Dr. Neil deGrasse Tyson: Pluto's Place in the Universe

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  • čas přidán 25. 06. 2024
  • 92Y.org/Talks

Komentáře • 481

  • @shpongle7322
    @shpongle7322 Před 4 lety +8

    If you ask me, I believe Pluto is happier with his new family. They are neighbors and are similar in size and function. Pluto is no longer an outcast but one of many in his new family. Awwww 🥰

  • @tristan3456
    @tristan3456 Před 4 lety +42

    Quarantine has got me watching Neil alot lately...

  • @babygunckel
    @babygunckel Před 9 lety +91

    I can listen to him for hours!! We are lucky that he is here, on earth, with us at this time!

    • @TheRocky0601
      @TheRocky0601 Před 5 lety +4

      Lucky is the righteous word! As I wish I lived during Tesla or this Einstein guy.

    • @otrondal
      @otrondal Před 4 lety

      It would be very polite if some aliens could borrow him for a week.

    • @jb111082
      @jb111082 Před 4 lety

      @@otrondal What does that mean?

    • @fiaestebanlara6092
      @fiaestebanlara6092 Před 4 lety

      YEE

    • @axelbaldursson7645
      @axelbaldursson7645 Před měsícem

      ​@@fiaestebanlara6092Unbearably easy. talks too much. all secretions are drawn out, too excited.

  • @horu6459
    @horu6459 Před 5 lety +21

    You don't have to teach your kids to love science, they already do! You spend a year (with your kids) teaching them to walk and talk, and the rest telling them to shut up and sit down! I LOVE HIM.

  • @livenandlove1980
    @livenandlove1980 Před 10 lety +111

    I don't know why but listening to Neil deGrasse Tyson always calms me.

    • @Taghouly
      @Taghouly Před 6 lety +5

      livenandlove1980 he stutters sometimes and i like like it for some reason

    • @itoncemighthave9666
      @itoncemighthave9666 Před 5 lety +5

      becuase hes an enlightening genius

    • @derrickstorm6976
      @derrickstorm6976 Před 5 lety +2

      Incomprehensible intelligence

    • @drecdabeast
      @drecdabeast Před 4 lety +3

      @@derrickstorm6976 i listen at work when im pissed at a mf takes my mind off it except when i typed this.

    • @catherinefriedman8511
      @catherinefriedman8511 Před 4 lety +3

      i feel the same way.

  • @jimbrooks3370
    @jimbrooks3370 Před 10 lety +201

    "You spend a year teaching them to walk and talk, and the rest of their lives telling them to shut up and sit down." Probably the best quote I've ever heard to explain why most children lose their thirst for knowledge as they grow.

    • @jws1948ja
      @jws1948ja Před 5 lety +14

      What I remember is my father in law calling me stupid when I talked about continental drift.

    • @derrickstorm6976
      @derrickstorm6976 Před 5 lety +2

      Exactly :(

    • @toolguyslayer1
      @toolguyslayer1 Před 4 lety +2

      @@jws1948ja how much money will that make you was the point i think. It is good to know things though the more you know the more you need to know its your world free thinker whats next

    • @tysonlester3611
      @tysonlester3611 Před 4 lety

      jws1948ja only obbbbb bmorning lbpphl olp phbbb pb
      Lobohhl

    • @tysonlester3611
      @tysonlester3611 Před 4 lety

      jws1948ja p
      Holhplh plo
      L
      Ph
      Bbwhpb
      Olplh

  • @johnlaccohee-joslin4477
    @johnlaccohee-joslin4477 Před 4 lety +16

    I have to say that i have watched quite a lot of videos that Mr. TYSON
    has been on and find them very mind exspanding at the least.
    I get the feeling that if teachers were made to sit and watch how he goes about rendering facts and figures in a way that everyone can understand the world would become firstly a very interesting place to live but more importantly i think people would be better equiped to talk to one anther.
    I can recall so many things that I have done my best to explain about what I am doing spending my money on my optical equipment and what results I have so far, only to find that i had left them behind after the first sentance, not because i used big words, but because they did not understand the simple ones right at the beginning.
    It never ceases to make me cring when you ask someone how many times does that stick that is stuck in the snow at the north pole complete a circle and what its called.
    If they do not know that then explaining other things a bit more detailed becomes very hard for them to get their heads round, like why curtain things happen while using a telescope of one sort do not happen when using another type.
    We live in a very small place in a huge universe but.it should not stop us all from wishing to learn more about all of it.

    • @thomasnielsen4326
      @thomasnielsen4326 Před 2 lety

      I wonder if you can get a few more people to get a hold of you and let me know what I can do for them to make sure they are okay 👌🤔🙂😏.

  • @dannyseo5111
    @dannyseo5111 Před 4 lety +19

    "the accessibility of the cosmos to the public is magnified by the fact that vocabulary is not in the way" 1:10:11

  • @YourPlanetHere
    @YourPlanetHere Před 11 lety +21

    I love his passion and his charisma, one of the most important men in science today. His greatest contribution, more than any of his other works, is making science seem more accessible and fighting for a scientifically literate culture :)

  • @Rottensteam
    @Rottensteam Před 6 lety +34

    21:58
    Jan Oort was dutch, not danish.
    I have corrected Neil, I can take on the universe now!

    • @Aethelia
      @Aethelia Před 4 lety +6

      I would expect an astrophysicist to get such a detail wrong.
      To them, we're all just from Earth.

    • @fiaestebanlara6092
      @fiaestebanlara6092 Před 4 lety +1

      STRAIGHT UP

  • @sours4g181
    @sours4g181 Před 4 lety +7

    Such an intelligent human. He gets it. Love listening to him talk

  • @derrickstorm6976
    @derrickstorm6976 Před 5 lety +22

    "Why can the worm breathe under the rock?" somehow struck me as such an intelligent thing to wonder

  • @theheavyweight2008
    @theheavyweight2008 Před 4 lety +7

    1:26:50 an extremely important 5 minutes of wisdom that everyone should listen to

  • @IlovelouisDTV
    @IlovelouisDTV Před 10 lety +4

    i liked this interviewer. best interviews are done when you just get neil started and watch him go off on his own thing.

  • @BruceK10032
    @BruceK10032 Před 11 lety +3

    Amen to that! Even with the volume all the way up, I can barely hear the questions.

  • @Melatina77
    @Melatina77 Před 11 lety +6

    I love this man! Thanks for the upload!

  • @ozdorothyfan
    @ozdorothyfan Před 4 lety +1

    He has an amusing method of delivery while making valid points.

  • @barbaradonelson3835
    @barbaradonelson3835 Před 11 lety

    Luved it, learned a lot also....wish i could have heard the questions in the audience,...Had to guess what their questions were by his answers

  • @suerayss
    @suerayss Před 3 lety +3

    I have gained so much respect for dr Tyson after listening to this talk. Amazing talk and absolutely breathtaking breath of knowledge. Wish he could visit India and enlighten the kids here who have lot of thirst for science and good teachers like Dr Tyson.

    • @YM-zz5qq
      @YM-zz5qq Před 3 měsíci

      *breadth

    • @suerayss
      @suerayss Před 3 měsíci

      @@YM-zz5qq no breathtaking.

  • @PhenyxinNC
    @PhenyxinNC Před 11 lety +4

    at about 0:10:35 I swear I expected Dr. Tyson to start singing "one of these things is not like the others...can you tell which one."

  • @exilfromsanity
    @exilfromsanity Před 9 lety +4

    Read the book, very funny and informative too.

  • @keetopuffs
    @keetopuffs Před 3 lety

    Every time I fall asleep CZcams puts on these videos.

    • @axelbaldursson7645
      @axelbaldursson7645 Před měsícem

      My to. Unbearably easy. talks too much. all secretions are drawn out, too excited.

  • @WickedV3ng3nc3
    @WickedV3ng3nc3 Před 8 lety

    I remember hearing about it in my High school science class.

  • @jimstewart3283
    @jimstewart3283 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Love your spreading of knowledge so much.

  • @dbrawley58
    @dbrawley58 Před 5 lety +4

    The South African /African was so smooth.

  • @hotliner2872
    @hotliner2872 Před 5 lety +2

    Yes, DGT ain't all that in the pure sense, but everything else he does to get people to relate, which is key to the mission, he hits every note. Let him do what he does well and everyone benefits. Funding? Check. Please do not mess this up Mr. Poster, we are all on the same team, which is to learn new things; DGT does a great job of keeping this in the forefront of everyone's mind. And they vote. And when he is in the educational science groove and not thinking policy, he is rock solid on topic. l tilt my hat to scientists who try to break through to politicos, especially effective ones. (footnote: so I don't have to :-) )

  • @RaymondReijerkerk101
    @RaymondReijerkerk101 Před 10 lety +2

    I like this guys humour. A very bright man!

  • @sanctionh2993
    @sanctionh2993 Před 4 lety +4

    I think the reason we quit paying attention to astronaughts in space, is because we stopped expanding into space. It's been 50 years, and we havn't gone, with humans, further than the moon. We should of been mining asteroids by now. Either in orbit of Earth, or in the belt.

  • @RHS-992
    @RHS-992 Před 9 lety +4

    I think it is not just all about dog, It's about people that afraid of change, afraid of new things, people with old thinking, and do nothing good for innovation, or kids.

    • @randolphpatterson5061
      @randolphpatterson5061 Před 5 lety

      It's been well known for quite some time, that people find comfort in what is already familiar to them, even if that means they might live in squalor. They'll resist change , even if change would provide them with happier lives. The people who get the most out of life are those who understand this and so seek change.

  • @Shermanbay
    @Shermanbay Před 4 lety

    Audience questions with no sound. Reeeely great idea!

  • @Awesomenizzleness23
    @Awesomenizzleness23 Před 10 lety

    I just wan't to say im very bad at math but I also know im very smart when it comes to space and the cosmos. I love science, Im always thinking about it and I also never read books but im going to get YOUR book Dr Neil deGrasse Tyson I love your speeches your lectures. im very fascinated about what you talk about.

  • @alainmaitre2069
    @alainmaitre2069 Před 4 lety +1

    Yes

  • @derrickstorm6976
    @derrickstorm6976 Před 5 lety +1

    It's sad that the narrator guy didn't get the culture talk around 30:00 (35:05) minute mark, because that shows that even rather intelligent people can still be such blunt instruments, and that it's still such a great leap to DeGrasse kind of level of just understanding, not knowledge but understanding

  • @northzealand
    @northzealand Před 10 lety +3

    He is great

  • @idicula1979
    @idicula1979 Před 11 lety +1

    I feel like Dr. Neil deGrasse Tyson is like the Banjamin Franklin of our day and much like Benjamin Franklin was he should be an internatiol superstar, I feel like in today's age we have lost that ability for scientific inquiry and also to be captivated by what is around us.

  • @cmmc3400
    @cmmc3400 Před 4 lety +1

    It was a brilliant move on Walt Disney's part naming that dog.

    • @AlisonsArt
      @AlisonsArt Před 3 lety

      The planet Pluto was discovered/recognized in 1932. When did Disney's Pluto join the cast? Wondering if it was a current event name at the time. off to google....

  • @waynewise9773
    @waynewise9773 Před 6 lety +6

    if you put earth where pluto is it would freeze solid and it too would have a tail as it approached the sun.

    • @derrickstorm6976
      @derrickstorm6976 Před 5 lety +3

      Idiot, the tail would come from the dry ice melting. When you have that ice frozen, there's no tail. And Earth has strong enough gravity in itself, And it's atmosphere, to keep any water from becoming a comet's tail

    • @jilianvan8165
      @jilianvan8165 Před 2 lety

      @@derrickstorm6976
      So unnecessarily rude ~
      Learn a little from NDT
      knowledge can be shared with gentleness and humor.
      🎐

  • @CaptainPrincess
    @CaptainPrincess Před 11 lety

    Yes I know his LIFE has been very atypical, I was talking about his character, what he's like compared to Neil as a public figure. How he's generally seen and the attitude he carries that is so loveable about him.
    It was not a description of Stephen it was a description of his public persona as seen by the general assumptions and views of him.

  • @merchillio
    @merchillio Před 9 lety +1

    the part about culture (starts around 31:40) is a really interesting to look at it.

    • @derrickstorm6976
      @derrickstorm6976 Před 5 lety

      Very underrated segment by what is shown in the comments

    • @bobinthewest8559
      @bobinthewest8559 Před 4 lety

      The takeaway:
      Time to lay off of the soft drinks and cereal.

  • @GaryNumeroUno
    @GaryNumeroUno Před 4 lety +12

    34:00 If there was no toilet paper there would be a riot... oh... hang on!

  • @brydonjesse
    @brydonjesse Před 3 měsíci +1

    100% right about astronauts being super celebrity omg amazing ppl

  • @tripsr4kids
    @tripsr4kids Před 5 lety +3

    i feel a dim veil stupidity lift from my head every time i hear this guy speak. i feel my synapses firing, my brain growing. i feel a little smarter. it really is amazing. and im always a little bit more in awe of the world after i hear him speak. how many people can u say that about in the world?

  • @lomigreen
    @lomigreen Před 4 lety +2

    I think you’re the smartest person around, Dr. Tyson.

  • @squamish4244
    @squamish4244 Před 9 lety

    I always liked Pluto because it is so far out that it is way out there in the darkness in the edge of the Solar System, where the sun is just a dot in the sky, and so cold that its atmosphere is frozen to the ground. Being named after the sinister Roman god of the underworld just added to its badassery.

  • @calvinlary6134
    @calvinlary6134 Před 6 měsíci

    To m😢me, Pluto will always be a planet!

  • @rogeriopauloluis
    @rogeriopauloluis Před 3 měsíci

    Obrigado

  • @pimnijsten9007
    @pimnijsten9007 Před 5 lety +1

    21:58 Jan Oort was Dutch (just like Gerard Kuiper from the Kuiper Belt), not Danish. It's wrong in Neils book Death by black hole as well, on page 80.

  • @tanyajantz6376
    @tanyajantz6376 Před 3 lety

    BTW Clyde Tombaugh is from Burdett, KS.... My grandmother went to school wi him there. There is also a plaque there on the highway.. :).

  • @VeraHolm
    @VeraHolm Před 5 lety

    46:50 - infinity

  • @stalbourne
    @stalbourne Před 9 lety +2

    3:31 I learrned greek and roman mythology first than the cartoon when I was a kid...

  • @gunnarkaestle
    @gunnarkaestle Před 4 lety

    1:06:28 "Half the schools in this district are below average." I think that this statement is not trivial, but gives us the information that median equals the mean value in this case.

  • @Shock777423
    @Shock777423 Před 11 lety

    Hmmm... I haven't seen this one yet. Yay!

  • @brianjcavanaugh
    @brianjcavanaugh Před 10 lety +1

    Save Pluto!

  • @dotexe4981
    @dotexe4981 Před 5 měsíci +1

    59:30 I'm European and I never say I'm European when someone asks me where I am from, I think almost no European does this.

  • @bunnee777
    @bunnee777 Před 9 lety +1

    Mankind has now arrived at PLUTO!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @No_OneV
    @No_OneV Před 4 lety +12

    Here goes another 1 hour and 40 mins of my life again

  • @cerngox
    @cerngox Před 5 lety +1

    They need a cordless mic so you can hear the questions

  • @SyntaxScout
    @SyntaxScout Před 4 lety +1

    Do you notice without looking at the screen the host voice sounds similar to Chris Hadfield??

  • @smyrnianlink
    @smyrnianlink Před 5 lety

    "Planet" is just a word. What is strange is that people are disturbed to use the same word for Mercury and Pluto while they are not uncomfortable to use the same word for Mercury and Jupiter.

  • @PhenyxinNC
    @PhenyxinNC Před 11 lety

    BTW, if you haven't seen the documentary "The Pluto Files" you need to. It's Dr. Tyson at some of his best.

  • @user-fv3vc6hl7d
    @user-fv3vc6hl7d Před měsícem

    Dr. Neil deGrasse Tyson, i think you are the only smart ones that didn't lose ur humour. Thank u and that makes u a special person, someone enjoyable to watch and learn from. But i am hesitantly and respectfully correcting you for saying that Marianas trench is in the Philippines vice Guam(USA).

  • @Rossdink
    @Rossdink Před 3 měsíci

    He’s absolutely correct about Pluto

  • @PeggyJame
    @PeggyJame Před 4 lety +1

    You start learning the minute you emerge

  • @badpanda84
    @badpanda84 Před 11 lety

    But they are closely linked. Physical deals with things like quantam mechanics ( amongst other topics) and sub atomic particals.. chemsitry also deals with atom and molecules etc.
    And then as far as biology goes -- many biological process are chemical processes.. like the how the body metabilised carbohydrates.

  • @HaloJonas182
    @HaloJonas182 Před 11 lety

    There is no doubt about that.

  • @ReuvenF957
    @ReuvenF957 Před 4 lety

    Megillah comes from the Hebrew word "liglol", which means "to roll" because books and stories were recorded on scrolls.
    Lengthy ones were called, "Megillot", the singular of which is Megillah.
    When someone says "the whole Megillah". he means the whole story.

  • @IlovelouisDTV
    @IlovelouisDTV Před 10 lety +1

    actually one could argue that mathematics was created to explain the phenomena observed in the world of physics so really, mathematics was built on physics.

    • @derrickstorm6976
      @derrickstorm6976 Před 5 lety

      If you look at history, you realize it's a "possible argument" that could be true. It is the truth (beyond "I have one grain here and other here so now I have two grains to grow" simplicity)

  • @MrJihadTime
    @MrJihadTime Před 4 lety +1

    Pluto is still a planet to me

    • @picklefish74
      @picklefish74 Před 3 lety

      Then you have to also count the moon as a planet, because the moon is larger .

    • @MrJihadTime
      @MrJihadTime Před 3 lety

      randall davis no you don’t as the moon is a moon because it orbits a planet, it’s nothing to do with size

  • @loue6563
    @loue6563 Před 4 lety

    I think it is also the "underdog" fact too. Americans always want to fight for the rights of the underdog. and that we learned our solar system had 9 planets and to "loose" one makes us feel we are now smaller or less.

  • @istarsamu5585
    @istarsamu5585 Před 9 lety +21

    Super confused European thinking how he gets his water to boil till 212 degrees.Until he realises, yeah Fahrenheit...

    • @ryldauril6379
      @ryldauril6379 Před 4 lety

      well did you ppl that invented your scale of measurement defend yourselves in 2 world wars? umm no..so its feet inchs and fahrenheit..yes america was stupid saving you ...and feeding you and defending ..YOU

    • @Prodigious1One
      @Prodigious1One Před 4 lety +4

      @@ryldauril6379 well... The USA didn't enter those wars until 1917 and 1941. The UK, the Commonwealth nations, and other countries were in them since 1914 and 1939.

    • @gunnarkaestle
      @gunnarkaestle Před 4 lety +1

      @@Prodigious1One I am not sure about the connection of being sucessful at warfare and the alignment of measurement units. In the middle ages, each city had it's own set of cubits and pounds and it own time zone. It just impaired trade - in 1975 the Metric Conversion Act was passed in the US to have SI as "the preferred system of weights and measures for United States trade and commerce". Maybe the transition period is not one generation, but 2-3. I think that rocket science now has made the change after a few avoidable mishaps.

    • @Prodigious1One
      @Prodigious1One Před 4 lety

      @@gunnarkaestle Yeah, Americans need time to adopt a new measurement system.

    • @gunnarkaestle
      @gunnarkaestle Před 4 lety +1

      @@Prodigious1One In Germany cars are still measured in horsepower by Joe Sixpack, although since the late 1970s, kWs were made mandatory as unit for engine power. It is a simple factor of 3/4 but still both units are used in parallel and only slowly, the horsepower is fading away. Maybe with electric vehicles this trend accelerates.

  • @JuanPena-ql1hi
    @JuanPena-ql1hi Před 4 lety +3

    The part in the big bang theory when sheldon is mad at him for the killing Pluto 😂😂

    • @DellaWatson-cz3mq
      @DellaWatson-cz3mq Před 4 lety

      I ain't gonna lie, I'm still mad at him for killing Pluto too, and I still haven't forgiven him yet... I don't think I ever will 😢... I'm glad to hear though that Pluto is still a partial planet

  • @Quantum_GirlE
    @Quantum_GirlE Před 5 lety +1

    Does the Pluto thing vary by state? Thought it was a national thing. :/

  • @HorrorMovieReviewGuy
    @HorrorMovieReviewGuy Před 9 lety

    Does anyone know if it is possible to have two planets one orbiting the other not being the primary body in orbit that would still be considered a planet? Would any definition qualify it as a planet? Can't find anything on that.

    • @jamesclifford1308
      @jamesclifford1308 Před 9 lety

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_planet

    • @matlord8799
      @matlord8799 Před 8 lety

      Yes, stars can also do this, black holes and massive stars can also do this.

  • @DellaWatson-cz3mq
    @DellaWatson-cz3mq Před 4 lety

    What you just told me about Pluto has made me even madder at you now... Pluto is special.... Yes I still haven't forgiven you all these years later... And I'm 38

  • @PeggyJame
    @PeggyJame Před 4 lety

    The Universe expands in all directions

  • @holycrapfreakinsweet
    @holycrapfreakinsweet Před 5 lety +2

    I honestly thought the video was paused or hanged up or something, but I checked and found out someone from the audience was giving a question only they could hear... bugs me...

  • @danibroxy1465
    @danibroxy1465 Před 5 lety

    We have a soda isle in the UK supermarkets. Didn't realise that it was weird :/

  • @ReuvenF957
    @ReuvenF957 Před 4 lety

    How many Kuiper belt objects have influence on the orbits of the existing planets?
    Pluto was discovered by noting its gravitational effect on the planet Neptune.
    Maybe Pluto needs a special category of which it is the only known member so far.
    I'm upset that it's not a planet although I understand why not but lumping it with Ceres seems kind of odd, too.

  • @CaptainPrincess
    @CaptainPrincess Před 11 lety

    It's kind of different though, because despite what people often think, Stephen isn't really a scientific-based orator like Neil is.
    Stephen is more of a cultural icon, more a publically adored idol of a sort of representation, an almost imagined ideal of the Typical British Older Man.
    Neil is an incredibly imaginative genius in a field of science. Whole different package.
    I'd say the only way in which Neil and Stephen were equal is they're both awesome smart people.

  • @atheismeeu
    @atheismeeu Před 11 lety

    I'm enjoying this conversation a lot so far, but I'd like to say that Jan Hendrik Oort, who came up with the hypothesis of the Oort Cloud, is Dutch, not Danish.

  • @mrfbng
    @mrfbng Před 4 lety +1

    So, since the asteroid Ceres is round, could you call it the World Ceres?

  • @jackehli621
    @jackehli621 Před 4 měsíci

    Why record this if the people listening to it cannot hear the people asking the questions?

  • @BartonSangerWoodside80
    @BartonSangerWoodside80 Před 10 lety

    Woke me up, but the Greek God PLUTO is no doubt feeling disrespected!

  • @YTEdy
    @YTEdy Před měsícem

    Asteroid Ceres was briefly a planet too. Not that briefly. About 50 years, from it's discovery in 1801. As far as I know, there wasn't an uproar when it was demoted from a planet to an asteroid.

  • @infinite4destruction771

    Clyde tombaugh was born in streator, illinois

  • @ZorenA65
    @ZorenA65 Před 8 lety

    The Pluto system is so interesting. Very interesting orbit. I hope one day humans can harness gravity and spacetime for interstellar travel. The moons of Pluto are chaotic for the outer 3 of 5. But I bet it would be a very peaceful place to visit. My ashes will go to Pluto. Took Greek mythology first year of uni. Very intense and difficult course. I love the mythology. But if I had to choose between infinitely powerful microscopic or telescopic vision super powers, I would choose microscopic vision. Use that to research interstellar travel. Gravity is the weakest, but most interesting force. They should make robot astronauts with computerized versions of Neil degrasse tyson's brain! But not his fashion sense.

  • @PhenyxinNC
    @PhenyxinNC Před 11 lety

    No, that isn't the only reason...in fact you'll see, in the definition of "planet", that size isn't referenced outside of "is your gravity such that you are round", which Pluto is. In fact, if you "listen" to Dr. Tyson he discusses the composition of Pluto and points out that it really is more like a comet than an asteroid even. The Dr even hints at the idea that perhaps Jupiter and it's kin are not really planets either BASED ON THEIR COMPOSITION!

  • @maskedmarvyl4774
    @maskedmarvyl4774 Před 3 lety +1

    If Tyson has a problem, it's that he begins a sentence, branches off before he's halfway through it, branches off into a side story before continuing his original sentence, branches off again into another sentence without ever finishing the first one, then when you try to get him to clarify the sentence he never finished, says "WAI-WAI-WAI-WAI-WAI-WAIT!!!! I'M MEETING HIM HALFWAY!!! JUST LET ME FINISH!!!" Meanwhile, he's forgotten the first and second points he started to make, and then says "does that make sense?" He needs to put himself on a word budget of 5,000 words per statement, and needs to stop running over people in a way that's frankly rude. If brevity is the soul of wit, then Tyson's explanations would actually greatly benefit from answering questions without meandering down pathways that he understands for himself, but other people don't.

  • @alinaysa
    @alinaysa Před 11 lety +1

    get microphone in the audience next time...

  • @patricklynch9574
    @patricklynch9574 Před 3 lety

    I was 5 I named my pitbull German Shepherd Chow Chow Pluto after Mickey Mouse's dog. When I got older I then found out Pluto is the god of the underworld IE hell. Which was a much more fitting name for this bad ass dog. I still miss him ,but now he's guarding Hades.

  • @davinschmidt3303
    @davinschmidt3303 Před 4 lety

    Question? He says something like is it more cost effective to deflect a comet from earth or to ship a billion people to a terraformed mars? Short term deflect comet, long term something bigger that cant be stopped will inevitably hit us (real long term example andromeda galaxy right?) so we need to get to Mars and beyond is the only real answer...
    Basically building a hammer would secure any current life span battle, theoretically?
    But to insure survival, we need to focus on like intergalactic civilization or something?
    Just interested me and wanted to share... Gnite! :)

  • @McMurchie
    @McMurchie Před 9 lety +3

    he said the US dominated Astrophysics last century, by quoting big bang as American created words. Sorry mate, that was a British person, Fred Hoyle. In fact a huge amount of discoveries were from the UK, Germany etc so I wouldn't say dominated.

  • @ReuvenF957
    @ReuvenF957 Před 4 lety

    I am NOT a fundamentalist about the six days and can even show an interpretation of the Big Bang in religious literature. My problem with evolutionary theory is that I have never received a good answer to things like poisonous snakes and electric eels and bombadier beetles and the human eye.

  • @sabin97
    @sabin97 Před 3 lety +1

    is the white guy the radio host that interviewed dr cooper?

  • @noahDnewport
    @noahDnewport Před 3 lety +1

    “Not even the geologists!” 😂😂😂

  • @melese1988
    @melese1988 Před 11 lety

    Neil could be to America as Stephen Fry to UK. Such a fun to listen to him

    • @Sjb2077
      @Sjb2077 Před 5 měsíci

      Mr Tyson is not in the same category as Stephen Fry, he is far beyond it, far. Mr Fry does not compare with Dr David Attenborough, our, that is Uk ‘s most loved, respected and watched man ever. Dr Attenborough is in his nineties and you will find how he is so beloved when he, sadly, passes.

  • @michaelreichardt2308
    @michaelreichardt2308 Před 4 lety

    Neil deGrasse Tyson, the American Harald Lesch! Both are capable to bring Astrophysics to the general public in an understandable way!

  • @jojobar5877
    @jojobar5877 Před 4 lety

    Maybe Neil should have mentioned Mike Brown’s team at Caltech who did all the work to discover the other minor planets out there that really demoted Pluto.

  • @brianjcavanaugh
    @brianjcavanaugh Před 10 lety

    Neptune crosses Pluto's orbit. And Pluto's orbit might be clear of other independently orbiting objects, other than Neptune. And its tipped orbit shouldn't make a difference.

  • @idicula1979
    @idicula1979 Před 11 lety

    The Universe (even as we know it) is much more vast then just the sun and the planets and the moons that orbit them. Infact Pluto when it is all said and done might be classified as belonging to the Keiper Belt which to me is much more intresting to me and offers a place where we can expand our research.