissionOG Před rokem +7

      he was probably insane too

    • @RatusMax
      @RatusMax Před rokem

      His brain it's not on a different level. Stop lying. He removed all other distractions from life so that he can just sit and think without judgement. Sacrifices were made. The fool tried hard to find immortality through alchemy but realized it was impossible at some point. I will say, who knows what he would have found with the chemistry and biology like we know today. It was because he was secretive and did his own experiments in private that nobody interrupted his thoughts.
      Every human can do what he did.The question is do you want to truly be like him?

  • @nudaveritas8195
    @nudaveritas8195 Před 3 měsíci +3

    What about Tesla?
    What about Faraday?
    What about Einstein?
    What about Nils Bohr?
    These gentlemen were far more intelligent and contributed more to physics than Newton.

    • @owlcowl
      @owlcowl Před měsícem +3

      Your final sentence is total nonsense. Any theoretical physicist will tell you that the three most important figures in the history of his science are Newton, Maxwell & Einstein. And Newtons contribution was foundational to everything that followed, the most profound conceptual leap ever accomplished by a single individual. Compare the pioneering work of Galileo, the first physicist in the modern sense, with how Newton incorporated & extended it into a systematic explanation of the behavior of matter in motion, both terrestrial and celestial, positing a force acting between objects at a distance without physical contact (a heretical notion at the time), and describing it all quantitatively with a new mathematics which he invented for that specific purpose, plus his groundbreaking work in optics and inventing the reflecting telescope -- this astonishing output was the product of a superhuman intellect, as all his successors acknowledged, Einstein included. Faraday, Bohr, and countless others who could be named -- Rutherford, Schrödinger, Heisenberg, Dirac, et all -- were titans of physics, but "far more intelligent" than and greater contributors than the author of F=MA (the most important of all physical equations) and everything else in classical mechanics -- they would have snorted at such a ludicrous and uniformed assessment! Another Isaac, science writer Isaac Asimov, asked to name the greatest of all scientists, averred: "If the question was, who is the _second_ greatest scientist of all time, it would be impossible to answer, given the number of serious candidates who instantly present themselves. But since the question is who was the _greatest_ scientist ever, I can see no other defensible answer than Isaac Newton."

  • @BaroqueBach.
    @BaroqueBach. Před rokem +377

    When thoughty2 is two days early:

    • @davidlancaster8152
      @davidlancaster8152 Před rokem +12

      It's always Monday drops where I live

    • @Australian_Made
      @Australian_Made Před rokem +13

      Monday for me in
      the land, downunder. 🇦🇺
      or just AFTER midnight 🙊

    • @snotmonkey357
      @snotmonkey357 Před rokem +10

      WAIT.... he has a schedule?? What is it... for say western Europe

    • @youtubeuser206
      @youtubeuser206 Před rokem +2

      @@snotmonkey357 somewhere around mondays 16:00 gmt

    • @doughewitt2507
      @doughewitt2507 Před rokem +1

      ​@Purmasari Sindangmulya qqqqqq

  • @NowhereMan7
    @NowhereMan7 Před rokem +46

    When you said he was encouraged to spend his working life on a farm implying its a near thing that the world turned out this way, I had the same thought I always have when I hear stuff like this. Like " Hitler could have been got shot in WWI" and other history changing close calls.
    The thing is, these close calls have happened an impossibly large, unknowable amount of times.
    There have been more humanity altering events we dont know about than do. People who would have gone on to do something to advance the human race or something hugely destructive existed but life sent them on another path. Its crazy to think about.

    • @aceventura5398
      @aceventura5398 Před rokem +7

      44 attempts to kill hitler failed. Thats not good luck coupled with caution. He had a protector.

    • @NowhereMan7
      @NowhereMan7 Před rokem +5

      @@aceventura5398 I dont know how your reply has anything to do with what I'm saying, which is about how we can never know all the near misses and lost opportunities in history that have hugely changed the world today.

    • @aceventura5398
      @aceventura5398 Před rokem +3

      @@NowhereMan7 just watched a " Mr Ballen" video.
      Said hitler was in the sights of an enemy soldier just 30 feet away.
      Hitler was a " runner " delivered messages trench to trench. He must have gotten disoriented and walked in the wrong direction.
      The enemy soldier saw he was unarmed so didnt fire on him. They just made eye contact for a moment then hitler turned and walked away.
      Is this story true ? Perhaps.
      44 recorded attempts to kill hitler.
      How many failed before being noticed as such. Ten..twenty...thirty.
      Lets say 15. Thats almost 60 attempts.
      This bstd was surely being kept safe by a spiritual power.
      Hitler was a masterful spokes man, but a poor general.
      Germany's chances of victory were much higher if hitler had been killed.
      Hitler didnt trust anyone. You cant win such a war without trust.
      As you stated ....." near misses and lost opportunities"
      60 near misses and lost opportunities to kill hitler have DRASTICALLY altered our history
      So who kept him alive..satan or Yahweh ?

    • @NowhereMan7
      @NowhereMan7 Před rokem +1

      @@aceventura5398 You are free to comment on this website just like everyone else. Maybe start your own comment though if your reply is on another subject. Then again do as you please. I just dont know what that has to do with my comment but all good.

    • @tonilaseng4620
      @tonilaseng4620 Před rokem +3

      There is no coincidences in this world. Those who knows will knows.

  • @ChelseaFootballClub1905
    @ChelseaFootballClub1905 Před rokem +5

    He lived to 84 when he was like 20% metal that’s pretty impressive

  • @brendadefazio8497
    @brendadefazio8497 Před rokem

    Another great video 😊 thanks Thoughty

  • @dysrt147
    @dysrt147 Před rokem +40

    You are a Great Story teller. I love your channel.

  • @chemicalvamp
    @chemicalvamp Před rokem +21

    My family had some quart mugs when i was a kid. They were made of pewter and had glass pane bottom.

  • @diturner7247
    @diturner7247 Před rokem +1

    Enjoying this one. One of the best. Comments are great. Charcoal in water to assist removing metal and such. Organic gardening and herbs assist removing nasty stuff from our body. Great job gardening and hugely rewarding. Natural matters and so does nurture.

  • @vassilenatanadjikova6188

    Excellent presentation!!!

  • @iplayeddsharpminor
    @iplayeddsharpminor Před rokem +58

    I am a former student of astrophysics with a vague awareness of what an arse Newton was in getting works of peers removed from libraries. And as always I love your videos. But Gerard Vernon Wallop has got to be the single best part of it. What a name 😂

    • @aceventura5398
      @aceventura5398 Před rokem

      What proof have you found confirming billions of gallaxies ?
      Proof confirming images of multiple gallaxies Photoshoped from pixelated images are actualy a true representation.

    • @AA-BB
      @AA-BB Před rokem +5

      Sick brag

  • @hell-hollowfarmer41
    @hell-hollowfarmer41 Před rokem +57

    Great videos as always! Love the 'don't take that shovel!' part! The best doctor I had growing up was the first generation in his family to attend college after a huge falling out with his family when he wanted to continue schooling instead of pursuing a life of ditch digging! Sometimes schooling can be okay! Thanks Doc for not taking the shovel!

    • @doncarlodivargas5497
      @doncarlodivargas5497 Před rokem +2

      I wished someone told my mother that,
      I could have been a world known genius also

    • @margaretclark9016
      @margaretclark9016 Před rokem

      My brothers-in-law could have been been genius’ as well. My husband managed to be the one and only in his family to go to college and on to med school. My father-in-law felt insecure and forbid the other children to further their education.

    • @notoftentold4076
      @notoftentold4076 Před rokem

      Number one on that list is the most important subject anyone could ever study. Prophet Muhammed (peace be upon him)

    • @natarajsingaluri2
      @natarajsingaluri2 Před měsícem

      He became a thief !! He theft theories from Indian texts and later he shamelessly claimed that they were his inventions . What a shame

  • @silmasantos3265
    @silmasantos3265 Před rokem

    Really Interesting subjects, love your channel. And your accent too. 😊

  • @dougalexander7204
    @dougalexander7204 Před 4 měsíci

    Thoughty2 is the best story teller of events and people with the ability to see through BS when it clouds the view.

  • @KhalidAskar
    @KhalidAskar Před rokem +21

    Everytime a new video drops on my feed, I feel like I just got a new book ! Your storytelling abilities are unmatched!

    • @snorthsnorth6480
      @snorthsnorth6480 Před rokem

      Unmatched, also, in the sense of being relentlessly chirpy.

  • @scarlettg6136
    @scarlettg6136 Před rokem +13

    Wonderful alternate bioblog of a great mind. Your art adds just what's needed to keep it in prospective. Thanks for the history lesson.

  • @jabberwocky8021
    @jabberwocky8021 Před rokem

    Another really interesting video. Thanks man!

  • @philcarter2362
    @philcarter2362 Před rokem

    Awesome vid. Thank you.

  • @jedidiahsamuelu1651
    @jedidiahsamuelu1651 Před rokem +4

    thank you Thoughty 2 for this informative video.
    been loving your content for the last 2 years

  • @aadamtx
    @aadamtx Před rokem +52

    I've found it fascinating that some folks can have such divergent interests and careers and do both well. Newton and the Mint, for example, but also novelist Anthony Trollope and his postal service innovations. Peter Ackroyd's NEWTON (part of the "Brief Lives" series) is a good overview of the man's life and work.

    • @HFTYKCK
      @HFTYKCK Před rokem

      MBTI probably determines a lot to do with this.

    • @redditastic6711
      @redditastic6711 Před rokem

      ​@@HFTYKCK mbti is proven bs. It's a development of appetite for multiple disciplines

    • @Trump-sucks
      @Trump-sucks Před 4 měsíci

      🤣🤣

    • @Dherwin
      @Dherwin Před 2 měsíci

      I am one of those people, but I can't say that I do the things I do pretty well, only other people can tell if I did good on a certain things. I'm an electronics engineer and an author of some novels I've written throughout the years. Never have published anything though, only the people closest to me are able to access my archives. All the feedbacks have been good so far.
      I don't know how to describe it, but having multiple interests makes me less productive on other areas since I often get invested into something that I find fascinating such as studying engineering when I was at university. Ultimately I had to take a step down on writing novels when this interest spiked. It's like a dormant hobby that takes over me when triggered. But with time, I often find myself writing again for some reason. Man I'm really bad at explaining, you might find this confusing as hell. Lmao

  • @garlandremingtoniii1338

    I actually learned quite a bit that I didn’t know about, Sir Isaac. And I studied him extensively when I was at Cambridge.

  • @guillaumemaurice3503
    @guillaumemaurice3503 Před rokem

    Thank you for sharing this video that was very interesting.

  • @MrMockingbird1313
    @MrMockingbird1313 Před rokem +156

    Hey Thoughty2, I have spent a considerable amount of energy on genealogy. Sir Issac was a cousin of my late wife. It appears he has had some number of nieces and nephews, but never had a girl friend. He was childless. He may have had Asperger's Syndrome. I am almost positive he had Alpha 1 Anti Tripsin Deficiency, as it ran through the family. I will speculate that there is a good chance Sir Issac's Cause of Death (COD) was some form of Parkinson's Disease. A1A Disease (short name), is a host carrier for at least 20 other well known diseases, like Parkinson's. Many people with A1A will do cutting edge almost crazy things. So his drinking metals hardly seems odd, given his genetic code. Finally, many of Issac's cousins, to this day, have had genius level IQ.

    • @Alan_Misc
      @Alan_Misc Před rokem +43

      Hey MrMockingbird1313. That's amazing. Your late wife could very well be related to me as well then!!! Sir Isaac Newton was my 3rd cousin 11x removed. His 2nd great grandfather John Clark Newton (1520-1563) had two sons - Richard (1575-1641) whos son was Isaac Newton (1606-1642) who was the father of Sir Isaac Newton. For the other son George Newton (1554-1600), he had a son called Christopher Newton (1584-1645) who had a son called Isaac Newton (1608-1650) who likewise had a son called Captain Isaac Newton (born 1632) who was my direct 9th great grandfather and also the 3rd cousin of Sir Isaac Newton. I hope that's of interest.

    • @aceventura5398
      @aceventura5398 Před rokem +23

      Genius IQ'S are easy to reach today. Mine said i was one. Im as dumb as a shit between two house bricks. 😂

    • @1minuteofgaming596
      @1minuteofgaming596 Před rokem +11

      @@Alan_Misc How did you feel when you first realized that the great Newton was your relative? He is my favorite scientist BTW.

    • @Alan_Misc
      @Alan_Misc Před rokem +30

      @@1minuteofgaming596 it was interesting but after building my family tree for +11 years, it really makes you realise we're all cousins anyway. It's just how distant / close we are and that everyone in the world are related if we could go back far enough.

    • @Time-worm
      @Time-worm Před rokem

      If were going by that logic im Jesus Christ 15th cousin 161 times removed. Im just saying you guys share more dna with a banana than you do Isaac

  • @MajorHenryL
    @MajorHenryL Před rokem +25

    A court mug is literally just a giant beer mug. When you buy beer in some states it comes in quarts(32oz, 0.946lit), not 40 oz.
    I have one in my cupboard. Thanks for reminding me to break it out again, been a while.

    • @cvp5882
      @cvp5882 Před rokem +3

      40oz is a quarter imperial gallon. 32oz is a quarter US gallon. 4.54L vs 3.78L

    • @jp5481
      @jp5481 Před rokem +1

      ​@@Joe-sg9ll I.e. 2 pints, or about 1100 ml

    • @jp5481
      @jp5481 Před rokem

      @@Joe-sg9ll indeed

  • @papan525
    @papan525 Před rokem

    Brilliant work, new subscriber

  • @gordonduckworth5591
    @gordonduckworth5591 Před 8 měsíci

    I’m new to your channel loving your videos you are amazing thank you

  • @cassieoz1702
    @cassieoz1702 Před rokem +35

    I've heard that he was the instigator of the ridged 'milling' on the rim of coins to prevent clipping. This was a common practice when coins were actually made of precious metals and cutting slivers of metal from the edges could provide a stash of gold or silver that could be sold

  • @mobiuseno
    @mobiuseno Před rokem +5

    Excellent as always...thanks for watching 😉

  • @dawsie
    @dawsie Před rokem +3

    It never fails, I learn something new each time I watch your videos, this was an eye opener for sure, it’s a shame that that part is not as widely known, I wonder where all the pages are now, because it’s something that should never of been split up in the first place.

  • @masterchief5603
    @masterchief5603 Před 7 měsíci

    7:50 Brilliant thing he figured it out! And left his knowledge to us all.

  • @ianmalcolm2552
    @ianmalcolm2552 Před rokem +38

    Extremely informative videos without fail. Much better than Thoughty1. Keep up the great work!

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 Před rokem +1

      Absolutely man! Thoughty 1 was a bummer! Thoughty 2 is a much acknowledged improvement!

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 Před rokem +1

      Still waiting on Thoughty 2.0.

    • @ianmalcolm2552
      @ianmalcolm2552 Před 11 měsíci

      No, just an attempt at a joke…🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @natarajsingaluri2
      @natarajsingaluri2 Před měsícem

      Newton became a thief !! He theft theories from Indian texts and later he shamelessly claimed that they were his inventions . What a shame

  • @puiafanai3471
    @puiafanai3471 Před rokem +4

    Thoughty2 never miss, always interesting and awsome contents🔥🔥💯

  • @c.d-man9781
    @c.d-man9781 Před rokem

    The absolute, hands down best looking thumbnails on CZcams!!!!!!!!!

  • @RivasLaforet
    @RivasLaforet Před rokem +1

    9:53 “My Alchemical Obsession” is a great band name, cousin to MCR.

  • @richiesimons4403
    @richiesimons4403 Před rokem +3

    Brilliant video. Really well made as usual.

  • @hell-hollowfarmer41
    @hell-hollowfarmer41 Před rokem +7

    I wanna see a 'glow up' contest between Sir Isaac and Gottried Leibniz! Some serious hair-metal 80s rocker vibes going on there!

  • @user-dz2fn5ne1c
    @user-dz2fn5ne1c Před měsícem

    Thanks again

  • @rev.jonathanwint6038
    @rev.jonathanwint6038 Před 5 měsíci +2

    Not just a Alchemist but a Demon summoner and necromancer.. So yep...By the way he considered the Alchemy and Magic the serouse real life work.

  • @matthewcovington2699
    @matthewcovington2699 Před rokem +8

    Thank you for your entertainment while I do Homework Sir!

  • @Lewwyy
    @Lewwyy Před rokem +48

    Isac Newton discovered gravity in 1687...
    Before that, people could fly

    • @DarknessProphet
      @DarknessProphet Před rokem +7

      Oh gee, thanks Isaac, robbing us of flying carriages.

    • @annabellethepitty
      @annabellethepitty Před rokem +7

      What a killjoy.

    • @MeganVictoriaKearns
      @MeganVictoriaKearns Před rokem +6

      Damn... Isaac Newton is history's version of that kid who reminds the teacher she didn't assign homework yet.

    • @Deepak.Dahiya
      @Deepak.Dahiya Před rokem +5

      Writing was invented around 3200 BC
      People before 3200 BC :

    • @Angelol3895
      @Angelol3895 Před rokem

      Steven’s dad was still in school

  • @pistolpete5189
    @pistolpete5189 Před rokem +7

    Lesser known fact about Newton is that he gave Brian May inspiration for his hair style 😂

  • @stinkysnowman7169
    @stinkysnowman7169 Před rokem +2

    I used to play minecraft and listen to your vids now i get nostalgic when i hear your voice❤

  • @vaslim80
    @vaslim80 Před rokem +10

    As a piece of lead, I approve of this video

  • @bertram-raven
    @bertram-raven Před rokem +7

    I searched for Sophic Mercury but discovered Sapphic Mastery. I cannot say I am unhappy.

  • @BrotherPatriot
    @BrotherPatriot Před 3 měsíci

    Excellent video...!

  • @rokadaprliinnysystemyaczno4761

    Would be good to do follow up programmes on the fate of Newtons papers at auction, who got them and hiw they were used and their final place(s) and analysis of them. Would be interesting to know how they influence Keynes.

  • @artdonovandesign
    @artdonovandesign Před rokem +53

    Yes. He was truly an S.O.B. to other scientists. As dedicated as he was to science, he was equally dedicated to bolstering his own legend.
    Great episode, Aaron!

    • @mikebauer6917
      @mikebauer6917 Před rokem +4

      A quality shared by Einstein (SOB to colleagues and spouses).

    • @yve4889
      @yve4889 Před rokem +1

      What is an SOB?

    • @Tony32
      @Tony32 Před rokem +2

      I think his name is Arran.

    • @Alagachak
      @Alagachak Před rokem +4

      Not much change to scientists today :P The good/great/achievementoriented ones can be... quite the personalities.
      Anyone thinking it goes like this: Oh my lovely protege! You have grown beyond me and proven what my career is built upon and the connections I have with the industry producing things based upon my research quite lacking... I applaud you!
      Haven't really been paying attention to all the backstabbing and downright feuds within Universities, between fields and between researchers.

    • @musicingflowing
      @musicingflowing Před rokem +7

      ​@@yve4889 Spaghetti on Burrito

  • @thijsminnee7549
    @thijsminnee7549 Před rokem +4

    Google said a quart mug was one of those old mugs were people drink beer from in movies.

  • @rachanachowdhury4162
    @rachanachowdhury4162 Před rokem

    Well said Sir!

  • @BARGEARSE-tk3mh
    @BARGEARSE-tk3mh Před rokem

    The Mad Hatters and Mercury is interesting to read about. Soft metal sorcery is also the work of the fallen. Aluminum Sulphate is part of it too..

  • @DavidPaulNewtonScott
    @DavidPaulNewtonScott Před rokem +30

    I was told about a story that he had an illegitimate child Mary Newton from whom I am descended. True or not he inspired me to study science and continue the family tradition of inserting the name Newton in our surnames. David-Paul Newton-Scott (Physics and Mathematics teacher) not done yet.

    • @LittleMissJess
      @LittleMissJess Před rokem +6

      But... I thought Issac Newton famously died a virgin ???

    • @DavidPaulNewtonScott
      @DavidPaulNewtonScott Před rokem +8

      Well there are a few letters to a neice he was obviously fond of. The woman in the story was his housekeeper. He is and always was my hero. I have ADHD and there are people who say ge had it. He stood up to the school bully and won so did I and I lost but they say he had a healthy respect for me. That guy went on to become a coke dealer. He was a total parasite on society. So I get Newton's desire for law enforcement and justicen

    • @y_fam_goeglyd
      @y_fam_goeglyd Před rokem +5

      ​@@LittleMissJess he wasn't going to blab about it and get a reputation for being a rake, especially if there was a child as a result.

    • @leicestergux
      @leicestergux Před rokem +5

      ​@@DavidPaulNewtonScott I'm not sure the man who formulated calculus suffered with concentration problems oh great god child of Newton 😂😂🤯

    • @agnibeshbasu3089
      @agnibeshbasu3089 Před rokem +6

      @@leicestergux well, ADHD people have trouble in concentrating in repetitive tasks, or tasks they find boring. ADHD people can often enter into a hyperfocus state where they can ultra focus for long hours on things that they are genuinely interested in (you'll see adhd kids completely absorbed in video games and cannot even hear you if you call). So Newton having ADHD is not impossible IMO.

  • @adamosburn754
    @adamosburn754 Před rokem +4

    It's amazing how right he was while still being so wrong. Goes to show a little understanding goes a long way.

  • @dtaylor10chuckufarle
    @dtaylor10chuckufarle Před rokem +14

    There are two kinds of countries in the world: Those that use the Metric System, and those that landed a man on the Moon. 🌜🚀

    • @mikecrowley2472
      @mikecrowley2472 Před měsícem +1

      I hadn't heard that Myanmar/Burma had a moon program.

    • @alwynemcintyre2184
      @alwynemcintyre2184 Před měsícem

      I believe NASA used the metric system to get a man on the moon, didn't they employ a large chunk of the nazi rocket team?

    • @Codex7777
      @Codex7777 Před měsícem +1

      ...using the metric system. :)
      US scientists and most engineers use the metric system.

  • @talismanskulls2857
    @talismanskulls2857 Před rokem +1

    Best way to describe a quart mug in British context is a type of mug holding about two pints, and usually made out of Pewter. Not really ornate or anything like that.

  • @deepanshukapoor8591
    @deepanshukapoor8591 Před rokem +4

    Whenever i see ur notification sir ✌️😎 i grab all my snacks and 🤩jst binge watch😌👌🏼

  • @eyemunchained8968
    @eyemunchained8968 Před rokem +5

    Isaac Newton was never married has no known child... He like the mad scientist himself, Nikola Tesla, were titans in mankind's brief history.

  • @brentcaudill7567
    @brentcaudill7567 Před rokem +1

    Allways as usual great production and information..probably the greatest scientific mind. Tesla is tight there with him

  • @normancherry8732
    @normancherry8732 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Take note people, education, science, ambition etc, sure roads to madness!

  • @theblitz9
    @theblitz9 Před rokem +38

    The most important thing Newton invented?
    The cat flap!
    And yes, he really did.

    • @TheBaileyandashlyn
      @TheBaileyandashlyn Před rokem

      The what?? 😂😂

    • @theblitz9
      @theblitz9 Před rokem

      @@TheBaileyandashlyn yep

    • @FatherMullet
      @FatherMullet Před rokem +2

      Nahh, common mistake amongst Americans. Cat doors have been here for quite some time before the birth of sir Newton.

    • @TheBaileyandashlyn
      @TheBaileyandashlyn Před rokem +1

      @@FatherMullet who calls it a cat flap?? And what does that have to do with Newton? I feel like I'm on a trip

    • @FatherMullet
      @FatherMullet Před rokem +1

      @@TheBaileyandashlyn Read my initial comment again.

  • @safiremorningstar
    @safiremorningstar Před rokem +6

    It might not have just been mercury poisoning heavy metal poisoning can cause this when the liver starts to no longer be able to function the term for this is high metal toxicity. And you can have a various forms of toxicity happen when your liver malfunctions and it has nothing necessarily to do with high middle but in his case based on everything you've been telling us I say hi metal toxicity. Please bear in mind that I am using voice to text and it doesn't always write things down as I would like it so when you read any comments for me that's what you're having to deal with it doesn't punctuate and it doesn't let me fix anything I have problems with my hands so fixing things as a bit difficult have to go back erase and rerecord it as it were biunno get voice-to-text to put it down but it doesn't always work.

  • @bethpemberton7980
    @bethpemberton7980 Před rokem +3

    Didnt know that much abt Sir Isaac. Interesting. Yes, heavy metals poisoning likely plus a touch of genius/insanity. Keep up the good work and look forward to more!!

  • @alanhindmarch4483
    @alanhindmarch4483 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Not only was Newton buried in Westminster Abbey, he was the First of Only 3 Commoners (non Royals) to be given a State Funeral. The other 2 being Lord Nelson and Winston Churchill.

  • @ayjanyusuf6047
    @ayjanyusuf6047 Před rokem +20

    Brilliantly told, as usual 👌

    • @frankwilson6100
      @frankwilson6100 Před rokem +2

      His script writing is too verbose and he's full of himself

    • @jamespaul2587
      @jamespaul2587 Před rokem +4

      ​@Frank Wilson then why do you watch and comment?

    • @PrairieWolf62
      @PrairieWolf62 Před rokem +2

      ​@@frankwilson6100 🤡🎈🤡🎈🤡🎈🤡🎈

    • @KingTFD
      @KingTFD Před rokem +3

      ​@Frank Wilson too verbose? Are we keeping to first grade?

    • @natarajsingaluri2
      @natarajsingaluri2 Před měsícem

      Newton became a thief !! He theft theories from Indian texts and later he shamelessly claimed that they were his inventions . What a shame

  • @justinanderson267
    @justinanderson267 Před rokem +4

    It's strange... Looking at this list of sins is almost like looking at someone's Facebook timeline, or something similar.

  • @22nealy
    @22nealy Před 4 měsíci

    I can't wait to watch you all 🔥

  • @omarsimpson1483
    @omarsimpson1483 Před rokem +1

    "People have been executed for far less" most underrated statement of the decade😅

  • @douglasmackallor
    @douglasmackallor Před rokem +13

    The apple never falls to far from the eccentric branch of geniuses.

  • @amyhill9127
    @amyhill9127 Před rokem +4

    A quart jar is used for canning foods and Moonshine 😅

  • @richardfitzgerald2986

    Hiya I love your work keep it up. One Quart is 1/4 of a gallon or 2 pints.

  • @AntoinettexKitten
    @AntoinettexKitten Před rokem

    I like the story about him getting pissed at the guy who kept making counterfeit coins and getting away with so much crap

  • @cadenmandrake5859
    @cadenmandrake5859 Před rokem +3

    I have a juicy one for you, Thoughty2. If you can unravel it in time, you may unveil one of the simplest, yet most profoundly powerful forms of awareness ever to be kept secret from the public. (Mostly for public safety). Alternatively, you will not unravel it in time and this overly simple and yet globally overlooked tidbit may vanish from perspective entirely. This latin term for an anonymous individual has been used to further obscure his identity so he could test knowledge. As it turns out, both Newton and this man were very interested in a fancy rock.

  • @rgnyc
    @rgnyc Před rokem +3

    Nicely done! I haven't been watching for a while, and I'm cautious about subscribing to any channel (the numbers can become overwhelming). But I think perhaps it is time to subscribe after all. I've missed these clips, and have found them to be quite accurate - unlike many other history channels.

  • @kondutu
    @kondutu Před rokem

    2:53 A quart is a unit used to measure liquids, and is slightly larger than a Liter.

  • @Ricardo-Mureb
    @Ricardo-Mureb Před rokem

    What an awesome video. 10/10. I just wished Isaac's name was in the title

  • @Lewwyy
    @Lewwyy Před rokem +11

    Isac Newton?
    More like, Isac knew tons

  • @Leon-ym9qm
    @Leon-ym9qm Před rokem +5

    He invented calculus. Bastard, lol! I had to have the course to graduate. I took it my senior year because I was avoiding with all I had. I passed and that’s about it. Till this day I remember so little I don’t know if I can do a basic equation. Bastard!

  • @AvangionQ
    @AvangionQ Před 5 měsíci

    2:44 Quart mug is an oversized beer stein that can hold two pints.

  • @jamwayofaiken-augustarockb7643

    I think that Court mug is similar to what we call a Steiner we like ours frosted and we do like the head overflowing

  • @kevinmcqueenie7420
    @kevinmcqueenie7420 Před rokem +4

    Imagine if his full attention had been on, you know, science.

  • @lzrdkng
    @lzrdkng Před rokem +3

    The quart mug looks to be a beer stein of some sort which is approx 2 pints (american pints) in volume

    • @Australian_Made
      @Australian_Made Před rokem +4

      The mug in question would be a quart of a WINE gallon.
      Today's UK (water) gallon is NOT the same as a wine gallon.
      However, Todays
      USA 1 gallon is = 1 wine gallon,
      So YES, 1/4 of American gallon.

  • @jlpsinde
    @jlpsinde Před rokem

    So good ❤

  • @MorrisonLee-wt2jp
    @MorrisonLee-wt2jp Před 2 měsíci

    Thoughty overlooks the fact that alchemists were the earliest metallurgists, a trade useful to Newton in his work as warden of coinage at the mint.

  • @mutantryeff
    @mutantryeff Před rokem +14

    Isaac Newton hid the secret that he invented the Fig Newton.

    • @MeganVictoriaKearns
      @MeganVictoriaKearns Před rokem

      He didn't hide it very well, because everybody knows he's the brains behind the production of fig newtons.

  • @henryz4312
    @henryz4312 Před rokem +3

    I just sit and wonder who counted all those words in the notes Newton took.

    • @sunnyjim1355
      @sunnyjim1355 Před rokem +2

      Obviously nobody did.. it'll just be an estimated, based on the number of pages and the average number of words per page.

  • @Zebraarehorsetoo
    @Zebraarehorsetoo Před 3 měsíci

    The face he make when he say .. ‘he was broke’ 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @erichenry3447
    @erichenry3447 Před 3 měsíci

    Thanks

  • @ShoutOfCoffee
    @ShoutOfCoffee Před rokem +6

    This moment... "You're the best. Don't tell Jesus." really cracked me open. 😂😂😂

  • @kevintaunt4385
    @kevintaunt4385 Před rokem +3

    Very interesting, though I might comment that “hung, drawn and quartered” punishment usually involved hanging the guy until unconscious, reviving him to be disemboweled, “drawn”, and then finally tearing him apart with for horses tied to his limbs, “quartering”. The good old days. 😎

    • @mikev4621
      @mikev4621 Před rokem

      Quartering was done after death so that parts of the body could be sent to major cities to act as warnings.Being torn apart by horses was a different punishment . They think the 'drawn ' part was where they were drawn along behind a cart , often naked , on the streets, to the place of execution.

  • @SandyCheeks63564
    @SandyCheeks63564 Před 8 měsíci

    The quotes you cite say It's NOT coming BEFORE 2060 (earliest date; he also said Not Before 2090 or 2132 in the above quotes).

  • @FulcrumMason
    @FulcrumMason Před 3 měsíci +1

    great channel , only comment about this vid is the changing between OS (old style) dates and New Style (NS). He states the OS when referring to birth and NS when referring to death. Wiki tells us that he was born Xmas day in OS but died in 1726 OS which is 1727 NS. blame the Gregorian calendar for this (or thank it). a very mute point though , some fantastic info here - I'll always come back regardless, for some interesting stories.