Neil deGrasse Tyson: The Brutal Truth About Astrology! Our Breath Contains Molecules Jesus Inhaled!

2h 6m
Dr Neil deGrasse Tyson, world-renowned astrophysicist, breaks down the universe, space, black holes, and the Big Bang, uncovering how Elon Musk, AI, SpaceX, and NASA are defining the future of humanity.

As a science communicator, Neil is the host of StarTalk podcast, which covers science, pop culture and comedy. He is also the bestselling author of several books, such as ‘Astrophysics for People in a Hurry’ and the newly revised ‘Just Visiting this Planet: More Cosmic Quandaries from Dr. Tyson’s inbox’.

In this explosive conversation, he explains:

◼️80% of Gen Z believe the stars control their life

◼️The dangerous lie we believe about life’s purpose, and what to do instead

◼️Why you have 20% of the same DNA as a banana

◼️Why AI’s real danger isn’t what Hollywood warned you about

◼️Why simulation theory might explain every disaster on Earth

(00:00) Intro
(02:43) The Big Questions About the Universe and Our Existence
(10:55) Why We're Not Good at Feeling Oneness With Others
(15:48) Has Science Shaped Your Beliefs About Religion?
(20:15) Did Humans Evolve to Believe in Something?
(25:00) Changing the Way We See the Universe
(30:32) Did the Loss of Your Parents Change Your Views?
(35:05) Do We Live in a Simulation?
(40:05) Do We Have Free Will in Our Society?
(43:44) Will We Be Able to Extend Our Lives Soon?
(45:57) What Happens When We Extend Everyone's Lives?
(48:57) Neil deGrasse Tyson on AI
(53:28) Will We Travel to Mars in Our Lifetime?
(1:00:01) How Long and How Far Is It to Mars?
(1:02:43) Ads
(1:04:13) What Would Happen If the Earth Got Swallowed by a Black Hole?
(1:07:51) Could the Sun Become a Black Hole?
(1:09:06) What Happens If the Sun Freezes?
(1:10:37) Every Breath You Take Contains the History of the Universe
(1:15:25) Is the Universe Infinite?
(1:16:34) Do Aliens Exist?
(1:19:37) Why Do You Think Aliens Exist?
(1:25:38) The Physics Error in *The Matrix*
(1:28:22) Ads
(1:30:26) The Questions We Dream Of
(1:33:26) Should We Argue About Meaning?
(1:37:18) Are Horoscopes Really a Thing?
(1:42:15) Are You Happier If You Believe in God?
(1:46:54) What's the Biggest Advice You Have for Me?
(1:51:32) What Do You Think of America Right Now?
(1:57:25) Do You Have Any Regrets?

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UK - You can pre-order Neil’s revised book, ‘Just Visiting This Planet: Merlin Answers More Questions about Everything under the Sun, Moon and Stars’, here: https://amzn.to/43cbEhB

US - You can pre-order Neil’s revised book, ‘Just Visiting This Planet: Merlin Answers More Questions about Everything under the Sun, Moon and Stars’, here: https://amzn.to/3Wxvsbq

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Transcript

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Surveys find that roughly 80% of of Gen Z believe in astrology and many allow it to influence major life decisions.

But what would be sad is if that number got to 100%, then the civilization just goes back to the cave, where everything that happened in the natural world was created by forces beyond our knowledge and understanding.

So if you want to think you're not in control of your fate because the sun, moon, and planets are, it's a free country.

But I'm creating meaning in my life because I can control that.

But is there anything that the universe does to influence us?

Yes.

Really?

Yeah.

And I'll tell you how.

Ready?

Neil deGrasse Tyson is one of the most recognizable voices in modern science who turns the mysteries of the universe into simple truths and simple truths into life lessons.

As a scientist, it's disturbing how easily people divide each other based on skin color, religion, what food you eat, what language they speak, and then they find some other philosophy that differs and then they go to war.

But when I step back with a cosmic perspective, you realize how ridiculous it is.

Give me the cosmic perspective.

Well, there is nothing that we can put on the table that can rival the measurements of the universe.

And we are literally composed of stardusts.

So when people think they're different, they have DNA in common with all of the life forms on Earth.

Like, you have 20% identical genes to a banana.

Excuse me.

Okay, we all do, not just you.

And that's not all.

There are molecules that went in and out of your lungs that are in China being breathed by people now.

And go further back, Jesus inhaled them.

So how's that the oneness with others?

That can't be true.

And that's the next problem.

People value what they think is true more than what is true.

That's a recipe for the unraveling of of civilization as we know it.

But as a scientist, show me the data.

And as someone that knows so much about the universe and objective truth, I've got a lot of questions.

So what do you think is the probability of me getting to another planet in my lifetime?

And then could you make the case that the universe is simulated by some sort of advanced life form?

And also, did humans evolve at some point to believe?

And do you think you would be happier if you believed in God?

Oh, so you're going to spice this up a bit.

Okay, so...

Just give me 30 seconds of your time.

Two things I wanted to say.

The first thing is a huge thank you for listening and tuning into the show week after week.

It means the world to all of us.

And this really is a dream that we absolutely never had and couldn't have imagined getting to this place.

But secondly, it's a dream where we feel like we're only just getting started.

And if you enjoy what we do here, please join the 24% of people that listen to this podcast regularly and follow us on this app.

Here's a promise I'm going to make to you.

I'm going to do everything in my power to make this show as good as I can now and into the future.

We're going to deliver the guests that you want me to speak to, and we're going to continue to keep doing all of the things you love about this show.

Thank you.

I've been watching a lot of videos of yours, I think, because I've reached the stage in my life where I've become really existentially curious.

I think we all do at some point.

And especially the more you've lived, the more

it all sort of, you ask, what does it all mean?

How does it all come together?

What will it mean to me in five years, ten years?

I don't know if you're old enough to think about your mortality,

but that's a thing when you have fewer years left than the years you've lived.

And

you can, I think the way they say it is: there's you can have a good expectation to live as long as your parents did.

I lost both of them in the last five years.

So

that's my horizon.

And

the fact that we die

has a capacity to bring focus into the remaining time you're alive.

Because think about it, if knowing you're going to die

brings focus and purpose

and resolve

and action,

then if you lived forever, What's your hurry?

For me, knowing I'm going to die

gives meaning

to my remaining life.

Whereas if I'm never going to die, then mathematically, that would mean I'd lead a life of no meaning at all.

Because there's no way to focus an infinity amount of time into anything and have it be meaningful.

So I'm taking mortality as a very serious force operating on happiness, productivity.

Can you do something for the world?

And on my tombstone,

what I want to say,

what I want it to say is a quote from Horace Mann, be ashamed to die until you have won some victory for humanity.

I want to have made a difference in the world.

I want the world to have been better off because I lived in it.

Is that too much to ask of any of us, really?

We're all capable of good deeds.

So

if the world is better off,

I've played my part as a citizen of planet Earth.

And this all sort of dovetails into this new book that you've written.

I call it a new book, but it's really a revision of a very successful book that I think the first copy was published in 1998 called Just Visiting the Planet, Further Scientific Adventures of Merlin from Amnicia.

Omniscia, yeah.

When I think about these bigger questions about the universe, meaning purpose, death, why am I here, religion, all these things, so often I think about them through the context and information that I find in your work, because when I think of like the world being so big, as you talk about in this book, and so infinite, and all these stars, I feel meaningless in a nice way sometimes.

I feel like the shit that

I worry about no longer matters.

But then when you talk about...

You feel meaningless in a happy way.

Yeah.

Yeah.

I feel like the things that cause me

suffering don't matter as much as I thought they did.

And then you talked about shortening time by realizing that you're going to live for 90 years or 80 years, creating great amounts of meaning.

And it feels somewhat like a, I don't know.

Yes, the universe is huge in size, in age,

in contents.

There's nothing we can put on the table that can rival those measurements that we make of the universe.

However, how big?

Well,

there's the light from the most distant galaxies has been traveling for nearly 14 billion years.

10 billion years more than Earth has even existed.

If you want to get a sense of that.

And

so,

but think about it a whole other way.

That

if you look at the ingredients of life,

not just human life, but life on Earth, and you can rank the elements.

What's the number one element in life?

We could mention the human body.

The number one element is hydrogen.

That's contained in the H2O of the water content of your body, which depending on how chubby you are,

anywhere from a half to three quarters of your body weight, is water.

And all right, what's the next most abundant element in your body?

It's oxygen attached to the water.

Okay, H2O.

And both the H and the O appear in many, many other molecules in our body.

In the DNA, and in your muscle tissue, all of this, and in the blood.

Okay.

What's third?

Carbon, which you would have thought had to be somewhere in the list because you know we're carbon-based life.

Fourth is nitrogen.

Okay.

Fifth, I'll put them all together and just say other.

Okay.

So that's the sequence of elements.

And now you say, what are the sequence of elements?

in the universe.

The number one is hydrogen.

The number two is helium, but that's chemically chemically inert.

You might remember from high school chemistry.

You can't do anything with it anyway.

Helium.

Next in the universe, oxygen.

Next, carbon.

Next, nitrogen.

Next,

other.

Okay, so we are one for one

matched to the ingredients of the universe.

And one of the gifts of 20th century astrophysics is

gifts to civilization is where those ingredients came

We trace those ingredients,

the hydrogen, to the Big Bang itself, and all these heavier elements to stars that manufactured those elements in their core, in the crucible that is their core.

They lived out their lives, they exploded, scattered that enrichment into gas clouds, so that the next generation of stars would have planets, and at least one of them

have life as we know it, life on Earth.

So that

you can think of us not just figuratively, but literally composed of stardust.

And so that it's not that we are alive in the universe.

Yes, that's true.

But the universe is alive within us.

So we're special because we're the same.

as the universe.

Often when people think they're special, I want to be different from it.

No.

We're saying because we have human DNA on an earth where we have DNA in common with all other animals, all other life forms on earth.

Do you realize we

and mushrooms have more in common with each other than either we or mushrooms have with green plants?

The common ancestor between fungus and animals split later in the tree of life than its common ancestor split with green plants.

You have 20%

identical genes to a banana.

Excuse me.

Okay, you all did.

Not just you.

Not just you.

You have it.

So

when you consider all of this,

it's not just that we're alive in the universe.

The universe is alive within us.

And that discovery borders on the spiritual.

And it's a scientific result.

So when I look up at night, I never feel small.

I feel large.

I feel as large as the universe itself, because that's where we came from.

We're a participant in a great unfolding story of cosmic evolution.

The minute you said that, I thought of all these Eastern traditions and religions that say we are one.

And from a scientific perspective,

as you say, we very much are one.

Yeah, what's interesting is

one of my deep concerns about the world is many philosophies or religions that say we are one, they find some other philosophy that differs and then they go to war.

Yeah.

I don't mean to laugh at that, but it's we're not good at feeling oneness with everyone.

It's easy to feel oneness with our tribe.

Our tribe could be skin color, religion, who you sleep with, who you don't sleep with, what food you eat, what rituals you perform.

And so those

people choose sides based on so many

factors that

it's actually, to me, as a scientist, it's disturbing how easily and quickly we will divide each other.

and make that the reason for how you interact rather than see what we have in common and make make that the reason for why we would come together.

Aaron Powell, Jr.: This has been really front of mind for me for the last 24 hours.

There's been a lot of things that have happened in the news that have thrown the conversation around division to the very front of my mind.

And that, you know, in the UK, we've got all these people that are marching next week, I believe,

through London because of various political things.

And I was saying to my friends last night, I said, I think actually that the root cause isn't this or that.

It's the division itself.

And it's yeah, you can overanalyse.

I mean, if you look deeper than whatever people are saying is the reason they are marching or arguing, if you just

part the curtains and unpack it all, at the bottom of that is

there's a tribe here and a tribe here, and they think this way and they think that way, and

never the twain meet unless we rethink how we interact with one another.

It's, it's,

I mean, think about it, you know, with the race,

the race friction that existed around the world, but especially in

colonial Europe and the slave trade and all of this.

And,

okay, that's not good.

It's bad.

And,

all right, but then you look at World War I and World War II.

That's white people fighting white people, slaughtering them in great numbers.

So you can divide by skin color, but apparently people find plenty of reasons to divide and conquer, to divide and kill, to divide and oppress.

And

skin color is one in a long list of all the reasons people have given to the religious wars, to worshiping the different God, or you're worshiping the God differently.

These are human beings.

And, you know, I wrote a whole book, I think one of those books in your stash there, that one,

Cosmic Perspectives on Civilization, one in your hand there.

That one is

what conflict in the world looks like when you are scientifically literate and you have a dose of cosmic perspective on top of it.

Give me the cosmic perspective, please.

It's

you're fighting over that line in the sand

when I'm out here at the moon looking at Earth.

this fragile ecosystem.

Do you realize Earth's atmosphere is to Earth what the skin of an apple is to an apple in terms of thickness?

So

I see people trashing the planet, fighting one another,

again, just based on who's on what side of the line in the sand, or who they worship, who they don't worship, or what their skin color is, or where they were born, what language they speak, what accent they have.

And I step back, and from orbit,

it's

ocean, land,

clouds.

From the moon, there's Earth suspended there in space.

I almost don't want to zoom in on it

because

people

value what they think is true

more

than what

is true.

There are objective truths out there, but it's almost as though people

fight and argue more vehemently the less evidence there is to support what it is they think is true.

There's an old saying, if an argument lasts more than five minutes, then both sides are wrong.

It's true probably 80, 90% of the time, but it's something, definitely something to think about.

How have your spiritual and religious beliefs evolved throughout the course of your career based on all that you've come to know about the objective nature of the universe?

Has there been an evolution?

Aaron Ross Powell, it depends what you mean by evolution.

I was raised Catholic.

Yeah.

But we were raised basically in a secular household, even though we would go to church every weekend.

What I mean by that is we come home at no time do either of my parents say, don't do that.

Jesus is watching.

You keep that up, you'll go to hell.

Do this because it'll please God.

Never was there such a conversation as that in the household.

So the household was driven by

objective truths or life experience as would be brought from elders to a next generation.

Something that was more common in that generation than in the current generation, because now elders don't know anything about anything.

You know, your kid comes up to you and says, Mommy, Daddy, I want to be a YouTube influencer.

And you're saying, what?

Go back to school.

No, and then they become a YouTube influencer and they out-earn you.

So

the divide is greater than ever before between one generation and the next, for sure.

But by the time I turned eight,

I found that religious teachings less and less convincing.

And so by the time I was nine, when I discovered the universe, or really the universe discovered me, a first visit to my local planetarium.

So yeah, I wouldn't call it an evolution, but I will say this.

You didn't ask this, but it relates.

Before I was more recognized, you know, I'd be on an airplane.

What do you do?

What do you do?

Okay.

They find out I'd do astrophysics.

Then out come the questions.

Okay.

Oh, tell me about black holes, relativity, the Big Bang,

aliens, okay, and would always land on God.

And I used to give pretty straight,

unforgiving answers to that question, to that inquiry.

But then I thought, that's not fair.

They're people whose lives pivot around their religious beliefs and their spirituality.

And just because I've been discounting it since I was eight, I shouldn't use that as a force against them.

I should at least

understand where they're coming from.

So I systematically acquired religious books of all kinds.

So I have the Torah.

I have multiple copies of the Quran, Joseph Smith's account that led to the Mormons.

I have multiple

bits of literature from Jehovah's Witnesses because they'll come to your door and they want to hand you.

So I acquired all these books and I mostly read them.

I've skimmed all of them and read some of them with a little more intensity than others.

All right.

On doing so, that enabled me, empowered me to have more meaningful conversations with people who were religious.

Much more meaningful and more informed.

That's the key.

I don't want to speak about a religion unless I know as much as I can about it.

As an academic, that should be what would be true of any subject.

You're an academic, you care what's true, not what you think is true, what is true, or what people think.

All right.

And

there's no doubt that religion has been one of the greatest forces operating on civilization ever since civilization.

When you look at as a source of people's behavior, what they eat, like I said, who they sleep with, where they sleep, where they worship, who they worship, all around the world, from animistic native peoples, where there's a spirit energy imbued in the mountain, in the brook, in the wind,

to

the monotheistic religions, to the polytheistic religions.

We don't call them that to put distance between us, but the Greek gods,

it was their religion.

We call it mythology.

It was their religion.

the Greek gods, the Roman gods.

So

I'm conversational in all of this.

So that when someone says, how do I feel?

What do I think?

I can do that without just

being obnoxious.

And so, and it's a meaningful conversation.

I haven't done that.

You haven't?

No, I haven't.

I haven't, but it's such a good idea to do that, especially as someone in my position that does a lot of talking with people and asking questions.

But the first thing that sprung to mind was, there's actually two questions that sprung to mind.

The first was,

how did that change you reading all those books outside of you being able to relate with those?

Well, being able to talk to them in a different way.

And the second question, because I've watched Cosmos, I've watched it several times.

It's one of my, me and my partner's favorite things to watch is you

going from the very beginnings of time through the universe and to where we are.

You gotta love that calendar too.

Oh my god.

Cosmic calendar.

That's my favorite thing.

And I try and persuade everybody to watch that.

But my question was about, because I watched that and I watched how the universe has evolved over time, or at least our understanding of it and how it came to be, is did humans

evolve at some point to believe?

Are we meant to believe?

Well,

so the best way to ask that is: let's go back to the earliest humans we have fossil records of.

And we can go back to Neanderthal, for example.

Neanderthal is a branch of hominids that went extinct, basically.

There's some cross-breeding, and there's Neanderthal DNA in

many humans today, but as a branch of the hominids, they went extinct.

So the Neanderthal, then there's Cro-Magnon.

We are Homo sapiens coming after Cro-Magnon.

And

so when you look at burial grounds,

the Neanderthal bury their dead with things,

with parts of their life of the person.

who died.

Now, why would you do that unless you had some belief

that there was something more to come for that person?

I mean, probably the people who took it to the limit were the Egyptians, all right, for the Egyptian royalty.

I mean, they bury you with all kinds of stuff.

And in fact, in Greece, I read this.

It's not that I researched it, and I'm not a scholar in this, but that

When they buried you, they put a coin in your mouth or in your hand, somewhere on your body, so that when you got into Hades, you can tip the ferryboat driver to cross the river Styx to get into Hades.

You might even say that's the beginning of what it was to be human when people started thinking that way about dying.

We might even

invert the question and say, it's not when did we start, it's we existed

in all the ways we

know ourselves to be when that ritual came upon our ancestors.

And the survival benefit in believing?

I don't know.

Really?

Yeah, I don't know.

We're pretty sure there's a survival benefit of groupthink.

And

religion is groupthink, if there ever was.

It was we will all believe this in this way, and we will behave in that way on those those occasions, and you will not deviate from it.

And part of that package of beliefs includes statements about the afterlife and how you should behave in this life.

Otherwise, you don't go to heaven, you go to hell.

I don't think Judaism has a hell, but you're not as rewarded as you'd otherwise be.

Now that forms a corpus of beliefs.

that can be highly binding of a people's.

And

especially if some other peoples come up and they do other things and you don't understand it, you don't know what it is, and they're a threat.

And so you keep them out,

you do whatever you can to preserve your traditions relative to theirs.

Ultimately, the worst, that in its worst manifestation, is all out war.

You just kill people who don't believe the way you do.

So maybe

religion is kind of what defined humans in the fossil record.

I mean, like I said, that's an interesting inversion of that question.

Not when did humans begin being religious.

You define

who we are as humans as when religion showed up in

the burial grounds of

cavemen.

You just talked about us being bound there by certain shared beliefs and ideas.

Yes.

And I think in case you're not...

I think ritual is one of the strongest binding forces of society that we have.

And I think that people are maybe unbinding.

If you look at the narrative in society, it's about be your own boss, standing your own two feet.

More people are lonely, living alone,

having less kids, working freelance and remotely.

So it feels like in a weird way, we're becoming more independent and there's a somewhat of a cost to that.

And actually my friends that are struggling the most in their lives are those that have the least dependence.

on a village.

So I always wonder if people we need to ladder up to the universe, i.e.

me, my family, maybe my village, maybe my country, the planet, the universe,

and God.

The metaverse.

Yeah.

And like God.

The multiverse.

Yeah.

So let me just react to that.

There have been studies about the psychological effects of this kind of life, basically the social media too early in one's life

force that operates.

But I

so I don't know.

I don't want to be the person who says, in my day, we did it right.

And you young'ins don't know what you're doing and you're all going to, I mean, I've seen the films of people, of officials smashing pinball machines with sledgehammers saying it will be the death of the next generation because

they're not studying.

It's gambling.

I've seen, you've seen people burning rock and roll records.

You know, you've seen, we've seen this.

And

I don't want to be that guy.

I'd rather be the person that says

they're going to create a whole other reality

that was not my reality growing up.

And I don't know that I can or should value judge that.

When they come up in the ranks, they'll be mature adults.

They'll figure out what the rhythms are of that world.

And

I will say, however, that if you go far enough back, no one ever traveled anywhere.

You'd spend your whole life not going more than 30 miles from your hometown, a couple hundred years back.

So now people do actually communicate with countless thousands of people around the world.

So that's, it's different.

Again, I'm not value judging it, but it's different.

And you're exposed to different ideas.

Maybe it tribalizes you more, or maybe it softens you.

It has the power to do both.

What concerns me is because when I post to social media, I've learned the art of not expressing an opinion.

Because I don't care what your opinion is.

I don't care that you have my opinion.

What I care about as an educator, and especially as a scientist, is that your opinion is based on objective reality, objective truths.

If you have an opinion where the foundation of it is, what do you, what?

Then you're just floating.

There's no...

And then if you rise to power of laws and legislation, and then you shape a society based on what you think is true or want to be true rather than what is objectively true.

That's a recipe for the unraveling of civilization as we know it.

So

this loneliness bit, I don't know how to comment on that.

I don't have the expertise, but I do know that I don't want to be the person on the rocking chair.

Get off my lawn.

And I guess I've been trying to figure out if I need to try and make sure my life ladders upwards.

Oh, let me get back to that.

So it may be that

the most important role of church

wasn't to give a specific recipe for how you pray or, again, who you pray to or when you pray.

Maybe that wasn't its greatest value.

Maybe its greatest value was the community that it created.

Everyone comes together and they're all in one room at the same time.

That's not happening today.

Like you said,

people are less religious today than ever before.

Many people who were once religious would today, statistically, would today say they're spiritual, which means they're separated from the rules and regulations that

typically

dictate how you behave within a religion.

But the fact is, you're talking about going upwards.

So you have your...

your city, your community, your neighbors, and your church, your synagogue, your mosque,

your temple, whatever is the

place

where you gather with some frequency,

that

surely has value

because

we need each other.

I'm jealous when you drive down the country road and there's a deer just walking around.

And I'm thinking,

you know, society collapsed.

That deer is just fine.

The deer was born in the woods, is finding food, is grown up.

Whereas I need other people to survive in this world.

I don't know how to hunt.

I don't know how to skin game.

I don't know how,

you know, I'd like knowing that there's a quart of milk waiting for me on the grocery store and

ready to eat cereals.

That's,

we have an interdependence as never before.

And how do we maintain that without scattering to the winds?

You said you lost both your parents in the last five years.

Yeah.

As someone that knows so much about the universe and objective truth and reality,

how do you contend with grief in that scenario?

But also,

does that change you in any way?

It did a little bit.

Not as much as I thought it might have.

My father was 89 when he died.

That was five years ago.

My mother was two days shy of her 95th birthday.

So I'm putting myself right between them in my life expectancy.

I think I'll get get to 92.

It's the average of those two.

So

when you die at that age,

it's sad, but it's not tragic.

So that's an important distinction for me.

A tragic life is a life that could have been lived, but through act of

war or negligence or

negligence of the person or of others, the life is cut short.

Then that's tragic.

It's a life not fully lived.

But if you lived a full life,

they were married 50-something years,

it's sad, but it's not tragic.

In fact, it's not even sad.

It's something to celebrate.

And

so I miss them.

I miss them more than I thought I would.

because they carried quite a bit of wisdom with them.

My father was active in the civil rights movement.

My mother was a gerontologist.

So they both cared very deeply about the plight of others.

And I'm their son, the astrophysicist.

So I go off with my head in the sky, but I was anchored into the human condition and anchored to think about it, to care about it.

And

when I encountered

things in modern life,

I wonder what my mother would say about that.

I wonder what insights my father, and they're not there.

I don't have them for that.

So the way it's changed me is it has put a greater expectation of me on myself

to make sure I have wisdom that I can share with my kids, my two kids, the kind of wisdom that I glean from my parents,

so that,

again, this is not wisdom of what

car to buy or what job to have, because they have other values.

They have other expectations expectations of society.

But in terms of

human-to-human interaction, in terms of love, in terms of challenges in life and overcoming them, some of those are timeless.

Some of those are, you know,

how to navigate difficult people,

how to appreciate nature.

So you don't take it for granted.

One of the things I liked about Joyce Kilmer's poem

on the tree

is about a tree.

And we've all seen trees.

So why does this matter?

Because it takes an artist,

a poet, a writer, a sculptor, a painter.

For me, the artist's job

is to encourage us, stimulate us

to pay attention to things we might otherwise take for granted.

Because so much of life

is what you might just walk by and not even give it any thought.

And so I don't walk by trees without thinking something about that poem.

What is the poem?

I think that I shall never see a poem lovely as a tree.

A tree whose hungry mouth is pressed against the earth's sweet flowering breast.

A tree that looks at God all day and lifts her leafy arms to pray.

A tree that may in summer wear a nest of robins in her hair.

Upon whose bosom snow has lain, who ultimately lives with rain.

Poems are made by fools like me,

but only God can make a tree.

but only god can make a tree i spend so long these days thinking and talking to people about what all of this means and uh i've got more and more i saw you talking about the simulation theory once or twice

and i i started to fall into that that whole of thinking oh yes it's no you gotta you know

step outside every now and then and you know smell the roses.

But you said you wouldn't be surprised if people found out the universe is simulated by some sort of advanced life form.

Yeah, given what we can now compute, throw in quantum computing on top of that,

we don't have this power yet, but to make a world in our computer where the characters in that world believe they have free will.

And then they conduct themselves and then they invent computers and then they make a world inside of their computer

and where their characters think they have free will.

And then they so then it's this simulated universes all the way down.

And

close your eyes and throw a dart.

Which of these, are you going to get the first universe that invented the simulated universe or the zillion ones that followed?

The dart's likely to hit one of the others.

But my

escape hatch from that

is

since we do not yet know or have the power to make a perfectly simulated world,

it means we are either the first universe that's real that hasn't created one yet,

or we're the last universe that hasn't evolved yet to have created one of its own.

Because all the middles have the power to create one.

So that takes it, you know, a zillion to one against us to maybe 50-50.

Oh, interesting.

Yeah,

so I'm a little more comfortable that way.

Comfortable.

Yeah, I sleep a little better at night.

But I guess it wouldn't matter anyway.

Actually, it wouldn't matter.

If we're completely simulated, what do you care?

You're living your life.

I know we don't want to believe that there are puppet strings on us.

Part of me thinks that, though.

You know, just when Earth is kind of, everything on Earth is kind of stable.

Oh, COVID shows up.

Oh, so this is the programmer saying, you know, the Earth is too boring now.

We got to spice it up a bit.

They throw in a pandemic.

Okay, a once-in-a-century pandemic.

Now we're entertaining for them.

What do we do?

Who gets vaccinated?

Who doesn't?

Who's going to fight?

Who dies?

Who lives?

Okay.

So then we kind of get through that.

We get the vaccine.

Okay.

We're just calming down off of that.

And they said, oh,

let's make a billionaire real estate developer from New York City the most powerful person in the world.

Let's stir the pot again.

And so now the whole other set of pot stirring that's going on.

So that's kind of consistent

with

a snot-nosed alien

kid in the parents' basement programming our existence.

That's what I would do.

I would throw in interest.

There's a game,

Sim City.

Yeah.

I played that.

That's how old I am.

Sim City.

So you are mayor of this city and people can vote you out of office.

So you have to do things that make them happy.

And there's an opinion poll that's there.

And if you you spend too much money here, you're not spending money on the schools.

That's bad.

But then there's crime goes up.

And you're realizing, oh my gosh, in even this simple simulation, so many interdependent phenomenon are taking place.

Then,

then,

things that happen, then Godzilla steps through and plows through the city.

Okay, now Godzilla is not real, but...

It kind of is, because that would be a disaster.

Is it a flood?

Is it fires?

It's a thing that nobody saw coming.

Okay.

We are recording this interview on September 11th.

I live four blocks from ground zero.

That's Godzilla walking through the city.

Well, how do you respond to that?

What's, you know, you didn't know that was going to happen the day before.

So

realizing that in this game, it's only interesting to play.

when disastrous things happen, not too many in a row because you have to be able to recover.

So when I look at our world, I'm thinking the best argument I have for being in a simulation is how often some big disaster takes place.

When it was the First World War, and then after that, the peace, oh, pandemic, okay?

The 1918 flu pandemic.

And then we get out of that.

Oh,

no, Second World War.

Okay, we get out of that.

The Cold War, nuclear holocaust.

Okay, so that's my.

That's me looking over the shoulder of the programmer.

Oh, God.

I think I prefer the world where I feel like I have free will and there's not.

Does it make a difference if you believe you have free will, even if you don't?

No, because I'll never know.

And, you know, the fun answer to that,

ask me, say,

do you have free will?

Ask me that.

Do we have free will?

Do you have free will?

What choice do I have?

No, if you don't have free will, then you don't even have an option to say you don't.

So

you just live life.

Just live your life

so that the world is better off for you having lived in it.

And what does that mean for you?

It means people are better off.

The institutions are better off.

People are happier,

healthier,

wealthier,

safer,

better fed.

That rationality matters in politics and lawmaking.

And

that

will help to ensure stability of anything you build going forward.

But, you know, that's all.

I mean, it's not complicated.

And you were talking about meaning before.

I stopped looking for meaning decades ago because I realized I, we, we, any of us, have the power to make

meaning in life.

If you're going to look for meaning, are you looking under a rock, behind a tree?

It's as though meaning is sitting there waiting for you to find it.

Oh, I found meaning.

There it is.

Now my life is complete.

That feels so

powerless.

on your own destiny.

Whereas

I make meaning, I want to learn something today that I didn't know yesterday.

I want to lessen the suffering of someone today

compared with however that person was living yesterday.

I want to use what I learn

to

well up within me and manifest as wisdom.

Because information is not really useful until it becomes knowledge.

And then knowledge is good.

You can show off if you have a lot of knowledge.

That's what these game shows do.

But in the end,

the best use of knowledge is when it becomes wisdom.

And wisdom,

people say, oh, I don't like getting older.

I want to be young again.

I don't want to be young again.

When I was 30, I was an idiot.

Even when I was 30, I thought I was brilliant, right?

So.

Don't get older unless you have wisdom to show for it.

It's when you don't have something to show for your age, you want to be younger.

You're just getting old with nothing to show for it.

But I continue to learn things every day, passively and actively.

Passively is you just notice, you know, open your eyes sometimes and see what's happening, where things are headed, what they're doing.

You learn.

Not all things you learn are good.

And if they're bad or need adjustment or need help,

do something about it if you can.

So that's how I derive meaning.

Hence my tombstone.

Be ashamed to die unless you've scored some victory for humanity.

There's the meaning for you.

There's a whole class of billionaires that are trying to live forever now.

And that think we are on the verge of being able to extend life potentially indefinitely.

Yeah, we're looking for the day.

It's called escape velocity.

Do you know about that phrase?

It exists in astrophysics, of course, but the escape velocity for Earth, for example, is seven miles per second.

So

escape velocity in astrophysics is the speed that you launch something so that it never comes back, no matter how hard the gravity tries.

Okay, so every object has an escape velocity.

Escape velocity in aging is

the idea is

there is a generation yet to be born, but in the very near future,

who

will not only live longer than the previous generation.

So

here's a cleaner way to say this.

Every year,

you can expect to live one month longer because knowledge about human physiology has gotten better.

Okay.

Okay.

Just think about it that way.

Yeah.

And so we know what to eat, what not to eat, how to exercise, how to not overexercise,

how to maintain

your health and physiology.

All right.

There will come a day

where

every year that you're alive, medicine has figured out a way for you to live an extra year.

That's the escape velocity.

So every year you live another year.

And after that, it could be every year you live two years.

So that's the escape velocity.

So it's not just everybody lives forever today.

It sort of works its way into the population.

And yeah,

I don't want to live forever.

I don't

take me off this earth.

Provided, I mean, I want, I still have more to give, more books to write, that in my judgment would make the world better than it currently is.

So I don't want to die before I get as much of that done as I can.

But are you scared of death?

No.

Although that's easy to say because I'm not at death's door.

And

I had someone

rationalize with me, which is they made a potent argument.

It's, I can say now with another 20 years life expectancy, 15, 20 years, that I don't fear death.

But if I'm on my deathbed and someone says,

if I can wave my hand and you could live another year, would you?

The answer is probably going to be yes.

And at the end of that year, if they so so

I don't know if my sentiments about life and death will change

on my deathbed.

I know my mother, there's a point where she couldn't swallow and she didn't want a feed tube.

And she said, my time has come.

They put me in

palliative care and then hospice.

And she was dead 10 days later.

So she

was in charge of her.

They could have fed her with a tube, and she would have been completely healthy for another, you know, five years, perhaps.

But nope.

She raised two kids, three kids, you know, 50-year marriage, happy life, stable life.

And

yeah, I'm good with that.

So the billionaires, you know, that's ego for sure.

If you live forever, there are other people

who you're taking resources from who would come behind you.

That's one.

But two,

are you still contributing to the world?

Should you give another person a chance who's in school now, who might be the next genius that'll figure out the energy problem, the poverty problem, the pollution problem?

Are you figuring that out?

No.

You're in the last,

you're 90 years old and you're just living on your yacht.

So

there's the problem that

the last years of your life

are not the most creative, the most ambitious, the most irreverent.

It's irreverent that where new ideas come.

You know, you've perhaps seen episodes of Shark Tank.

You know, half or more of those people are 30 and under.

They got ideas, fresh ideas.

Everyone else is entrenched.

So if

people

start living forever,

they're living forever in the part of their life that is least useful to the progress and advance of culture and civilization.

And so all of civilization will stagnate.

Do you think

in your lifetime, you said you've got a 20-year life expectancy?

Well, 15 to 20.

15 to 20-year life expectancy.

Based on my age now and the age my parents died.

Yeah.

But I mean, you've done a lot of neurological work and laid down a lot of good foundations with all these books you've written.

So maybe it'll be the upper end of that.

It's food for AI.

It's food for chat GPT.

What What do you make of AI?

What's your thought?

I love it.

Yeah.

I love it.

But I'm.

It's, by the way, it's been here for a while.

It really spooked people when it started writing your term paper and composing your painting and your set design.

All right.

That the whole other category of people got spooked by that.

Meanwhile, AI has been harnessed and being fully used in my field and in most of the physical sciences.

It's doing work.

If you can do the work and I can go to the Bahamas, let it do the work.

We have telescopes coming online that could not exist without the intervention of AI to access the data, reduce the data, analyze the data, make a decision about whether it should go back to the thing that it just observed, because that was weird

compared to the last time it was observed.

This is the Verubin telescope that I'm literally describing now.

And so

we're living with it.

What it means is

it'll have to up the game of people who say they are creative.

And what I mean by that is, I can say, Chat GPT, take this picture of us and say, Chat GPT,

paint this scene in the style of Van Gogh.

It'll come back, the colors will be just right.

It'll have the swirling lines.

It'll be perfect.

If Van Gogh was standing here, that's what Van Gogh would have painted.

If I say, Chet GPT, paint us in the style of no artist who has ever lived.

I don't know what it's going to give us, but it'll probably suck.

Okay.

And so true creativity

is not aping what has happened before and making adjustments.

True creativity, yes, you always build on others.

I'm not in denial of that.

But true creativity takes leaps

that most people don't even know can be taking.

And so the artist, so that gap, I think is what

AI in the arts world is going to force creative people to reach for.

Otherwise,

you're replaced by a simple request

in the input line of a large language model or of an art.

I was just wondering then, if I watch Cosmos in 30, 40 years' time, let's say 100 years' time, I was wondering if this is the moment where humans and computers in the story of humanity become one and intertwine.

If you think about things like Neuralink, which Elon's working on, to make when he first made that company, all of the narrative that he put out there was about us being able to interface with AI.

So we'd need like a brain chip computer interface.

More recently, it's been about people that are paraplegic and disabled and helping blind people see.

But I think that's a socially acceptable way to advance the technology.

But in his early work, he said.

Superintelligence is going to arrive and we're going to need a way to basically keep up where we have better sort of latency with

the technology.

And I'm wondering if that's like what we're seeing now.

Yeah, super intelligence,

you know, if that happens,

then it becomes our overlord and we become its pet.

Okay.

Now, that sounds pretty scary,

but

don't we treat our pets better than we treat

other humans in the world?

Think about it.

The pet is kept warm and fed and happy.

And would you do that for a homeless person in the the street, a person of your own species?

Probably not.

So if we're the pet for the super intelligence.

What about the chicken?

How bad could it be?

We used to have chickens when we were younger, and I watched my Nigerian mother chase that chicken around the garden, grab it, pull its head off, and cook it.

Wow, okay.

Yeah.

Oh, you worried that it's going to do that for us?

We're going to run around.

Not all my pets make it.

And snap, not all the pets survive.

Yeah, it depends on whether it needs us to be alive or dead.

We have to be relevant to it in some way.

Maybe we'll be court gestures with the entertainment.

Until then,

I don't know that this is some special moment.

I do a lot of reading of history and throughout history,

most occasions, especially in the era of the Industrial Revolution, people think they're living in a special moment.

And so I'm not going to be that guy who says today is special because everyone has thought they were in a special moment.

And what do you think is the probability of me getting to another planet in my lifetime?

Zero.

Zero.

Really?

Yeah.

You want to know why?

Yes.

Please.

Yeah, it's just zero.

I thought SpaceX is going to go to Mars.

I have an unorthodox view on this, so

you don't have to believe me.

But

my read of history tells me that we only do big, expensive things if there's a geopolitical reason for it, either an economic reason or a defense reason,

not just because it's the next thing to do.

And when we went to the moon, you realize in 1961, May 25th, President Kennedy, so six weeks after Yuri Gagarin flew around the Earth in orbit, and we didn't have a ship that wouldn't blow up on the launch pad that could carry humans yet.

He calls a joint session of Congress and says, if the events of recent weeks, couldn't even utter the man's name, the events of recent weeks, and I paraphrase, are any indication of the impact of this adventure on the minds of men everywhere, then we need to show the world the path of freedom over the path of tyranny.

It's a battle cry against communism, the godless Russians,

and the whole Soviet Union.

We were losing a technological race.

And that was the battle cry that prompted Congress to write the check.

Oh, later on, he says, oh, it'll be,

put a man on the moon and return him to safely to Earth.

And, oh, that's so beautiful.

Let's hold hands.

That's so beautiful.

No one ever spent scads of money just because it was a cool thing to do.

That has never happened ever.

So

we go to the moon.

People forgetting why we went to the moon

say, while we're on the moon, at this rate, we'll be on Mars by 1985.

That'll be the next ambitious goal we'll take on.

No.

Because we didn't just go to the moon because that was the next thing to do.

We went to the moon to beat the Russians.

And when we got to the moon, and we looked over our shoulder and the Russians weren't there, we canceled the Apollo program.

1970, we haven't been back to the moon in 53 years.

We canceled it.

Apollo 18 was ready to fly.

It's now in captivity in Huntsville, Alabama, in a museum on its side.

It's fascinating to walk the full length of it.

All rocket flight-ready parts.

It never flew.

We ended it at Apollo 17.

No, we didn't go to Mars because we didn't have geopolitical reasons to do so, neither economic nor for defense reasons.

Historically, people explored, did expensive things things for the glory of God and royalty.

Very expensive.

The pyramids, the honor of royalty, okay?

The church building, cathedral building, all of these activities were in the glory

of

power,

deity, and royalty.

None of that happens today.

We're past that.

the power of kings and gods.

That doesn't happen.

Nobody dislodges major resources, capital resources of a nation in the interest of a god or a king anymore.

Okay?

It's secular.

And secular means it's money or it's war because you feel threatened.

Okay.

So,

you know, we're going back to the moon now, Project Artemis.

Did you ever think to stop and ask why?

Why didn't we stay on the moon in 1972?

Why don't we go back in 1980, 1990, 2000, 2010?

Oh, all of a sudden, let's let's go back to the moon.

Wouldn't that be cool?

Do you know when Artemis began?

In the late teens?

Right about when China says we're going to put Tychonauts on the moon.

Tychonos.

Yeah, Chinese astronaut, Tychonaut.

All right?

That's when we say, let's go back to the moon.

What a good idea.

Let's do that.

Really?

Because it's just a good idea?

Because we're a little bit spooked by a friendly foe

around the world

might

get the glory of that exercise.

And once again, it's a godless country.

Okay?

Communism is godless by design, by construct.

So

here we are going back to the moon.

All right.

What motivation do we have to go to Mars?

Are there oil wells there?

Is there diamond mines?

We're not going to Mars.

We're just not.

Unless

China says they want to put military bases on Mars.

We're going to be in Mars in 10 months.

One month to design, build, and fund the thing, and nine months to get to Mars.

A geopolitical force operating.

Oh, and by the way, NASA doesn't have a rocket that'll get us to Mars.

They think they do, but they don't really have one yet.

Time to do that.

They say, well, did anybody have a rocket?

Elon says, I have a rocket.

So if Elon Rocket goes to Mars, it's not because he sends it there.

It's because taxpayers sent it there.

By the way, he could go there on a vanity project, but there's no business case.

He could fly to Mars, team up with Jeff Bezos.

They can send people to Mars.

It's not a business case.

And if you are an investor in his company,

you would not agree to do that.

You wouldn't.

But he doesn't need investors because he's very wealthy.

He could do it on his own.

Are you going to Mars as a tourist?

Is that a business case?

It's a trillion dollars to get to Mars first.

Second, will be a little less.

I don't see that happening.

A trillion dollars.

About that.

Yeah.

If Earth were a schoolroom globe.

With your fist, show me where you think the moon is.

This is Earth.

Take your fist and put it at the distance the moon is.

Your fist is about the right size compared.

Okay.

I mean,

right there?

Yeah.

Okay, not too bad.

It's 30 feet away.

It's in the next room.

Okay, thanks.

Okay.

30 feet away.

Okay.

That's the moon.

Let's keep going.

How far away from Earth did the Bezos-Branson

rockets go?

Oh, no farther.

The thickness of two dimes above the surface of the Earth.

How far away is Mars?

It's a mile away.

From here.

Yes.

From this Earth.

It's a mile away.

It's in the central point.

The Moon, 30 feet away.

Mars a mile away.

Yeah, it's a trillion dollars to Mars.

Yes.

How long?

Nine months.

And you have to wait till the planets are configured so that...

when you travel, you arrive where Mars will be when you get there.

And that's a minimum energy orbit.

If If you have filling stations along the way, you can just fill up with fuel and get there as fast as you want.

But minimum energy orbital takes about nine months.

And then to come back, you have to wait till it's configured again a few years later.

So a round trip to Mars is three to five years, easily.

So there's not an economic case.

I'm not saying we don't know how to get to Mars.

We have a SUV-sized rover there now,

discovering potential life from a billion years ago.

It's not like we don't know how to get to Mars.

This is not a technological statement I'm making.

I'm talking about a practical statement.

So no.

My read of history tells me no.

I thought you were going to also add to that that even if Elon wanted to do it as a vanity project because he makes all this money and manages to use Starlink as a way to fund it, whatever, that the problem is Elon's going to die.

He's going to die in the next couple of decades, which means the vanity element that comes from his childhood situation where he wanted to get out there and explore the stars because he read that book has got 30 years, 40, 50 years left on it.

Well, that would make him want to hurry, wouldn't it?

Yeah.

Yeah.

And plus he said, I don't want to die on Earth.

I want to die on Mars.

I'm paraphrasing, but that's the idea.

So that's a goal, sure.

But don't tell me

it's a business case.

I can see a tourist case going into orbit and even possibly visiting the moon.

It's three days there, three days back.

That's a week's vacation that you would take.

And I would save up five years, 10 years of vacation money.

If that was the amount that it would take to go to the moon for one week, that would be a really fun bucket list item for me.

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No way.

You know, you've written this, you've revised this book.

Oh, yeah.

Just visiting this planet.

Yeah, I wrote a column, a question and an answer column for like 10 years, 15 years, where people just asked me questions from the public.

And I had a pen name called Merlin.

And Merlin was friends with Newton and Galileo and Marie Curie and all these people.

So if you ask Merlin, dear Merlin, I don't quite understand gravity.

Merlin would say, well, Merlin had a conversation with Isaac Newton in his backyard.

And here's how he answers that.

I think in the book you talk about a golf ball-sized black hole would weigh more than Earth and swallow it whole, leaving behind something the size of a lime.

Yeah, slightly bigger, right?

What is, you've been asked this so many times, but I still don't know the answer.

What is a black hole?

And how do we even know if they're real if no one's one's ever been to one?

Well, you can know things without visiting them.

I mean, that's the methods and tools and machines of science are remarkable in their ability to learn something without actually having to see it with your eyes or hear it with your ears or to touch it with your fingers.

We have,

in fact, science didn't take off until these machines became a fundamental part of how we investigated the world, replacing our five senses.

Because there's there's nothing more feeble in this world than you thinking you understand reality through your five senses.

I don't want to call it feeble.

I would call it error-prone.

Error-prone.

Remember I told you about escape velocity of Earth?

Yeah.

Do you remember what I, the value I said it was?

Seven miles per second.

Paying attention.

A minute.

Per second.

Per second.

That's very fast.

Seven miles.

So the adage, what goes up must come down,

that's not true.

It's true for almost anything you would experience, but you can launch something at seven miles per second.

It'll never ever come back.

That's the escape velocity for Earth.

Okay.

If Earth had more mass and the gravity were stronger, the escape velocity is higher.

That would make sense because there's more gravity that you have to escape.

Let's keep up that exercise.

Cram in more and more mass.

Just keep doing that.

Escape velocity keeps going up.

Eventually, the escape velocity hits the speed of light.

At that point, light can't even escape.

Light is the fastest thing in the universe.

If light can't escape, if you fall in, you don't escape either.

There's no better description of a hole than that.

And worse yet, it's a hole in any direction you approach it.

Not just a hole in the street or in the floor.

It's a three-dimensional hole.

And how do we know it's there?

Because it distorts the fabric of space and time around it.

We see galaxies behind concentrations of matter, black holes, and the shape of the galaxy is distorted.

Because Einstein tells us that gravity distorts the fabric of space and time.

So that's one way we discover black holes.

Another way is most stars in the night sky are binary and multiple star systems, most of them.

You can't see it because you just have human vision.

You whip out a telescope, you see, oh my gosh, there are two stars, not just one.

If there's a pair of stars and one of them becomes a black hole and this one ages, it expands and some of its material spills onto and orbits around the event horizon of the black hole.

This swirling material gets hotter and hotter and hotter and it radiates x-rays and ultraviolet.

We have x-ray and ultraviolet telescopes that see every one of these in the night sky.

They're all black holes.

And it's created from an explosion?

There's a star that wants to explode, but it has so much mass, the explosion doesn't overcome the gravity, and the star collapses down on itself to make a black hole.

There's one way to make a black hole.

So our sun, when that runs...

That's not going to be humbling.

It's pretty wimpy in that department.

It'll still kill us, but for different reasons.

So the the mass of the object is so big that it can't actually explode because the gravitational push

inwards is so strong.

Correct.

That's above a certain threshold.

Within there, there's the stars that the explosion is greater than what the gravity can contain, and it makes a supernova.

And those are the stars that spread heavy elements across the galaxy, enabling us to even exist.

So I'm going to read this again.

A golf ball-sized black hole would weigh more than Earth and swallow it whole, leaving behind something the size of a lime.

Yeah, so when black holes eat, they get bigger.

So a lime is bigger than a golf ball, but not by very much.

You can calculate what the size is.

Where would everything go?

It's in there.

It's compressed down inside the hole.

And if I was, and everything near it's going to get pulled in there as well.

If it comes too close, right?

If it comes too close.

Yeah, you can keep your distance.

Black holes don't, they're not giant sucking devices.

I mean, if you keep your distance, if the sun became a black hole right now, we would still orbit it.

The gravity we feel at our distance is no different.

You say that if the sun suddenly shut off, we'd freeze at minus 462 Fahrenheit, which is the background temperature of the universe.

Yes.

Once the stored energy ran out.

Yeah.

Once the stored energy where ran out.

Well, so there's the sun's energy if the sun

blotted out.

But Earth has energy.

inside of itself as well.

This is what gives us volcanoes and continental drift and all the rest of this.

So if you don't have a sun, you want to live near a volcano or something that is a source of energy for you.

And then you'll live on Earth until the Earth's energy died out.

Ideally, by then, you just go to another planet.

I mean, why not?

How long has our sun got left?

About another five billion years.

How would we know?

It's a good question.

That's the product of 20th century modern astrophysics.

Then it was modern.

I think of it as modern.

Where you say, what kind of star is this?

Then you you look around the universe for other stars that are just like it.

And then you see those stars in their stages of evolution.

Stars being born, living out their lives, and dying.

And the star changes its properties from birth to death.

And so you can line up where the sun is in that chart.

And then, plus, we know how old Earth is.

So we can directly measure the age of the Earth.

And so

there's no reason to think that earth

did not form at the same time the sun did another really um fascinating one was every breath you take contains molecules once inhaled by every human in history yep

that can't be true

chat gpt it

no so here it is you ready yeah

there are more molecules of air

in a single breath of air

than there are breaths of air

in Earth's entire atmosphere.

So if you breathe in and then breathe out,

there's enough molecules that you breathed out to populate every breath that anyone will ever again take on this earth.

And air mixes rather quickly.

Okay?

So it has to mix.

It's not not immediately, give it some time, but you give it some time.

There are molecules that went in and out of your lungs that are in China being breathed by people there

when enough time has elapsed.

You can calculate that.

It's years, 10 years, something like that.

There's tremendous mixing of air.

So how's that for feeling kinship with others?

Same with water.

You drink water.

There are more molecules of water in a glass of water.

This is a mug of water, than there are mugs of water in all the world's oceans.

So you drink a mug of water, and then it comes out of you in any one of a half dozen different ways.

There's enough molecules to scatter into every other mug of water in the world.

So someone gets a mug of water.

Your molecules will be

plenty of molecules to go.

So if I do a big, big inhale, I'm also, I'm inhaling air that contains molecules that all of my living relatives once inhaled.

Yes.

And go further back.

Jesus inhaled them.

Muhammad.

With every breath.

Yes, every breath.

This is

the oneness of it all.

That's why it's a beautiful thing.

Astrophysics,

I wouldn't live without it.

Do you think it makes us kinder learning about the universe?

Or do you think it makes us more nihilistic and narcissistic?

No, if you learn about it as you should, you shouldn't be nihilistic.

There's no force of nihilism in the knowledge, wisdom, and insight you get by studying the universe.

You will never find marching armies led by astrophysicists to go slaughter one another.

The cosmic perspective prevents that.

The cosmic perspective.

Yeah.

By the way, if you look at the chapter titles in there, they're each pairs of words that we've all used, but we've argued over many of them over our Thanksgiving dinner.

I don't know if there's a version of Thanksgiving in the UK.

Maybe it's just Christmas, everybody gathers, and the crazy uncles and aunts come in, and you got to argue with them about,

you know, and you, then you reminded why you only see them once a year.

Because,

no, there are topics in there.

Color and race is in there.

Law and order.

Body and mind.

Meatarians and vegetarians.

Life and death.

A lot of reflective moments in there.

So this book, though it's all these topics that people fight about, its goal is to say, you think that and you think that?

You got to look at it this way.

It's not meat in the middle.

No.

It's meat on a plane of existence above what you're arguing.

And you will look down on what you're arguing and realize how ridiculous it is.

That's the goal of that book.

Chapter 10 of the book says human physiology may be overrated.

What do you mean by that?

Well,

you know, we like to think of ourselves at the top of

evolutionary

properties, but it's really your mind, surely, but not much else.

You know, we...

It's odd because we always imagine aliens having humanoid bodies.

Yeah.

And there's no reason for that if they come from another planet.

Most life on Earth doesn't have a humanoid body.

The banana doesn't have a humanoid body, and you have DNA in common with it.

You don't have any DNA in common with an alien from another planet, yet it's walking around with a neck, eyes, nose, mouth, head, ears, shoulders, arms, fingers, kneecaps, feet.

Really?

Is that your best imagination that you can come up with?

Alien from another planet?

Is the universe infinite?

I've often wondered that.

Does it just go on forever?

Or is there a...

We're not given reason to think it doesn't, but our horizon has an edge.

What we can see.

Yeah.

But there's no reason to think.

So you're a ship at sea

and you have a horizon.

Are you saying, well, that's the extent of the ocean?

No.

Because if you sail towards the horizon, more horizon shows up.

And you keep that up until you hit land.

So in the universe, we have our horizon.

And if we went to that horizon, we'd have a whole other horizon beyond that.

If we traveled to that horizon, a whole other horizon there.

The question is,

how far does that go?

We don't know.

We have no idea.

It's simpler mathematically to think it goes forever.

It's curious how there's some equations where infinities

work just fine in the equation.

So we don't know.

We can talk about to our own horizon.

That's it.

There's so many people saying that they've seen aliens.

We had someone on this podcast actually that said they'd seen aliens.

Not they'd seen aliens, but they had evidence that aliens existed.

And they worked in the military and said that they'd,

you know, some of these spacecraft footage that you see from the news.

Did they

show you the alien?

No, but you see the videos of the things bouncing around in the sky.

Oh, fuzzy videos.

Fuzzy videos.

So those are UFOs.

They're not aliens.

UFOs, yeah.

There's a difference.

Oh, yeah.

Many people equate the two.

But if you see something in the sky and you don't know what it is,

it's a UFO.

And what does the U stand for?

Unidentified.

Until you can identify it, it's a UFO.

And because it does things that you don't understand,

you cannot equate that with it being an alien.

You just said you don't know what it is.

Wow, that's amazing.

I don't know what it is.

Therefore, it must be an alien?

If once you just said you don't know what it is, that's the end of the sentence.

You can't go on and say, therefore, it must be anything.

You can be impressed with videos that have no explanation.

I don't have a problem with that.

But you want to turn around and say, it's aliens?

You want to say, it's a government cover-up?

Do you really think the government is that competent?

Often the same people who say there's a masterminded government, there's the same people who complain that the government is a bloated bureaucracy, inefficient bureaucracy that should be replaced by private enterprise.

There's the same people making those same

statements.

So I love the aliens.

I want to meet them too.

My people, the astrophysics community has been searching for aliens for decades.

And you've never found evidence of any?

Not.

So

the community of amateur astronomers in the world, okay?

Amateur astronomy is that's a badge of honor because it means you know the night sky and you own a telescope.

It's not like an amateur neurosurgeon, okay?

You don't want to go to an amateur neurosurgeon, but you want to know the night sky, go to an amateur astronomer.

Amateur astronomers know the night sky.

They know what the sun, moon, and stars are doing every night.

They know they're very good at climate and weather because that affects whether things are visible.

So they know when weather systems come in and go out and what things look like.

You would think if aliens were about,

up and about, that amateur astronomers would have seen more of them than anyone else.

But they've seen less

because we know what we're looking at.

It's kind of that simple.

The moment you know what you're looking at, it's an IFO, isn't it?

Yeah.

It's not a UFO.

And so, yeah, I want to meet the aliens, but you're going to show me fuzzy video or you're going to say you have an alien, but it's in a locked box and you're not going to show it.

If you have an alien in a locked box and you're not going to to show it, that's the same thing to a scientist as not having an alien at all.

Could you make the case for why aliens probably do exist and also the case

for why they probably don't exist?

No, no, they surely exist in this universe.

The universe is 14 billion years old and the ingredients of life on Earth are the most common ingredients in the universe.

And life began on Earth almost as quickly as it possibly could have.

When Earth finally cooled down after it being formed, it was about 200 million years, first signs of single-celled life.

So even though we can't duplicate that yet, we don't know how, that's a frontier of biology, Earth didn't seem to have problems getting the job done within 200 million years.

That's Earth.

Now you have exoplanets everywhere across the galaxy.

To suggest that life on Earth is alone in the universe, You'd have to have some point of philosophy that requires you believe that, because it's not derived from actual evidence or observations of the universe itself.

So

aliens, usually people mean intelligent aliens, but we're happy to find any kind of life at all, bacterial life.

That would transform biology.

What about in our galaxy in the Milky Way galaxy?

Yeah, the galaxy is the most sensible place to.

So

we've looked for exoplanets.

So

a planet orbiting another star.

Because if we're going to look for life,

we presume it's going to be on a planet.

So if this table is the galaxy

and the solar system would be about right there,

we've searched a circle about this big for exoplanets.

And what's the solar system versus the system?

It's just the sun and its planets.

Oh, okay.

Yeah, solar system.

And then that's our solar system there, and we are part of several hundred billion stars in the galaxy.

And this galaxy is one of perhaps as many as a trillion galaxies in the observable universe.

So to say we're alone, that's just

you're being philosophically irresponsible.

So this table is the galaxy?

Yeah, if it were the galaxy.

And we searched a coin.

Yes, that's a good word to use, a coin-sized volume of this galaxy.

We've searched for exoplanets and by association, life.

So folks at the SETI Institute, the search for extraterrestrial intelligence, they come up with an analogy.

But the people have said, well, we haven't found life yet, so maybe there's no life anywhere.

And we say, no, take a cup and scoop it into the ocean.

That's like saying,

hmm,

the ocean has no whales in it.

Is that the equivalent?

Yeah, it's equivalent in terms of the space of searching, because it's not only in physical space, but it's in time.

Suppose aliens sent radio signals to us, and they arrived 2,000 years ago.

Do the Romans have radio telescopes?

No.

But we would all count them as intelligent.

So communication requires intelligence and technology.

How long have we had technology to do that?

80 years.

On the court chance of probability, do you think there are aliens in the Milky Way galaxy?

Yeah.

Oh, sure.

You think there are?

I don't see why not.

It's a calculation you can do.

I did it with two colleagues of mine.

We have about 100 civilizations in the galaxy alive now.

That's not many out of the total number of stars.

But again, a civilization has to evolve out of whatever it was.

And it's a tiny little slice of time relative to how long the planet has been there.

100 different

living

pause on the word living because living can mean many things.

Well, I mean,

Mars might have had life, but it would be dead today on the surface.

So we're looking for living civilizations.

And does that excite you?

Yes, completely.

But

you want to now tell me it has visited you

with fuzzy lights in the sky

and no one has brought forth an alien.

I need better evidence because you're making an extraordinary claim.

Humans fascination with meeting these aliens when we've got...

crazy species we've never met on our own planet.

That's a good point.

Plus, what do we need real aliens for when we have Hollywood?

The funny part to me is we have no knowledge that aliens want to harm us, but we do have knowledge that humans want to harm humans.

And any encounter between an advanced civilization and one that was less advanced in the history of exploration has never boded well for the less advanced civilization.

So for me,

we are describing aliens,

not

as we think they would be, but as we know we are

to one another.

It's a mirror.

And we've only got to play out what we would do as well if we found an alien civilization.

What would humans do?

I mean, I think we'd go and try and steal some of them

and bring them here.

Well, no, they're probably smarter than us.

That's like worms saying, oh we found some humans what should we do with them should we corral them no

if if aliens came here they clearly are more advanced than we are because we haven't left low earth orbit in 53 years so if they cross the galaxy to visit us

oh we're gonna take a shoot a gun at them they'll laugh at us

you know

In all the movies, though, we beat them.

That's so funny.

I've never thought about that before.

That, yeah, we just shoot guns at them.

You shoot guns at them.

And did it really make a difference?

You know?

We put like Brad Pitt or whoever in like a Tom Cruise and

what's your favorite space movie?

Space movie?

Well, sci-fi is The Matrix.

Why?

I love everything about it.

The story is tight.

There's one physics error in it, but without it, they don't have a movie.

So you got to

write them a hall pass.

Which I feel

that I have the power to do.

What was the error?

Everyone's going to be wondering what the error was in the mix.

Well, it's not an error.

It's just...

They got the...

It's bad physics in it.

Okay.

So

if you remember, the

AI

computer that's running everything needs an energy source.

And so they're growing humans in these pods, knowing that each human radiates at about 80 watts.

They didn't give that number, but it's a true fact.

80 watts, like an 80-watt bulb.

That's how much energy you are consuming and using.

It's an energy rate.

Okay.

So they, and one of the writers must have known that and said, that's kind of cool.

Let's use humans as an energy source for the machines.

All right.

So there are these pods of humans, and they grow the humans from childhood to adulthood.

And they put in their head a world that they're living in, which is just in their head.

And they think it's real, but it's not.

That's the matrix.

Okay.

But wait a minute.

How do the humans get their energy?

They feed the humans food.

Well, why are you feeding food to humans and then using the energy from the humans through the machine?

Bypass the middleman and just feed the machine.

Something called the second law of thermodynamics, first or second law of thermodynamics, anytime energy changes from one form to another,

it's not 100% efficient.

You drive a car, if you drive a combustion engine car you drive it 50 miles get out the engine's hot

where'd the heat come from that's wasted energy converting chemical energy of the gasoline to kinetic energy of your car it is never 100 perfect so they are losing energy in with this middleman and they should just feed themselves whatever the food they're feeding the humans.

And

if they're smart, they would not have humans at all.

But then there's no movie.

So that's my point.

Rotom a hall pass.

You're okay with that.

Are you an easy person to watch movies like this?

Yeah, I'm not.

I'm not the guy you think I am.

I will watch it and silently, yes,

I'll gather a list of, but I'm silent about it.

And if you're interested, I will tell you later.

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What's the one outstanding question, if there is one,

that you're desperate to know the answer to?

I don't live life that way.

Really?

Yeah.

It's a sensible question that you're asking me.

I don't want to diminish the sensibility of it, but I want to say that

that's not how I view the world.

The world is not, there's the one question I need answered.

The world is,

what do I need to learn

so that I'm standing in a place I can yet imagine,

asking a question I have yet to think of.

In other words, as the area of our knowledge grows,

so too does the perimeter of our ignorance.

And so you say, what, one question?

No, there'll be a bunch of questions.

The area grows some more.

I'm standing in a new place.

Now there's a question I didn't even think could be asked before.

And that's the question that matters there and then.

But then there's another question later on as this frontier continues to advance.

So I don't think about the one question or the two questions that matter.

I think about questions yet to be dreamt of that we don't even see because we haven't taken the frontier to that vista yet.

And so, yeah, some of that, that's unknowable, but I kind of like that.

There's the German poet Rainer Maria Rilke.

One of the poems, I don't remember all the lines, but the one that matters to me most is, learn to love the questions themselves.

You're trying to find answers, and I'm trying to find the questions.

Learn to love the questions themselves.

This kind of brings me back to the top of the conversation where I was talking about I've got a lot more questions these days.

That's good.

Love it.

Sometimes it's difficult.

And not all questions can be answered, given the state of knowledge.

Some questions are...

illegitimate questions.

Not all questions are legit questions.

For example, at what temperature does the number seven melt?

What kind of cheese is the moon made out of?

These are, just because the nouns and verbs are lined up and there's a question mark doesn't mean the, and by the way, when you're

facing the unknown, you don't know if your question later on would look that ridiculous.

What separates the great scientist from the average scientist is that they cued into what questions to ask.

Do you think we hurt ourselves by asking these invalid questions?

No.

No.

You don't know if it's invalid.

I know the moon is not made out of cheese today.

I know that because we've been there.

We've brought back moon rocks.

So today that question is invalid.

But if you never imagine ever going to the moon and you don't know anything about physics or rocks and you look up and it looks like a hunk of cheese you're eating, a completely legit question.

There is a bit of a conversation raging in my friendship circle at the moment about religion and meaning and what's the point.

Should we be arguing about these things?

About meaning, religion.

Is there any better?

I think meaning is a very personal thing to people.

So why should you jump in the middle of their attempt to establish meaning in their life?

We're all very different people.

And so meaning ought to be different.

If meaning was the same for everyone, you just publish it, everyone reads it, and then we all have meaning.

No, you got to

make it yourself.

Some people want to search for it.

Fine.

I don't have a problem with that.

I'm not searching for meaning.

I'm creating meaning in my life because I can control that.

Not that it's important to control everything.

You know, I like magic as an adult because it reminds me I can still be fooled.

Okay?

That's so I don't need to know everything.

I just need to maintain curiosity.

And you've got kids.

So

29 and 25.

Is that the most meaningful thing you've done in your life?

Raising kids?

Yeah.

It's among the meaningful things.

I would say they did a lot of their own raising because they're highly independent.

And

so there's a limit to how much I should take credit for who and what they have become.

They're a lot of what they did themselves.

But my wife, who's a scientist, she's a mathematical physicist.

We made sure that both our kids were scientifically literate at an early age, by age 13, certified.

So at that point, I said, I don't care what grade you get from now on.

I don't care.

I know no one will exploit you for your lack of curiosity and knowledge about the

objective universe.

And, you know, we'd be at a dinner party and they're like, they're in middle school, right?

And someone says, oh, I had a bad day because Mercury was in retrograde.

And

my son would say,

what actually happened to you today has that happened on days when it was they know how to ask questions okay by the way if you just reject what someone says outright that's as intellectually lazy as it is to accept what they say outright what's harder but I think more fun is lining up a series of questions to probe the statement to explore

what is going on in the thoughts and in the claims of the person with whom you're conversing?

So if someone says, I have these crystals, you rub them together, it'll heal you.

My kids would say, what are the crystals made of?

And what tests have you made for this?

And

could the healing have been explained in another way?

And in what way are the crystals.

And they'd start asking these questions, and then the person would probably just walk away because they would not have the answers to all of them.

And then, you know, remember I said, if an argument lasts more than five minutes, then both sides are wrong.

The person, there's nothing, there's no place for that to go to the truly curious person.

Here's another interesting fact.

Crystals represent the lowest energy state of the atomic or molecular configuration that it's comprised of.

The lowest energy state.

So people say, I have crystal energy.

No, you don't.

You have the lowest energy state of

that silicon dioxide that you're calling quartz.

There's no energy you're going to take out of it.

It is in its lowest energy state.

These are people who have never had chemistry and and as an educator I don't want to make fun of this but when people think they know something and are audacious about it when in fact they don't That makes it much harder for an educator to break through horoscopes

Yeah

Well, I've got some stats for you here.

Sure.

Neil.

Surveys find that roughly 80% of Gen Z believe in astrology to some degree.

72% of those Gen Z and millennials allowed astrology to influence major life decisions like romance, health, work, and education.

And many Gen Zs now are checking their horoscopes weekly.

Yeah,

we live in a free country.

So I don't, I'm not going to try to stop them.

What would be sad is if that number got to 100%.

And then you wouldn't be generating scientists or engineers or people who the objective truths of of the world matter.

And then this civilization just goes back to the cave where everything that happened in the natural world was mysterious, created by forces beyond our knowledge and understanding.

And

this is the title of one of Carl Sagan's books, The Demon-Haunted World.

Science as a Candle in the Dark.

That was the subtitle.

of that book.

So if you want to think you're not in control of your fate because the sun, moon, and planets are,

it's like I said, it's a free country.

Is there anything that you've learned that the universe does to influence us?

Yeah, the sun rises and I wake up because I want to be awake during the day.

Yes.

That people aren't.

Yeah, the tide comes in and I move

my beach chair back because the tide came in.

Yeah.

There are things that influence my behavior.

Yes.

But it's not much more than that.

The Earth is tipped on its axis, so we have seasons.

I'd buy coats and wear them in the winter.

That influences my behavior.

What's your star sign?

Well, I once had someone take a class of mine at the Hayden Planetarium that I taught on astrophysics.

And at the end, she, like the second to last class, she came to say, oh, thank you.

Thanks for the class.

I'm enjoying the class, but I want you to know I'm an astrologer, and I'm taking the class so I can cast horoscopes better.

So I said, it's really working for you?

She said, yeah, yeah, yeah.

She said, for example, what's your horoscope sign?

And I said,

shouldn't you be able to figure that out?

If all this works and you cast horoscopes, you ought to tell me what my sign is.

She said, okay, okay.

She said, are you Gemini?

I said, no.

Cancer.

I said, no.

It must be Leo.

I I said no.

Eight horoscopes later,

she gets the correct answer and says, I knew it.

So I'm simply saying

that

her ninth guess out of 12 was correct, and she declares, I knew it.

Why do people want to believe in things like this?

I think they want the world to still have mysteries, because mysteries are beautiful things.

However,

the world still has mysteries.

They're just different mysteries from whatever there used to be.

And so follow the mysteries where they take you.

And there's another branch of all of us who must have answers to every question

because they're not learning to love the questions.

They only want to love the answer.

So they say, what was around before the Big Bang?

I said, I don't know.

We got top people.

Something had to be around.

I said, I don't know.

Must have been God.

So there's their answer.

And then they're happy.

What happens after death?

Well, it looks like you rot in the ground, but otherwise, I mean, it's what physics.

It's got to be something.

Your soul.

I said, there's got to be

heaven?

Okay, that's their answer.

They've got their answer.

And if that's your answer at every turn,

you're not as good an investigator of the unknown because you just invented the answer to the unknown.

You're content.

What is dark matter, dark?

I don't know.

We got top people working on it.

Is that the spirit of God?

Okay.

Then that person won't walk into a lab to continue to study what dark matter and dark energy is.

I don't mind if you want to say it's God, but don't let that stop your curiosity.

But if you say it's God and then you're done,

then you're not very useful in the lab.

Those people seem to be happier and healthier, though, which is the surprising thing.

Religious people.

Well, again, so it could be because they believe there's a God that tells them who to sleep with and where to eat and how to pray, or because they have a regular dose of community.

I don't know that those are completely separable variables.

They're people who they love and care about that they see every week, which is not happening with so many people today.

Do you think you would be happier if you believed in God?

I'm a pretty happy guy.

Do you think you'd be happier?

I don't know.

I see people, I've seen very happy people

in

celebrating their version of God.

But then there are other other people who are really happy in their version of God.

And here's the problem.

Deeply religious people,

typically, find other religions,

deeply religious people will declare for themselves and others in that religion that all the other religions are false.

False.

And if not false, just make preposterous claims.

It is so obvious to them how false all the other religions are.

Now you go to this religion.

It is obvious how preposterous the rest of the religions are.

You go around religion to religion.

And

so what's really going on here is devout people in so many of these religions are atheists to every religion but their own.

Every religion but their own.

Okay?

How can a mountain have moved to Muhammad?

That can't be.

Okay.

Oh, but yes, the creator of the universe impregnated a woman in the Middle East 2,000 years ago.

That's more believable than anything in the Quran for this person.

Okay?

And then the Jews are saying, Jesus is the Son of God.

What are you, what are you crazy?

Where'd you get that from?

He's a good Jew, nice prophet, but son of God, you're going too far.

So everybody's saying what's not true.

So they're atheist for every other...

They just don't believe any other religion.

Whereas an actual atheist just has one more religion to that category.

It's your religion.

The atheist agrees with you that all the other religions are preposterous in their claims,

but they also believe, they also think your religion is preposterous.

And people don't accept that.

It doesn't land well.

So I don't have any problems with people being religious.

I don't have any issues with that.

It's,

I don't try to impose my

other people try to do it.

I've seen them do this.

I have a quote where I'm misquoted just because they want me on their side.

Okay, you ready?

It's a simple quote.

If every time I tell you science doesn't understand it, and you say, well, God must be that, God made the universe because we don't, God made life, because we don't know how to make life yet.

God, if that's, if that is your definition and understanding of God,

then as science progresses, it will solve these questions,

pushing the God back

outward

to places that have yet to be discovered.

And so the quote is, if to you God is where science has yet to tread,

then God is an ever-receding pocket.

of scientific ignorance.

That references what philosophers have called God of the gaps.

It goes way back, thousands of years.

We don't understand it.

There's a God.

The storm is Poseidon.

Okay.

Lightning bolt struck, it's Zeus.

That's God of the gaps.

God of the gaps is a time-honored exercise in human civilization.

And all I'm saying is

that statement

is objectively true because it's an if statement.

If to you, God is where science has yet to tread, then as science continues to tread, you're a pocket, a shrinking pocket of scientific.

That's your God.

Okay?

It's not an opinion.

That is a statement of an if statement, the consequences of an if statement.

I've had people take the second half and put it on a t-shirt.

God is an ever-receding pocket of scientific ignorance.

Neil deGrasse Tyson.

That's not what I said.

That's half of what I said.

And that's only true if if to you, God, is where science has yet to tread.

But to pull that out and make that the truth?

No.

I would never make such a statement.

Ever.

You're 66, right?

Hang on.

Hang on.

I will be 67

in a month.

In a month.

Okay, so you're...

A month from this recording.

So I'm 33.

Okay.

Half my age.

Exactly half.

And I was wondering, you're a very wise man.

What is the advice that that you wish someone had said to you at 33 that you could give to me now?

I have no such advice, and I'll tell you why.

If you're alert and you're smart,

alert meaning you notice things and you're smart and

you learn,

living life itself

is the lesson.

So a version of what you just asked is,

given what you know today, what would you tell yourself if you met yourself when you were 15, 20, 25, 30, whatever?

And I said, I wouldn't tell him anything.

Because if I gave a bit of wisdom,

I say, you're about to do that, but don't do that.

Okay?

There's no better lesson than doing something and learning that you shouldn't do it.

That's the best lesson.

We don't live life because there's a list of things that other people said don't do.

You're going to explore your life.

That's what you're going to do.

And some things are great and some things you don't want to do again.

Some things you're bad.

That's where the wisdom comes from.

You earn it.

It's the most...

It's the most,

it's the strongest kind of wisdom you can have, provided you learn from a mistake.

If you're just an idiot and you just keep making the mistake, my advice for you is don't make the same mistake twice.

But that's, you don't need me for that.

So you'll make a decision about this podcast or some business decision.

And no, it didn't turn out right.

Here's a better example of this.

Ready?

This is a very American kind of story I'm about to tell.

Immigrant comes over,

back when that was a thing you could do, comes to the United States, and they work hard,

very hardworking.

They first sweep the street in front of a store up front, and then they're in the store and they learn the trade.

And then the owner dies and they take over the trade.

And they're working hard and they're scrapping.

And they're okay.

And then they buy the adjacent store and they build the thing and become, and then he moves and he lives in a big house and he has kids.

Okay?

And he says to himself,

When I was your age, I had to like

scrounge for food and I had to like sweep things.

And I want to make sure my kids don't have to do that.

I want to make sure they don't have to do that.

Okay?

So you provide things for them

so they don't have to do this.

And now they grow up and they're adults

and they're deadbeats.

They have no motivation.

They have no ambition.

They have no vision statement because everything got handed to them.

And what does the adult say to the kids?

Where did I go wrong?

I gave you everything I didn't have.

That's where they went wrong because they gave the kids everything you didn't have.

And what made that person was what they struggled, the decisions they had to make, the decisions they got right, the decisions they got wrong, who they met, how they treated people.

This is life experience.

And it doesn't come on a bumper sticker.

It doesn't come on a, what's the secret?

That's like going to someone's home and

one of the hosts

is actually a trained chef, right?

And maybe worked in a restaurant.

And they prepared this exquisite meal.

And you say, this is delicious.

What's your secret?

Oh, the secret?

I went to chef school for six years.

That's the secret.

You're thinking this is one sentence I could tell you, and then that'll make everything better.

No.

No.

Just stay alert, learn new stuff every day,

and learn from your mistakes because those lessons are greater

than someone just telling you to not do it.

Then you have no such life experience to build into the wisdom that you want to acquire.

in the years to come.

My last question for you is, and I hear it the other way.

I didn't think you'd ever have a last question.

No, yeah, I mean, for now, I should say.

My last question for now.

But my last question for now, and I kind of hear it in between some of the things you say, is, and I've just moved here, so I've just moved to Los Angeles.

How do you feel about America right now?

Well, you know, it's a free country and we vote in our leaders.

And right now, there's a whole set of people in charge that are doing different things from what had happened in previous

years, previous leaderships, even previous leaders of that same political party.

What's going on is very different from anything that I think people would have predicted.

A lot of people like

complaining about leadership, but we live in a country where we choose our leaders.

So we're going to complain about the leadership.

You should be complaining about the people,

about the electorate.

I'm an educator.

I've never

complained about politicians.

They represent people.

I was once in the Rayburn office building, Washington, D.C., in the science committee's room, beautifully decorated with science

art and sculptures and things.

One of the members of the science committee back then was a young earth creationist.

Young Earth creationist.

Universe created in six days, Earth created in 6,000 years, at most 10,000 years.

And I knew he was going to be there.

And I thought to myself, do I grab him by the lapels and say, what do you think?

You're on a science commitment.

And then I thought, no,

no.

If he thinks that, presumably, so does his electorate.

They voted him in.

And this electorate are fellow citizens, as am I in this country.

So I can't indict him.

Let me go have a conversation with the folks who voted for him.

I say, why do you think this?

And if you consider this.

And that's my duty as an educator, not to hit anybody on the head who's in Washington.

So do we blame the educators and the media people like, you know, people like me?

No, that's the blame game is, I don't feel that way.

My parents, when we showed us the images

of the dogs and the water hoses on the protesters in the South, American South,

they were never bitter.

They said, these people don't know any better.

They don't know any differently.

We have to talk to them and

teach them.

That's very different from saying, holding up your fist, saying, I'm going to fight them because they're my enemy.

It's, I want to teach them because they're my fellow citizens.

And that's how I feel.

So my worry is that there are decisions made that are not in the best interest of the people who voted for those decisions.

The longer-term implications

could be devastating.

If you cut basic science, basic science feeds engineering.

Engineering feeds economies.

And so if you don't think basic science matters because you don't either understand the title of the research or the scientists didn't communicate it, interestingly enough, whatever.

And you say, this is a waste of money, take it all out.

Let's just do the engineering.

You'll be ossified in place.

and is that what's happened

we are on the brink of that happening right now that's correct the average person has no idea about this i've tried to you know illuminate the public about it it's easy to say that basic science doesn't matter or can't matter or will never matter

because we don't know yet

right now is the centennial decade so let's go back to the 1920s where quantum physics was developed.

If you were around back then, what would you have said?

Why are you studying atoms?

I can't even see atoms.

Don't waste your time.

You're a brilliant person.

Go work on this other problem that we have in society.

And

it would take decades.

But

the information technology revolution

has as its core

the creation, storage, and retrieval of digital information that can only happen

with the exploitation of the quantum.

So, this decade of science, physics, that was discovered, by the 1950s, it was like, whoa, this is some important physics here.

No one would have known that at the time.

Why?

Let me keep going.

Was it 1876

Philadelphia Expo?

Alexander Graham Bell showcases his new contraption, the telephone.

And people say, wow, this is kind of cool.

You should read what people wrote about it.

This is a great invention.

I can imagine there might be one in every city in the future.

In this book,

that one.

Yeah.

There's a whole chapter called Science and Technology, where I chronicle.

I chronicle.

how people think about the technology of their day and how they always get it wrong when they predict the future.

Because foundational science comes in at the bottom and you don't see that coming.

And it gurgles its way up.

Clever engineers apply it.

And then

you have an iPad.

Neil, thank you so much.

Well, thanks

for having me back.

This is our second time together.

It is.

You bought out the bookstore here?

What did you do?

Yes, we wanted to come prepared.

I mean, you write the most incredible books

and you talk in the most incredible ways.

I said this to you last time, but you're one of the most incredible storytellers I've ever heard.

You make something which is, I really did have a huge amount of interest in in school suddenly interesting to us as adults, which is a remarkable thing.

So, thank you for doing what you do.

We do have a closing tradition where the last guest leaves a question for the next guest.

Oh, is that right?

Yes.

Okay.

And they don't know who they're leaving it for.

The question left for you is: how good are you at knowing

what you will regret?

And is there anything you do regret?

Yeah, I think regrets are things that you only realize when it's too late.

Otherwise, you would have preempted it and not have to regret it.

So

I don't know that I'm any better than anyone else at it.

Because if you're good at it, you'll never be in a position to have to do something that you would regret.

The fact is you went past something.

that you did and say, damn, I shouldn't have done it.

I got to regret that.

So to be good at knowing in advance that you're going to regret something, that's that's almost an impossible scenario.

If I'm good at seeing it, then I would never have to regret anything because I would have preempted it.

So for all of us, the fact that we have regrets is we move past something that we did.

I was like, damn, I regret that.

After the fact.

Do you have any regrets?

I was

in college.

I majoring in physics, and I think I was a junior.

There were students that came in from

other schools for a summer program.

Okay, high school seniors, I think they were.

They might have been freshmen in their college, but I think they were high school students.

And I was a men, not a mentor, but I would guide them in these research projects.

Then at the end, we had to write an evaluation of them.

And as one student, I wrote an evaluation that

was accurate

but

unnecessary.

I said

he

pretends he knows things that he doesn't, and he's,

you know, he's faking this, and he's,

and I didn't yet know

how to speak encouragingly about someone,

separate from just speaking factually about someone.

So

is that an art?

Is it a science to do that?

I don't know, but I know I didn't have it at the time.

I just simply described what I saw.

And I said, he, you know, this is not going to work.

It was very deflating

to him.

And

considering that at the time I'm majoring in physics at Harvard, he's coming from some

high school somewhere, and And I'm a Harvard student telling him that, you know, he ain't shit.

And I should not have done that.

Did he contact you later?

No.

He might have taken up another field.

I don't know.

But so I regret that.

But it would take me four years to even realize that that was a regrettable thing because I didn't know how to,

you know, as an educator, you want to encourage people, you see where the weaknesses are and figure out ways to have that person eradicate them, improve upon them, rather than just say, this is not working, go home.

I regret that.

And that's probably the thing I regret most in life.

Really?

Yeah.

Because it was,

who knows what consequences that has on that person's life.

And you remembered that?

Oh, yes.

Oh, my gosh.

Yes.

How do you remember that?

Because

you write it down in his report code or whatever on his assessment.

Time goes on.

Does something happen for you to think back to what you wrote?

Well, I've written many letters of reference for people, more than I can count.

So I think every time I write a letter of reference, I think about how I could have written that letter back then.

So that's a regret.

And I live with that.

I can see you live with it.

Yeah.

So I think I've made up for it.

Just in how many people I and there are other people who needed help.

And so you find out how they can improve it and advise on on that so that everybody lifts up.

That's how you make a better world.

And it goes back to what you said at the start you wanted on your tombstone, which is certainly something you've already done in droves.

More so than I think anybody.

So you tell me I can die now?

Is that what you just said?

You just said that.

Or you can go on holiday.

It's up to you.

But thank you so much for being who you are.

You're a huge inspiration to me.

I know Jack is a mega, mega fan of yours as well and has loves your work.

And you're both the reason that I,

well,

I let go of my religious belief at 18 years old.

And I found that.

I don't want you to lose your religion.

I didn't

really, no, but I just said this.

I let go of my religious belief at 18 years old and I became an atheist agnostic.

Then I became really agnostic.

But then I kind of fell in love with the universe.

And I fell in love in the universe because of you and because of Cosmos, which is one of my favorite things ever to watch.

And I found all the curiosity and awe and magic that I needed to find by reading your work and watching the wonderful movies that you've made.

So thank you so much for that.

Well, the universe is a rich repository

of

spiritual fulfillment.

Yeah.

If I may.

Yes, to say the least.

Yeah.

Wow.

And your book is exactly that.

I highly recommend everybody goes and checks it out.

It's out on, I think it's the 21st of October.

Oh, yeah, yeah.

The next installment in Merlin.

Yeah, in October.

Yeah.

I'll link it on the screen.

Oh, thank you.

Link it below.

Highly recommend.

It's called Just Visiting This Planet.

So, so, so I'd lied before.

I can give you some advice.

Please.

Yeah.

This is 67-year-old advice.

At no time

should you

overvalue

your own thoughts.

You should allow yourself to be humbled daily.

with new ideas that challenge any or everything that you currently think.

That's wisdom, I think.

How do I know who I am if I don't hang on to it?

Maybe you're not, maybe you only are who you are on your deathbed, because then you would have completed your life.

You're still in a work in progress.

You're 33, so last year, when you were 31, you would have lived your billionth second.

Okay, and if you lead a healthy life, you should get three billion seconds out of it.

You get to 93, at least that.

So

time passes.

If you learn something new every day, that forces extra context for extra perspective, new perspective on whatever you knew yesterday.

You have to stay open to that.

And I read old science books because I watch people's confidence that they had in what they thought they knew.

It can be embarrassing in some cases.

And it's very humbling to look back at people writing about their own world.

There's a book from 1899, the guy said on the sun, and it says, we've learned so much about the sun in the last three years, I had to up the edition of the book I wrote three years ago.

And I'm saying, you don't know shit about the sun,

okay,

in 19 in 1899.

But he's feeling it.

He's feeling that joy.

And so I, it

it keeps me humble on the frontier on this perimeter of ignorance.

Because there's way more to discover than anything you've already learned.

Maybe that's the antidote in medicine that society needs right now, too.

I think so, because everybody is running things thinking they know better than everybody else.

This is the story of the one.

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