SGU Episode 892: Difference between revisions

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== News Items ==
== News Items ==
'''S:'''
'''B:'''
'''C:'''
'''J:'''
'''E:'''
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* [https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/maps.13892 Bolide fragmentation: What parts of asteroid 2008 TC<sub>3</sub> survived to the ground?]<ref>[https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/maps.13892 The Meteoritical Society: Bolide fragmentation: What parts of asteroid 2008 TC<sub>3</sub> survived to the ground?]</ref>
* [https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/maps.13892 Bolide fragmentation: What parts of asteroid 2008 TC<sub>3</sub> survived to the ground?]<ref>[https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/maps.13892 The Meteoritical Society: Bolide fragmentation: What parts of asteroid 2008 TC<sub>3</sub> survived to the ground?]</ref>


[19:55.040 --> 19:57.560]  Let's click over to some regular news items.
'''S:''' Jay, you're going to start us off with the physics of meteors.


[19:57.560 --> 20:01.920]  Jay, you're going to start us off with the physics of meteors.
'''J:''' Steve, are you aware that meteors are affected by gravity just like everything else on the planet?


[20:01.920 --> 20:07.520]  Steve, are you aware that meteors are affected by gravity just like everything else on the
'''S:''' Oh yeah.


[20:07.520 --> 20:08.520]  planet?
'''E:''' Oh, my gosh.


[20:08.520 --> 20:09.520]  Oh, my gosh.
'''C:''' You mean off the planet?


[20:09.520 --> 20:10.520]  You mean off the planet?
'''J:''' I'm just kidding.


[20:10.520 --> 20:11.520]  I'm just kidding.
'''E:''' You mean mass has gravity? Oh, my gosh.


[20:11.520 --> 20:12.520]  You mean mass has gravity?
'''J:''' I mean, this is new, Ev. It's new. This is like the new physics. They're talking about gravity and how everything is affected by gravity.


[20:12.520 --> 20:13.520]  Oh, my gosh.
'''E:''' Slow down there, Einstein.


[20:13.520 --> 20:16.000] I mean, this is new, Ev.
'''J:''' So the question is that the researchers were asking is how does a part of a meteor make it all the way to the surface of the Earth? What determines what parts of the meteor actually make it to the surface, if at all? Is it like a piece that falls off early on, or what's the story behind the whole thing? And you would think that because most meteors are small, when you have something enter the Earth's atmosphere from outer space, lots of stuff is entering the Earth's atmosphere all the time. It's essentially sand and dirt and very, very small things that burn up immediately. I guess most things do burn up in the atmosphere, but some are big enough to get down or pieces of it to get down to the surface. Peter Jenaskins of the SETI Institute and [https://www.nasa.gov/ames NASA Ames Research Center] set out to find some answers about what actually happens to meteorites or meteors as they're coming down. They decided to find meteorites that came from an asteroid that was originally detected back in 2008. And that asteroid is called, I mean, this always makes me laugh, I think of you, Bob. It's called TC3. They need to read more science fiction. They got to name these things something cool, something catchy.


[20:16.000 --> 20:17.000]  It's new.
'''E:''' Well, at least there's only three characters on those really long ones that nobody will ever remember.


[20:17.000 --> 20:18.240]  This is like the new physics.
'''C:''' But just roll them into a word. Like if it's TC3, call it like Tech 3 or Tri-Tech or something. Like turn it into something more memorable.


[20:18.240 --> 20:21.080] They're talking about gravity and how everything is affected by gravity.
'''J:''' But what do they call it? The Wolfbiter 7.


[20:21.080 --> 20:23.720]  Slow down there, Einstein.
'''E:''' I like that.


[20:23.720 --> 20:28.860]  So the question is that the researchers were asking is how does a part of a meteor make
'''J:''' Sounds provocative. So this bad boy was six meters long, and it was actually detected by scientists. They're scanning outer space all the time to try to find asteroids and things that are flying by the Earth. And they found this guy, and they had some time to study it before it entered the Earth's atmosphere. Now, this one came down and ended up breaking apart over the Nubian desert of Sudan. And what they did was they got some research students to go to the site and to turn the site into a grid. So when it enters the Earth's atmosphere and it's traveling, not horizontally and not vertically, it's just coming down on an angle. And it could cover a lot of area, that pathway as it comes down. And it's shedding stuff the entire time. So they wanted to figure out, let's try to find samples of pretty much everything that fell off of this asteroid meteor as it was coming down. So they had tons of students go, and they were looking for samples. They found over 600 meteorites, which is a lot, by the way. They all varied in size, but nothing was bigger than, say, the size of a fist. So as the meteor was coming down, it was shedding parts of itself. And the researchers found that the larger pieces, the largest pieces that came off of this, the fist-sized ones that I mentioned, they were more spread out and they were farther down the pathway that the meteor took than the smaller ones, meaning that they were farther away from the path of the incoming meteor. Does that make sense? So the smaller particles would come off and they would basically fall in line with the pathway of the meteor. But the larger ones that happened towards the end were kind of like blown away. And it's all the physics of what happened.


[20:28.860 --> 20:31.540]  it all the way to the surface of the Earth?
'''E:''' So they take a different trajectory? They don't follow the same path, is that what you're saying?


[20:31.540 --> 20:37.320]  What determines what parts of the meteor actually make it to the surface, if at all?
'''J:''' They went perpendicular to the path of the meteor at the very end.


[20:37.320 --> 20:42.440]  Is it like a piece that falls off early on, or what's the story behind the whole thing?
'''B:''' Was it from an air burst?


[20:42.440 --> 20:49.200]  And you would think that because most meteors are small, when you have something enter the
'''J:''' Kind of, yeah. Let me explain to you what they say and what the physics is that they're talking about. So because this meteor was initially tracked, they knew what size and shape it was. And they used the information that they had to be able to make a computer model to simulate the asteroid entering the Earth's atmosphere and its meteoric descent, using something called 3D hydrodynamic modeling. Now, this is typically used for, you would think, water. But air molecules behave like water in a lot of ways. And they can use this software to do modeling when things are moving through the atmosphere. So they were able to recreate the motion of the meteor as it tumbled around and melted and broke apart when it was coming into the Earth's atmosphere. And there's another important part of this. Scientists actually observed the actual meteor itself as it came down the day that it happened. And they recorded details about its brightness and the dust clouds it was leaving behind and the altitude at which these things were happening. So this information was factored into the simulation. And you'd be surprised at how damn accurate this simulation was at painting the story of where and when things fell off, especially when they added in the information of the debris field that was left under the pathway of the meteor as it came down. And they got a pretty clear picture of what was going on with this thing. So one cool thing they figured out was that because the meteor was coming in at a very high speed, it created a near vacuum wake in the Earth's atmosphere. So the first pieces that broke off came off from the sides of the asteroid slash meteor. And these pieces mostly moved into the vacuum that was created. And then after they entered that vacuum space, they fell down to the ground straight. They deaccelerated and fell down pretty much at regular speed like dirt and sand falling out of the air. The larger pieces that broke off mostly fell much further down the path of the descending meteor like I told you. So as the meteor is coming down, the air pressure becomes so high that it actually dramatically increases the heat on the front side of the meteor. So what they found, and this is so interesting, is that the backside of the meteor, however, did not get as hot and was not anywhere nearly as affected by the heat as the other parts of the meteor, that front leading edge in the front face of the meteor was really affected by the heat. It starts to melt, literally melts as it's coming down with that intense heat that's coming. So you have this the air pressure that builds up and creates that intense heat in the front. And then you have this vacuum that's being created like on the sides and partly behind. It's a really complicated collection of different types of physics happening all at the same time. So they were able to determine that the front leading edge of the meteor was the part that received the most heat from the compression of the air. While the back side and particularly the back bottom side was not as hot. Now, of course, what an important factor here is because of the the shape of this particular meteor, it wasn't tumbling as much. It tumbled more early on and then it kind of stabilized and it retained a relative position. So there was an extraordinarily different amount of heat in the front than the back of the meteor. And that is very important to the physics of what was what's about to take place here. Now towards the end of its journey, larger pieces now came flying apart in the final collapse. So as it's getting down into the atmosphere, there was this final collapse that happens where the whole thing just broke apart. And that's when the really large pieces, the fifth side pieces came off of this. And like I said, they they weren't following the normal trajectory. They got shot out to the sides because of what happened with all the air pressure and all of the heat and everything. And that final collapse, these pieces just came shooting out of this area where it had its final kind of like an explosion, you could say. Now here's another really interesting thing about what happens to asteroids and and ways that scientists will take advantage of these things. Asteroids are hit with cosmic rays as they travel through space and they all have low levels of radiation. The farther inside the asteroid you go, the less and less radiation is being absorbed. So by analyzing the meteorites, they were able to determine that the interior parts of the meteor did not survive the descent.


[20:49.200 --> 20:53.680]  Earth's atmosphere from outer space, lots of stuff is entering the Earth's atmosphere
'''C:''' Oh that's cool.


[20:53.680 --> 20:54.720]  all the time.
'''J:''' They were not the protected part. It's the backside that's protected because it had radiation. And when they compared it to pieces that they did find with with lower radiation, they were able to determine that the majority of the material that was ejected from this as it came down was from the backside.


[20:54.720 --> 21:00.320]  It's essentially sand and dirt and very, very small things that burn up immediately.
'''B:''' Interesting.


[21:00.320 --> 21:05.940]  I guess most things do burn up in the atmosphere, but some are big enough to get down or pieces
'''J:''' Now that I've educated you guys about it pretty complicated report that I read, but it was extraordinarily complicated and they get into literally mathematical formulas about what's going on and everything. And of course, I can't get into all of that. So this is this is a quick overview that I just thought was very interesting. But then I just decided, let me look up some some fun facts that I could share with you guys about meteors. Are you ready?


[21:05.940 --> 21:07.800]  of it to get down to the surface.
'''E:''' Fun facts about meatballs. Ready.


[21:07.800 --> 21:12.760]  Peter Jenaskins of the SETI Institute and NASA Ames Research Center set out to find
'''J:''' Every day. Next episode Ev. Every day, Earth is bombarded with more than how many tons of dust and sand sized particles?


[21:12.760 --> 21:19.480]  some answers about what actually happens to meteorites or meteors as they're coming down.
'''S:''' Tons on a million.


[21:19.480 --> 21:24.480]  They decided to find meteorites that came from an asteroid that was originally detected
'''J:''' Anybody else?


[21:24.480 --> 21:26.480]  back in 2008.
'''E:''' A million? A million tons?


[21:26.480 --> 21:30.360]  And that asteroid is called, I mean, this always makes me laugh, I think of you, Bob.
'''B:''' 10,000.


[21:30.360 --> 21:31.360]  It's called TC3.
'''E:''' I'll say 10,005.


[21:31.360 --> 21:35.120]  They need to read more science fiction.
'''J:''' It's actually 100 tons, which is a lot.


[21:35.120 --> 21:36.840]  They got to name these things something cool, something catchy.
'''E:''' Bob's closest.


[21:36.840 --> 21:40.840]  Well, at least there's only three characters on those really long ones that nobody will
'''B:''' I win!


[21:40.840 --> 21:41.840]  ever remember.
'''J:''' It's a lot. Yeah. You add zeroes. You take away zeros. These are hard numbers to guess. About once a year, an automobile sized asteroid hits Earth's atmosphere. It creates an impressive fireball and then burns up before reaching the surface. In that situation, it could be tumbling like crazy and everything gets burned up because everything gets hot and explosive and then turns into dust and sand at that point. Every 2000 years or so, a meteoroid the size of a football field hits Earth and causes significant damage to the area that it hits. Only once every few million years, an object large enough to threaten Earth civilization comes along. Impact craters on Earth and the moon and other planetary bodies are evidence of these occurrences. So we know that they happen. We know that they're super rare. Please don't worry about it. We're also watching the skies now, but it does happen. Space rocks smaller than about 25 meters or about 82 feet will most likely burn up as they enter the Earth's atmosphere and cause little or no damage. 25 meters, that's a pretty big chunk of rock if you think about it, and our atmosphere is there to protect us. If a rocky meteoroid larger than 25 meters but smaller than one kilometer, a little more than half a mile, were to hit Earth, it would likely cause local damage to the impact area. And we believe anything larger than one to two kilometers or one kilometer is a little more than a half a mile could have worldwide effects. So it would take an extraordinarily large piece of rock that we would most definitely see coming and we probably have time to deal with it.


[21:41.840 --> 21:44.820]  But just roll them into a word.
'''B:''' Well. If it's coming out of the Sun, if it's coming from that direction, I mean, I'm just saying it's not a no brainer that we wouldn't miss it. We're not perfectly observing all possibilities. We still have meteoroids that kind of look it, there it goes. Didn't see it coming, but there it goes. That still happens.


[21:44.820 --> 21:49.120]  Like if it's TC3, call it like Tech 3 or Tri-Tech or something.
'''E:''' See you again in 5,000 years.


[21:49.120 --> 21:52.360]  Like turn it into something more memorable.
'''J:''' Bob I'm trying to make people feel good. And you're harshing our mellow over here how about this? When we went to the museum in New Zealand, we got to smell a meteorite. And what, guys, do you remember what it smelled like?


[21:52.360 --> 21:53.360]  But what do they call it?
'''E:''' Burning or something.


[21:53.360 --> 21:54.360]  The Wolfbiter 7.
'''B:''' It's a cam and Swiss?


[21:54.360 --> 21:56.360]  Ooh, I like that.
'''J:''' No, it smelled like a barbecue. It had definitely had─


[21:56.360 --> 21:57.920]  Sounds provocative.
'''E:''' Burning, OK, yeah.


[21:57.920 --> 22:04.200]  So this bad boy was six meters long, and it was actually detected by scientists.
'''J:''' ─almost an umami kind of smell to it. Very interesting to think that little particles of that were coming off and we were breathing them in and getting a smell of outer space in us.


[22:04.200 --> 22:09.280]  They're scanning outer space all the time to try to find asteroids and things that are
'''B:''' Yeah, right?


[22:09.280 --> 22:10.280]  flying by the Earth.
'''E:''' Yeah. From a long time ago too.


[22:10.280 --> 22:14.480]  And they found this guy, and they had some time to study it before it entered the Earth's
'''B:''' I liked it.


[22:14.480 --> 22:15.480] atmosphere.
[commercial brake]
=== New Kind of Motion <small>(33:38)</small> ===
* [https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/08/220808161528.htm Robotic motion in curved space defies standard laws of physics]<ref>[https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/08/220808161528.htm Georgia Institute of Technology: Robotic motion in curved space defies standard laws of physics]</ref>


[22:15.480 --> 22:20.440Now, this one came down and ended up breaking apart over the Nubian desert of Sudan.
[33:38.560 --> 33:44.160All right, Bob, you're going to tell us about a new kind of motion that defies the laws


[22:20.440 --> 22:27.640And what they did was they got some research students to go to the site and to turn the
[33:44.160 --> 33:45.160of physics.


[22:27.640 --> 22:29.120site into a grid.
[33:45.160 --> 33:46.160What?


[22:29.120 --> 22:34.880So when it enters the Earth's atmosphere and it's traveling, not horizontally and not vertically,
[33:46.160 --> 33:49.320Well, kind of, but this is cool.


[22:34.880 --> 22:36.760]  it's just coming down on an angle.
[33:49.320 --> 33:52.880Researchers claim that by studying movement on curved spaces, that it's possible to create


[22:36.760 --> 22:41.840And it could cover a lot of area, that pathway as it comes down.
[33:52.880 --> 33:57.240]  a type of movement in a way that has never been seen before.


[22:41.840 --> 22:43.700And it's shedding stuff the entire time.
[33:57.240 --> 34:01.760Now, this was recently published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.


[22:43.700 --> 22:48.400So they wanted to figure out, let's try to find samples of pretty much everything that
[34:01.760 --> 34:06.600Researchers were led by Zeb Rocklin, assistant professor in the School of Physics at Georgia


[22:48.400 --> 22:53.280fell off of this asteroid meteor as it was coming down.
[34:06.600 --> 34:07.600Tech.


[22:53.280 --> 22:57.200So they had tons of students go, and they were looking for samples.
[34:07.600 --> 34:08.600Okay.


[22:57.200 --> 23:01.520They found over 600 meteorites, which is a lot, by the way.
[34:08.600 --> 34:14.200This one is a bit of a loin girding scenario, so I'll lead with a quote from the researchers'


[23:01.520 --> 23:05.820They all varied in size, but nothing was bigger than, say, the size of a fist.
[34:14.200 --> 34:19.400pre-print archive paper from January 2022, and I'm going to use that because it's ironically


[23:05.820 --> 23:09.240So as the meteor was coming down, it was shedding parts of itself.
[34:19.400 --> 34:22.840better than their opening for their published paper.


[23:09.240 --> 23:14.080And the researchers found that the larger pieces, the largest pieces that came off of
[34:22.840 --> 34:28.640So they said, locomotion by shape changes, spermatozoan swimming, snakes leathering,


[23:14.080 --> 23:19.880this, the fist-sized ones that I mentioned, they were more spread out and they were farther
[34:28.640 --> 34:35.120bird flapping, or gas expulsion, rocket firing, is assumed to require environmental interaction


[23:19.880 --> 23:25.800down the pathway that the meteor took than the smaller ones, meaning that they were farther
[34:35.120 --> 34:36.840due to conservation of momentum.


[23:25.800 --> 23:27.840away from the path of the incoming meteor.
[34:36.840 --> 34:39.060All right, that's a huge point.


[23:27.840 --> 23:28.980Does that make sense?
[34:39.060 --> 34:43.760What this means is that for locomotion to occur, momentum has a critical role to play


[23:28.980 --> 23:33.320So the smaller particles would come off and they would basically fall in line with the
[34:43.760 --> 34:46.840as well as the environmental forces like friction, right?


[23:33.320 --> 23:34.480pathway of the meteor.
[34:46.840 --> 34:47.840Think about it.


[23:34.480 --> 23:39.720But the larger ones that happened towards the end were kind of like blown away.
[34:47.840 --> 34:52.680Without them, especially like thinking of friction as well, specifically walking or


[23:39.720 --> 23:41.240And it's all the physics of what happened.
[34:52.680 --> 34:57.360slithering or flapping, you're not going to go anywhere, you're not going to get anywhere.


[23:41.240 --> 23:43.200So they take a different trajectory?
[34:57.360 --> 34:59.800Momentum also plays a critical role.


[23:43.200 --> 23:45.520They don't follow the same path, is that what you're saying?
[34:59.800 --> 35:04.720Now, this exchange of momentum, it seems obvious and has been a general assumption for quite


[23:45.520 --> 23:49.200They went perpendicular to the path of the meteor at the very end.
[35:04.720 --> 35:07.600a long time until the early aughts.


[23:49.200 --> 23:51.720Was it from an air burst?
[35:07.600 --> 35:09.840Is anybody even still using that word anymore?


[23:51.720 --> 23:52.720Kind of, yeah.
[35:09.840 --> 35:10.840Aughts?


[23:52.720 --> 23:56.160Let me explain to you what they say and what the physics is that they're talking about.
[35:10.840 --> 35:11.840I almost never hear it.


[23:56.160 --> 24:00.840]  So because this meteor was initially tracked, they knew what size and shape it was.
[35:11.840 --> 35:12.840]  Don't think so.


[24:00.840 --> 24:07.820And they used the information that they had to be able to make a computer model to simulate
[35:12.840 --> 35:13.840Not in 20 years or so.


[24:07.820 --> 24:13.280the asteroid entering the Earth's atmosphere and its meteoric descent, using something
[35:13.840 --> 35:20.800The early 2000s, when some scientists named Wisdom, Guérin, and Avron claimed that locomotion


[24:13.280 --> 24:15.720called 3D hydrodynamic modeling.
[35:20.800 --> 35:27.520does not require this interaction with the environment if it happens in curved space-time


[24:15.720 --> 24:20.400Now, this is typically used for, you would think, water, right?
[35:27.520 --> 35:32.080or even in earthbound curved surfaces.


[24:20.400 --> 24:24.200But air molecules behave like water in a lot of ways.
[35:32.080 --> 35:36.600So this assumption that you're going to have this interaction, you know, this exchange


[24:24.200 --> 24:29.240And they can use this software to do modeling when things are moving through the atmosphere.
[35:36.600 --> 35:42.980of momentum and utilizing forces like friction, that assumption, they claim, is not warranted


[24:29.240 --> 24:33.720So they were able to recreate the motion of the meteor as it tumbled around and melted
[35:42.980 --> 35:49.280in a special situation where there's a curved space-time or earthbound curved surfaces.


[24:33.720 --> 24:36.320and broke apart when it was coming into the Earth's atmosphere.
[35:49.280 --> 35:50.280Okay.


[24:36.320 --> 24:38.880And there's another important part of this.
[35:50.280 --> 35:52.600Now, many scientists didn't believe this exception.


[24:38.880 --> 24:43.880Scientists actually observed the actual meteor itself as it came down the day that it happened.
[35:52.600 --> 35:55.420They thought, no way, that can't be right.


[24:43.880 --> 24:48.640And they recorded details about its brightness and the dust clouds it was leaving behind
[35:55.420 --> 35:56.920They didn't think it existed.


[24:48.640 --> 24:51.480and the altitude at which these things were happening.
[35:56.920 --> 36:01.700And now, these most recent researchers claim that they've actually demonstrated this effect


[24:51.480 --> 24:54.560So this information was factored into the simulation.
[36:01.700 --> 36:05.380for the first time using a robotic apparatus.


[24:54.560 --> 24:59.400And you'd be surprised at how damn accurate this simulation was at painting the story
[36:05.380 --> 36:08.420They describe this apparatus in their paper in this way.


[24:59.400 --> 25:04.160]  of where and when things fell off, especially when they added in the information of the
[36:08.420 --> 36:14.160]  Here we show that a precision robo-physical apparatus consisting of motors driven on curved


[25:04.160 --> 25:09.280debris field that was left under the pathway of the meteor as it came down.
[36:14.160 --> 36:20.360tracks and thereby confined to a spherical surface without a solid substrate.


[25:09.280 --> 25:12.800And they got a pretty clear picture of what was going on with this thing.
[36:20.360 --> 36:24.760Now, if you think that description is hard to picture, I saw a video of this thing and


[25:12.800 --> 25:16.340So one cool thing they figured out was that because the meteor was coming in at a very
[36:24.760 --> 36:27.160I'm still not sure exactly what the hell was going on.


[25:16.340 --> 25:22.480high speed, it created a near vacuum wake in the Earth's atmosphere.
[36:27.160 --> 36:29.880I mean, it's like, wait, what?


[25:22.480 --> 25:28.240So the first pieces that broke off came off from the sides of the asteroid slash meteor.
[36:29.880 --> 36:31.480And it gave me two angles.


[25:28.240 --> 25:32.280And these pieces mostly moved into the vacuum that was created.
[36:31.480 --> 36:35.360So all right, so from what I could gather, the hardest thing about this apparatus was


[25:32.280 --> 25:37.000And then after they entered that vacuum space, they fell down to the ground like straight,
[36:35.360 --> 36:39.920]  that they had to isolate it from the environmental forces as much as possible, right, because


[25:37.000 --> 25:41.920]  like they deaccelerated and fell down pretty much at regular speed, you know, like dirt
[36:39.920 --> 36:45.920]  they needed to remove the possibility of conservation of momentum or environmental forces like friction


[25:41.920 --> 25:44.160and sand falling out of the air.
[36:45.920 --> 36:46.920from playing a part.


[25:44.160 --> 25:49.360The larger pieces that broke off mostly fell much further down the path of the descending
[36:46.920 --> 36:49.280They wanted to subtract that possibility.


[25:49.360 --> 25:51.040meteor like I told you.
[36:49.280 --> 36:54.240So in this case, they minimized the effect of gravity and friction to as close as zero


[25:51.040 --> 25:57.220So as the meteor is coming down, the air pressure becomes so high that it actually dramatically
[36:54.240 --> 36:55.240]  as possible.


[25:57.220 --> 26:02.280increases the heat on the front side of the meteor, right?
[36:55.240 --> 37:01.320And then once they did that, it allowed for this subtle effect to appear in their robo-physical


[26:02.280 --> 26:07.800So what they found, and this is so interesting, is that the backside of the meteor, however,
[37:01.320 --> 37:02.320apparatus.


[26:07.800 --> 26:13.240did not get as hot and was not anywhere nearly as affected by the heat as the other parts
[37:02.320 --> 37:03.320Robo-physical.


[26:13.240 --> 26:17.060of the meteor, like that front leading edge in the front face of the meteor was really
[37:03.320 --> 37:05.440And that's a word never heard before.


[26:17.060 --> 26:18.080affected by the heat.
[37:05.440 --> 37:07.640I'm not sure what I think about it yet, but okay.


[26:18.080 --> 26:22.720It starts to melt, literally melts as it's coming down with that intense heat that's
[37:07.640 --> 37:08.640Sorry.


[26:22.720 --> 26:23.720coming.
[37:08.640 --> 37:14.000The result, which has never been observed before, was that from a system, the system


[26:23.720 --> 26:27.040So you have you have this the air pressure that builds up and creates that intense heat
[37:14.000 --> 37:18.560]  that they created had zero momentum, nothing, no momentum.


[26:27.040 --> 26:28.040in the front.
[37:18.560 --> 37:24.120And from that, they were able to generate a forward movement of a tenth of a centimeter


[26:28.040 --> 26:32.800And then you have this vacuum that's being created like on the sides and partly behind.
[37:24.120 --> 37:25.640per gate cycle.


[26:32.800 --> 26:37.160It's a really complicated collection of different types of physics happening all at the same
[37:25.640 --> 37:31.800Not amazingly fast, but it came from a zero momentum system and it accomplished this even


[26:37.160 --> 26:38.160time.
[37:31.800 --> 37:36.600while it still had to resist the tiny amounts of gravity and friction that remained in the


[26:38.160 --> 26:42.780So they were able to determine that the front leading edge of of the meteor was the part
[37:36.600 --> 37:37.600system.


[26:42.780 --> 26:48.560that received the most heat from the compression of the air, while the back side and particularly
[37:37.600 --> 37:42.600You know, the minute pieces of that that they couldn't fully remove.


[26:48.560 --> 26:52.320the back bottom side was not as hot.
[37:42.600 --> 37:48.200And even though it had to resist it, it still had this forward movement that was created


[26:52.320 --> 26:57.700Now, of course, what an important factor here is because of the the shape of this particular
[37:48.200 --> 37:50.800kind of from nothing in a sense.


[26:57.700 --> 27:00.360meteor, it wasn't tumbling as much.
[37:50.800 --> 37:55.380So the summary in their paper said, we have experimentally realized and theoretically


[27:00.360 --> 27:06.760It tumbled more early on and then it kind of stabilized and it retained a relative position.
[37:55.380 --> 38:01.520characterized the movement of a robot through a curved spherical space without relying on


[27:06.760 --> 27:11.240So there was an extraordinarily different amount of heat in the front than the back
[38:01.520 --> 38:05.680any momentum or reliance on environmental forces to translate.


[27:11.240 --> 27:12.880of the meteor.
[38:05.680 --> 38:11.960In contrast with all other observed systems, this has never been observed before.


[27:12.880 --> 27:17.460]  And that is very important to the physics of what was what's about to take place here.
[38:11.960 --> 38:17.360]  And I mean, it's not really from nothing, but I mean, that's one interpretation that


[27:17.460 --> 27:22.000Now towards the end of its journey, larger pieces now came flying apart in the final
[38:17.360 --> 38:19.200some people are saying.


[27:22.000 --> 27:23.000collapse.
[38:19.200 --> 38:20.360But I mean, look at the paper.


[27:23.000 --> 27:24.000Right.
[38:20.360 --> 38:21.360It's like, damn, man.


[27:24.000 --> 27:27.260So as it as it's getting down into the atmosphere, there was this final collapse that happens
[38:21.360 --> 38:26.560You know, obviously a lot of that was super technical and I'd like to see what some other


[27:27.260 --> 27:29.680where the whole thing just broke apart.
[38:26.560 --> 38:27.560scientists make of it.


[27:29.680 --> 27:33.880]  And that's when the really large pieces, the fifth side pieces came off of this.
[38:27.560 --> 38:29.880]  So, all right, so what do we make of this?


[27:33.880 --> 27:38.120And like I said, they they weren't following the normal trajectory.
[38:29.880 --> 38:33.360What can something like this even accomplish if it's further developed?


[27:38.120 --> 27:43.380They got shot they got shot out like to the sides because of what happened with all the
[38:33.360 --> 38:34.880What's the future of something like this?


[27:43.380 --> 27:45.960air pressure and all of the heat and everything.
[38:34.880 --> 38:39.360You know, and of course it's hard to say, but this could get potentially very, very


[27:45.960 --> 27:50.600And that final collapse, like, you know, they these pieces just came shooting out of this
[38:39.360 --> 38:40.360interesting.


[27:50.600 --> 27:55.680area where it had its final like kind of like an explosion, you could say.
[38:40.360 --> 38:45.340Now they say that their apparatus can be used as a test bed to reveal other types of this


[27:55.680 --> 28:01.500Now here's another really interesting thing about what happens to asteroids and and ways
[38:45.340 --> 38:51.880very exotic behavior on curved surfaces related to, for example, nonlinear effects or collective


[28:01.500 --> 28:04.840that scientists will take advantage of these things.
[38:51.880 --> 38:52.960behavior.


[28:04.840 --> 28:08.880Asteroids are hit with cosmic rays as they travel through space and they all have low
[38:52.960 --> 38:58.160And we know, you know, nonlinear effects and collective behavior, to me, that's like, wow.


[28:08.880 --> 28:10.520levels of radiation.
[38:58.160 --> 39:02.960You know, those are scenarios where you can see amazing stuff like collective behavior.


[28:10.520 --> 28:17.360The farther inside the asteroid you go, the less and less radiation is being absorbed.
[39:02.960 --> 39:07.040I mean, we see emergent behavior coming from collective behavior.


[28:17.360 --> 28:21.600So by analyzing the meteorites, they were able to determine that the interior parts
[39:07.040 --> 39:11.320Nonlinear effects can also, as we know, produce some very, very interesting things.


[28:21.600 --> 28:25.400of the meteor did not survive the descent.
[39:11.320 --> 39:16.880Now researchers say that this curvature induced effect may have some practical importance.


[28:25.400 --> 28:27.020]  They were not the protected part.
[39:16.880 --> 39:21.400]  They compare it to, for example, the small frequency shift that's caused by gravity that


[28:27.020 --> 28:31.220It's the backside that's protected because it had radiation.
[39:21.400 --> 39:24.520became critical for GPS satellite systems to work so well.


[28:31.220 --> 28:36.120And when they compared it to pieces that they did find with with lower radiation, they were
[39:24.520 --> 39:29.600So they compare it, you know, as an analogy, something that was subtle and small having,


[28:36.120 --> 28:42.000able to determine that the majority of the the material that was ejected from this as
[39:29.600 --> 39:33.200you know, an outsized impact potentially in the future.


[28:42.000 --> 28:43.800it came down was from the backside.
[39:33.200 --> 39:38.240Now they say this research relates to the so-called impossible engine study, right?


[28:43.800 --> 28:44.800Interesting.
[39:38.240 --> 39:39.240Remember that?


[28:44.800 --> 28:51.060Well, now that I've educated you guys about it, you know, is a pretty, pretty complicated
[39:39.240 --> 39:41.480That's that so-called EM drive nonsense.


[28:51.060 --> 28:55.960report that I read, but it was extraordinarily complicated and they get into literally mathematical
[39:41.480 --> 39:42.480Now that got a little nervous.


[28:55.960 --> 28:57.940formulas about what's going on and everything.
[39:42.480 --> 39:43.480Propellantless rocket.


[28:57.940 --> 28:59.400And of course, I can't get into all of that.
[39:43.480 --> 39:44.480Yeah.


[28:59.400 --> 29:03.760So this is this is a quick overview that I just thought was very interesting.
[39:44.480 --> 39:45.480Yeah.


[29:03.760 --> 29:07.960But then I just decided, let me look up some some fun facts that I could share with you
[39:45.480 --> 39:46.480]  I got nervous when I read that, like, whoa, wait, what?


[29:07.960 --> 29:09.280guys about meteors.
[39:46.480 --> 39:48.720Well, you're comparing this to that baloney?


[29:09.280 --> 29:10.280Are you ready?
[39:48.720 --> 39:53.440So but lead scientist Rocklin said, its creator claimed that it could move forward without


[29:10.280 --> 29:11.280Yeah.
[39:53.440 --> 39:54.780any propellant.


[29:11.280 --> 29:12.280Fun facts about meatballs.
[39:54.780 --> 40:00.640That engine was indeed impossible, but because space time is very slightly curved, a device


[29:12.280 --> 29:13.280Ready.
[40:00.640 --> 40:05.800could actually move forward without any external forces or emitting a propellant.


[29:13.280 --> 29:14.280Every day.
[40:05.800 --> 40:09.160A novel discovery as a hell of a sentence right there.


[29:14.280 --> 29:15.280Yes.
[40:09.160 --> 40:12.000So can a rocket be created like that?


[29:15.280 --> 29:16.280Oh, meteors.
[40:12.000 --> 40:14.200No external forces or propellant emission.


[29:16.280 --> 29:17.280]  Next episode.
[40:14.200 --> 40:17.280]  Steve, Jay, do we need a new chapter in our future book?


[29:17.280 --> 29:22.240Every day, Earth is bombarded with more than how many tons of dust and sand sized particles?
[40:17.280 --> 40:18.280That's rhetorical.


[29:22.240 --> 29:23.240Tons on a million.
[40:18.280 --> 40:19.280Don't answer it.


[29:23.240 --> 29:24.240Anybody else?
[40:19.280 --> 40:20.280Well, okay.


[29:24.240 --> 29:25.240A million.
[40:20.280 --> 40:24.600So I'm of course, I'm skeptical at this point, you know, if their experiment and their interpretation


[29:25.240 --> 29:26.240A million tons?
[40:24.600 --> 40:32.200is solid, I suspect, you know, my luck, this will just remain, you know, a laboratory curiosity.


[29:26.240 --> 29:27.24010,000.
[40:32.200 --> 40:33.200But who knows?


[29:27.240 --> 29:29.880I'll say 10,005.
[40:33.200 --> 40:37.160There's already talk of this potentially being used on a spacecraft in the future at some


[29:29.880 --> 29:33.200It's actually 100 tons, which is Bob's close.
[40:37.160 --> 40:42.960potential point that can move around the incredibly curved space around a black hole.


[29:33.200 --> 29:34.200It's a lot.
[40:42.960 --> 40:49.280Just using, you know, curved space time to actually move without needing propellant or


[29:34.200 --> 29:35.200Yeah.
[40:49.280 --> 40:52.340even, you know, laser sails or any of that stuff.


[29:35.200 --> 29:36.200Yeah.
[40:52.340 --> 40:53.340Who knows?


[29:36.200 --> 29:37.200Zeroes.
[40:53.340 --> 40:57.520For me, that sounds a little magical still at this point, but their experiment is their


[29:37.200 --> 29:38.200You take away zeros.
[40:57.520 --> 41:02.960experiment and I can't wait to see, you know, what other scientists say about, you know,


[29:38.200 --> 29:39.200You know, these are hard numbers to guess.
[41:02.960 --> 41:05.600what they did and what their interpretation of it is.


[29:39.200 --> 29:43.440About once a year, an automobile sized asteroid hits Earth's atmosphere.
[41:05.600 --> 41:07.160So I'm going to definitely be following this one.


[29:43.440 --> 29:48.120It creates an impressive fireball and then burns up before reaching the surface.
[41:07.160 --> 41:08.160Yeah.


[29:48.120 --> 29:52.680This in that situation, it could be tumbling like crazy and everything gets burned up right
[41:08.160 --> 41:13.880That's one of those game changers that would render a huge chunk of our book completely


[29:52.680 --> 29:58.240because everything gets hot and explosive and then turns into dust and sand at that
[41:13.880 --> 41:14.880obsolete.


[29:58.240 --> 29:59.240point.
[41:14.880 --> 41:15.880Oh my gosh.


[29:59.240 --> 30:04.840Every 2000 years or so, a meteoroid the size of a football field hits Earth and causes
[41:15.880 --> 41:16.880Right.


[30:04.840 --> 30:07.560significant damage to the area that it hits.
[41:16.880 --> 41:17.880Yeah.


[30:07.560 --> 30:12.020Only once every few million years, an object large enough to threaten Earth civilization
[41:17.880 --> 41:24.600If there's any, if there's any way to translate, you know, energy or motion, whatever, into


[30:12.020 --> 30:13.440comes along.
[41:24.600 --> 41:29.760linear acceleration without external force or propellant, because those are really the


[30:13.440 --> 30:17.800Impact craters on Earth and the moon and other planetary bodies are evidence of these occurrences.
[41:29.760 --> 41:34.360only two methods, that is a complete game changer.


[30:17.800 --> 30:18.840]  So we know that they happen.
[41:34.360 --> 41:39.800]  So, you know, then, you know, then interstellar space travel becomes massively more feasible.


[30:18.840 --> 30:21.420We know that they're super rare.
[41:39.800 --> 41:43.160Well, let's hope it doesn't happen for a few years at least then.


[30:21.420 --> 30:22.920]  Please don't worry about it.
[41:43.160 --> 41:47.920]  I'm assuming it's, you know, I mean, even that, remember what they, what they've achieved


[30:22.920 --> 30:26.320We're also watching the skies now, but it does happen.
[41:47.920 --> 41:48.920in the laboratory.


[30:26.320 --> 30:31.440Space rocks smaller than about 25 meters or about 82 feet will most likely burn up as
[41:48.920 --> 41:51.280This was, you know, a 10th of a centimeter.


[30:31.440 --> 30:34.760they enter the Earth's atmosphere and cause little or no damage.
[41:51.280 --> 41:52.280Now sure.


[30:34.760 --> 30:40.080You know, 25 meters, that's a pretty big chunk of rock if you think about it, and our atmosphere
[41:52.280 --> 41:53.280It doesn't matter.


[30:40.080 --> 30:41.980is there to protect us.
[41:53.280 --> 41:54.280It's a testament.


[30:41.980 --> 30:46.680If a rocky meteoroid larger than 25 meters but smaller than one kilometer, a little more
[41:54.280 --> 41:55.280It doesn't, it doesn't matter.


[30:46.680 --> 30:51.400than half a mile, were to hit Earth, it would likely cause local damage to the impact area.
[41:55.280 --> 41:56.280But that really doesn't matter.


[30:51.400 --> 30:56.120And we believe anything larger than one to two kilometers or one kilometer is a little
[41:56.280 --> 41:57.280It doesn't necessarily.


[30:56.120 --> 30:59.160more than a half a mile could have worldwide effects.
[41:57.280 --> 41:58.280Yeah.


[30:59.160 --> 31:04.520So it would take an extraordinarily large piece of rock that we would most definitely
[41:58.280 --> 42:00.720The fact that that it happened is, is kind of big.


[31:04.520 --> 31:07.720see coming and we probably have time to deal with it.
[42:00.720 --> 42:02.160It is absolutely big.


[31:07.720 --> 31:12.280Like maybe if it's coming out of the sun, if it's coming from that direction, I mean,
[42:02.160 --> 42:06.080But translating that to the possibility, it might be the situation where, yup, this is


[31:12.280 --> 31:15.760you know, I'm just saying it's not a no brainer that we wouldn't miss it.
[42:06.080 --> 42:07.200absolutely real.


[31:15.760 --> 31:21.960We're not perfectly, you know, observing all possibilities.
[42:07.200 --> 42:12.200It happens, but you, you know, you would need infinite energy to translate it into a rocket


[31:21.960 --> 31:27.720We still have, we still have meteoroids that kind of like, oh, look it, there it goes.
[42:12.200 --> 42:16.400that could, that could travel in, you know, in a interstellar in a way that would actually


[31:27.720 --> 31:30.040Didn't see it coming, but there it goes.
[42:16.400 --> 42:17.400be beneficial.


[31:30.040 --> 31:31.040]  That still happens.
[42:17.400 --> 42:20.080]  That, that, that's what I suspect it would happen.


[31:31.040 --> 31:32.040See you again in 5,000 years.
[42:20.080 --> 42:21.080But who knows?


[31:32.040 --> 31:35.880Bob, you know, I'm trying to make people feel good.
[42:21.080 --> 42:22.780This could be, you know, pie in the sky.


[31:35.880 --> 31:39.000And you're harshing our mellow over here, you know, how about this?
[42:22.780 --> 42:27.800This could be like the future of industries could be based on this at some point.


[31:39.000 --> 31:46.360When we went to the museum in New Zealand, we got to smell a meteorite.
[42:27.800 --> 42:29.600But that's so premature at this point.


[31:46.360 --> 31:49.000And what, guys, do you remember what it smelled like?
[42:29.600 --> 42:34.360It's just, it's just a fun little thing that could become something, but you know, cross


[31:49.000 --> 31:50.000Burning or something.
[42:34.360 --> 42:35.360your fingers.


[31:50.000 --> 31:51.000It was a...
[42:35.360 --> 42:36.640Let's just see what other scientists say.


[31:51.000 --> 31:52.000It's a cam and Swiss?
[42:36.640 --> 42:37.640Yeah, absolutely.


[31:52.000 --> 31:53.560No, it smelled like a barbecue.
[42:37.640 --> 42:41.800It could be the zero point energy of acceleration, you know.


[31:53.560 --> 32:00.600You know, it had definitely had like a, like a, yeah, yeah, almost like, almost an umami
[42:41.800 --> 42:42.800That's a bit interesting.


[32:00.600 --> 32:02.960kind of smell to it.
[42:42.800 --> 42:43.800Yeah.


[32:02.960 --> 32:06.240Very interesting to think that little particles of that were coming off and we were breathing
[42:43.800 --> 42:44.920And again, I hope that we were wrong about this.


[32:06.240 --> 32:09.520them in and, you know, getting a smell of outer space in us.
[42:44.920 --> 42:51.120I hope there is some subtle aspect of the laws of space, time and quantum physics or


[32:09.520 --> 32:10.520Yeah, right?
[42:51.120 --> 42:57.480whatever the hell, like quantum gravity, something, there's something there that we could exploit


[32:10.520 --> 32:11.520Yeah.
[42:57.480 --> 43:01.480to produce the equivalent of propellantless acceleration.


[32:11.520 --> 32:12.520From a long time ago.
[43:01.480 --> 43:03.680Oh my God.


[32:12.520 --> 32:13.520I liked it.
[43:03.680 --> 43:04.960That will give us the universe.


[32:13.520 --> 32:16.080Well, everyone, we're going to take a quick break from our show to talk about one of our
[43:04.960 --> 43:09.280I mean, that would just be a complete game changer for space travel.


[32:16.080 --> 32:19.200sponsors this week, Bombus.
[43:09.280 --> 43:15.680It may be even intraplanetary travel, but yeah, even small scale uses could be amazingly


[32:19.200 --> 32:23.120Now in the past we've spoken about Bombus socks, but did you know, guys, that Bombus
[43:15.680 --> 43:16.680beneficial.


[32:23.120 --> 32:29.740also sells t-shirts and underwear and all with the tremendous attention to detail that
[43:16.680 --> 43:22.240If it's just something that's limited in that way, it really wouldn't be useful for beyond


[32:29.740 --> 32:30.740they bring.
[43:22.240 --> 43:23.600the solar system.


[32:30.740 --> 32:35.480You know, they really did take another look at the design of these, these basic items
[43:23.600 --> 43:26.400Even that could be an absolute game changer.


[32:35.480 --> 32:36.480of clothing.
[43:26.400 --> 43:29.400But you know, but we have to be as amazing as it is.


[32:36.480 --> 32:42.520They have really thoughtful design features like invisible seams, soft fabrics, how much
[43:29.400 --> 43:31.440That's how skeptical we need to be about it.


[32:42.520 --> 32:47.240they should weigh, like how weighty they should be, um, how breathable the fabric should
[43:31.440 --> 43:32.440Yeah, absolutely.


[32:47.240 --> 32:48.240be.
[43:32.440 --> 43:33.440All right.


[32:48.240 --> 32:49.680]  And you know, the quality really shows.
=== Structured Water <small>(43:34)</small> ===
* [https://www.sciencealert.com/structured-water-is-not-what-people-claim-don-t-believe-the-hype-scientist-says 'Structured Water' Is Not What People Claim. Don't Believe The Hype, Scientist Says]<ref>[https://www.sciencealert.com/structured-water-is-not-what-people-claim-don-t-believe-the-hype-scientist-says Science Alert: 'Structured Water' Is Not What People Claim. Don't Believe The Hype, Scientist Says]</ref>


[32:49.680 --> 32:53.760I mean, we all love, you know, Bombus socks because they're just great.
[43:33.440 --> 43:37.600Speaking of being skeptical, that stuff, Kara, tell us about structured water.


[32:53.760 --> 32:54.760Yeah.
[43:37.600 --> 43:38.600What is that?


[32:54.760 --> 33:00.480Steve, so far Bombus customers have helped donate over 50 million items of essential
[43:38.600 --> 43:39.600Yeah.


[33:00.480 --> 33:01.480clothing.
[43:39.600 --> 43:42.840This is, I feel like I'm like doing an Evan story today.


[33:01.480 --> 33:05.280So it was time and I reloaded, I bought more Bombus socks.
[43:42.840 --> 43:43.840]  I'm excited.


[33:05.280 --> 33:06.480That should say it all.
[43:43.840 --> 43:48.880I don't often talk about like scams on the show, but I love it.


[33:06.480 --> 33:10.600]  I wear them every day, pretty much every day, except when I'm mowing the lawn, then I wear
[43:48.880 --> 43:55.400So I came across an article in The Conversation, which was also picked up by Science Alert


[33:10.600 --> 33:14.840my crappy socks, but I don't wear my Bombus then.
[43:55.400 --> 43:56.400that was recent.


[33:14.840 --> 33:15.960Bombus socks are great, guys.
[43:56.400 --> 44:04.320It was like within the last week because apparently Courtney Kardashian on her website, do you


[33:15.960 --> 33:19.720I highly recommend you give them a try because you're going to have them for a very long
[44:04.320 --> 44:05.920know that she has a website called Poosh?


[33:19.720 --> 33:20.720time.
[44:05.920 --> 44:06.920Poosh?


[33:20.720 --> 33:26.280So if we've swayed you in any way, please go to bombus.com slash skeptics and get 20%
[44:06.920 --> 44:07.920How do you spell that?


[33:26.280 --> 33:28.160off your first purchase.
[44:07.920 --> 44:08.920P-O-O-S-H?


[33:28.160 --> 33:34.720That's B-O-M-B-A-S.com slash skeptics for 20% off bombus.com slash skeptics.
[44:08.920 --> 44:09.920P-O-O-S-H.


[33:34.720 --> 33:38.560]  All right, guys, let's get back to the show.
[44:09.920 --> 44:12.560]  She's trying to outdo goop or something?
=== New Kind of Motion <small>(33:38)</small> ===
* [https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/08/220808161528.htm Robotic motion in curved space defies standard laws of physics]<ref>[https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/08/220808161528.htm Georgia Institute of Technology: Robotic motion in curved space defies standard laws of physics]</ref>


[33:38.560 --> 33:44.160All right, Bob, you're going to tell us about a new kind of motion that defies the laws
[44:12.560 --> 44:15.000Yeah, she's trying to outgoop goop.


[33:44.160 --> 33:45.160of physics.
[44:15.000 --> 44:16.000Posh with an extra O.


[33:45.160 --> 33:46.160What?
[44:16.000 --> 44:17.520Is it just as ridiculous?


[33:46.160 --> 33:49.320Well, kind of, but this is cool.
[44:17.520 --> 44:18.520Yes.


[33:49.320 --> 33:52.880Researchers claim that by studying movement on curved spaces, that it's possible to create
[44:18.520 --> 44:19.520Oh.


[33:52.880 --> 33:57.240a type of movement in a way that has never been seen before.
[44:19.520 --> 44:20.800Oh, absolutely.


[33:57.240 --> 34:01.760Now, this was recently published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[44:20.800 --> 44:26.600So there is an article that was published in Poosh this past month.


[34:01.760 --> 34:06.600Researchers were led by Zeb Rocklin, assistant professor in the School of Physics at Georgia
[44:26.600 --> 44:31.240The title is, Is Your Water Creating Chaos?


[34:06.600 --> 34:07.600Tech.
[44:31.240 --> 44:33.440And it's amazing.


[34:07.600 --> 34:08.600Okay.
[44:33.440 --> 44:35.640Like this, oh, it's so bad.


[34:08.600 --> 34:14.200This one is a bit of a loin girding scenario, so I'll lead with a quote from the researchers'
[44:35.640 --> 44:41.960So the whole thing is trying to hawk something called hexagonal water.


[34:14.200 --> 34:19.400pre-print archive paper from January 2022, and I'm going to use that because it's ironically
[44:41.960 --> 44:43.520Oh, I love hexagons.


[34:19.400 --> 34:22.840better than their opening for their published paper.
[44:43.520 --> 44:47.140Yeah, which like the more I've learned about it, the more, it's just there's so much good


[34:22.840 --> 34:28.640So they said, locomotion by shape changes, spermatozoan swimming, snakes leathering,
[44:47.140 --> 44:48.140stuff here.


[34:28.640 --> 34:35.120bird flapping, or gas expulsion, rocket firing, is assumed to require environmental interaction
[44:48.140 --> 44:49.140There's like so much to unpack.


[34:35.120 --> 34:36.840due to conservation of momentum.
[44:49.140 --> 44:51.980They also sometimes call it structured water.


[34:36.840 --> 34:39.060All right, that's a huge point.
[44:51.980 --> 44:59.320And as the Poosh article explains, its molecules are beautifully formed hexagonal configurations


[34:39.060 --> 34:43.760What this means is that for locomotion to occur, momentum has a critical role to play
[44:59.320 --> 45:02.060]  that look like perfect little snowflakes.


[34:43.760 --> 34:46.840as well as the environmental forces like friction, right?
[45:02.060 --> 45:08.320They also say it's formed in nature from endless swirls and tumbles over smooth rocks and stones,


[34:46.840 --> 34:47.840Think about it.
[45:08.320 --> 45:12.360creating vortexes that magnetize the water, pulling the components of each molecule into


[34:47.840 --> 34:52.680Without them, especially like thinking of friction as well, specifically walking or
[45:12.360 --> 45:13.360a symmetrical shape.


[34:52.680 --> 34:57.360]  slithering or flapping, you're not going to go anywhere, you're not going to get anywhere.
[45:13.360 --> 45:14.360]  Oh, yeah.


[34:57.360 --> 34:59.800Momentum also plays a critical role.
[45:14.360 --> 45:15.360Oh, wow.


[34:59.800 --> 35:04.720Now, this exchange of momentum, it seems obvious and has been a general assumption for quite
[45:15.360 --> 45:18.200So it gets everything in alignment and balances.


[35:04.720 --> 35:07.600a long time until the early aughts.
[45:18.200 --> 45:19.200Yeah.


[35:07.600 --> 35:09.840Is anybody even still using that word anymore?
[45:19.200 --> 45:20.200Sounds great.


[35:09.840 --> 35:10.840Aughts?
[45:20.200 --> 45:21.200Right.


[35:10.840 --> 35:11.840I almost never hear it.
[45:21.200 --> 45:22.200You could do that right now with a turbo-encabulator.


[35:11.840 --> 35:12.840Don't think so.
[45:22.200 --> 45:23.200Right.


[35:12.840 --> 35:13.840Not in 20 years or so.
[45:23.200 --> 45:29.400So, well, the funny thing is, of course, they're not just saying your water isn't hexagonal


[35:13.840 --> 35:20.800The early 2000s, when some scientists named Wisdom, Guérin, and Avron claimed that locomotion
[45:29.400 --> 45:30.400enough.


[35:20.800 --> 35:27.520does not require this interaction with the environment if it happens in curved space-time
[45:30.400 --> 45:34.920They're also hawking a filter or a machine.


[35:27.520 --> 35:32.080or even in earthbound curved surfaces.
[45:34.920 --> 45:35.920The hexagonator.


[35:32.080 --> 35:36.600So this assumption that you're going to have this interaction, you know, this exchange
[45:35.920 --> 45:36.920Yeah.


[35:36.600 --> 35:42.980of momentum and utilizing forces like friction, that assumption, they claim, is not warranted
[45:36.920 --> 45:40.920That will hexagonify your water.


[35:42.980 --> 35:49.280in a special situation where there's a curved space-time or earthbound curved surfaces.
[45:40.920 --> 45:41.920And guess how much it costs?


[35:49.280 --> 35:50.280Okay.
[45:41.920 --> 45:42.920Oh, got $995 at least.


[35:50.280 --> 35:52.600Now, many scientists didn't believe this exception.
[45:42.920 --> 45:43.920$2,420.


[35:52.600 --> 35:55.420They thought, no way, that can't be right.
[45:43.920 --> 45:44.920Sure.


[35:55.420 --> 35:56.920]  They didn't think it existed.
[45:44.920 --> 45:45.920]  Oh, my gosh.


[35:56.920 --> 36:01.700And now, these most recent researchers claim that they've actually demonstrated this effect
[45:45.920 --> 45:46.920Sure.


[36:01.700 --> 36:05.380for the first time using a robotic apparatus.
[45:46.920 --> 45:47.920Yeah.


[36:05.380 --> 36:08.420They describe this apparatus in their paper in this way.
[45:47.920 --> 45:48.920Because in numerology, that's an important number.


[36:08.420 --> 36:14.160Here we show that a precision robo-physical apparatus consisting of motors driven on curved
[45:48.920 --> 45:49.920Yeah.


[36:14.160 --> 36:20.360tracks and thereby confined to a spherical surface without a solid substrate.
[45:49.920 --> 45:50.920It will vortex your water.


[36:20.360 --> 36:24.760Now, if you think that description is hard to picture, I saw a video of this thing and
[45:50.920 --> 45:51.920But isn't your health worth it, Kara?


[36:24.760 --> 36:27.160I'm still not sure exactly what the hell was going on.
[45:51.920 --> 45:52.920To make it more structured.


[36:27.160 --> 36:29.880]  I mean, it's like, wait, what?
[45:52.920 --> 46:02.320So I was like, yeah, I was like, well, this is stupid.


[36:29.880 --> 36:31.480And it gave me two angles.
[46:02.320 --> 46:04.660So I started to dig a little bit deeper.


[36:31.480 --> 36:35.360So all right, so from what I could gather, the hardest thing about this apparatus was
[46:04.660 --> 46:11.280And I found a lot of websites hawking hexagonal water, structured water.


[36:35.360 --> 36:39.920that they had to isolate it from the environmental forces as much as possible, right, because
[46:11.280 --> 46:14.680It's also apparently called EZ water.


[36:39.920 --> 36:45.920they needed to remove the possibility of conservation of momentum or environmental forces like friction
[46:14.680 --> 46:15.680And EZ.


[36:45.920 --> 36:46.920from playing a part.
[46:15.680 --> 46:16.680Oh, it's easy.


[36:46.920 --> 36:49.280They wanted to subtract that possibility.
[46:16.680 --> 46:17.680Yeah.


[36:49.280 --> 36:54.240So in this case, they minimized the effect of gravity and friction to as close as zero
[46:17.680 --> 46:18.680It's very easy.


[36:54.240 --> 36:55.240as possible.
[46:18.680 --> 46:19.680As in the letters EZ.


[36:55.240 --> 37:01.320And then once they did that, it allowed for this subtle effect to appear in their robo-physical
[46:19.680 --> 46:20.680Oh, my gosh.


[37:01.320 --> 37:02.320apparatus.
[46:20.680 --> 46:22.400Here's a great website.


[37:02.320 --> 37:03.320Robo-physical.
[46:22.400 --> 46:23.400I don't want to give the...


[37:03.320 --> 37:05.440And that's a word never heard before.
[46:23.400 --> 46:26.520I'm not even going to say the dude's name because I don't want to give him any traffic.


[37:05.440 --> 37:07.640I'm not sure what I think about it yet, but okay.
[46:26.520 --> 46:32.120But the article is literally called, what is EZ water and why do I have to get naked


[37:07.640 --> 37:08.640Sorry.
[46:32.120 --> 46:34.480in the sun to make it?


[37:08.640 --> 37:14.000The result, which has never been observed before, was that from a system, the system
[46:34.480 --> 46:35.480Why?


[37:14.000 --> 37:18.560that they created had zero momentum, nothing, no momentum.
[46:35.480 --> 46:36.480Why?


[37:18.560 --> 37:24.120And from that, they were able to generate a forward movement of a tenth of a centimeter
[46:36.480 --> 46:42.160Because apparently, as he says, who shall be unnamed, EZ water is a special type of


[37:24.120 --> 37:25.640per gate cycle.
[46:42.160 --> 46:44.480water that forms in your cells.


[37:25.640 --> 37:31.800Not amazingly fast, but it came from a zero momentum system and it accomplished this even
[46:44.480 --> 46:46.240It's like a charged battery.


[37:31.800 --> 37:36.600while it still had to resist the tiny amounts of gravity and friction that remained in the
[46:46.240 --> 46:50.040It stores energy and can deliver that energy to cells that need it.


[37:36.600 --> 37:37.600system.
[46:50.040 --> 46:54.480EZ water makes your mitochondria stronger so that you can produce more energy.


[37:37.600 --> 37:42.600You know, the minute pieces of that that they couldn't fully remove.
[46:54.480 --> 46:58.760It also acts as an antioxidant, protecting you from stress and slowing down aging and


[37:42.600 --> 37:48.200And even though it had to resist it, it still had this forward movement that was created
[46:58.760 --> 47:02.960improves protein folding across your whole body, which makes you more resilient to stress


[37:48.200 --> 37:50.800kind of from nothing in a sense.
[47:02.960 --> 47:04.360and speeds up recovery.


[37:50.800 --> 37:55.380So the summary in their paper said, we have experimentally realized and theoretically
[47:04.360 --> 47:09.840Oh, and if we read below, we'll have five ways to make more EZ water in our cells.


[37:55.380 --> 38:01.520characterized the movement of a robot through a curved spherical space without relying on
[47:09.840 --> 47:11.020Let's find those five ways.


[38:01.520 --> 38:05.680any momentum or reliance on environmental forces to translate.
[47:11.020 --> 47:12.620Here we go.


[38:05.680 --> 38:11.960In contrast with all other observed systems, this has never been observed before.
[47:12.620 --> 47:18.240Drink raw vegetable juice or fresh spring water, because I guess it just naturally occurs


[38:11.960 --> 38:17.360And I mean, it's not really from nothing, but I mean, that's one interpretation that
[47:18.240 --> 47:20.000in those places.


[38:17.360 --> 38:19.200some people are saying.
[47:20.000 --> 47:30.400Blend regular water in the blender or drink bulletproof coffee.


[38:19.200 --> 38:20.360But I mean, look at the paper.
[47:30.400 --> 47:32.160Apparently that helps too.


[38:20.360 --> 38:21.360It's like, damn, man.
[47:32.160 --> 47:33.720Get naked in the sun.


[38:21.360 --> 38:26.560You know, obviously a lot of that was super technical and I'd like to see what some other
[47:33.720 --> 47:34.720So you want to know why?


[38:26.560 --> 38:27.560scientists make of it.
[47:34.720 --> 47:35.720Here we go.


[38:27.560 --> 38:29.880So, all right, so what do we make of this?
[47:35.720 --> 47:40.280Sunlight has plenty of the 1200 nanometer light that creates EZ water, plus a bunch


[38:29.880 --> 38:33.360What can something like this even accomplish if it's further developed?
[47:40.280 --> 47:41.280of other spectra.


[38:33.360 --> 38:34.880What's the future of something like this?
[47:41.280 --> 47:42.280Yeah.


[38:34.880 --> 38:39.360You know, and of course it's hard to say, but this could get potentially very, very
[47:42.280 --> 47:45.280Yeah, a bunch that makes sunlight great for you.


[38:39.360 --> 38:40.360interesting.
[47:45.280 --> 47:47.280I can't with this.


[38:40.360 --> 38:45.340Now they say that their apparatus can be used as a test bed to reveal other types of this
[47:47.280 --> 47:50.400It's so stupid, it's unbelievable.


[38:45.340 --> 38:51.880very exotic behavior on curved surfaces related to, for example, nonlinear effects or collective
[47:50.400 --> 47:52.640And then you also, oh, infrared sauna, of course.


[38:51.880 --> 38:52.960behavior.
[47:52.640 --> 47:56.760And then use some sort of, again, not going to give the name of the machine, some sort


[38:52.960 --> 38:58.160And we know, you know, nonlinear effects and collective behavior, to me, that's like, wow.
[47:56.760 --> 48:02.080of stupid machine that sends water through 1200 nanometer radiation.


[38:58.160 --> 39:02.960You know, those are scenarios where you can see amazing stuff like collective behavior.
[48:02.080 --> 48:03.880And then you breathe it in.


[39:02.960 --> 39:07.040I mean, we see emergent behavior coming from collective behavior.
[48:03.880 --> 48:04.880What?


[39:07.040 --> 39:11.320Nonlinear effects can also, as we know, produce some very, very interesting things.
[48:04.880 --> 48:05.880Okay.


[39:11.320 --> 39:16.880Now researchers say that this curvature induced effect may have some practical importance.
[48:05.880 --> 48:07.180So I was like, this is the dumbest thing ever.


[39:16.880 --> 39:21.400They compare it to, for example, the small frequency shift that's caused by gravity that
[48:07.180 --> 48:12.780But the interesting thing, and also I found the Wikipedia page, and you know the gorilla


[39:21.400 --> 39:24.520became critical for GPS satellite systems to work so well.
[48:12.780 --> 48:17.440skeptics did some, a number on this, it's amazing.


[39:24.520 --> 39:29.600]  So they compare it, you know, as an analogy, something that was subtle and small having,
[48:17.440 --> 48:23.580]  So like hexagonal water, also known as gel water, structured water, cluster water, H3O2


[39:29.600 --> 39:33.200]  you know, an outsized impact potentially in the future.
[48:23.580 --> 48:26.200]  is a term used in a marketing scam.


[39:33.200 --> 39:38.240Now they say this research relates to the so-called impossible engine study, right?
[48:26.200 --> 48:31.140That is the first sentence of the Wikipedia entry that claims the ability to create a


[39:38.240 --> 39:39.240Remember that?
[48:31.140 --> 48:34.660certain configuration of water that is better for the body.


[39:39.240 --> 39:41.480That's that so-called EM drive nonsense.
[48:34.660 --> 48:38.200But what I learned is that, A, the scam is not new.


[39:41.480 --> 39:42.480Now that got a little nervous.
[48:38.200 --> 48:39.200It's quite old.


[39:42.480 --> 39:43.480Propellantless rocket.
[48:39.200 --> 48:43.220We're finding websites from 2011 that are hawking hexagonal water.


[39:43.480 --> 39:44.480Yeah.
[48:43.220 --> 48:46.760So I guess poosh is a little late to the party.


[39:44.480 --> 39:45.480Yeah.
[48:46.760 --> 48:52.660Also it's one of those types of pseudoscience that I find the most fascinating, where it's


[39:45.480 --> 39:46.480I got nervous when I read that, like, whoa, wait, what?
[48:52.660 --> 49:00.260based on legitimate research that then went into like crazy town.


[39:46.480 --> 39:48.720]  Well, you're comparing this to that baloney?
[49:00.260 --> 49:05.720]  So there was a researcher, or I shouldn't say was, I don't know if he's still around,


[39:48.720 --> 39:53.440So but lead scientist Rocklin said, its creator claimed that it could move forward without
[49:05.720 --> 49:11.860and I am a little concerned about his, about some of the conclusions that he draws on his


[39:53.440 --> 39:54.780any propellant.
[49:11.860 --> 49:13.460labs page.


[39:54.780 --> 40:00.640That engine was indeed impossible, but because space time is very slightly curved, a device
[49:13.460 --> 49:21.540But there is a laboratory by a researcher named Gerald Pollock, and he does research


[40:00.640 --> 40:05.800could actually move forward without any external forces or emitting a propellant.
[49:21.540 --> 49:24.120on the structure of water, among other things.


[40:05.800 --> 40:09.160A novel discovery as a hell of a sentence right there.
[49:24.120 --> 49:25.860And water is fascinating.


[40:09.160 --> 40:12.000So can a rocket be created like that?
[49:25.860 --> 49:30.780Like water is really cool and has all sorts of really amazing properties that like only


[40:12.000 --> 40:14.200No external forces or propellant emission.
[49:30.780 --> 49:33.820water seems to have, and it's fascinating.


[40:14.200 --> 40:17.280Steve, Jay, do we need a new chapter in our future book?
[49:33.820 --> 49:38.900And so we know about the three different states of water, matter, right, solid, liquid, and


[40:17.280 --> 40:18.280That's rhetorical.
[49:38.900 --> 49:39.900gas.


[40:18.280 --> 40:19.280Don't answer it.
[49:39.900 --> 49:44.140His research laboratory looks at something called a fourth phase, exclusion zone water,


[40:19.280 --> 40:20.280Well, okay.
[49:44.140 --> 49:48.420and that's where the name EZ water actually comes from.


[40:20.280 --> 40:24.600So I'm of course, I'm skeptical at this point, you know, if their experiment and their interpretation
[49:48.420 --> 49:54.380Exclusion zone water is water that occurs at interfaces with surfaces, because the water


[40:24.600 --> 40:32.200is solid, I suspect, you know, my luck, this will just remain, you know, a laboratory curiosity.
[49:54.380 --> 50:03.300properties do change, and the structure changes a bit as water interfaces with either surfaces,


[40:32.200 --> 40:33.200But who knows?
[50:03.300 --> 50:07.540whether it's air surfaces or the surfaces of the container that it's in.


[40:33.200 --> 40:37.160There's already talk of this potentially being used on a spacecraft in the future at some
[50:07.540 --> 50:11.880I mean, you guys remember way back when you were taking your biology lab and you would


[40:37.160 --> 40:42.960potential point that can move around the incredibly curved space around a black hole.
[50:11.880 --> 50:13.800put things in a graduated cylinder?


[40:42.960 --> 40:49.280Just using, you know, curved space time to actually move without needing propellant or
[50:13.800 --> 50:15.740Do you remember where you had to measure from?


[40:49.280 --> 40:52.340even, you know, laser sails or any of that stuff.
[50:15.740 --> 50:16.740The bottom of the meniscus?


[40:52.340 --> 40:53.340Who knows?
[50:16.740 --> 50:17.740The bottom of the meniscus, yeah.


[40:53.340 --> 40:57.520For me, that sounds a little magical still at this point, but their experiment is their
[50:17.740 --> 50:18.740You remember that?


[40:57.520 --> 41:02.960experiment and I can't wait to see, you know, what other scientists say about, you know,
[50:18.740 --> 50:19.740Yeah.


[41:02.960 --> 41:05.600what they did and what their interpretation of it is.
[50:19.740 --> 50:26.660Because it clings to the edge of the graduated cylinder, clings to that, because of these


[41:05.600 --> 41:07.160So I'm going to definitely be following this one.
[50:26.660 --> 50:32.420properties that make it basically stick, like bond, to the edge of the glass.


[41:07.160 --> 41:08.160Yeah.
[50:32.420 --> 50:37.260And so this lab really studies exactly what's happening at the molecular level in these


[41:08.160 --> 41:13.880That's one of those game changers that would render a huge chunk of our book completely
[50:37.260 --> 50:42.320exclusion zones, and they've looked at all sorts of different cool things where they're


[41:13.880 --> 41:14.880obsolete.
[50:42.320 --> 50:48.260finding that certain solutes are excluded from hydrophilic surfaces, and they're using


[41:14.880 --> 41:15.880Oh my gosh.
[50:48.260 --> 50:55.180their findings to develop interesting technologies, desalination technologies, filter technologies


[41:15.880 --> 41:16.880Right.
[50:55.180 --> 51:00.220that don't require, like filterless filters, as they call it, by utilizing the exclusion


[41:16.880 --> 41:17.880Yeah.
[51:00.220 --> 51:07.940zone properties of water to separate solutes from the solution, basically.


[41:17.880 --> 41:24.600If there's any, if there's any way to translate, you know, energy or motion, whatever, into
[51:07.940 --> 51:14.460His lab does not study the magical, mystical properties of hexagonifying water and then


[41:24.600 --> 41:29.760linear acceleration without external force or propellant, because those are really the
[51:14.460 --> 51:18.140drinking it and, I guess, making your cells super efficient.


[41:29.760 --> 41:34.360only two methods, that is a complete game changer.
[51:18.140 --> 51:22.980But I do worry that there is a portion on his website called Water and Health that just


[41:34.360 --> 41:39.800So, you know, then, you know, then interstellar space travel becomes massively more feasible.
[51:22.980 --> 51:25.140starts to feel a little, like, weird.


[41:39.800 --> 41:43.160Well, let's hope it doesn't happen for a few years at least then.
[51:25.140 --> 51:27.420So I'm curious what you guys' take is on this.


[41:43.160 --> 41:47.920]  I'm assuming it's, you know, I mean, even that, remember what they, what they've achieved
[51:27.420 --> 51:29.220]  I'm just going to read you, like, two paragraphs.


[41:47.920 --> 41:48.920]  in the laboratory.
[51:29.220 --> 51:31.820We're studying the central role of water in health.


[41:48.920 --> 41:51.280This was, you know, a 10th of a centimeter.
[51:31.820 --> 51:33.420We're two-thirds water by volume.


[41:51.280 --> 41:52.280Now sure.
[51:33.420 --> 51:36.660In terms of the percentage of molecules that two-thirds can figure computes to a lot of


[41:52.280 --> 41:53.280It doesn't matter.
[51:36.660 --> 51:37.660water molecules.


[41:53.280 --> 41:54.280It's a testament.
[51:37.660 --> 51:40.780More than 99% of our molecules are water molecules.


[41:54.280 --> 41:55.280It doesn't, it doesn't matter.
[51:40.780 --> 51:44.820Evidence suggests that those 99% don't merely sit as background carriers, but they're central


[41:55.280 --> 41:56.280But that really doesn't matter.
[51:44.820 --> 51:47.660participants that what the cell does depends on water.


[41:56.280 --> 41:57.280It doesn't necessarily.
[51:47.660 --> 51:49.140Okay, so far you've got me.


[41:57.280 --> 41:58.280Yeah.
[51:49.140 --> 51:52.740This leads to the hypothesis that proper hydration is a central feature of function and therefore


[41:58.280 --> 42:00.720The fact that that it happened is, is kind of big.
[51:52.740 --> 51:53.740]  of health.


[42:00.720 --> 42:02.160It is absolutely big.
[51:53.740 --> 51:54.740Uh-huh.


[42:02.160 --> 42:06.080But translating that to the possibility, it might be the situation where, yup, this is
[51:54.740 --> 51:55.740Yeah.


[42:06.080 --> 42:07.200absolutely real.
[51:55.740 --> 51:56.740I don't think anybody's arguing with you.


[42:07.200 --> 42:12.200It happens, but you, you know, you would need infinite energy to translate it into a rocket
[51:56.740 --> 51:57.740Hydration is important.


[42:12.200 --> 42:16.400that could, that could travel in, you know, in a interstellar in a way that would actually
[51:57.740 --> 51:58.740Yes.


[42:16.400 --> 42:17.400be beneficial.
[51:58.740 --> 51:59.740Yes.


[42:17.400 --> 42:20.080That, that, that's what I suspect it would happen.
[51:59.740 --> 52:02.460Considerable evidence supports this point of view.


[42:20.080 --> 42:21.080But who knows?
[52:02.460 --> 52:04.140And then the next sentence, you guys.


[42:21.080 --> 42:22.780This could be, you know, pie in the sky.
[52:04.140 --> 52:07.900Informal discussion of the evidence for the role of water in health appears in an interview


[42:22.780 --> 42:27.800This could be like the future of industries could be based on this at some point.
[52:07.900 --> 52:10.380I did with Dr. Mercola.


[42:27.800 --> 42:29.600But that's so premature at this point.
[52:10.380 --> 52:11.380Really?


[42:29.600 --> 42:34.360It's just, it's just a fun little thing that could become something, but you know, cross
[52:11.380 --> 52:12.380Why?


[42:34.360 --> 42:35.360your fingers.
[52:12.380 --> 52:17.220And a recent lecture dealing with easy water in health is found here and a grant proposal


[42:35.360 --> 42:36.640Let's just see what other scientists say.
[52:17.220 --> 52:19.660submitted earlier to the NIH, blah, blah, blah.


[42:36.640 --> 42:37.640Yeah, absolutely.
[52:19.660 --> 52:21.780We're actively seeking funding, blah, blah, blah.


[42:37.640 --> 42:41.800It could be the zero point energy of acceleration, you know.
[52:21.780 --> 52:27.420And then he ends this section with, who knows, easy water may become the next wonder drug.


[42:41.800 --> 42:42.800That's a bit interesting.
[52:27.420 --> 52:32.700So I am not going to take Dr. Pollack off the hook for this.


[42:42.800 --> 42:43.800Yeah.
[52:32.700 --> 52:37.500Yes, I think that he's probably got a fair amount of really legitimate research.


[42:43.800 --> 42:44.920]  And again, I hope that we were wrong about this.
[52:37.500 --> 52:42.920]  And yes, I think that a lot of scammers and snake oil salesmen took a handful of things


[42:44.920 --> 42:51.120I hope there is some subtle aspect of the laws of space, time and quantum physics or
[52:42.920 --> 52:50.820that he studied and ran with it into a bizarre kind of totally different dimension.


[42:51.120 --> 42:57.480whatever the hell, like quantum gravity, something, there's something there that we could exploit
[52:50.820 --> 52:54.380But don't seem like he's doing a whole lot to stop them.


[42:57.480 --> 43:01.480to produce the equivalent of propellantless acceleration.
[52:54.380 --> 52:55.380Mm-hmm.


[43:01.480 --> 43:03.680Oh my God.
[52:55.380 --> 52:56.380Doesn't seem like he is.


[43:03.680 --> 43:04.960That will give us the universe.
[52:56.380 --> 52:57.380No, he's totally responsible.


[43:04.960 --> 43:09.280]  I mean, that would just be a complete game changer for space travel.
[52:57.380 --> 53:03.140First of all, my sense is, and I'd have to look into it deeper to see if this holds up,


[43:09.280 --> 43:15.680It may be even intraplanetary travel, but yeah, even small scale uses could be amazingly
[53:03.140 --> 53:04.860]  but there's two things.


[43:15.680 --> 43:16.680beneficial.
[53:04.860 --> 53:09.740One is he's some nerdy scientist in a lab who has no idea about the world out there


[43:16.680 --> 43:22.240If it's just something that's limited in that way, it really wouldn't be useful for beyond
[53:09.740 --> 53:14.260and pseudoscience and how his research can be exploited.


[43:22.240 --> 43:23.600the solar system.
[53:14.260 --> 53:19.360The fact that he has no idea who Mercola is and what a complete and total scam artist


[43:23.600 --> 43:26.400Even that could be an absolute game changer.
[53:19.360 --> 53:24.080and pseudoscientist he is is inexcusable.


[43:26.400 --> 43:29.400But you know, but we have to be as amazing as it is.
[53:24.080 --> 53:29.300And second, a lot of basic science researchers, of course, they want their research to change


[43:29.400 --> 43:31.440That's how skeptical we need to be about it.
[53:29.300 --> 53:30.300the world.


[43:31.440 --> 43:32.440Yeah, absolutely.
[53:30.300 --> 53:31.300Right?


[43:32.440 --> 43:33.440All right.
[53:31.300 --> 53:37.320And I've seen a lot of them get seduced by pseudoscientists who say, oh, your research


=== Structured Water <small>(43:34)</small> ===
[53:37.320 --> 53:42.160]  could actually be this huge clinical thing, the new wonder drug or whatever it is.
* [https://www.sciencealert.com/structured-water-is-not-what-people-claim-don-t-believe-the-hype-scientist-says 'Structured Water' Is Not What People Claim. Don't Believe The Hype, Scientist Says]<ref>[https://www.sciencealert.com/structured-water-is-not-what-people-claim-don-t-believe-the-hype-scientist-says Science Alert: 'Structured Water' Is Not What People Claim. Don't Believe The Hype, Scientist Says]</ref>


[43:33.440 --> 43:37.600Speaking of being skeptical, that stuff, Kara, tell us about structured water.
[53:42.160 --> 53:44.680And they buy it because they're not clinicians.


[43:37.600 --> 43:38.600What is that?
[53:44.680 --> 53:46.460They don't know.


[43:38.600 --> 43:39.600Yeah.
[53:46.460 --> 53:54.020This happened with when I was sued, the doctor who did that, where he had these basic research


[43:39.600 --> 43:42.840This is, I feel like I'm like doing an Evan story today.
[53:54.020 --> 53:59.340scientists on the hook who he's telling them that, oh, yeah, your basic science research


[43:42.840 --> 43:43.840I'm excited.
[53:59.340 --> 54:02.220led to this amazing clinical breakthrough.


[43:43.840 --> 43:48.880I don't often talk about like scams on the show, but I love it.
[54:02.220 --> 54:06.220They didn't have the first clue.


[43:48.880 --> 43:55.400So I came across an article in The Conversation, which was also picked up by Science Alert
[54:06.220 --> 54:13.720]  I remember I told my lawyer when they were on the stand, I'm like, ask them what a phase


[43:55.400 --> 43:56.400that was recent.
[54:13.720 --> 54:15.080three clinical trial is.


[43:56.400 --> 44:04.320It was like within the last week because apparently Courtney Kardashian on her website, do you
[54:15.080 --> 54:17.440Just ask, what's a phase three clinical trial?


[44:04.320 --> 44:05.920know that she has a website called Poosh?
[54:17.440 --> 54:22.500And he asked that question and she gets this embarrassed smile on her face and goes, it's


[44:05.920 --> 44:06.920Poosh?
[54:22.500 --> 54:24.420the one that comes after phase two?


[44:06.920 --> 44:07.920How do you spell that?
[54:24.420 --> 54:27.540That was literally her answer.


[44:07.920 --> 44:08.920P-O-O-S-H?
[54:27.540 --> 54:28.540She had no idea.


[44:08.920 --> 44:09.920P-O-O-S-H.
[54:28.540 --> 54:29.540No idea.


[44:09.920 --> 44:12.560She's trying to outdo goop or something?
[54:29.540 --> 54:30.540Oh, my gosh.


[44:12.560 --> 44:15.000Yeah, she's trying to outgoop goop.
[54:30.540 --> 54:31.540Right.


[44:15.000 --> 44:16.000Posh with an extra O.
[54:31.540 --> 54:32.540Because she's not doing translation work.


[44:16.000 --> 44:17.520Is it just as ridiculous?
[54:32.540 --> 54:33.540Right.


[44:17.520 --> 44:18.520Yes.
[54:33.540 --> 54:34.540Exactly.


[44:18.520 --> 44:19.520Oh.
[54:34.540 --> 54:35.540She's not a clinical scientist.


[44:19.520 --> 44:20.800Oh, absolutely.
[54:35.540 --> 54:36.540So shut up and get off the stand.


[44:20.800 --> 44:26.600So there is an article that was published in Poosh this past month.
[54:36.540 --> 54:38.540You have no idea what you're talking about.


[44:26.600 --> 44:31.240The title is, Is Your Water Creating Chaos?
[54:38.540 --> 54:41.940So it's possible that he's falling into this category.


[44:31.240 --> 44:33.440And it's amazing.
[54:41.940 --> 54:42.940Yeah.


[44:33.440 --> 44:35.640Like this, oh, it's so bad.
[54:42.940 --> 54:45.380He is a bioengineering professor, right?


[44:35.640 --> 44:41.960So the whole thing is trying to hawk something called hexagonal water.
[54:45.380 --> 54:49.220And he's studying, again, behavior at these hydrophilic surfaces.


[44:41.960 --> 44:43.520Oh, I love hexagons.
[54:49.220 --> 54:54.340And he's discovering that, whoa, water has these cool properties where it pushes away


[44:43.520 --> 44:47.140Yeah, which like the more I've learned about it, the more, it's just there's so much good
[54:54.340 --> 54:55.660certain materials.


[44:47.140 --> 44:48.140stuff here.
[54:55.660 --> 54:57.820It pushes away certain solutes.


[44:48.140 --> 44:49.140There's like so much to unpack.
[54:57.820 --> 55:02.860And so, yeah, it could have some cool industrial, some cool material science outcomes.


[44:49.140 --> 44:51.980They also sometimes call it structured water.
[55:02.860 --> 55:03.860It's diamagnetic.


[44:51.980 --> 44:59.320And as the Poosh article explains, its molecules are beautifully formed hexagonal configurations
[55:03.860 --> 55:05.740I don't even think that's anything like new.


[44:59.320 --> 45:02.060that look like perfect little snowflakes.
[55:05.740 --> 55:07.380And here's the interesting thing.


[45:02.060 --> 45:08.320They also say it's formed in nature from endless swirls and tumbles over smooth rocks and stones,
[55:07.380 --> 55:10.940Well, I shouldn't say interesting, but here's the part where I feel like we would be remiss


[45:08.320 --> 45:12.360creating vortexes that magnetize the water, pulling the components of each molecule into
[55:10.940 --> 55:13.140if we didn't just straight up debunk this.


[45:12.360 --> 45:13.360a symmetrical shape.
[55:13.140 --> 55:17.660I know we're debunking it by being like, this is stupid, but let's debunk it by looking


[45:13.360 --> 45:14.360Oh, yeah.
[55:17.660 --> 55:21.180at what the claims are and systematically dismantling them.


[45:14.360 --> 45:15.360Oh, wow.
[55:21.180 --> 55:29.100Basically the main claim is that at this exclusion zone, which does seem to exist, water, we


[45:15.360 --> 45:18.200]  So it gets everything in alignment and balances.
[55:29.100 --> 55:30.200]  know what water is, right?


[45:18.200 --> 45:19.200Yeah.
[55:30.200 --> 55:37.740It's two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom, yep, H2O, may change into H3O2.


[45:19.200 --> 45:20.200Sounds great.
[55:37.740 --> 55:43.300So we've got this negative electric charge and that sort of induces this layered kind


[45:20.200 --> 45:21.200Right.
[55:43.300 --> 55:45.760of hexagonal network arrangement.


[45:21.200 --> 45:22.200You could do that right now with a turbo-encabulator.
[55:45.760 --> 55:49.840And in doing that, certain solutes now can no longer bind to it.


[45:22.200 --> 45:23.200Right.
[55:49.840 --> 55:54.160And we do see this happening within our cells all the time because our cells have membranes.


[45:23.200 --> 45:29.400]  So, well, the funny thing is, of course, they're not just saying your water isn't hexagonal
[55:54.160 --> 55:59.900]  So there are going to be these kind of zones, these surface zones with water.


[45:29.400 --> 45:30.400enough.
[55:59.900 --> 56:02.180But this is where the massive jump comes, right?


[45:30.400 --> 45:34.920They're also hawking a filter or a machine.
[56:02.180 --> 56:04.180Well, that's what happens in your cells.


[45:34.920 --> 45:35.920The hexagonator.
[56:04.180 --> 56:05.580That's what happens in nature.


[45:35.920 --> 45:36.920Yeah.
[56:05.580 --> 56:07.900Why aren't we drinking this kind of water?


[45:36.920 --> 45:40.920That will hexagonify your water.
[56:07.900 --> 56:11.620And let's talk about why this is not science.


[45:40.920 --> 45:41.920And guess how much it costs?
[56:11.620 --> 56:17.460If water could change into H3O2, first of all, it wouldn't and doesn't stay that way


[45:41.920 --> 45:42.920Oh, got $995 at least.
[56:17.460 --> 56:25.540because then it wouldn't be water because water is H2O.


[45:42.920 --> 45:43.920$2,420.
[56:25.540 --> 56:30.340If it formed this hexagonal lattice-like structure, it would not be wet.


[45:43.920 --> 45:44.920Sure.
[56:30.340 --> 56:31.940It would not flow.


[45:44.920 --> 45:45.920Oh, my gosh.
[56:31.940 --> 56:41.060That would no longer be the liquid phase of water if in large quantities like in the macro,


[45:45.920 --> 45:46.920Sure.
[56:41.060 --> 56:42.060it stayed this way.


[45:46.920 --> 45:47.920Yeah.
[56:42.060 --> 56:44.260This only happens at the surface, right?


[45:47.920 --> 45:48.920Because in numerology, that's an important number.
[56:44.260 --> 56:49.140It could not happen throughout the whole water or it wouldn't be water.


[45:48.920 --> 45:49.920Yeah.
[56:49.140 --> 56:50.140Get this.


[45:49.920 --> 45:50.920]  It will vortex your water.
[56:50.140 --> 56:54.920]  If you were to look at like a big vat of water, about every one molecule in every billion


[45:50.920 --> 45:51.920But isn't your health worth it, Kara?
[56:54.920 --> 56:59.500molecules already has an extra hydrogen atom because like, you know, not everything's super


[45:51.920 --> 45:52.920To make it more structured.
[56:59.500 --> 57:00.500stable.


[45:52.920 --> 46:02.320So I was like, yeah, I was like, well, this is stupid.
[57:00.500 --> 57:03.280Sometimes you get these positively charged and negatively charged ions.


[46:02.320 --> 46:04.660So I started to dig a little bit deeper.
[57:03.280 --> 57:05.260They just happen spontaneously.


[46:04.660 --> 46:11.280And I found a lot of websites hawking hexagonal water, structured water.
[57:05.260 --> 57:06.460These protons are mobile.


[46:11.280 --> 46:14.680It's also apparently called EZ water.
[57:06.460 --> 57:07.740They move around.


[46:14.680 --> 46:15.680]  And EZ.
[57:07.740 --> 57:09.800]  And it happens really fast.


[46:15.680 --> 46:16.680Oh, it's easy.
[57:09.800 --> 57:15.020Like we're talking about what this site says a thousand times each second.


[46:16.680 --> 46:17.680Yeah.
[57:15.020 --> 57:20.980On the Wiki page, it says that hydrogen bonds continually break and reform at timescales


[46:17.680 --> 46:18.680It's very easy.
[57:20.980 --> 57:25.280shorter than 200 femtoseconds.


[46:18.680 --> 46:19.680As in the letters EZ.
[57:25.280 --> 57:32.060So even if you could produce hexagonal water with like some sort of weird filter, it would


[46:19.680 --> 46:20.680Oh, my gosh.
[57:32.060 --> 57:39.140just become water again within femtoseconds because chemistry.


[46:20.680 --> 46:22.400Here's a great website.
[57:39.140 --> 57:45.020So it's one of those things where not only is it a clear and total scam, it's not even


[46:22.400 --> 46:23.400I don't want to give the...
[57:45.020 --> 57:46.500feasible.


[46:23.400 --> 46:26.520I'm not even going to say the dude's name because I don't want to give him any traffic.
[57:46.500 --> 57:51.580We can debunk it, sure, but it doesn't even have face validity from the beginning.


[46:26.520 --> 46:32.120But the article is literally called, what is EZ water and why do I have to get naked
[57:51.580 --> 57:52.580It's homeopathy.


[46:32.120 --> 46:34.480in the sun to make it?
[57:52.580 --> 57:53.580It's so important.


[46:34.480 --> 46:35.480Why?
[57:53.580 --> 57:54.580Oh, that's a good point.


[46:35.480 --> 46:36.480Why?
[57:54.580 --> 57:55.580Yeah.


[46:36.480 --> 46:42.160Because apparently, as he says, who shall be unnamed, EZ water is a special type of
[57:55.580 --> 57:56.580It's like water has a memory.


[46:42.160 --> 46:44.480water that forms in your cells.
[57:56.580 --> 57:57.580It's all that.


[46:44.480 --> 46:46.240It's like a charged battery.
[57:57.580 --> 58:03.900And again, they refer to this femtosecond structure of water to say that, see, water


[46:46.240 --> 46:50.040It stores energy and can deliver that energy to cells that need it.
[58:03.900 --> 58:06.420can have other structure and information.


[46:50.040 --> 46:54.480EZ water makes your mitochondria stronger so that you can produce more energy.
[58:06.420 --> 58:08.060They're like bricks building a building.


[46:54.480 --> 46:58.760It also acts as an antioxidant, protecting you from stress and slowing down aging and
[58:08.060 --> 58:11.780So yeah, at the femtosecond scale, you're going to drink that.


[46:58.760 --> 47:02.960improves protein folding across your whole body, which makes you more resilient to stress
[58:11.780 --> 58:14.740It's going to survive to interact with your body in some way.


[47:02.960 --> 47:04.360and speeds up recovery.
[58:14.740 --> 58:15.740It's ridiculous.


[47:04.360 --> 47:09.840Oh, and if we read below, we'll have five ways to make more EZ water in our cells.
[58:15.740 --> 58:20.200It's water is water and I'm sorry, but like really when it comes down to it, whether they're


[47:09.840 --> 47:11.020Let's find those five ways.
[58:20.200 --> 58:24.300changing the pH on you, whether trying to change the molecular structure, whether they're


[47:11.020 --> 47:12.620Here we go.
[58:24.300 --> 58:27.540dissolving stuff into it, whatever, it's water.


[47:12.620 --> 47:18.240Drink raw vegetable juice or fresh spring water, because I guess it just naturally occurs
[58:27.540 --> 58:31.060And you know what water is in a lot of places in the world?


[47:18.240 --> 47:20.000in those places.
[58:31.060 --> 58:32.060Not all.


[47:20.000 --> 47:30.400Blend regular water in the blender or drink bulletproof coffee.
[58:32.060 --> 58:35.900We definitely have struggles with water insecurity, but in most developed nations, you know what


[47:30.400 --> 47:32.160Apparently that helps too.
[58:35.900 --> 58:39.020water out of your tap is pretty cheap, if not free.


[47:32.160 --> 47:33.720Get naked in the sun.
[58:39.020 --> 58:40.020Yeah.


[47:33.720 --> 47:34.720]  So you want to know why?
[58:40.020 --> 58:45.780]  So, you know, don't, don't spend ridiculous amounts of money on scamming water and mind


[47:34.720 --> 47:35.720Here we go.
[58:45.780 --> 58:48.460the pockets of, yeah, of hucksters.


[47:35.720 --> 47:40.280Sunlight has plenty of the 1200 nanometer light that creates EZ water, plus a bunch
[58:48.460 --> 58:51.220Magic water is a whole category of scams unto itself.


[47:40.280 --> 47:41.280of other spectra.
[58:51.220 --> 58:52.220Absolutely.


[47:41.280 --> 47:42.280Yeah.
[58:52.220 --> 58:53.220Yep, yep, yep.


[47:42.280 --> 47:45.280Yeah, a bunch that makes sunlight great for you.
[58:53.220 --> 58:54.220All right.


[47:45.280 --> 47:47.280I can't with this.
[58:54.220 --> 58:55.220Thanks, Cara.


[47:47.280 --> 47:50.400] It's so stupid, it's unbelievable.
=== Cryonic Horror Stories <small>(58:58)</small> ===
* [https://bigthink.com/the-future/cryonics-horror-stories/ Horror stories of cryonics: The gruesome fates of futurists hoping for immortality]<ref>[https://bigthink.com/the-future/cryonics-horror-stories/ Big Think: Horror stories of cryonics: The gruesome fates of futurists hoping for immortality]</ref>


[47:50.400 --> 47:52.640And then you also, oh, infrared sauna, of course.
[58:55.220 --> 58:57.580Evan, tell us about cryonic horror stories.


[47:52.640 --> 47:56.760And then use some sort of, again, not going to give the name of the machine, some sort
[58:57.580 --> 58:58.580Oh boy.


[47:56.760 --> 48:02.080of stupid machine that sends water through 1200 nanometer radiation.
[58:58.580 --> 59:00.540Jack, Jay, you're going to love this story.


[48:02.080 --> 48:03.880And then you breathe it in.
[59:00.540 --> 59:03.180Well, a long time ago.


[48:03.880 --> 48:04.880What?
[59:03.180 --> 59:04.180No?


[48:04.880 --> 48:05.880Okay.
[59:04.180 --> 59:05.180Yeah.


[48:05.880 --> 48:07.180]  So I was like, this is the dumbest thing ever.
[59:05.180 --> 59:06.180]  What?


[48:07.180 --> 48:12.780But the interesting thing, and also I found the Wikipedia page, and you know the gorilla
[59:06.180 --> 59:07.180Anyone?


[48:12.780 --> 48:17.440skeptics did some, a number on this, it's amazing.
[59:07.180 --> 59:08.180In a galaxy far, far away?


[48:17.440 --> 48:23.580So like hexagonal water, also known as gel water, structured water, cluster water, H3O2
[59:08.180 --> 59:09.180Oh.


[48:23.580 --> 48:26.200is a term used in a marketing scam.
[59:09.180 --> 59:10.180Okay.


[48:26.200 --> 48:31.140That is the first sentence of the Wikipedia entry that claims the ability to create a
[59:10.180 --> 59:11.180Let's just see who was awake.


[48:31.140 --> 48:34.660certain configuration of water that is better for the body.
[59:11.180 --> 59:14.940A protocol droid once said, oh, they've encased him in carbonite.


[48:34.660 --> 48:38.200But what I learned is that, A, the scam is not new.
[59:14.940 --> 59:19.180He should be quite well protected if he survived the freezing process, that is.


[48:38.200 --> 48:39.200It's quite old.
[59:19.180 --> 59:23.620Well, fast forward to today in our very own galaxy, and we have a newly released article


[48:39.200 --> 48:43.220We're finding websites from 2011 that are hawking hexagonal water.
[59:23.620 --> 59:29.780over at bigthink.com with the title, Horror Stories of Cryonics, the Gruesome Fates of


[48:43.220 --> 48:46.760So I guess poosh is a little late to the party.
[59:29.780 --> 59:33.420Futurists Hoping for Immortality.


[48:46.760 --> 48:52.660Also it's one of those types of pseudoscience that I find the most fascinating, where it's
[59:33.420 --> 59:38.780So I guess we have to decide how we went from quite well protected to cryonic horror stories.


[48:52.660 --> 49:00.260based on legitimate research that then went into like crazy town.
[59:38.780 --> 59:42.940Cryonics, we've spoken about it before on the show, I'm certain.


[49:00.260 --> 49:05.720So there was a researcher, or I shouldn't say was, I don't know if he's still around,
[59:42.940 --> 59:47.200But for those who are not familiar with it, cryonics is the practice of deep freezing


[49:05.720 --> 49:11.860and I am a little concerned about his, about some of the conclusions that he draws on his
[59:47.200 --> 59:52.500bodies of people who have entered the earliest state of the dying process in hopes that future


[49:11.860 --> 49:13.460labs page.
[59:52.500 --> 59:56.920scientific advances may allow them to be revived in the future.


[49:13.460 --> 49:21.540But there is a laboratory by a researcher named Gerald Pollock, and he does research
[59:56.920 --> 01:00:01.240In some cases, it's only the head of the person that gets frozen as opposed to the


[49:21.540 --> 49:24.120on the structure of water, among other things.
[01:00:01.240 --> 01:00:02.240full body.


[49:24.120 --> 49:25.860]  And water is fascinating.
[01:00:02.240 --> 01:00:06.900]  And the goal is to freeze the body or the head before the natural decaying processes


[49:25.860 --> 49:30.780Like water is really cool and has all sorts of really amazing properties that like only
[01:00:06.900 --> 01:00:09.160take hold for too long.


[49:30.780 --> 49:33.820water seems to have, and it's fascinating.
[01:00:09.160 --> 01:00:13.420So what they do, they prepare a body, the bodily liquids are removed and replaced with


[49:33.820 --> 49:38.900And so we know about the three different states of water, matter, right, solid, liquid, and
[01:00:13.420 --> 01:00:16.500what they call an organ preservation solution.


[49:38.900 --> 49:39.900gas.
[01:00:16.500 --> 01:00:19.220And I believe that process is called perfusion, right?


[49:39.900 --> 49:44.140His research laboratory looks at something called a fourth phase, exclusion zone water,
[01:00:19.220 --> 01:00:22.060When you take the blood out and you put something else in.


[49:44.140 --> 49:48.420and that's where the name EZ water actually comes from.
[01:00:22.060 --> 01:00:25.380The solution is described as sort of a human antifreeze.


[49:48.420 --> 49:54.380Exclusion zone water is water that occurs at interfaces with surfaces, because the water
[01:00:25.380 --> 01:00:29.300The body is then wrapped in several layers of insulating material.


[49:54.380 --> 50:03.300properties do change, and the structure changes a bit as water interfaces with either surfaces,
[01:00:29.300 --> 01:00:35.940It's embedded in dry ice until the body reaches a temperature of about negative 130 degrees


[50:03.300 --> 50:07.540whether it's air surfaces or the surfaces of the container that it's in.
[01:00:35.940 --> 01:00:37.060Celsius.


[50:07.540 --> 50:11.880I mean, you guys remember way back when you were taking your biology lab and you would
[01:00:37.060 --> 01:00:41.760Then the frozen body is placed inside a Dewar, D-E-W-A-R.


[50:11.880 --> 50:13.800put things in a graduated cylinder?
[01:00:41.760 --> 01:00:45.180That's an insulated container used for storing cryogens.


[50:13.800 --> 50:15.740Do you remember where you had to measure from?
[01:00:45.180 --> 01:00:51.400Body goes into the Dewar, head down to keep the brain the coldest and most stable to also


[50:15.740 --> 50:16.740The bottom of the meniscus?
[01:00:51.400 --> 01:00:53.620guard against leakage.


[50:16.740 --> 50:17.740]  The bottom of the meniscus, yeah.
[01:00:53.620 --> 01:00:58.700]  The Dewar lies within a second outer vessel separated by a vacuum to avoid heat transfer


[50:17.740 --> 50:18.740You remember that?
[01:00:58.700 --> 01:01:03.560from the outer room temperature vessel wall to the cold inner vessel wall.


[50:18.740 --> 50:19.740Yeah.
[01:01:03.560 --> 01:01:08.260Then that Dewar in that pocket is filled with liquid nitrogen and that gets the body down


[50:19.740 --> 50:26.660]  Because it clings to the edge of the graduated cylinder, clings to that, because of these
[01:01:08.260 --> 01:01:12.660]  to 196 degrees below Celsius.


[50:26.660 --> 50:32.420]  properties that make it basically stick, like bond, to the edge of the glass.
[01:01:12.660 --> 01:01:14.420]  So yeah, that's where you are.


[50:32.420 --> 50:37.260And so this lab really studies exactly what's happening at the molecular level in these
[01:01:14.420 --> 01:01:17.660That's about as frozen I think as a body can get with using modern technology.


[50:37.260 --> 50:42.320exclusion zones, and they've looked at all sorts of different cool things where they're
[01:01:17.660 --> 01:01:23.420Oh, and you have to fill up the liquid nitrogen periodically in order to keep it stable at


[50:42.320 --> 50:48.260finding that certain solutes are excluded from hydrophilic surfaces, and they're using
[01:01:23.420 --> 01:01:24.420]  that temperature.


[50:48.260 --> 50:55.180their findings to develop interesting technologies, desalination technologies, filter technologies
[01:01:24.420 --> 01:01:28.740Now, the freezing of people using dry ice and liquid nitrogen has been in practice since


[50:55.180 --> 51:00.220that don't require, like filterless filters, as they call it, by utilizing the exclusion
[01:01:28.740 --> 01:01:31.140]  the 1960s.


[51:00.220 --> 51:07.940zone properties of water to separate solutes from the solution, basically.
[01:01:31.140 --> 01:01:35.620And as you can imagine, the first instances of attempting to preserve people using freezing


[51:07.940 --> 51:14.460His lab does not study the magical, mystical properties of hexagonifying water and then
[01:01:35.620 --> 01:01:39.820techniques didn't go so well.


[51:14.460 --> 51:18.140drinking it and, I guess, making your cells super efficient.
[01:01:39.820 --> 01:01:42.060Techniques were generally poor.


[51:18.140 --> 51:22.980But I do worry that there is a portion on his website called Water and Health that just
[01:01:42.060 --> 01:01:46.540Bodies were at room temperature in most cases for too long before they froze them and that


[51:22.980 --> 51:25.140starts to feel a little, like, weird.
[01:01:46.540 --> 01:01:49.020really made them unviable from the start.


[51:25.140 --> 51:27.420So I'm curious what you guys' take is on this.
[01:01:49.020 --> 01:01:54.740Some companies did not use cryoprotectants or the perfusion with their patients.


[51:27.420 --> 51:29.220I'm just going to read you, like, two paragraphs.
[01:01:54.740 --> 01:01:59.940Some only put them on dry ice and did not use liquid nitrogen and others skip the liquid


[51:29.220 --> 51:31.820We're studying the central role of water in health.
[01:01:59.940 --> 01:02:02.380nitrogen and went straight to freezing them.


[51:31.820 --> 51:33.420We're two-thirds water by volume.
[01:02:02.380 --> 01:02:03.380I'm sorry.


[51:33.420 --> 51:36.660In terms of the percentage of molecules that two-thirds can figure computes to a lot of
[01:02:03.380 --> 01:02:07.980And then others skip the dry ice and went straight to freezing them in the liquid nitrogen.


[51:36.660 --> 51:37.660water molecules.
[01:02:07.980 --> 01:02:11.500Although the idea they said initially wasn't for future revival, it was more for cosmetic


[51:37.660 --> 51:40.780More than 99% of our molecules are water molecules.
[01:02:11.500 --> 01:02:12.500preservation.


[51:40.780 --> 51:44.820Evidence suggests that those 99% don't merely sit as background carriers, but they're central
[01:02:12.500 --> 01:02:15.760But even that didn't go so well.


[51:44.820 --> 51:47.660participants that what the cell does depends on water.
[01:02:15.760 --> 01:02:19.480And they have several cases in which, you know, they tell you about how some of these


[51:47.660 --> 51:49.140Okay, so far you've got me.
[01:02:19.480 --> 01:02:21.740things failed ultimately.


[51:49.140 --> 51:52.740This leads to the hypothesis that proper hydration is a central feature of function and therefore
[01:02:21.740 --> 01:02:25.660So in one case, there's a facility that was paid to keep people frozen in just the dry


[51:52.740 --> 51:53.740of health.
[01:02:25.660 --> 01:02:30.660ice and that would get your body to about 130, negative 130 Celsius.


[51:53.740 --> 51:54.740Uh-huh.
[01:02:30.660 --> 01:02:31.660And that was it.


[51:54.740 --> 51:55.740]  Yeah.
[01:02:31.660 --> 01:02:36.740]  They're just lay there on beds of dry ice until they decided to finally obtain a Dewar


[51:55.740 --> 51:56.740I don't think anybody's arguing with you.
[01:02:36.740 --> 01:02:40.500capsule that could do the liquid nitrogen process.


[51:56.740 --> 51:57.740Hydration is important.
[01:02:40.500 --> 01:02:44.860And then when they did get it, they got the Dewar, there was already a body inside of


[51:57.740 --> 51:58.740Yes.
[01:02:44.860 --> 01:02:45.860it.


[51:58.740 --> 51:59.740Yes.
[01:02:45.860 --> 01:02:50.300So they opened it up, they took that body out and then they packed it back in with a


[51:59.740 --> 52:02.460Considerable evidence supports this point of view.
[01:02:50.300 --> 01:02:54.500total of four bodies, you know, managed to kind of get it in there.


[52:02.460 --> 52:04.140And then the next sentence, you guys.
[01:02:54.500 --> 01:02:58.580But the original body that they took out, it thawed too much.


[52:04.140 --> 52:07.900Informal discussion of the evidence for the role of water in health appears in an interview
[01:02:58.580 --> 01:03:05.560It was just out of there too long and unfortunately it started to, you know, unfreeze.


[52:07.900 --> 52:10.380I did with Dr. Mercola.
[01:03:05.560 --> 01:03:08.900They refilled it, they got it all in there though eventually.


[52:10.380 --> 52:11.380]  Really?
[01:03:08.900 --> 01:03:12.380]  They held everyone there for about a year, but then they stopped receiving money from


[52:11.380 --> 52:12.380Why?
[01:03:12.380 --> 01:03:15.540the relatives, so after a while they couldn't pay for it anymore.


[52:12.380 --> 52:17.220And a recent lecture dealing with easy water in health is found here and a grant proposal
[01:03:15.540 --> 01:03:19.940They had to thaw everyone out and then give them more of a regular resting place in a


[52:17.220 --> 52:19.660submitted earlier to the NIH, blah, blah, blah.
[01:03:19.940 --> 01:03:22.100cemetery vault.


[52:19.660 --> 52:21.780We're actively seeking funding, blah, blah, blah.
[01:03:22.100 --> 01:03:27.340Reporters who visited the crypt where those failed operations as they call them took place,


[52:21.780 --> 52:27.420And then he ends this section with, who knows, easy water may become the next wonder drug.
[01:03:27.340 --> 01:03:30.620they reported a horrifying stench.


[52:27.420 --> 52:32.700]  So I am not going to take Dr. Pollack off the hook for this.
[01:03:30.620 --> 01:03:34.340]  So that's not good, whatever the heck they were smelling.


[52:32.700 --> 52:37.500Yes, I think that he's probably got a fair amount of really legitimate research.
[01:03:34.340 --> 01:03:39.420Another case, a group of three bodies packed into one Dewar, the liquid nitrogen system


[52:37.500 --> 52:42.920And yes, I think that a lot of scammers and snake oil salesmen took a handful of things
[01:03:39.420 --> 01:03:40.420failed.


[52:42.920 --> 52:50.820that he studied and ran with it into a bizarre kind of totally different dimension.
[01:03:40.420 --> 01:03:45.540Yep, the Dewar design failed and couldn't hold the liquid nitrogen and then just one


[52:50.820 --> 52:54.380But don't seem like he's doing a whole lot to stop them.
[01:03:45.540 --> 01:03:49.340day they were checking and the technician noticed, uh-oh, we got a problem here.


[52:54.380 --> 52:55.380Mm-hmm.
[01:03:49.340 --> 01:03:55.140They thawed out and they were eventually removed and buried elsewhere, so that's another case.


[52:55.380 --> 52:56.380Doesn't seem like he is.
[01:03:55.140 --> 01:04:02.060Oh, here's a case where a boy, a young boy's body was frozen, but they found it to be cracked


[52:56.380 --> 52:57.380No, he's totally responsible.
[01:04:02.060 --> 01:04:07.220and they said the cracking likely occurred because it was frozen too quickly by the liquid


[52:57.380 --> 53:03.140First of all, my sense is, and I'd have to look into it deeper to see if this holds up,
[01:04:07.220 --> 01:04:08.220nitrogen.


[53:03.140 --> 53:04.860but there's two things.
[01:04:08.220 --> 01:04:13.260They had to go over a specific sort of slow gradual process of getting to that temperature,


[53:04.860 --> 53:09.740One is he's some nerdy scientist in a lab who has no idea about the world out there
[01:04:13.260 --> 01:04:15.420but apparently it went too quickly.


[53:09.740 --> 53:14.260]  and pseudoscience and how his research can be exploited.
[01:04:15.420 --> 01:04:19.540Once again they had to abandon it and the boy had to be thawed out and buried in a more


[53:14.260 --> 53:19.360The fact that he has no idea who Mercola is and what a complete and total scam artist
[01:04:19.540 --> 01:04:21.120traditional sense.


[53:19.360 --> 53:24.080and pseudoscientist he is is inexcusable.
[01:04:21.120 --> 01:04:27.540And then there's the one in, here's one where the Dewar, again poor design, led to a series


[53:24.080 --> 53:29.300]  And second, a lot of basic science researchers, of course, they want their research to change
[01:04:27.540 --> 01:04:31.300]  of incidents, at least one of which was the failure of the vacuum jacket.


[53:29.300 --> 53:30.300]  the world.
[01:04:31.300 --> 01:04:35.460Remember I said the Dewar is dropped in and then there's another inside and then there's


[53:30.300 --> 53:31.300Right?
[01:04:35.460 --> 01:04:37.220an exterior piece to it.


[53:31.300 --> 53:37.320And I've seen a lot of them get seduced by pseudoscientists who say, oh, your research
[01:04:37.220 --> 01:04:41.660So you got these two layers, but problem with the vacuum that took place, the bodies in


[53:37.320 --> 53:42.160could actually be this huge clinical thing, the new wonder drug or whatever it is.
[01:04:41.660 --> 01:04:46.780the container partially thawed, they moved, and then they froze again.


[53:42.160 --> 53:44.680]  And they buy it because they're not clinicians.
[01:04:46.780 --> 01:04:54.020]  And when that happens, the bodies contort, they'll go into these strange shapes, which


[53:44.680 --> 53:46.460They don't know.
[01:04:54.020 --> 01:04:55.140is not good.


[53:46.460 --> 53:54.020This happened with when I was sued, the doctor who did that, where he had these basic research
[01:04:55.140 --> 01:04:57.380They wind up sticking to the side of the capsule.


[53:54.020 --> 53:59.340scientists on the hook who he's telling them that, oh, yeah, your basic science research
[01:04:57.380 --> 01:05:02.420They described it like a child's tongue to a cold lamp post, eventually when they got


[53:59.340 --> 54:02.220led to this amazing clinical breakthrough.
[01:05:02.420 --> 01:05:04.200these bodies out, yeah.


[54:02.220 --> 54:06.220They didn't have the first clue.
[01:05:04.200 --> 01:05:08.380So ultimately after a year, they deemed it a total failure.


[54:06.220 --> 54:13.720I remember I told my lawyer when they were on the stand, I'm like, ask them what a phase
[01:05:08.380 --> 01:05:13.540The bodies decomposed into a plug of fluids, as they described it, and sort of pooled at


[54:13.720 --> 54:15.080three clinical trial is.
[01:05:13.540 --> 01:05:17.380the bottom of the capsule and they had to scrape out their remains and bury them.


[54:15.080 --> 54:17.440Just ask, what's a phase three clinical trial?
[01:05:17.380 --> 01:05:20.580So basically when the process goes bad, it goes really bad.


[54:17.440 --> 54:22.500And he asked that question and she gets this embarrassed smile on her face and goes, it's
[01:05:20.580 --> 01:05:23.940But here's the interesting part of the article, the part that I didn't know about.


[54:22.500 --> 54:24.420]  the one that comes after phase two?
[01:05:23.940 --> 01:05:30.300This was in 1983, Alcor, which is one of the main companies that manages the freezing of


[54:24.420 --> 54:27.540That was literally her answer.
[01:05:30.300 --> 01:05:34.900people, they had to lighten three cryonauts.


[54:27.540 --> 54:28.540]  She had no idea.
[01:05:34.900 --> 01:05:38.540]  You're a cryonaut, by the way, when you go into these duars.


[54:28.540 --> 54:29.540No idea.
[01:05:38.540 --> 01:05:41.060That's your designation.


[54:29.540 --> 54:30.540Oh, my gosh.
[01:05:41.060 --> 01:05:47.500And the orders were to take the bodies out and we're just going to use the heads.


[54:30.540 --> 54:31.540Right.
[01:05:47.500 --> 01:05:49.860They're just going to keep the heads frozen.


[54:31.540 --> 54:32.540Because she's not doing translation work.
[01:05:49.860 --> 01:05:53.580I imagine for financial reasons, but they wouldn't really get into that.


[54:32.540 --> 54:33.540Right.
[01:05:53.580 --> 01:05:55.360But in any case, that's what had to happen.


[54:33.540 --> 54:34.540Exactly.
[01:05:55.360 --> 01:06:00.460So the corpses were removed from the duar capsules, the heads were cut off, and they


[54:34.540 --> 54:35.540She's not a clinical scientist.
[01:06:00.460 --> 01:06:04.140used a chainsaw to do it because obviously you're still very much frozen.


[54:35.540 --> 54:36.540So shut up and get off the stand.
[01:06:04.140 --> 01:06:05.500And then the heads were stored separately.


[54:36.540 --> 54:38.540You have no idea what you're talking about.
[01:06:05.500 --> 01:06:11.180But this gave the scientists an opportunity to see, okay, so what happens to the thawing


[54:38.540 --> 54:41.940So it's possible that he's falling into this category.
[01:06:11.180 --> 01:06:13.660process of the bodies?


[54:41.940 --> 54:42.940Yeah.
[01:06:13.660 --> 01:06:17.760They had these three bodies to observe and watch.


[54:42.940 --> 54:45.380He is a bioengineering professor, right?
[01:06:17.760 --> 01:06:22.120So while the bodies were still frozen, they said the skin was only moderately cracked


[54:45.380 --> 54:49.220And he's studying, again, behavior at these hydrophilic surfaces.
[01:06:22.120 --> 01:06:24.100in a few places.


[54:49.220 --> 54:54.340And he's discovering that, whoa, water has these cool properties where it pushes away
[01:06:24.100 --> 01:06:28.420But they said once the bodies thawed, then things started to go downhill rapidly.


[54:54.340 --> 54:55.660certain materials.
[01:06:28.420 --> 01:06:34.420Cracks appeared in the bodies, cutting through the skin and subcutaneous fat, all the way


[54:55.660 --> 54:57.820It pushes away certain solutes.
[01:06:34.420 --> 01:06:37.420down to the body wall and muscles beneath.


[54:57.820 --> 55:02.860And so, yeah, it could have some cool industrial, some cool material science outcomes.
[01:06:37.420 --> 01:06:38.940No, you should.


[55:02.860 --> 55:03.860It's diamagnetic.
[01:06:38.940 --> 01:06:45.540But I mean, what happens at the macro level, think about what's happening inside the cells.


[55:03.860 --> 55:05.740I don't even think that's anything like new.
[01:06:45.540 --> 01:06:49.700These ice crystals are ripping the cell membranes apart.


[55:05.740 --> 55:07.380And here's the interesting thing.
[01:06:49.700 --> 01:06:53.100They're losing all of their integrity.


[55:07.380 --> 55:10.940Well, I shouldn't say interesting, but here's the part where I feel like we would be remiss
[01:06:53.100 --> 01:06:59.420That's what that liquid, that's what that perfusion method is supposed to be minimizing.


[55:10.940 --> 55:13.140if we didn't just straight up debunk this.
[01:06:59.420 --> 01:07:04.660And from my understanding, the material that they're using and the formula that they're


[55:13.140 --> 55:17.660I know we're debunking it by being like, this is stupid, but let's debunk it by looking
[01:07:04.660 --> 01:07:08.780using is constantly being improved upon.


[55:17.660 --> 55:21.180at what the claims are and systematically dismantling them.
[01:07:08.780 --> 01:07:13.340I've never seen any proof of how well it's working or there's also different companies.


[55:21.180 --> 55:29.100Basically the main claim is that at this exclusion zone, which does seem to exist, water, we
[01:07:13.340 --> 01:07:16.740But if they're just perfusing in blood, that's probably not enough.


[55:29.100 --> 55:30.200]  know what water is, right?
[01:07:16.740 --> 01:07:17.940You know what I mean?


[55:30.200 --> 55:37.740It's two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom, yep, H2O, may change into H3O2.
[01:07:17.940 --> 01:07:19.540You need to get into the neurons.


[55:37.740 --> 55:43.300So we've got this negative electric charge and that sort of induces this layered kind
[01:07:19.540 --> 01:07:20.940You need to get into...


[55:43.300 --> 55:45.760]  of hexagonal network arrangement.
[01:07:20.940 --> 01:07:25.420I just remember working in a lab years and years and years ago and one of my lab mates


[55:45.760 --> 55:49.840And in doing that, certain solutes now can no longer bind to it.
[01:07:25.420 --> 01:07:29.700was trying to figure out how to ship these like in vitro nerve cell networks that we


[55:49.840 --> 55:54.160And we do see this happening within our cells all the time because our cells have membranes.
[01:07:29.700 --> 01:07:30.700made.


[55:54.160 --> 55:59.900So there are going to be these kind of zones, these surface zones with water.
[01:07:30.700 --> 01:07:31.700And she was trying to...


[55:59.900 --> 56:02.180But this is where the massive jump comes, right?
[01:07:31.700 --> 01:07:32.980And this was an exposed nerve cell network.


[56:02.180 --> 56:04.180Well, that's what happens in your cells.
[01:07:32.980 --> 01:07:38.540Just use the right basically antifreeze in order to allow them to be frozen and then


[56:04.180 --> 56:05.580That's what happens in nature.
[01:07:38.540 --> 01:07:43.100come back without ripping through microtubules and really destroying the integrity of the


[56:05.580 --> 56:07.900Why aren't we drinking this kind of water?
[01:07:43.100 --> 01:07:44.100cells.


[56:07.900 --> 56:11.620]  And let's talk about why this is not science.
[01:07:44.100 --> 01:07:45.100]  And it was very hard to do.


[56:11.620 --> 56:17.460If water could change into H3O2, first of all, it wouldn't and doesn't stay that way
[01:07:45.100 --> 01:07:48.740I know we've gotten to the point where we're better at that now with cultures, but with


[56:17.460 --> 56:25.540because then it wouldn't be water because water is H2O.
[01:07:48.740 --> 01:07:49.740whole bodies?


[56:25.540 --> 56:30.340If it formed this hexagonal lattice-like structure, it would not be wet.
[01:07:49.740 --> 01:07:50.740Yeah, whole bodies.


[56:30.340 --> 56:31.940]  It would not flow.
[01:07:50.740 --> 01:07:51.740]  It's not fair.


[56:31.940 --> 56:41.060That would no longer be the liquid phase of water if in large quantities like in the macro,
[01:07:51.740 --> 01:07:55.780They said for as bad as the skin and the muscles and the tissue damage was, it's the organs


[56:41.060 --> 56:42.060it stayed this way.
[01:07:55.780 --> 01:08:02.340that really took horrible, horrible beatings, badly cracked, severed in some cases.


[56:42.060 --> 56:44.260This only happens at the surface, right?
[01:08:02.340 --> 01:08:07.820The spinal cords were snapped into three pieces, the heart was fractured, every major blood


[56:44.260 --> 56:49.140It could not happen throughout the whole water or it wouldn't be water.
[01:08:07.820 --> 01:08:13.460vessel had broken near the heart, the lungs and spleen were almost bisected.


[56:49.140 --> 56:50.140Get this.
[01:08:13.460 --> 01:08:19.500And yeah, the liver and kidneys, although weren't completely destroyed, they were severely


[56:50.140 --> 56:54.920If you were to look at like a big vat of water, about every one molecule in every billion
[01:08:19.500 --> 01:08:20.580damaged.


[56:54.920 --> 56:59.500molecules already has an extra hydrogen atom because like, you know, not everything's super
[01:08:20.580 --> 01:08:26.780So these are the cases in which they emphasize in this particular article.


[56:59.500 --> 57:00.500stable.
[01:08:26.780 --> 01:08:32.300The thing is that there are still plenty of people who remain frozen.


[57:00.500 --> 57:03.280Sometimes you get these positively charged and negatively charged ions.
[01:08:32.300 --> 01:08:35.100So obviously we don't know exactly what's going on with all cases.


[57:03.280 --> 57:05.260They just happen spontaneously.
[01:08:35.100 --> 01:08:40.880These are just the cases they were able to study of the few that have had to be thawed


[57:05.260 --> 57:06.460These protons are mobile.
[01:08:40.880 --> 01:08:42.900out for whatever reason.


[57:06.460 --> 57:07.740They move around.
[01:08:42.900 --> 01:08:46.800If the scientists know that this is the case, especially when it comes to the whole body


[57:07.740 --> 57:09.800And it happens really fast.
[01:08:46.800 --> 01:08:52.880freezing process, perhaps maybe they should be more focusing on really just offering the


[57:09.800 --> 57:15.020Like we're talking about what this site says a thousand times each second.
[01:08:52.880 --> 01:08:54.420service for the head alone.


[57:15.020 --> 57:20.980On the Wiki page, it says that hydrogen bonds continually break and reform at timescales
[01:08:54.420 --> 01:08:59.500And again, you can imagine what's going to happen to the brain during any sort of thaw


[57:20.980 --> 57:25.280shorter than 200 femtoseconds.
[01:08:59.500 --> 01:09:00.500process.


[57:25.280 --> 57:32.060So even if you could produce hexagonal water with like some sort of weird filter, it would
[01:09:00.500 --> 01:09:03.960But again, you're relying on a future technology that doesn't exist.


[57:32.060 --> 57:39.140just become water again within femtoseconds because chemistry.
[01:09:03.960 --> 01:09:04.960That's the gamble.


[57:39.140 --> 57:45.020So it's one of those things where not only is it a clear and total scam, it's not even
[01:09:04.960 --> 01:09:09.180However, some people pay as much as almost a quarter million dollars to have their entire


[57:45.020 --> 57:46.500feasible.
[01:09:09.180 --> 01:09:12.980body frozen and maintained.


[57:46.500 --> 57:51.580We can debunk it, sure, but it doesn't even have face validity from the beginning.
[01:09:12.980 --> 01:09:18.380And the company's knowledge about sort of how the history of this has worked out and


[57:51.580 --> 57:52.580It's homeopathy.
[01:09:18.380 --> 01:09:24.220what they do know about the thaw out process with the body, it's a red flag to me that


[57:52.580 --> 57:53.580It's so important.
[01:09:24.220 --> 01:09:30.160they kind of still continue to offer that as a service, sort of knowing that the end


[57:53.580 --> 57:54.580Oh, that's a good point.
[01:09:30.160 --> 01:09:34.860result here in at least all of these cases turned out to be a big zero.


[57:54.580 --> 57:55.580Yeah.
[01:09:34.860 --> 01:09:39.860The problem here is that the kind of gross damage that you're describing and said like


[57:55.580 --> 57:56.580It's like water has a memory.
[01:09:39.860 --> 01:09:45.780the heart was split, the spine was split in three pieces, to me that's all irrelevant


[57:56.580 --> 57:57.580It's all that.
[01:09:45.780 --> 01:09:51.220because the point is, the entire point is that you're anticipating a future technology


[57:57.580 --> 58:03.900And again, they refer to this femtosecond structure of water to say that, see, water
[01:09:51.220 --> 01:09:53.700that will be able to do repairs at the nanoscale.


[58:03.900 --> 58:06.420can have other structure and information.
[01:09:53.700 --> 01:09:59.280So those gross damage would be trivial assuming that technology.


[58:06.420 --> 58:08.060They're like bricks building a building.
[01:09:59.280 --> 01:10:05.180But it also misses the point of the way a lot of these companies are now preserving


[58:08.060 --> 58:11.780So yeah, at the femtosecond scale, you're going to drink that.
[01:10:05.180 --> 01:10:06.180]  the brain.


[58:11.780 --> 58:14.740It's going to survive to interact with your body in some way.
[01:10:06.180 --> 01:10:08.580They're not using these cryopreservation fluids.


[58:14.740 --> 58:15.740It's ridiculous.
[01:10:08.580 --> 01:10:12.260They're using vitrification which is much superior.


[58:15.740 --> 58:20.200It's water is water and I'm sorry, but like really when it comes down to it, whether they're
[01:10:12.260 --> 01:10:18.180]  I've read studies where they've taken hippocampal slices from rats and vitrified them and then


[58:20.200 --> 58:24.300changing the pH on you, whether trying to change the molecular structure, whether they're
[01:10:18.180 --> 01:10:23.820they undid that process and it was comparable to controls that were not cryopreserved or


[58:24.300 --> 58:27.540dissolving stuff into it, whatever, it's water.
[01:10:23.820 --> 01:10:25.200vitrified at all.


[58:27.540 --> 58:31.060And you know what water is in a lot of places in the world?
[01:10:25.200 --> 01:10:32.380So I mean the key is, can you infer the working state of the neurons, of the brain from what


[58:31.060 --> 58:32.060Not all.
[01:10:32.380 --> 01:10:33.380is left?


[58:32.060 --> 58:35.900We definitely have struggles with water insecurity, but in most developed nations, you know what
[01:10:33.380 --> 01:10:38.420So some damage is essentially inevitable but if you can infer, all you have to be able


[58:35.900 --> 58:39.020water out of your tap is pretty cheap, if not free.
[01:10:38.420 --> 01:10:42.840to do, you assume that the technology will be developed and then if we can infer the


[58:39.020 --> 58:40.020Yeah.
[01:10:42.840 --> 01:10:48.620working state then you have a decent shot of having some sort of positive result here.


[58:40.020 --> 58:45.780So, you know, don't, don't spend ridiculous amounts of money on scamming water and mind
[01:10:48.620 --> 01:10:53.500More nuanced damage would probably be hard to predict but to me that's the key.


[58:45.780 --> 58:48.460the pockets of, yeah, of hucksters.
[01:10:53.500 --> 01:10:57.700So this other, this damage that you're talking about, you know, it kind of misses the point.


[58:48.460 --> 58:51.220Magic water is a whole category of scams unto itself.
[01:10:57.700 --> 01:11:02.620It's like because the whole thing is anticipating and expecting this technology that doesn't


[58:51.220 --> 58:52.220Absolutely.
[01:11:02.620 --> 01:11:06.860seem to, you know, it's not breaking any laws of physics in my book.


[58:52.220 --> 58:53.220Yep, yep, yep.
[01:11:06.860 --> 01:11:09.580Yes it is.


[58:53.220 --> 58:54.220All right.
[01:11:09.580 --> 01:11:11.860So you're talking quick care.


[58:54.220 --> 58:55.220Thanks, Cara.
[01:11:11.860 --> 01:11:18.260I mean we've got, you know, we've got biology itself, you know, creates structures that


=== Cryonic Horror Stories <small>(58:58)</small> ===
[01:11:18.260 --> 01:11:20.380] work at this level.
* [https://bigthink.com/the-future/cryonics-horror-stories/ Horror stories of cryonics: The gruesome fates of futurists hoping for immortality]<ref>[https://bigthink.com/the-future/cryonics-horror-stories/ Big Think: Horror stories of cryonics: The gruesome fates of futurists hoping for immortality]</ref>


[58:55.220 --> 58:57.580Evan, tell us about cryonic horror stories.
[01:11:20.380 --> 01:11:25.620So you're saying that repair at the molecular level is not something that we could achieve


[58:57.580 --> 58:58.580Oh boy.
[01:11:25.620 --> 01:11:27.700within a century or two or ten?


[58:58.580 --> 59:00.540Jack, Jay, you're going to love this story.
[01:11:27.700 --> 01:11:32.180No, I think we could easily repair things at the molecular level but then to reanimate


[59:00.540 --> 59:03.180Well, a long time ago.
[01:11:32.180 --> 01:11:34.020them is a completely different question.


[59:03.180 --> 59:04.180No?
[01:11:34.020 --> 01:11:37.660Well you've got to put them on a table, you lift them up when there's an electrical storm


[59:04.180 --> 59:05.180Yeah.
[01:11:37.660 --> 01:11:42.300and then, you know, just let it work but I mean the thing is it's not like we've got


[59:05.180 --> 59:06.180What?
[01:11:42.300 --> 01:11:44.420to like find a spark of life to throw in there.


[59:06.180 --> 59:07.180Anyone?
[01:11:44.420 --> 01:11:45.420What do you mean?


[59:07.180 --> 59:08.180In a galaxy far, far away?
[01:11:45.420 --> 01:11:49.700I mean once you get things working, well I don't know what that comment means.


[59:08.180 --> 59:09.180Oh.
[01:11:49.700 --> 01:11:54.420It would take nanotechnology, right, it would take a full blown developed nanotechnology


[59:09.180 --> 59:10.180Okay.
[01:11:54.420 --> 01:11:57.420to be able to even contemplate doing something like this.


[59:10.180 --> 59:11.180Let's just see who was awake.
[01:11:57.420 --> 01:11:58.420Of course.


[59:11.180 --> 59:14.940A protocol droid once said, oh, they've encased him in carbonite.
[01:11:58.420 --> 01:12:01.420I feel like the breakdown in reasoning is the same parallel breakdown in reasoning that


[59:14.940 --> 59:19.180He should be quite well protected if he survived the freezing process, that is.
[01:12:01.420 --> 01:12:05.580we often get to the crux and maybe it's a philosophical difference.


[59:19.180 --> 59:23.620Well, fast forward to today in our very own galaxy, and we have a newly released article
[01:12:05.580 --> 01:12:10.700When you guys talk about space colonialism and I'm like why would we do that, we haven't


[59:23.620 --> 59:29.780over at bigthink.com with the title, Horror Stories of Cryonics, the Gruesome Fates of
[01:12:10.700 --> 01:12:14.740even figured out how to terraform our own planet and make it livable.


[59:29.780 --> 59:33.420Futurists Hoping for Immortality.
[01:12:14.740 --> 01:12:18.300It's the same kind of thing like you're just saying oh well you just put bodies in a blender


[59:33.420 --> 59:38.780So I guess we have to decide how we went from quite well protected to cryonic horror stories.
[01:12:18.300 --> 01:12:21.940then we'll just figure out how to fucking fix it all later.


[59:38.780 --> 59:42.940Cryonics, we've spoken about it before on the show, I'm certain.
[01:12:21.940 --> 01:12:25.660Like it's like no we won't, like it just doesn't make sense.


[59:42.940 --> 59:47.200But for those who are not familiar with it, cryonics is the practice of deep freezing
[01:12:25.660 --> 01:12:30.140Good luck inferring a working brain from a blender but I mean that's not a good example.


[59:47.200 --> 59:52.500bodies of people who have entered the earliest state of the dying process in hopes that future
[01:12:30.140 --> 01:12:31.340I see what you mean.


[59:52.500 --> 59:56.920scientific advances may allow them to be revived in the future.
[01:12:31.340 --> 01:12:34.660But it's not that different than why don't we just freeze them on ice.


[59:56.920 --> 01:00:01.240In some cases, it's only the head of the person that gets frozen as opposed to the
[01:12:34.660 --> 01:12:39.220Like why do all this extra tech, why vitrify even if we come up with good tech?


[01:00:01.240 --> 01:00:02.240full body.
[01:12:39.220 --> 01:12:42.700Because I think if you just did it on regular ice, I mean you will have decay.


[01:00:02.240 --> 01:00:06.900And the goal is to freeze the body or the head before the natural decaying processes
[01:12:42.700 --> 01:12:47.820You will have decay and you will not be able to infer the working state and that's what


[01:00:06.900 --> 01:00:09.160take hold for too long.
[01:12:47.820 --> 01:12:48.820death is.


[01:00:09.160 --> 01:00:13.420So what they do, they prepare a body, the bodily liquids are removed and replaced with
[01:12:48.820 --> 01:12:54.100You know we all know the definition of death is almost meaningless in that it changes over


[01:00:13.420 --> 01:00:16.500what they call an organ preservation solution.
[01:12:54.100 --> 01:12:55.100time.


[01:00:16.500 --> 01:00:19.220And I believe that process is called perfusion, right?
[01:12:55.100 --> 01:12:58.520You're right, a century ago or so or two, if you stopped breathing you were dead.


[01:00:19.220 --> 01:00:22.060When you take the blood out and you put something else in.
[01:12:58.520 --> 01:13:00.580Now you are not dead at all when you stop breathing.


[01:00:22.060 --> 01:00:25.380The solution is described as sort of a human antifreeze.
[01:13:00.580 --> 01:13:06.780So death is not a point, it's a process and just because somebody is frozen in the future


[01:00:25.380 --> 01:00:29.300The body is then wrapped in several layers of insulating material.
[01:13:06.780 --> 01:13:12.220doesn't necessarily mean that for all time this person is going to be considered dead.


[01:00:29.300 --> 01:00:35.940It's embedded in dry ice until the body reaches a temperature of about negative 130 degrees
[01:13:12.220 --> 01:13:16.700No but it's also a wild assumption to think that we will just figure out a mechanistic


[01:00:35.940 --> 01:00:37.060Celsius.
[01:13:16.700 --> 01:13:25.440and feasible ability to re-induce consciousness when we don't understand the emergent property


[01:00:37.060 --> 01:00:41.760Then the frozen body is placed inside a Dewar, D-E-W-A-R.
[01:13:25.440 --> 01:13:26.440that is consciousness.


[01:00:41.760 --> 01:00:45.180That's an insulated container used for storing cryogens.
[01:13:26.440 --> 01:13:32.580I don't think you need to understand consciousness to thaw out and repair a body and potentially


[01:00:45.180 --> 01:00:51.400Body goes into the Dewar, head down to keep the brain the coldest and most stable to also
[01:13:32.580 --> 01:13:33.580make it work.


[01:00:51.400 --> 01:00:53.620guard against leakage.
[01:13:33.580 --> 01:13:36.780But you're just assuming it will then just become conscious after you do that.


[01:00:53.620 --> 01:00:58.700The Dewar lies within a second outer vessel separated by a vacuum to avoid heat transfer
[01:13:36.780 --> 01:13:38.820I think that's a pretty good conclusion.


[01:00:58.700 --> 01:01:03.560from the outer room temperature vessel wall to the cold inner vessel wall.
[01:13:38.820 --> 01:13:41.100My odds of coming back otherwise are zero.


[01:01:03.560 --> 01:01:08.260Then that Dewar in that pocket is filled with liquid nitrogen and that gets the body down
[01:13:41.100 --> 01:13:45.180I'll take fractionally above zero, over zero any day.


[01:01:08.260 --> 01:01:12.660to 196 degrees below Celsius.
[01:13:45.180 --> 01:13:47.420And that's a fine, I mean if that's the gamble you're taking that makes sense.


[01:01:12.660 --> 01:01:14.420So yeah, that's where you are.
[01:13:47.420 --> 01:13:49.220Of course it is, of course it is.


[01:01:14.420 --> 01:01:17.660That's about as frozen I think as a body can get with using modern technology.
[01:13:49.220 --> 01:13:53.460But to really think that it's actually going to happen to me is pseudoscience.


[01:01:17.660 --> 01:01:23.420Oh, and you have to fill up the liquid nitrogen periodically in order to keep it stable at
[01:13:53.460 --> 01:13:55.140We're not talking about magic here though.


[01:01:23.420 --> 01:01:24.420that temperature.
[01:13:55.140 --> 01:14:02.380Like if they were going to repair a brain, bring it back up to temperature and actually


[01:01:24.420 --> 01:01:28.740]  Now, the freezing of people using dry ice and liquid nitrogen has been in practice since
[01:14:02.380 --> 01:14:07.740]  have blood pumped to it, if that brain is put together in a way that makes sense from


[01:01:28.740 --> 01:01:31.140the 1960s.
[01:14:07.740 --> 01:14:12.580a neurological perspective, why would we think that that consciousness would be impossible


[01:01:31.140 --> 01:01:35.620And as you can imagine, the first instances of attempting to preserve people using freezing
[01:14:12.580 --> 01:14:13.580]  to achieve?


[01:01:35.620 --> 01:01:39.820techniques didn't go so well.
[01:14:13.580 --> 01:14:17.940I mean you're really just trying to build, it is the most complicated thing in the universe,


[01:01:39.820 --> 01:01:42.060Techniques were generally poor.
[01:14:17.940 --> 01:14:20.200I'll give you that without a doubt.


[01:01:42.060 --> 01:01:46.540Bodies were at room temperature in most cases for too long before they froze them and that
[01:14:20.200 --> 01:14:26.620The real question is not will we be able to do this because like ever is a very long time.


[01:01:46.540 --> 01:01:49.020]  really made them unviable from the start.
[01:14:26.620 --> 01:14:31.260It's really a matter of how long is it going to take before we can repair the amount of


[01:01:49.020 --> 01:01:54.740Some companies did not use cryoprotectants or the perfusion with their patients.
[01:14:31.260 --> 01:14:33.860damage that's going to happen.


[01:01:54.740 --> 01:01:59.940Some only put them on dry ice and did not use liquid nitrogen and others skip the liquid
[01:14:33.860 --> 01:14:38.780And so the better you preserve the body at the front end, the less time it will take


[01:01:59.940 --> 01:02:02.380nitrogen and went straight to freezing them.
[01:14:38.780 --> 01:14:43.500]  to be able to repair it at the back end in terms of advances in technology.


[01:02:02.380 --> 01:02:03.380]  I'm sorry.
[01:14:43.500 --> 01:14:48.180But to just have a blanket assumption it's not an if, it's a when, I think is a little


[01:02:03.380 --> 01:02:07.980And then others skip the dry ice and went straight to freezing them in the liquid nitrogen.
[01:14:48.180 --> 01:14:49.180overreaching.


[01:02:07.980 --> 01:02:11.500Although the idea they said initially wasn't for future revival, it was more for cosmetic
[01:14:49.180 --> 01:14:53.940There's a lot of assumptions there.


[01:02:11.500 --> 01:02:12.500preservation.
[01:14:53.940 --> 01:14:59.420If you assume that human civilization doesn't collapse and it continues indefinitely, then


[01:02:12.500 --> 01:02:15.760But even that didn't go so well.
[01:14:59.420 --> 01:15:04.140you know I think it's not unreasonable to say that this technology can happen.


[01:02:15.760 --> 01:02:19.480And they have several cases in which, you know, they tell you about how some of these
[01:15:04.140 --> 01:15:08.300It is very, very difficult but it is not breaking the laws of physics.


[01:02:19.480 --> 01:02:21.740things failed ultimately.
[01:15:08.300 --> 01:15:13.300There's no theoretical reason why it's impossible, it's just really hard.


[01:02:21.740 --> 01:02:25.660So in one case, there's a facility that was paid to keep people frozen in just the dry
[01:15:13.300 --> 01:15:17.420It may prove impractical and it may prove that we won't really be able to ever practically


[01:02:25.660 --> 01:02:30.660ice and that would get your body to about 130, negative 130 Celsius.
[01:15:17.420 --> 01:15:21.620do it or we may find that yeah, we could get the brain working again but like you have


[01:02:30.660 --> 01:02:31.660And that was it.
[01:15:21.620 --> 01:15:22.620none of your memories.


[01:02:31.660 --> 01:02:36.740They're just lay there on beds of dry ice until they decided to finally obtain a Dewar
[01:15:22.620 --> 01:15:29.100Like whatever, it's insufficient information for any continuity, that's also totally possible.


[01:02:36.740 --> 01:02:40.500capsule that could do the liquid nitrogen process.
[01:15:29.100 --> 01:15:30.420I would take that chance.


[01:02:40.500 --> 01:02:44.860And then when they did get it, they got the Dewar, there was already a body inside of
[01:15:30.420 --> 01:15:39.500But how is buying into cryonics then any different than buying into the pseudoscientific snake


[01:02:44.860 --> 01:02:45.860it.
[01:15:39.500 --> 01:15:44.740oils that we often see sold that do have, that don't fly in the face of physics?


[01:02:45.860 --> 01:02:50.300So they opened it up, they took that body out and then they packed it back in with a
[01:15:44.740 --> 01:15:45.740Like what?


[01:02:50.300 --> 01:02:54.500total of four bodies, you know, managed to kind of get it in there.
[01:15:45.740 --> 01:15:51.260It's not like everything that's pseudoscience is pseudoscience simply because it breaks


[01:02:54.500 --> 01:02:58.580But the original body that they took out, it thawed too much.
[01:15:51.260 --> 01:15:52.260]  the laws of physics.


[01:02:58.580 --> 01:03:05.560It was just out of there too long and unfortunately it started to, you know, unfreeze.
[01:15:52.260 --> 01:15:56.220Oh yeah, there's a lot of pseudoscience that doesn't define the laws of physics, they're


[01:03:05.560 --> 01:03:08.900They refilled it, they got it all in there though eventually.
[01:15:56.220 --> 01:16:01.060just wrong or there's insufficient evidence to, they're making claims that go beyond the


[01:03:08.900 --> 01:03:12.380They held everyone there for about a year, but then they stopped receiving money from
[01:16:01.060 --> 01:16:02.060evidence.


[01:03:12.380 --> 01:03:15.540the relatives, so after a while they couldn't pay for it anymore.
[01:16:02.060 --> 01:16:06.660And you think that cryonics isn't making claims that go beyond, that's what I'm saying.


[01:03:15.540 --> 01:03:19.940They had to thaw everyone out and then give them more of a regular resting place in a
[01:16:06.660 --> 01:16:08.020This is pseudoscience.


[01:03:19.940 --> 01:03:22.100cemetery vault.
[01:16:08.020 --> 01:16:11.860I'm not defending the ROI on cryonics.


[01:03:22.100 --> 01:03:27.340Reporters who visited the crypt where those failed operations as they call them took place,
[01:16:11.860 --> 01:16:15.380But I feel like our tone is very different as a skeptical podcast when we talk about


[01:03:27.340 --> 01:03:30.620they reported a horrifying stench.
[01:16:15.380 --> 01:16:16.660this kind of stuff.


[01:03:30.620 --> 01:03:34.340So that's not good, whatever the heck they were smelling.
[01:16:16.660 --> 01:16:19.180And it's like, why are we not applying the same skepticism?


[01:03:34.340 --> 01:03:39.420Another case, a group of three bodies packed into one Dewar, the liquid nitrogen system
[01:16:19.180 --> 01:16:20.180I disagree.


[01:03:39.420 --> 01:03:40.420failed.
[01:16:20.180 --> 01:16:21.860I think the tone is very much the same.


[01:03:40.420 --> 01:03:45.540Yep, the Dewar design failed and couldn't hold the liquid nitrogen and then just one
[01:16:21.860 --> 01:16:25.380Like I'm very careful to always say like, yeah, this is impossible.


[01:03:45.540 --> 01:03:49.340day they were checking and the technician noticed, uh-oh, we got a problem here.
[01:16:25.380 --> 01:16:26.460This isn't impossible.


[01:03:49.340 --> 01:03:55.140They thawed out and they were eventually removed and buried elsewhere, so that's another case.
[01:16:26.460 --> 01:16:29.700This could work, you know, but like we could be being visited by aliens.


[01:03:55.140 --> 01:04:02.060Oh, here's a case where a boy, a young boy's body was frozen, but they found it to be cracked
[01:16:29.700 --> 01:16:31.660There's nothing impossible about that.


[01:04:02.060 --> 01:04:07.220and they said the cracking likely occurred because it was frozen too quickly by the liquid
[01:16:31.660 --> 01:16:36.000There just isn't enough evidence to support it that I'm willing to accept that claim.


[01:04:07.220 --> 01:04:08.220nitrogen.
[01:16:36.000 --> 01:16:37.000That's all.


[01:04:08.220 --> 01:04:13.260They had to go over a specific sort of slow gradual process of getting to that temperature,
[01:16:37.000 --> 01:16:39.980So I think we're talking about it very similarly.


[01:04:13.260 --> 01:04:15.420but apparently it went too quickly.
[01:16:39.980 --> 01:16:44.660There isn't any reason why, again, you're talking about the future, all bets are off


[01:04:15.420 --> 01:04:19.540Once again they had to abandon it and the boy had to be thawed out and buried in a more
[01:16:44.660 --> 01:16:49.340]  and when you're talking about the deep future, especially, we just can't know that.


[01:04:19.540 --> 01:04:21.120traditional sense.
[01:16:49.340 --> 01:16:54.140What I think the real question is, what's the probability that the infrastructure is


[01:04:21.120 --> 01:04:27.540And then there's the one in, here's one where the Dewar, again poor design, led to a series
[01:16:54.140 --> 01:16:56.860going to keep you properly preserved until that?


[01:04:27.540 --> 01:04:31.300of incidents, at least one of which was the failure of the vacuum jacket.
[01:16:56.860 --> 01:16:57.860Yes, it's low.


[01:04:31.300 --> 01:04:35.460]  Remember I said the Dewar is dropped in and then there's another inside and then there's
[01:16:57.860 --> 01:16:59.460]  It's probably damn low.


[01:04:35.460 --> 01:04:37.220an exterior piece to it.
[01:16:59.460 --> 01:17:02.660We may be talking about the far future of what's going to be possible then, but we're


[01:04:37.220 --> 01:04:41.660So you got these two layers, but problem with the vacuum that took place, the bodies in
[01:17:02.660 --> 01:17:06.700talking about a commercial enterprise right now that people are spending money on.


[01:04:41.660 --> 01:04:46.780the container partially thawed, they moved, and then they froze again.
[01:17:06.700 --> 01:17:07.700Yeah, I'm not defending that.


[01:04:46.780 --> 01:04:54.020And when that happens, the bodies contort, they'll go into these strange shapes, which
[01:17:07.700 --> 01:17:08.700I'm not defending that.


[01:04:54.020 --> 01:04:55.140is not good.
[01:17:08.700 --> 01:17:09.700Yeah, of course.


[01:04:55.140 --> 01:04:57.380They wind up sticking to the side of the capsule.
[01:17:09.700 --> 01:17:10.940Because to me, this is pseudoscience.


[01:04:57.380 --> 01:05:02.420They described it like a child's tongue to a cold lamp post, eventually when they got
[01:17:10.940 --> 01:17:15.980It's like cord blood stuff, it's like all of these different industries that prey on


[01:05:02.420 --> 01:05:04.200these bodies out, yeah.
[01:17:15.980 --> 01:17:20.820people's fears and their concerns and then they take their money away from them in the


[01:05:04.200 --> 01:05:08.380So ultimately after a year, they deemed it a total failure.
[01:17:20.820 --> 01:17:23.820hopes of giving them some sort of salvation.


[01:05:08.380 --> 01:05:13.540The bodies decomposed into a plug of fluids, as they described it, and sort of pooled at
[01:17:23.820 --> 01:17:24.820That's pseudoscience.


[01:05:13.540 --> 01:05:17.380the bottom of the capsule and they had to scrape out their remains and bury them.
[01:17:24.820 --> 01:17:25.820No, I agree.


[01:05:17.380 --> 01:05:20.580So basically when the process goes bad, it goes really bad.
[01:17:25.820 --> 01:17:27.820I mean, I'm not defending crime as an industry.


[01:05:20.580 --> 01:05:23.940But here's the interesting part of the article, the part that I didn't know about.
[01:17:27.820 --> 01:17:31.380I just want to make that clear because I don't think that comes across in the conversation.


[01:05:23.940 --> 01:05:30.300This was in 1983, Alcor, which is one of the main companies that manages the freezing of
[01:17:31.380 --> 01:17:33.140Well, you're assuming a lot.


[01:05:30.300 --> 01:05:34.900people, they had to lighten three cryonauts.
[01:17:33.140 --> 01:17:37.980We're talking about it theoretically versus this is a good investment of your money.


[01:05:34.900 --> 01:05:38.540You're a cryonaut, by the way, when you go into these duars.
[01:17:37.980 --> 01:17:39.220We're not saying that.


[01:05:38.540 --> 01:05:41.060That's your designation.
[01:17:39.220 --> 01:17:43.260No, and that's great, but I'm saying nobody made that explicit.


[01:05:41.060 --> 01:05:47.500]  And the orders were to take the bodies out and we're just going to use the heads.
[01:17:43.260 --> 01:17:47.940]  And so I'm trying to put myself in the shoes of the listener.


[01:05:47.500 --> 01:05:49.860They're just going to keep the heads frozen.
[01:17:47.940 --> 01:17:48.940This needs to be made explicit.


[01:05:49.860 --> 01:05:53.580I imagine for financial reasons, but they wouldn't really get into that.
[01:17:48.940 --> 01:17:49.940Yeah.


[01:05:53.580 --> 01:05:55.360But in any case, that's what had to happen.
[01:17:49.940 --> 01:17:50.940Well, we're making it explicit.


[01:05:55.360 --> 01:06:00.460So the corpses were removed from the duar capsules, the heads were cut off, and they
[01:17:50.940 --> 01:17:51.940Yeah.


[01:06:00.460 --> 01:06:04.140used a chainsaw to do it because obviously you're still very much frozen.
[01:17:51.940 --> 01:17:52.940I'm just saying.


[01:06:04.140 --> 01:06:05.500And then the heads were stored separately.
[01:17:52.940 --> 01:17:53.940That's why I'm asking.


[01:06:05.500 --> 01:06:11.180But this gave the scientists an opportunity to see, okay, so what happens to the thawing
[01:17:53.940 --> 01:17:54.940That's why I started talking about it.


[01:06:11.180 --> 01:06:13.660process of the bodies?
[01:17:54.940 --> 01:17:56.640And for most people, I mean, the ROI absolutely is not there.


[01:06:13.660 --> 01:06:17.760They had these three bodies to observe and watch.
[01:17:56.640 --> 01:18:00.780You're better off spending your money in other ways, enjoying the life that you have.


[01:06:17.760 --> 01:06:22.120So while the bodies were still frozen, they said the skin was only moderately cracked
[01:18:00.780 --> 01:18:08.940You're going to spend $200,000 on a very slim chance of a partial future.


[01:06:22.120 --> 01:06:24.100in a few places.
[01:18:08.940 --> 01:18:09.940It's not that.


[01:06:24.100 --> 01:06:28.420But they said once the bodies thawed, then things started to go downhill rapidly.
[01:18:09.940 --> 01:18:10.940It's not that expensive.


[01:06:28.420 --> 01:06:34.420Cracks appeared in the bodies, cutting through the skin and subcutaneous fat, all the way
[01:18:10.940 --> 01:18:11.940I agree.


[01:06:34.420 --> 01:06:37.420down to the body wall and muscles beneath.
[01:18:11.940 --> 01:18:13.260You know, I don't disagree.


[01:06:37.420 --> 01:06:38.940No, you should.
[01:18:13.260 --> 01:18:20.280I'm not going to I'm not going to take money out of my kids' future, you know, to do this.


[01:06:38.940 --> 01:06:45.540]  But I mean, what happens at the macro level, think about what's happening inside the cells.
[01:18:20.280 --> 01:18:27.060]  But but it also and as Steve said, we're talking theoretical here and zero percent chance sucks


[01:06:45.540 --> 01:06:49.700These ice crystals are ripping the cell membranes apart.
[01:18:27.060 --> 01:18:28.260and a little bit better than that.


[01:06:49.700 --> 01:06:53.100They're losing all of their integrity.
[01:18:28.260 --> 01:18:30.780I bought a lotto ticket when it was a billion dollars.


[01:06:53.100 --> 01:06:59.420]  That's what that liquid, that's what that perfusion method is supposed to be minimizing.
[01:18:30.780 --> 01:18:32.420]  I bought some lotto tickets.


[01:06:59.420 --> 01:07:04.660And from my understanding, the material that they're using and the formula that they're
[01:18:32.420 --> 01:18:33.420Sure.


[01:07:04.660 --> 01:07:08.780using is constantly being improved upon.
[01:18:33.420 --> 01:18:35.380It was it was just for fun.


[01:07:08.780 --> 01:07:13.340]  I've never seen any proof of how well it's working or there's also different companies.
[01:18:35.380 --> 01:18:41.220]  I had no expectation that it was going to work, but there was the there was the possibility


[01:07:13.340 --> 01:07:16.740But if they're just perfusing in blood, that's probably not enough.
[01:18:41.220 --> 01:18:45.660]  that it could have worked and there was a potential that I could be a billionaire right


[01:07:16.740 --> 01:07:17.940You know what I mean?
[01:18:45.660 --> 01:18:46.660now.


[01:07:17.940 --> 01:07:19.540You need to get into the neurons.
[01:18:46.660 --> 01:18:48.940And otherwise, I would not have that chance.


[01:07:19.540 --> 01:07:20.940You need to get into...
[01:18:48.940 --> 01:18:52.540So it would to me it was worth, you know, the few dollars that I spent for that for


[01:07:20.940 --> 01:07:25.420I just remember working in a lab years and years and years ago and one of my lab mates
[01:18:52.540 --> 01:18:56.100that chance, which was infinitely greater than zero.


[01:07:25.420 --> 01:07:29.700was trying to figure out how to ship these like in vitro nerve cell networks that we
[01:18:56.100 --> 01:18:58.100If it gave you five dollars of entertainment, sure.


[01:07:29.700 --> 01:07:30.700made.
[01:18:58.100 --> 01:18:59.100It did.


[01:07:30.700 --> 01:07:31.700And she was trying to...
[01:18:59.100 --> 01:19:00.100Exactly.


[01:07:31.700 --> 01:07:32.980And this was an exposed nerve cell network.
[01:19:00.100 --> 01:19:01.100That's how you treat it.


[01:07:32.980 --> 01:07:38.540Just use the right basically antifreeze in order to allow them to be frozen and then
[01:19:01.100 --> 01:19:07.340But by scientific standards, if something is point one percent chance of being real,


[01:07:38.540 --> 01:07:43.100come back without ripping through microtubules and really destroying the integrity of the
[01:19:07.340 --> 01:19:08.340it's for all intents and purposes.


[01:07:43.100 --> 01:07:44.100cells.
[01:19:08.340 --> 01:19:11.420I'm not but I'm not talking about like I'm not talking about winning money.


[01:07:44.100 --> 01:07:45.100And it was very hard to do.
[01:19:11.420 --> 01:19:13.740I'm talking about my life.


[01:07:45.100 --> 01:07:48.740]  I know we've gotten to the point where we're better at that now with cultures, but with
[01:19:13.740 --> 01:19:15.460So it's kind of, you know, I'll take that.


[01:07:48.740 --> 01:07:49.740whole bodies?
[01:19:15.460 --> 01:19:17.380I'll take a chance.


[01:07:49.740 --> 01:07:50.740]  Yeah, whole bodies.
[01:19:17.380 --> 01:19:20.740]  I think you're creating a little bit of a straw man about how we talk about pseudoscience.


[01:07:50.740 --> 01:07:51.740It's not fair.
[01:19:20.740 --> 01:19:26.500Again, I'm usually very careful to distinguish when I think something is impossible versus


[01:07:51.740 --> 01:07:55.780They said for as bad as the skin and the muscles and the tissue damage was, it's the organs
[01:19:26.500 --> 01:19:31.340just unlikely versus we don't know and you should stop charging people for claims that


[01:07:55.780 --> 01:08:02.340that really took horrible, horrible beatings, badly cracked, severed in some cases.
[01:19:31.340 --> 01:19:35.380you can't prove or just your claims are not true, whether or not this phenomenon might


[01:08:02.340 --> 01:08:07.820The spinal cords were snapped into three pieces, the heart was fractured, every major blood
[01:19:35.380 --> 01:19:38.020be plausible or possible or not.


[01:08:07.820 --> 01:08:13.460vessel had broken near the heart, the lungs and spleen were almost bisected.
[01:19:38.020 --> 01:19:41.940Anyway, I think, you know, this is just this is on that spectrum.


[01:08:13.460 --> 01:08:19.500And yeah, the liver and kidneys, although weren't completely destroyed, they were severely
[01:19:41.940 --> 01:19:45.740This is I just think we have to be really careful because I think sometimes we make


[01:08:19.500 --> 01:08:20.580damaged.
[01:19:45.740 --> 01:19:49.660the mistake of assuming that the audience remembers.


[01:08:20.580 --> 01:08:26.780So these are the cases in which they emphasize in this particular article.
[01:19:49.660 --> 01:19:50.660I agree with that.


[01:08:26.780 --> 01:08:32.300The thing is that there are still plenty of people who remain frozen.
[01:19:50.660 --> 01:19:54.260And we talked about something, you know, nine months ago or a year and a half.


[01:08:32.300 --> 01:08:35.100So obviously we don't know exactly what's going on with all cases.
[01:19:54.260 --> 01:19:55.260It is.


[01:08:35.100 --> 01:08:40.880These are just the cases they were able to study of the few that have had to be thawed
[01:19:55.260 --> 01:19:56.260It is good to make it explicit.


[01:08:40.880 --> 01:08:42.900out for whatever reason.
[01:19:56.260 --> 01:20:00.140Because we always get emails where people assume all kinds of things about what we're


[01:08:42.900 --> 01:08:46.800If the scientists know that this is the case, especially when it comes to the whole body
[01:20:00.140 --> 01:20:02.140saying that we didn't say.


[01:08:46.800 --> 01:08:52.880freezing process, perhaps maybe they should be more focusing on really just offering the
[01:20:02.140 --> 01:20:06.260And this is the trick of being a good science communicator, like how much background and


[01:08:52.880 --> 01:08:54.420service for the head alone.
[01:20:06.260 --> 01:20:10.620caveats do we throw in on every discussion versus like, this is critical, I want to make


[01:08:54.420 --> 01:08:59.500And again, you can imagine what's going to happen to the brain during any sort of thaw
[01:20:10.620 --> 01:20:11.620it clear.


[01:08:59.500 --> 01:09:00.500process.
[01:20:11.620 --> 01:20:12.620This is what we're talking about here.


[01:09:00.500 --> 01:09:03.960But again, you're relying on a future technology that doesn't exist.
[01:20:12.620 --> 01:20:17.140Yes, this is vanishingly improbable from on many levels.


[01:09:03.960 --> 01:09:04.960That's the gamble.
[01:20:17.140 --> 01:20:20.520And it's certainly not the kind of thing I would say is like a good investment.


[01:09:04.960 --> 01:09:09.180However, some people pay as much as almost a quarter million dollars to have their entire
[01:20:20.520 --> 01:20:25.300But and I would definitely ask, you know, make sure that people know exactly what they're


[01:09:09.180 --> 01:09:12.980body frozen and maintained.
[01:20:25.300 --> 01:20:28.900doing, you know, if they're going to, you know, put their money into this, because the


[01:09:12.980 --> 01:09:18.380And the company's knowledge about sort of how the history of this has worked out and
[01:20:28.900 --> 01:20:33.500chances are pretty overwhelming that you're going to end up a smelly mess and then have


[01:09:18.380 --> 01:09:24.220what they do know about the thaw out process with the body, it's a red flag to me that
[01:20:33.500 --> 01:20:36.660]  to be just be buried later.


[01:09:24.220 --> 01:09:30.160they kind of still continue to offer that as a service, sort of knowing that the end
[01:20:36.660 --> 01:20:41.700It's overwhelmingly likely, especially the whole body option as opposed to just the head.


[01:09:30.160 --> 01:09:34.860]  result here in at least all of these cases turned out to be a big zero.
[01:20:41.700 --> 01:20:44.860]  But we'll say like, for a lot of things, like on a theoretical basis, like, again, I do


[01:09:34.860 --> 01:09:39.860The problem here is that the kind of gross damage that you're describing and said like
[01:20:44.860 --> 01:20:47.980]  the space alien things, there's no reason why they can't be visiting us right now.


[01:09:39.860 --> 01:09:45.780]  the heart was split, the spine was split in three pieces, to me that's all irrelevant
[01:20:47.980 --> 01:20:49.740I just don't think the evidence supports it.


[01:09:45.780 --> 01:09:51.220because the point is, the entire point is that you're anticipating a future technology
[01:20:49.740 --> 01:20:51.620I think it's kind of the same thing.


[01:09:51.220 --> 01:09:53.700that will be able to do repairs at the nanoscale.
[01:20:51.620 --> 01:20:52.620Yeah.


[01:09:53.700 --> 01:09:59.280So those gross damage would be trivial assuming that technology.
[01:20:52.620 --> 01:20:53.620Like, there's face validity there.


[01:09:59.280 --> 01:10:05.180But it also misses the point of the way a lot of these companies are now preserving
[01:20:53.620 --> 01:20:57.340I think this I think this was a good skeptical exercise, this conversation.


[01:10:05.180 --> 01:10:06.180the brain.
[01:20:57.340 --> 01:20:58.340Absolutely.


[01:10:06.180 --> 01:10:08.580They're not using these cryopreservation fluids.
[01:20:58.340 --> 01:20:59.340That's why we included it.


[01:10:08.580 --> 01:10:12.260They're using vitrification which is much superior.
[01:20:59.340 --> 01:21:00.340Absolutely.


[01:10:12.260 --> 01:10:18.180I've read studies where they've taken hippocampal slices from rats and vitrified them and then
[01:21:00.340 --> 01:21:01.340Okay.


[01:10:18.180 --> 01:10:23.820they undid that process and it was comparable to controls that were not cryopreserved or
[01:21:01.340 --> 01:21:03.900Well, everyone, we're going to take a quick break from our show to talk about one of our


[01:10:23.820 --> 01:10:25.200vitrified at all.
[01:21:03.900 --> 01:21:06.340sponsors this week, one dream.


[01:10:25.200 --> 01:10:32.380So I mean the key is, can you infer the working state of the neurons, of the brain from what
[01:21:06.340 --> 01:21:09.820You guys know that one dream is our favorite educational platform.


[01:10:32.380 --> 01:10:33.380is left?
[01:21:09.820 --> 01:21:14.900They've got audio and video courses, documentaries, tutorials, and so much more.


[01:10:33.380 --> 01:10:38.420So some damage is essentially inevitable but if you can infer, all you have to be able
[01:21:14.900 --> 01:21:17.480It's really like an endless list.


[01:10:38.420 --> 01:10:42.840to do, you assume that the technology will be developed and then if we can infer the
[01:21:17.480 --> 01:21:22.580And I am so obsessed with the documentaries that are available in one room.


[01:10:42.840 --> 01:10:48.620working state then you have a decent shot of having some sort of positive result here.
[01:21:22.580 --> 01:21:25.900You guys know I love documentaries and so many good ones here.


[01:10:48.620 --> 01:10:53.500More nuanced damage would probably be hard to predict but to me that's the key.
[01:21:25.900 --> 01:21:31.260We've got Solving for Zero, we've got Terms and Conditions May Apply, all about the balance


[01:10:53.500 --> 01:10:57.700So this other, this damage that you're talking about, you know, it kind of misses the point.
[01:21:31.260 --> 01:21:34.340between privacy and convenience.


[01:10:57.700 --> 01:11:02.620It's like because the whole thing is anticipating and expecting this technology that doesn't
[01:21:34.340 --> 01:21:40.780I'm seeing here documentaries about other cultures, documentaries about war, documentaries


[01:11:02.620 --> 01:11:06.860seem to, you know, it's not breaking any laws of physics in my book.
[01:21:40.780 --> 01:21:44.480about technology, documentaries about 9-11.


[01:11:06.860 --> 01:11:09.580Yes it is.
[01:21:44.480 --> 01:21:46.380We've got the Hedy Lamarr documentary.


[01:11:09.580 --> 01:11:11.860So you're talking quick care.
[01:21:46.380 --> 01:21:47.380Hedy.


[01:11:11.860 --> 01:11:18.260I mean we've got, you know, we've got biology itself, you know, creates structures that
[01:21:47.380 --> 01:21:48.380So good.


[01:11:18.260 --> 01:11:20.380]  work at this level.
[01:21:48.380 --> 01:21:49.380]  Yeah.


[01:11:20.380 --> 01:11:25.620So you're saying that repair at the molecular level is not something that we could achieve
[01:21:49.380 --> 01:21:50.380And also a documentary about Alan Turing.


[01:11:25.620 --> 01:11:27.700within a century or two or ten?
[01:21:50.380 --> 01:21:51.940So, so much good science here as well.


[01:11:27.700 --> 01:11:32.180No, I think we could easily repair things at the molecular level but then to reanimate
[01:21:51.940 --> 01:21:52.940Really highly recommend.


[01:11:32.180 --> 01:11:34.020them is a completely different question.
[01:21:52.940 --> 01:21:55.860Plus, the one dream app makes it really easy.


[01:11:34.020 --> 01:11:37.660Well you've got to put them on a table, you lift them up when there's an electrical storm
[01:21:55.860 --> 01:22:00.740You pick a program, you can watch or listen to it on basically any device, anytime you


[01:11:37.660 --> 01:11:42.300and then, you know, just let it work but I mean the thing is it's not like we've got
[01:22:00.740 --> 01:22:02.480want, anywhere you want.


[01:11:42.300 --> 01:11:44.420]  to like find a spark of life to throw in there.
[01:22:02.480 --> 01:22:05.420]  We know you're going to love one dream as much as we do.


[01:11:44.420 --> 01:11:45.420]  What do you mean?
[01:22:05.420 --> 01:22:07.420]  So what are you waiting for?


[01:11:45.420 --> 01:11:49.700I mean once you get things working, well I don't know what that comment means.
[01:22:07.420 --> 01:22:08.420Sign up today.


[01:11:49.700 --> 01:11:54.420]  It would take nanotechnology, right, it would take a full blown developed nanotechnology
[01:22:08.420 --> 01:22:09.420]  Wait, not today.


[01:11:54.420 --> 01:11:57.420]  to be able to even contemplate doing something like this.
[01:22:09.420 --> 01:22:10.420]  Do it right now.


[01:11:57.420 --> 01:11:58.420]  Of course.
[01:22:10.420 --> 01:22:11.420]  We'll wait.


[01:11:58.420 --> 01:12:01.420I feel like the breakdown in reasoning is the same parallel breakdown in reasoning that
[01:22:11.420 --> 01:22:14.900Wait, before you do that, before one dream is offering our listeners a free month of


[01:12:01.420 --> 01:12:05.580we often get to the crux and maybe it's a philosophical difference.
[01:22:14.900 --> 01:22:20.460unlimited access to get this offer, you need to visit our special URL, one dream.com slash


[01:12:05.580 --> 01:12:10.700When you guys talk about space colonialism and I'm like why would we do that, we haven't
[01:22:20.460 --> 01:22:21.460skeptics.


[01:12:10.700 --> 01:12:14.740even figured out how to terraform our own planet and make it livable.
[01:22:21.460 --> 01:22:27.460Again, that's W O N D R I U M dot com slash skeptics.


[01:12:14.740 --> 01:12:18.300It's the same kind of thing like you're just saying oh well you just put bodies in a blender
[01:22:27.460 --> 01:22:31.020All right, guys, let's get back to the show.


[01:12:18.300 --> 01:12:21.940then we'll just figure out how to fucking fix it all later.
[01:22:31.020 --> 01:22:32.020Let's move on.


[01:12:21.940 --> 01:12:25.660]  Like it's like no we won't, like it just doesn't make sense.
{{anchor|futureWTN}} <!-- keep right above the following sub-section. this is the anchor used by the "wtnAnswer" template, which links the previous "new noisy" segment to its future WTN, here.
 
-->
[01:12:25.660 --> 01:12:30.140]  Good luck inferring a working brain from a blender but I mean that's not a good example.
 
[01:12:30.140 --> 01:12:31.340]  I see what you mean.
 
[01:12:31.340 --> 01:12:34.660]  But it's not that different than why don't we just freeze them on ice.
 
[01:12:34.660 --> 01:12:39.220]  Like why do all this extra tech, why vitrify even if we come up with good tech?
 
[01:12:39.220 --> 01:12:42.700]  Because I think if you just did it on regular ice, I mean you will have decay.
 
[01:12:42.700 --> 01:12:47.820]  You will have decay and you will not be able to infer the working state and that's what
 
[01:12:47.820 --> 01:12:48.820]  death is.
 
[01:12:48.820 --> 01:12:54.100]  You know we all know the definition of death is almost meaningless in that it changes over
 
[01:12:54.100 --> 01:12:55.100]  time.
 
[01:12:55.100 --> 01:12:58.520]  You're right, a century ago or so or two, if you stopped breathing you were dead.


[01:12:58.520 --> 01:13:00.580]  Now you are not dead at all when you stop breathing.
[01:13:00.580 --> 01:13:06.780]  So death is not a point, it's a process and just because somebody is frozen in the future
[01:13:06.780 --> 01:13:12.220]  doesn't necessarily mean that for all time this person is going to be considered dead.
[01:13:12.220 --> 01:13:16.700]  No but it's also a wild assumption to think that we will just figure out a mechanistic
[01:13:16.700 --> 01:13:25.440]  and feasible ability to re-induce consciousness when we don't understand the emergent property
[01:13:25.440 --> 01:13:26.440]  that is consciousness.
[01:13:26.440 --> 01:13:32.580]  I don't think you need to understand consciousness to thaw out and repair a body and potentially
[01:13:32.580 --> 01:13:33.580]  make it work.
[01:13:33.580 --> 01:13:36.780]  But you're just assuming it will then just become conscious after you do that.
[01:13:36.780 --> 01:13:38.820]  I think that's a pretty good conclusion.
[01:13:38.820 --> 01:13:41.100]  My odds of coming back otherwise are zero.
[01:13:41.100 --> 01:13:45.180]  I'll take fractionally above zero, over zero any day.
[01:13:45.180 --> 01:13:47.420]  And that's a fine, I mean if that's the gamble you're taking that makes sense.
[01:13:47.420 --> 01:13:49.220]  Of course it is, of course it is.
[01:13:49.220 --> 01:13:53.460]  But to really think that it's actually going to happen to me is pseudoscience.
[01:13:53.460 --> 01:13:55.140]  We're not talking about magic here though.
[01:13:55.140 --> 01:14:02.380]  Like if they were going to repair a brain, bring it back up to temperature and actually
[01:14:02.380 --> 01:14:07.740]  have blood pumped to it, if that brain is put together in a way that makes sense from
[01:14:07.740 --> 01:14:12.580]  a neurological perspective, why would we think that that consciousness would be impossible
[01:14:12.580 --> 01:14:13.580]  to achieve?
[01:14:13.580 --> 01:14:17.940]  I mean you're really just trying to build, it is the most complicated thing in the universe,
[01:14:17.940 --> 01:14:20.200]  I'll give you that without a doubt.
[01:14:20.200 --> 01:14:26.620]  The real question is not will we be able to do this because like ever is a very long time.
[01:14:26.620 --> 01:14:31.260]  It's really a matter of how long is it going to take before we can repair the amount of
[01:14:31.260 --> 01:14:33.860]  damage that's going to happen.
[01:14:33.860 --> 01:14:38.780]  And so the better you preserve the body at the front end, the less time it will take
[01:14:38.780 --> 01:14:43.500]  to be able to repair it at the back end in terms of advances in technology.
[01:14:43.500 --> 01:14:48.180]  But to just have a blanket assumption it's not an if, it's a when, I think is a little
[01:14:48.180 --> 01:14:49.180]  overreaching.
[01:14:49.180 --> 01:14:53.940]  There's a lot of assumptions there.
[01:14:53.940 --> 01:14:59.420]  If you assume that human civilization doesn't collapse and it continues indefinitely, then
[01:14:59.420 --> 01:15:04.140]  you know I think it's not unreasonable to say that this technology can happen.
[01:15:04.140 --> 01:15:08.300]  It is very, very difficult but it is not breaking the laws of physics.
[01:15:08.300 --> 01:15:13.300]  There's no theoretical reason why it's impossible, it's just really hard.
[01:15:13.300 --> 01:15:17.420]  It may prove impractical and it may prove that we won't really be able to ever practically
[01:15:17.420 --> 01:15:21.620]  do it or we may find that yeah, we could get the brain working again but like you have
[01:15:21.620 --> 01:15:22.620]  none of your memories.
[01:15:22.620 --> 01:15:29.100]  Like whatever, it's insufficient information for any continuity, that's also totally possible.
[01:15:29.100 --> 01:15:30.420]  I would take that chance.
[01:15:30.420 --> 01:15:39.500]  But how is buying into cryonics then any different than buying into the pseudoscientific snake
[01:15:39.500 --> 01:15:44.740]  oils that we often see sold that do have, that don't fly in the face of physics?
[01:15:44.740 --> 01:15:45.740]  Like what?
[01:15:45.740 --> 01:15:51.260]  It's not like everything that's pseudoscience is pseudoscience simply because it breaks
[01:15:51.260 --> 01:15:52.260]  the laws of physics.
[01:15:52.260 --> 01:15:56.220]  Oh yeah, there's a lot of pseudoscience that doesn't define the laws of physics, they're
[01:15:56.220 --> 01:16:01.060]  just wrong or there's insufficient evidence to, they're making claims that go beyond the
[01:16:01.060 --> 01:16:02.060]  evidence.
[01:16:02.060 --> 01:16:06.660]  And you think that cryonics isn't making claims that go beyond, that's what I'm saying.
[01:16:06.660 --> 01:16:08.020]  This is pseudoscience.
[01:16:08.020 --> 01:16:11.860]  I'm not defending the ROI on cryonics.
[01:16:11.860 --> 01:16:15.380]  But I feel like our tone is very different as a skeptical podcast when we talk about
[01:16:15.380 --> 01:16:16.660]  this kind of stuff.
[01:16:16.660 --> 01:16:19.180]  And it's like, why are we not applying the same skepticism?
[01:16:19.180 --> 01:16:20.180]  I disagree.
[01:16:20.180 --> 01:16:21.860]  I think the tone is very much the same.
[01:16:21.860 --> 01:16:25.380]  Like I'm very careful to always say like, yeah, this is impossible.
[01:16:25.380 --> 01:16:26.460]  This isn't impossible.
[01:16:26.460 --> 01:16:29.700]  This could work, you know, but like we could be being visited by aliens.
[01:16:29.700 --> 01:16:31.660]  There's nothing impossible about that.
[01:16:31.660 --> 01:16:36.000]  There just isn't enough evidence to support it that I'm willing to accept that claim.
[01:16:36.000 --> 01:16:37.000]  That's all.
[01:16:37.000 --> 01:16:39.980]  So I think we're talking about it very similarly.
[01:16:39.980 --> 01:16:44.660]  There isn't any reason why, again, you're talking about the future, all bets are off
[01:16:44.660 --> 01:16:49.340]  and when you're talking about the deep future, especially, we just can't know that.
[01:16:49.340 --> 01:16:54.140]  What I think the real question is, what's the probability that the infrastructure is
[01:16:54.140 --> 01:16:56.860]  going to keep you properly preserved until that?
[01:16:56.860 --> 01:16:57.860]  Yes, it's low.
[01:16:57.860 --> 01:16:59.460]  It's probably damn low.
[01:16:59.460 --> 01:17:02.660]  We may be talking about the far future of what's going to be possible then, but we're
[01:17:02.660 --> 01:17:06.700]  talking about a commercial enterprise right now that people are spending money on.
[01:17:06.700 --> 01:17:07.700]  Yeah, I'm not defending that.
[01:17:07.700 --> 01:17:08.700]  I'm not defending that.
[01:17:08.700 --> 01:17:09.700]  Yeah, of course.
[01:17:09.700 --> 01:17:10.940]  Because to me, this is pseudoscience.
[01:17:10.940 --> 01:17:15.980]  It's like cord blood stuff, it's like all of these different industries that prey on
[01:17:15.980 --> 01:17:20.820]  people's fears and their concerns and then they take their money away from them in the
[01:17:20.820 --> 01:17:23.820]  hopes of giving them some sort of salvation.
[01:17:23.820 --> 01:17:24.820]  That's pseudoscience.
[01:17:24.820 --> 01:17:25.820]  No, I agree.
[01:17:25.820 --> 01:17:27.820]  I mean, I'm not defending crime as an industry.
[01:17:27.820 --> 01:17:31.380]  I just want to make that clear because I don't think that comes across in the conversation.
[01:17:31.380 --> 01:17:33.140]  Well, you're assuming a lot.
[01:17:33.140 --> 01:17:37.980]  We're talking about it theoretically versus this is a good investment of your money.
[01:17:37.980 --> 01:17:39.220]  We're not saying that.
[01:17:39.220 --> 01:17:43.260]  No, and that's great, but I'm saying nobody made that explicit.
[01:17:43.260 --> 01:17:47.940]  And so I'm trying to put myself in the shoes of the listener.
[01:17:47.940 --> 01:17:48.940]  This needs to be made explicit.
[01:17:48.940 --> 01:17:49.940]  Yeah.
[01:17:49.940 --> 01:17:50.940]  Well, we're making it explicit.
[01:17:50.940 --> 01:17:51.940]  Yeah.
[01:17:51.940 --> 01:17:52.940]  I'm just saying.
[01:17:52.940 --> 01:17:53.940]  That's why I'm asking.
[01:17:53.940 --> 01:17:54.940]  That's why I started talking about it.
[01:17:54.940 --> 01:17:56.640]  And for most people, I mean, the ROI absolutely is not there.
[01:17:56.640 --> 01:18:00.780]  You're better off spending your money in other ways, enjoying the life that you have.
[01:18:00.780 --> 01:18:08.940]  You're going to spend $200,000 on a very slim chance of a partial future.
[01:18:08.940 --> 01:18:09.940]  It's not that.
[01:18:09.940 --> 01:18:10.940]  It's not that expensive.
[01:18:10.940 --> 01:18:11.940]  I agree.
[01:18:11.940 --> 01:18:13.260]  You know, I don't disagree.
[01:18:13.260 --> 01:18:20.280]  I'm not going to I'm not going to take money out of my kids' future, you know, to do this.
[01:18:20.280 --> 01:18:27.060]  But but it also and as Steve said, we're talking theoretical here and zero percent chance sucks
[01:18:27.060 --> 01:18:28.260]  and a little bit better than that.
[01:18:28.260 --> 01:18:30.780]  I bought a lotto ticket when it was a billion dollars.
[01:18:30.780 --> 01:18:32.420]  I bought some lotto tickets.
[01:18:32.420 --> 01:18:33.420]  Sure.
[01:18:33.420 --> 01:18:35.380]  It was it was just for fun.
[01:18:35.380 --> 01:18:41.220]  I had no expectation that it was going to work, but there was the there was the possibility
[01:18:41.220 --> 01:18:45.660]  that it could have worked and there was a potential that I could be a billionaire right
[01:18:45.660 --> 01:18:46.660]  now.
[01:18:46.660 --> 01:18:48.940]  And otherwise, I would not have that chance.
[01:18:48.940 --> 01:18:52.540]  So it would to me it was worth, you know, the few dollars that I spent for that for
[01:18:52.540 --> 01:18:56.100]  that chance, which was infinitely greater than zero.
[01:18:56.100 --> 01:18:58.100]  If it gave you five dollars of entertainment, sure.
[01:18:58.100 --> 01:18:59.100]  It did.
[01:18:59.100 --> 01:19:00.100]  Exactly.
[01:19:00.100 --> 01:19:01.100]  That's how you treat it.
[01:19:01.100 --> 01:19:07.340]  But by scientific standards, if something is point one percent chance of being real,
[01:19:07.340 --> 01:19:08.340]  it's for all intents and purposes.
[01:19:08.340 --> 01:19:11.420]  I'm not but I'm not talking about like I'm not talking about winning money.
[01:19:11.420 --> 01:19:13.740]  I'm talking about my life.
[01:19:13.740 --> 01:19:15.460]  So it's kind of, you know, I'll take that.
[01:19:15.460 --> 01:19:17.380]  I'll take a chance.
[01:19:17.380 --> 01:19:20.740]  I think you're creating a little bit of a straw man about how we talk about pseudoscience.
[01:19:20.740 --> 01:19:26.500]  Again, I'm usually very careful to distinguish when I think something is impossible versus
[01:19:26.500 --> 01:19:31.340]  just unlikely versus we don't know and you should stop charging people for claims that
[01:19:31.340 --> 01:19:35.380]  you can't prove or just your claims are not true, whether or not this phenomenon might
[01:19:35.380 --> 01:19:38.020]  be plausible or possible or not.
[01:19:38.020 --> 01:19:41.940]  Anyway, I think, you know, this is just this is on that spectrum.
[01:19:41.940 --> 01:19:45.740]  This is I just think we have to be really careful because I think sometimes we make
[01:19:45.740 --> 01:19:49.660]  the mistake of assuming that the audience remembers.
[01:19:49.660 --> 01:19:50.660]  I agree with that.
[01:19:50.660 --> 01:19:54.260]  And we talked about something, you know, nine months ago or a year and a half.
[01:19:54.260 --> 01:19:55.260]  It is.
[01:19:55.260 --> 01:19:56.260]  It is good to make it explicit.
[01:19:56.260 --> 01:20:00.140]  Because we always get emails where people assume all kinds of things about what we're
[01:20:00.140 --> 01:20:02.140]  saying that we didn't say.
[01:20:02.140 --> 01:20:06.260]  And this is the trick of being a good science communicator, like how much background and
[01:20:06.260 --> 01:20:10.620]  caveats do we throw in on every discussion versus like, this is critical, I want to make
[01:20:10.620 --> 01:20:11.620]  it clear.
[01:20:11.620 --> 01:20:12.620]  This is what we're talking about here.
[01:20:12.620 --> 01:20:17.140]  Yes, this is vanishingly improbable from on many levels.
[01:20:17.140 --> 01:20:20.520]  And it's certainly not the kind of thing I would say is like a good investment.
[01:20:20.520 --> 01:20:25.300]  But and I would definitely ask, you know, make sure that people know exactly what they're
[01:20:25.300 --> 01:20:28.900]  doing, you know, if they're going to, you know, put their money into this, because the
[01:20:28.900 --> 01:20:33.500]  chances are pretty overwhelming that you're going to end up a smelly mess and then have
[01:20:33.500 --> 01:20:36.660]  to be just be buried later.
[01:20:36.660 --> 01:20:41.700]  It's overwhelmingly likely, especially the whole body option as opposed to just the head.
[01:20:41.700 --> 01:20:44.860]  But we'll say like, for a lot of things, like on a theoretical basis, like, again, I do
[01:20:44.860 --> 01:20:47.980]  the space alien things, there's no reason why they can't be visiting us right now.
[01:20:47.980 --> 01:20:49.740]  I just don't think the evidence supports it.
[01:20:49.740 --> 01:20:51.620]  I think it's kind of the same thing.
[01:20:51.620 --> 01:20:52.620]  Yeah.
[01:20:52.620 --> 01:20:53.620]  Like, there's face validity there.
[01:20:53.620 --> 01:20:57.340]  I think this I think this was a good skeptical exercise, this conversation.
[01:20:57.340 --> 01:20:58.340]  Absolutely.
[01:20:58.340 --> 01:20:59.340]  That's why we included it.
[01:20:59.340 --> 01:21:00.340]  Absolutely.
[01:21:00.340 --> 01:21:01.340]  Okay.
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== Who's That Noisy? <small>(1:22:32)</small> ==
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SGU Episode 892
August 13th 2022
892 meteor.jpg

Meteor (artistic rendering)

SGU 891                      SGU 893

Skeptical Rogues
S: Steven Novella

B: Bob Novella

C: Cara Santa Maria

J: Jay Novella

E: Evan Bernstein

Quote of the Week

Death might appear to destroy the meaning in our lives, but in fact it is the very source of our creativity. As Kafka said, "The meaning of life is that it ends." Death is the engine that keeps us running, giving us the motivation to achieve, learn, love, and create.

Caitlin Doughty, American mortician

Links
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Show Notes
Forum Discussion

Introduction, NECSS reflections & plans

Voice-over: You're listening to the Skeptics' Guide to the Universe, your escape to reality.

S: Hello and welcome to the Skeptics' Guide to the Universe. Today is Tuesday, August 9th, 2022, and this is your host, Steven Novella. Joining me this week are Bob Novella...

B: Hey, everybody!

S: Cara Santa Maria...

C: Howdy.

S: Jay Novella...

J: Hey guys.

S: ...and Evan Bernstein.

E: Good evening folks!

S: We have a full boat this week, I think it's been a little bit.

C: Yeah.

E: Yeah.

S: Just coming off of NECSS.

E: NECSS!

S: Yeah, we had a digital, virtual NECSS this year. It was great. I just like that format better. We had way more people than we ever get in person. It's a lot cheaper for everybody. We can get speakers from around the world. I know everyone misses meat space, but I think for a conference where it's just a lot of events where you have panels and discussions and interviews and talks, I think virtual is better. And then if we're going to get together in meat space, we'll do other stuff. We'll figure out more fun stuff that's more geared towards.

B: Yeah, let's absolutely do that. How are we going to get the vegans to a meat space thing? Do we need to rebrand this?

J: I said it during NECSS, like I think our next group thing that we do, we should go back to the Star Trek Museum.

S: We could do that.

J: I know that Cara doesn't.

C: No, but I'll come. I'll come. I still have the dress.

B: The problem, Jay, is that like for like hanging out together, like after outside of the awesome Star Trek sets. Where do you go? I mean, it's kind of like, I mean, we haven't been in that area in what, half a decade more?

J: Well, we could rent it. We could rent a hotel space and we could do a live show and then we could do a meet and greet and hang out that night we could just have it be a big social day.

C: Or maybe we rent the whole Star Trek museum and then we just like play games and stuff in the museum.

E: Oh my gosh. Will they let us do that?

S: Yeah. Well, wherever we do it, I think we need to just be open minded about what we're going to do. Having shows extravaganza, play games do like music or whatever, do stuff that's more fun, more casual and to have a lot of social interaction. That's what people want. They don't necessarily go to a conference so they could sit and listen to a lecture that they could listen at their leisure online and then stop and pause and whatever, it's just a it's just a better way to consume information if that's if that's what you're after. If you're after the social stuff, we'll do other stuff, more fun stuff, more social stuff.

B: Don't forget to include the drinking.

S: For some people.

C: Steve. That's spoken like a true college student. I love it. I just love it. This is the new way.

S: People are saying I missed in-person conference. What do you miss about it? Do you miss sitting in a room with a bunch of people listening to talks? No, that's not why you're doing that now in your living room. They're missed the other stuff. So let's just give them that.

B: Yeah, let's do it.

J: Don't forget, though, speaking about NECSS, if you didn't know, you could listen to NECSS. Actually, I think the last three NECSSes are still available if you're interested. But if you want to listen to this year's, if you buy tickets right now, if you go to NECSS.org, you could still listen to it, you have months or years to watch it. And I got to tell you, the keynote was particularly good this year. I was actually, I listened to the full thing three times and there's more information I get out of it each time I listen to it because Bill Nye and David Copperfield had a really cool longer than an hour conversation with each other that went to a lot of different places.

B: Yeah, Jay, it was good.

J: It was a lot of fun. And the other thing was, was that this year George said something to me when we were talking about the conference after we did it on Saturday and he's like, yeah, I just feel like we're giving people speakers that they haven't met before. It's not the same old, same old people like we're giving you like brand new people that you've never heard from before. And that's true. I really appreciate that because after going to how many skeptical conferences, guys, maybe 100 at this point, all said and done. There's like a cast of characters there that you see and it's great from a friendship perspective. But if you want to learn about something new and get into other people's minds and understand the type of research that they're doing, I think we deliver very strongly like brand new voices. So please do, if you're interested, go to NECSS.org and you can still get tickets to that conference. It's just available online streaming like anything else.

S: We're talking about doing, a rewatching of it, where we're going to be there live to do a highlight, talk about some of the best things, maybe even combine best of the last couple of, or even all three digital NECSSes but where they're live to do chats and everything again, get some online stuff going. So we're talking about that. I'm not committing to it cause we haven't put it on the calendar yet, but that's a solid idea that there were that we're working on. But in the meantime, you could watch the whole thing beginning to end. It's a very similar experience to having watched it live cause it's all online.

Guest Rogue's 50th Birthday (5:15)

J: So Steve, a listener of the show named Justin Fisher wrote me an email asking that we say happy 50th birthday to one of his friends, Carl Gerhardt back in episode─

S: I'm afraid we can't do that.

J:(laughs) it's Episode 402.

E: 402?

J: He was a guest on the show and he has been a long, long, long time fan and listener of the show.

S: All right. I guess we could do it.

J: Yeah. So I would say happy birthday. He's 50. It's a 50th birthday. We're not going to say happy birthday to everybody. But 50 years is a huge─

S: Arbitrary round number, sure.

J: It's an important. Basically once you hit 50, like your younger life is officially over. You know what I mean?

S: Is that the hill? We're at the top of the hill? Is that what you're saying?

J: It is. So anyway, Carl, happy birthday, man. I know what it's like to be in the fifties (Evan laughs) and you just gotta eat less and try to enjoy it.

E: Well, happy birthday, Carl.

Special Report: USA's New Climate Change Bill (6:10)

S: All right guys. So we have to talk about this again. We don't want to talk about really the politics of this, more of the strategy of this. The US passed really its first climate mitigation bill pretty much ever. At least in decades.

C: Definitely the most kind of intensive one.

S: Oh yeah. Billions of dollars. For climate mitigation. And I actually really like what the approach they took, which we'll get into in a second. But I think this is, it's good to point out, Bob, that it's not hopeless and that if we keep plugging away I think it's important that we don't, fall into nihilism because that's self-defeating. So in a way, sort of that nihilistic approach can be as bad as denialism because at the end of the day, it's we're doing nothing. That's the end result.

E: Perfection is not the enemy of good.

S: Yeah. And again, there's yeah, this certainly isn't a perfect bill. It doesn't do everything we'd want it to do. But it's a huge win. And I think we should be very happy about it. The big picture here is that this is the inflation reduction bill, which is really not primarily about inflation reduction. That's kind of a side thing. But that's how they're marketing. That's how politics works in the US. But it is primarily a health care expansion and climate change mitigation bill is like the primary pieces of it. But the approach that they're taking and this is what Biden said he was going to do. It's the carrot, not the stick. So it's rather than trying to reduce fossil fuel production or have disincentives for fossil fuel. It's all focused on incentives for transitioning to a green economy.

B: Yeah, that's good. It'll help.

S: So it's money for, yeah, absolutely. It's money for buying electric vehicles for green energy, for energy efficiency, for industry to transition, even like steel and cement industry, agricultural industry transitioning to cleaner processes.

E: Any nuclear in there?

S: Yeah, apparently it contains a subsidy for existing nuclear power, 30 billion dollars over the next 10 years. So this definitely could help support the nuclear industry. Now, what I like about this approach is when you think about it, I think it makes more economic sense because if you think about what's our goal, our goal is to get to a transportation and energy infrastructure that is all green. That's not producing greenhouse gases and therefore means, no fossil fuel. You could, if you get there through a pathway that emphasizes or begins with trying to reduce fossil fuel, that's going to increase energy costs and be bad for the economy and what are we going to replace it with. But if you just reduce the demand for fossil fuels by pushing them aside with alternatives with green energy, then energy costs go down and everybody's happy. It's a much more politically feasible and much more logical path to take. And also I think there's an interesting question in the middle of this and so I think everyone's pretty much in favor of subsidies for green energy and electric vehicles and all that sort of stuff. It's like hard to argue against that realistically, obviously there's politicians will find some reason to oppose it, but there's no real, I think, negative thing to say about it. But there is a thing, there's a real debate about whether or not we should be having policies designed to increase the cost of fossil fuel or to decrease the cost of fossil fuel. And here are the two arguments. You want to increase the cost of fossil fuel, then that motivates people to drive less by more fuel efficient cars or switch over to electric or get off their natural gas supply or whatever. And there's certainly some evidence that that happens, but that of course is focusing on the consumer. But the problem is that is a massive incentive for the fossil fuel industry to continue to produce fossil fuels because they're getting more money for it. It's a more valuable commodity.

C: Well, unless it's a tax.

S: But even then.

C: You're not actually increasing the cost to the, the fossil fuel industry doesn't get the money, the government gets the money.

S: Yeah, but they just pass that tax on to the consumer, right?

C: Right, that's true.

S: And then they still get their money. Otherwise, if you reduce the cost of fossil fuels, maybe initially people might loosen up. But again, if you're doing that at the same time, you're really pushing for alternatives that are even cheaper, then what happens is you reduce the value of fossil fuel. And the argument goes, that's a really great way to have to incentivize companies to leave it in the ground because it's not worth anything anymore.

C: Well, it depends on how you're reducing the cost, because right now we do reduce the cost of fossil fuel by giving these companies tax breaks.

S: That's not the way to do it, but specifically by reducing demand. And you're reducing demand by promoting electric cars and solar power and wind power and nuclear power and all that stuff. So I don't know. I think this is kind of what I've been arguing for a while, is that we want the win-win. And I think the win-win here is let's just develop the crap out of green infrastructure energy, transportation and industries like steel and cement are the big ones. And the rest will kind of take care of itself.

C: But the problem is we're not coming from a neutral place. We're already incentivizing fossil fuel. So we have to stop incentivizing fossil fuel before we can be in that neutral place where there's it's either a yes or no.

J: Yeah. I agree.

B: Yeah, it's true cost is like would be shocking to most people.

C: Yeah.

S: Right, right, right. Absolutely. And what we don't want to do is increase the profitability for the fossil fuel industry.

C: We absolutely don't want to do that.

S: Because that's what's happening now.

C: Yeah, we are already. You're right. We are incentivizing it and we are increasing the profitability. So it's making it harder for these companies. You remember there was a time when Exxon was like, hi, we're going to be the alternative fuel people. But it wasn't worth it to them. They decided not to go that route. That was their company's plan and they chose not to because it wasn't financially worth it to them. That was a big misstep.

B: How long ago was that?

C: The 80s, I think.

S: 90s?

C: Late 80s, early 90s.

B: Too soon, I guess. It was not in the cards at this point.

C: No it was─

S: Technology wasn't there?

C: ─a lot of policy failures.

B: Well, yeah. But also the technology was like in a zygote phase.

C: No, but that's what they wanted to do. They wanted to be the people who did that technology.

S: Which would have been [inaudible].

B: Imagine if they ran with that shit and really put some money into. Oh boy.

S: But the good thing is the technology did advance in the background. Right?

'B: Sure.

S: As we say, battery technology is better, solar technology is better, wind technology is better, nuclear technology is better─

B: Fusion is getting there.

S: ─and the electric vehicles are, yeah, that'd be nice. Electric vehicles now are just a completely different story than they were in the 90s.

C: It's like the technology is there, you're right, and it's getting there, but the corporate heavy-hittedness isn't there. When you think about─

S: But that's what this bill does, right? It basically─

C: When you think about BP and Exxon, it's like what do we have, Tesla? That's the closest thing we can even come up to that's like a heavy hitter like that in the green space.

S: Yeah, but this package gives incentives for all the auto companies to switch over to electric. To accelerate that transition. Right now there's more demand than supply of electric vehicles. So if we give the car companies money to rapidly switch over their manufacturing to electric vehicles, the demand is already there. And then we actually further increase the demand by giving incentives to the consumer for buying electric vehicles. So the idea is that we're at sort of a tipping point and we're just going to give it a huge push and then the dominoes are going to fall. So I hope that this approach works. I think it will. I think it's a good way to go. There's definitely more that could be done, but the other thing politically, because it's happening─

B: Yeah, how did they pull this off?

S: They got Manchin and Sinema on board and that's all it took.

C: Yeah we just needed [inaudible].

S: So here's the thing. This is how they got Manchin on board. They said, we'll increase drilling on federal land, onshore and offshore drilling, which may [sounds of disapproval] but I don't think that's a bad thing. I don't think that matters. It's not because, first of all, in the very current geopolitical climate, reducing the profitability of Russian oil is a good thing. And the thing is, until we reduce demand by replacing it, people are going to burn the fossil fuel anyway. I actually don't think it's a problem.

C: That's not why Manchin wanted this.

S: I know, but who cares? My point is, I will take this deal any day. If you tie increased leasing, first of all, it's only 10% of leasing, so who cares? But if you want to tie that to subsidies for green energy, I'll take that deal every day because I think in the long run, that pathway is going to get us the quickest to where we want to be. And trying to choke off fossil fuel in the short term is not going to get us there. It's actually going to create a backlash against green technology because all people are going to see I'm spending more money and the economy is in a slowdown or whatever. We want to make it politically a positive thing. We want it to be that in a year or two, just like with Obamacare after a couple of years, at first it was a backlash, then it was like the politics shifted.

C: And then it's like, please don't take this away from me.

S: Don't take this away. Again, it's the same thing. Once people see the health benefits and the price benefits and the energy independence and that electric vehicles are actually awesome, once that happens, then who's going to be the winner? It's going to be a political juggernaut. That's what we need.

B: Smart.

S: So this may be a domino, both in industry, politically, scientifically. So we will see. I'm trying to be optimistic and obviously we could be disappointed, but I think first of all, it's better than the stagnation and the nothing that we had.

C: Oh, for sure.

B: Absolutely. Do something. Please.

S: There's a lot of good reasons to think that this is actually a good, solid approach. I'm very happy with it.

C: Sorry to ask a kind of naive question. I know that you dug deep into this, Steve, or you've been digging deep into it. So I'm curious if you have insights on this. Is there anything in this package bill, whatever we're calling it, that gets around or helps at least to somewhat mitigate the problem that part of the reason that our electric car supply and demand is so off is because of these supply chain issues, because we kind of screwed the pooch when it comes to the actual base technology that we need to make these batteries? And we're sort of in China's vice right now. Is there anything in here that's going to help us with that?

S: Well, I think there's a separate bill the CHIPS Act, which is going to try to increase the chip manufacturing in the U.S., and that is one of the main supply chain log jams for electric cars. So that's a separate bill, but that actually will help the problem. There's a lot in here under so-called energy justice, like trying to make sure that the benefits are spread out and and reach people of different socioeconomic status. I didn't see anything in there specifically to say and we're going to maintain battery independence. But yet I'm not worried about that, because as we discussed a few weeks ago, there's like a million years worth of lithium in the oceans.

C: And so we just got to scale that up.

S: It's actually there.

B: But you didn't read the news, Steve. China grabbed all of it.

S: All of the million years worth of lithium?

B: Just happened last week.

S: And the technology exists. We could do it now. It's just a matter of how much it costs. So if China tries to choke it off, say, OK, screw it, we've got all that we need right here.

C: Gotcha. OK. So that's not like a big brick wall.

S: There's no obstacle.

C: Big, big brick wall.

S: There's no obstacle for us getting to our goal.

C: Well, there are obstacles, but there's none that we can't overcome. But I mean, there are no technological obstacles or resource obstacles. There's just political obstacles. And this, I think, massively overcame those political obstacles. And I think if it works, it'll snowball. I think that's the idea. And again like the naysayers say, oh, the United States is only one piece of the pie. And if we don't do anything about China and India and these other countries, then we're not doing anything. It's like, yeah, but a lot of this is research and development and industrial change. And the United States is still the biggest economy in the world by far. It still dwarfs even China. And if this will, first of all, give us the moral leadership saying, hey, we're doing our bit. We passed the big law. We're spending the money. We're doing it. So it puts a lot of pressure on our allies. And also, this makes us more competitive in the green energy space. That has massive downstream effects as well. So the idea is that this will have implications far beyond America's shores when it comes to green energy. And again, that's all extremely plausible. Very encouraging. It's like the only real encouraging climate news in decades. And we'll see how it goes. And it's 100% going to pass, which is good. All right. Let's click over to some regular news items.

News Items

The Physics of Meteors (19:57)

S: Jay, you're going to start us off with the physics of meteors.

J: Steve, are you aware that meteors are affected by gravity just like everything else on the planet?

S: Oh yeah.

E: Oh, my gosh.

C: You mean off the planet?

J: I'm just kidding.

E: You mean mass has gravity? Oh, my gosh.

J: I mean, this is new, Ev. It's new. This is like the new physics. They're talking about gravity and how everything is affected by gravity.

E: Slow down there, Einstein.

J: So the question is that the researchers were asking is how does a part of a meteor make it all the way to the surface of the Earth? What determines what parts of the meteor actually make it to the surface, if at all? Is it like a piece that falls off early on, or what's the story behind the whole thing? And you would think that because most meteors are small, when you have something enter the Earth's atmosphere from outer space, lots of stuff is entering the Earth's atmosphere all the time. It's essentially sand and dirt and very, very small things that burn up immediately. I guess most things do burn up in the atmosphere, but some are big enough to get down or pieces of it to get down to the surface. Peter Jenaskins of the SETI Institute and NASA Ames Research Center set out to find some answers about what actually happens to meteorites or meteors as they're coming down. They decided to find meteorites that came from an asteroid that was originally detected back in 2008. And that asteroid is called, I mean, this always makes me laugh, I think of you, Bob. It's called TC3. They need to read more science fiction. They got to name these things something cool, something catchy.

E: Well, at least there's only three characters on those really long ones that nobody will ever remember.

C: But just roll them into a word. Like if it's TC3, call it like Tech 3 or Tri-Tech or something. Like turn it into something more memorable.

J: But what do they call it? The Wolfbiter 7.

E: I like that.

J: Sounds provocative. So this bad boy was six meters long, and it was actually detected by scientists. They're scanning outer space all the time to try to find asteroids and things that are flying by the Earth. And they found this guy, and they had some time to study it before it entered the Earth's atmosphere. Now, this one came down and ended up breaking apart over the Nubian desert of Sudan. And what they did was they got some research students to go to the site and to turn the site into a grid. So when it enters the Earth's atmosphere and it's traveling, not horizontally and not vertically, it's just coming down on an angle. And it could cover a lot of area, that pathway as it comes down. And it's shedding stuff the entire time. So they wanted to figure out, let's try to find samples of pretty much everything that fell off of this asteroid meteor as it was coming down. So they had tons of students go, and they were looking for samples. They found over 600 meteorites, which is a lot, by the way. They all varied in size, but nothing was bigger than, say, the size of a fist. So as the meteor was coming down, it was shedding parts of itself. And the researchers found that the larger pieces, the largest pieces that came off of this, the fist-sized ones that I mentioned, they were more spread out and they were farther down the pathway that the meteor took than the smaller ones, meaning that they were farther away from the path of the incoming meteor. Does that make sense? So the smaller particles would come off and they would basically fall in line with the pathway of the meteor. But the larger ones that happened towards the end were kind of like blown away. And it's all the physics of what happened.

E: So they take a different trajectory? They don't follow the same path, is that what you're saying?

J: They went perpendicular to the path of the meteor at the very end.

B: Was it from an air burst?

J: Kind of, yeah. Let me explain to you what they say and what the physics is that they're talking about. So because this meteor was initially tracked, they knew what size and shape it was. And they used the information that they had to be able to make a computer model to simulate the asteroid entering the Earth's atmosphere and its meteoric descent, using something called 3D hydrodynamic modeling. Now, this is typically used for, you would think, water. But air molecules behave like water in a lot of ways. And they can use this software to do modeling when things are moving through the atmosphere. So they were able to recreate the motion of the meteor as it tumbled around and melted and broke apart when it was coming into the Earth's atmosphere. And there's another important part of this. Scientists actually observed the actual meteor itself as it came down the day that it happened. And they recorded details about its brightness and the dust clouds it was leaving behind and the altitude at which these things were happening. So this information was factored into the simulation. And you'd be surprised at how damn accurate this simulation was at painting the story of where and when things fell off, especially when they added in the information of the debris field that was left under the pathway of the meteor as it came down. And they got a pretty clear picture of what was going on with this thing. So one cool thing they figured out was that because the meteor was coming in at a very high speed, it created a near vacuum wake in the Earth's atmosphere. So the first pieces that broke off came off from the sides of the asteroid slash meteor. And these pieces mostly moved into the vacuum that was created. And then after they entered that vacuum space, they fell down to the ground straight. They deaccelerated and fell down pretty much at regular speed like dirt and sand falling out of the air. The larger pieces that broke off mostly fell much further down the path of the descending meteor like I told you. So as the meteor is coming down, the air pressure becomes so high that it actually dramatically increases the heat on the front side of the meteor. So what they found, and this is so interesting, is that the backside of the meteor, however, did not get as hot and was not anywhere nearly as affected by the heat as the other parts of the meteor, that front leading edge in the front face of the meteor was really affected by the heat. It starts to melt, literally melts as it's coming down with that intense heat that's coming. So you have this the air pressure that builds up and creates that intense heat in the front. And then you have this vacuum that's being created like on the sides and partly behind. It's a really complicated collection of different types of physics happening all at the same time. So they were able to determine that the front leading edge of the meteor was the part that received the most heat from the compression of the air. While the back side and particularly the back bottom side was not as hot. Now, of course, what an important factor here is because of the the shape of this particular meteor, it wasn't tumbling as much. It tumbled more early on and then it kind of stabilized and it retained a relative position. So there was an extraordinarily different amount of heat in the front than the back of the meteor. And that is very important to the physics of what was what's about to take place here. Now towards the end of its journey, larger pieces now came flying apart in the final collapse. So as it's getting down into the atmosphere, there was this final collapse that happens where the whole thing just broke apart. And that's when the really large pieces, the fifth side pieces came off of this. And like I said, they they weren't following the normal trajectory. They got shot out to the sides because of what happened with all the air pressure and all of the heat and everything. And that final collapse, these pieces just came shooting out of this area where it had its final kind of like an explosion, you could say. Now here's another really interesting thing about what happens to asteroids and and ways that scientists will take advantage of these things. Asteroids are hit with cosmic rays as they travel through space and they all have low levels of radiation. The farther inside the asteroid you go, the less and less radiation is being absorbed. So by analyzing the meteorites, they were able to determine that the interior parts of the meteor did not survive the descent.

C: Oh that's cool.

J: They were not the protected part. It's the backside that's protected because it had radiation. And when they compared it to pieces that they did find with with lower radiation, they were able to determine that the majority of the material that was ejected from this as it came down was from the backside.

B: Interesting.

J: Now that I've educated you guys about it pretty complicated report that I read, but it was extraordinarily complicated and they get into literally mathematical formulas about what's going on and everything. And of course, I can't get into all of that. So this is this is a quick overview that I just thought was very interesting. But then I just decided, let me look up some some fun facts that I could share with you guys about meteors. Are you ready?

E: Fun facts about meatballs. Ready.

J: Every day. Next episode Ev. Every day, Earth is bombarded with more than how many tons of dust and sand sized particles?

S: Tons on a million.

J: Anybody else?

E: A million? A million tons?

B: 10,000.

E: I'll say 10,005.

J: It's actually 100 tons, which is a lot.

E: Bob's closest.

B: I win!

J: It's a lot. Yeah. You add zeroes. You take away zeros. These are hard numbers to guess. About once a year, an automobile sized asteroid hits Earth's atmosphere. It creates an impressive fireball and then burns up before reaching the surface. In that situation, it could be tumbling like crazy and everything gets burned up because everything gets hot and explosive and then turns into dust and sand at that point. Every 2000 years or so, a meteoroid the size of a football field hits Earth and causes significant damage to the area that it hits. Only once every few million years, an object large enough to threaten Earth civilization comes along. Impact craters on Earth and the moon and other planetary bodies are evidence of these occurrences. So we know that they happen. We know that they're super rare. Please don't worry about it. We're also watching the skies now, but it does happen. Space rocks smaller than about 25 meters or about 82 feet will most likely burn up as they enter the Earth's atmosphere and cause little or no damage. 25 meters, that's a pretty big chunk of rock if you think about it, and our atmosphere is there to protect us. If a rocky meteoroid larger than 25 meters but smaller than one kilometer, a little more than half a mile, were to hit Earth, it would likely cause local damage to the impact area. And we believe anything larger than one to two kilometers or one kilometer is a little more than a half a mile could have worldwide effects. So it would take an extraordinarily large piece of rock that we would most definitely see coming and we probably have time to deal with it.

B: Well. If it's coming out of the Sun, if it's coming from that direction, I mean, I'm just saying it's not a no brainer that we wouldn't miss it. We're not perfectly observing all possibilities. We still have meteoroids that kind of look it, there it goes. Didn't see it coming, but there it goes. That still happens.

E: See you again in 5,000 years.

J: Bob I'm trying to make people feel good. And you're harshing our mellow over here how about this? When we went to the museum in New Zealand, we got to smell a meteorite. And what, guys, do you remember what it smelled like?

E: Burning or something.

B: It's a cam and Swiss?

J: No, it smelled like a barbecue. It had definitely had─

E: Burning, OK, yeah.

J: ─almost an umami kind of smell to it. Very interesting to think that little particles of that were coming off and we were breathing them in and getting a smell of outer space in us.

B: Yeah, right?

E: Yeah. From a long time ago too.

B: I liked it.

[commercial brake]

New Kind of Motion (33:38)

[33:38.560 --> 33:44.160] All right, Bob, you're going to tell us about a new kind of motion that defies the laws

[33:44.160 --> 33:45.160] of physics.

[33:45.160 --> 33:46.160] What?

[33:46.160 --> 33:49.320] Well, kind of, but this is cool.

[33:49.320 --> 33:52.880] Researchers claim that by studying movement on curved spaces, that it's possible to create

[33:52.880 --> 33:57.240] a type of movement in a way that has never been seen before.

[33:57.240 --> 34:01.760] Now, this was recently published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[34:01.760 --> 34:06.600] Researchers were led by Zeb Rocklin, assistant professor in the School of Physics at Georgia

[34:06.600 --> 34:07.600] Tech.

[34:07.600 --> 34:08.600] Okay.

[34:08.600 --> 34:14.200] This one is a bit of a loin girding scenario, so I'll lead with a quote from the researchers'

[34:14.200 --> 34:19.400] pre-print archive paper from January 2022, and I'm going to use that because it's ironically

[34:19.400 --> 34:22.840] better than their opening for their published paper.

[34:22.840 --> 34:28.640] So they said, locomotion by shape changes, spermatozoan swimming, snakes leathering,

[34:28.640 --> 34:35.120] bird flapping, or gas expulsion, rocket firing, is assumed to require environmental interaction

[34:35.120 --> 34:36.840] due to conservation of momentum.

[34:36.840 --> 34:39.060] All right, that's a huge point.

[34:39.060 --> 34:43.760] What this means is that for locomotion to occur, momentum has a critical role to play

[34:43.760 --> 34:46.840] as well as the environmental forces like friction, right?

[34:46.840 --> 34:47.840] Think about it.

[34:47.840 --> 34:52.680] Without them, especially like thinking of friction as well, specifically walking or

[34:52.680 --> 34:57.360] slithering or flapping, you're not going to go anywhere, you're not going to get anywhere.

[34:57.360 --> 34:59.800] Momentum also plays a critical role.

[34:59.800 --> 35:04.720] Now, this exchange of momentum, it seems obvious and has been a general assumption for quite

[35:04.720 --> 35:07.600] a long time until the early aughts.

[35:07.600 --> 35:09.840] Is anybody even still using that word anymore?

[35:09.840 --> 35:10.840] Aughts?

[35:10.840 --> 35:11.840] I almost never hear it.

[35:11.840 --> 35:12.840] Don't think so.

[35:12.840 --> 35:13.840] Not in 20 years or so.

[35:13.840 --> 35:20.800] The early 2000s, when some scientists named Wisdom, Guérin, and Avron claimed that locomotion

[35:20.800 --> 35:27.520] does not require this interaction with the environment if it happens in curved space-time

[35:27.520 --> 35:32.080] or even in earthbound curved surfaces.

[35:32.080 --> 35:36.600] So this assumption that you're going to have this interaction, you know, this exchange

[35:36.600 --> 35:42.980] of momentum and utilizing forces like friction, that assumption, they claim, is not warranted

[35:42.980 --> 35:49.280] in a special situation where there's a curved space-time or earthbound curved surfaces.

[35:49.280 --> 35:50.280] Okay.

[35:50.280 --> 35:52.600] Now, many scientists didn't believe this exception.

[35:52.600 --> 35:55.420] They thought, no way, that can't be right.

[35:55.420 --> 35:56.920] They didn't think it existed.

[35:56.920 --> 36:01.700] And now, these most recent researchers claim that they've actually demonstrated this effect

[36:01.700 --> 36:05.380] for the first time using a robotic apparatus.

[36:05.380 --> 36:08.420] They describe this apparatus in their paper in this way.

[36:08.420 --> 36:14.160] Here we show that a precision robo-physical apparatus consisting of motors driven on curved

[36:14.160 --> 36:20.360] tracks and thereby confined to a spherical surface without a solid substrate.

[36:20.360 --> 36:24.760] Now, if you think that description is hard to picture, I saw a video of this thing and

[36:24.760 --> 36:27.160] I'm still not sure exactly what the hell was going on.

[36:27.160 --> 36:29.880] I mean, it's like, wait, what?

[36:29.880 --> 36:31.480] And it gave me two angles.

[36:31.480 --> 36:35.360] So all right, so from what I could gather, the hardest thing about this apparatus was

[36:35.360 --> 36:39.920] that they had to isolate it from the environmental forces as much as possible, right, because

[36:39.920 --> 36:45.920] they needed to remove the possibility of conservation of momentum or environmental forces like friction

[36:45.920 --> 36:46.920] from playing a part.

[36:46.920 --> 36:49.280] They wanted to subtract that possibility.

[36:49.280 --> 36:54.240] So in this case, they minimized the effect of gravity and friction to as close as zero

[36:54.240 --> 36:55.240] as possible.

[36:55.240 --> 37:01.320] And then once they did that, it allowed for this subtle effect to appear in their robo-physical

[37:01.320 --> 37:02.320] apparatus.

[37:02.320 --> 37:03.320] Robo-physical.

[37:03.320 --> 37:05.440] And that's a word never heard before.

[37:05.440 --> 37:07.640] I'm not sure what I think about it yet, but okay.

[37:07.640 --> 37:08.640] Sorry.

[37:08.640 --> 37:14.000] The result, which has never been observed before, was that from a system, the system

[37:14.000 --> 37:18.560] that they created had zero momentum, nothing, no momentum.

[37:18.560 --> 37:24.120] And from that, they were able to generate a forward movement of a tenth of a centimeter

[37:24.120 --> 37:25.640] per gate cycle.

[37:25.640 --> 37:31.800] Not amazingly fast, but it came from a zero momentum system and it accomplished this even

[37:31.800 --> 37:36.600] while it still had to resist the tiny amounts of gravity and friction that remained in the

[37:36.600 --> 37:37.600] system.

[37:37.600 --> 37:42.600] You know, the minute pieces of that that they couldn't fully remove.

[37:42.600 --> 37:48.200] And even though it had to resist it, it still had this forward movement that was created

[37:48.200 --> 37:50.800] kind of from nothing in a sense.

[37:50.800 --> 37:55.380] So the summary in their paper said, we have experimentally realized and theoretically

[37:55.380 --> 38:01.520] characterized the movement of a robot through a curved spherical space without relying on

[38:01.520 --> 38:05.680] any momentum or reliance on environmental forces to translate.

[38:05.680 --> 38:11.960] In contrast with all other observed systems, this has never been observed before.

[38:11.960 --> 38:17.360] And I mean, it's not really from nothing, but I mean, that's one interpretation that

[38:17.360 --> 38:19.200] some people are saying.

[38:19.200 --> 38:20.360] But I mean, look at the paper.

[38:20.360 --> 38:21.360] It's like, damn, man.

[38:21.360 --> 38:26.560] You know, obviously a lot of that was super technical and I'd like to see what some other

[38:26.560 --> 38:27.560] scientists make of it.

[38:27.560 --> 38:29.880] So, all right, so what do we make of this?

[38:29.880 --> 38:33.360] What can something like this even accomplish if it's further developed?

[38:33.360 --> 38:34.880] What's the future of something like this?

[38:34.880 --> 38:39.360] You know, and of course it's hard to say, but this could get potentially very, very

[38:39.360 --> 38:40.360] interesting.

[38:40.360 --> 38:45.340] Now they say that their apparatus can be used as a test bed to reveal other types of this

[38:45.340 --> 38:51.880] very exotic behavior on curved surfaces related to, for example, nonlinear effects or collective

[38:51.880 --> 38:52.960] behavior.

[38:52.960 --> 38:58.160] And we know, you know, nonlinear effects and collective behavior, to me, that's like, wow.

[38:58.160 --> 39:02.960] You know, those are scenarios where you can see amazing stuff like collective behavior.

[39:02.960 --> 39:07.040] I mean, we see emergent behavior coming from collective behavior.

[39:07.040 --> 39:11.320] Nonlinear effects can also, as we know, produce some very, very interesting things.

[39:11.320 --> 39:16.880] Now researchers say that this curvature induced effect may have some practical importance.

[39:16.880 --> 39:21.400] They compare it to, for example, the small frequency shift that's caused by gravity that

[39:21.400 --> 39:24.520] became critical for GPS satellite systems to work so well.

[39:24.520 --> 39:29.600] So they compare it, you know, as an analogy, something that was subtle and small having,

[39:29.600 --> 39:33.200] you know, an outsized impact potentially in the future.

[39:33.200 --> 39:38.240] Now they say this research relates to the so-called impossible engine study, right?

[39:38.240 --> 39:39.240] Remember that?

[39:39.240 --> 39:41.480] That's that so-called EM drive nonsense.

[39:41.480 --> 39:42.480] Now that got a little nervous.

[39:42.480 --> 39:43.480] Propellantless rocket.

[39:43.480 --> 39:44.480] Yeah.

[39:44.480 --> 39:45.480] Yeah.

[39:45.480 --> 39:46.480] I got nervous when I read that, like, whoa, wait, what?

[39:46.480 --> 39:48.720] Well, you're comparing this to that baloney?

[39:48.720 --> 39:53.440] So but lead scientist Rocklin said, its creator claimed that it could move forward without

[39:53.440 --> 39:54.780] any propellant.

[39:54.780 --> 40:00.640] That engine was indeed impossible, but because space time is very slightly curved, a device

[40:00.640 --> 40:05.800] could actually move forward without any external forces or emitting a propellant.

[40:05.800 --> 40:09.160] A novel discovery as a hell of a sentence right there.

[40:09.160 --> 40:12.000] So can a rocket be created like that?

[40:12.000 --> 40:14.200] No external forces or propellant emission.

[40:14.200 --> 40:17.280] Steve, Jay, do we need a new chapter in our future book?

[40:17.280 --> 40:18.280] That's rhetorical.

[40:18.280 --> 40:19.280] Don't answer it.

[40:19.280 --> 40:20.280] Well, okay.

[40:20.280 --> 40:24.600] So I'm of course, I'm skeptical at this point, you know, if their experiment and their interpretation

[40:24.600 --> 40:32.200] is solid, I suspect, you know, my luck, this will just remain, you know, a laboratory curiosity.

[40:32.200 --> 40:33.200] But who knows?

[40:33.200 --> 40:37.160] There's already talk of this potentially being used on a spacecraft in the future at some

[40:37.160 --> 40:42.960] potential point that can move around the incredibly curved space around a black hole.

[40:42.960 --> 40:49.280] Just using, you know, curved space time to actually move without needing propellant or

[40:49.280 --> 40:52.340] even, you know, laser sails or any of that stuff.

[40:52.340 --> 40:53.340] Who knows?

[40:53.340 --> 40:57.520] For me, that sounds a little magical still at this point, but their experiment is their

[40:57.520 --> 41:02.960] experiment and I can't wait to see, you know, what other scientists say about, you know,

[41:02.960 --> 41:05.600] what they did and what their interpretation of it is.

[41:05.600 --> 41:07.160] So I'm going to definitely be following this one.

[41:07.160 --> 41:08.160] Yeah.

[41:08.160 --> 41:13.880] That's one of those game changers that would render a huge chunk of our book completely

[41:13.880 --> 41:14.880] obsolete.

[41:14.880 --> 41:15.880] Oh my gosh.

[41:15.880 --> 41:16.880] Right.

[41:16.880 --> 41:17.880] Yeah.

[41:17.880 --> 41:24.600] If there's any, if there's any way to translate, you know, energy or motion, whatever, into

[41:24.600 --> 41:29.760] linear acceleration without external force or propellant, because those are really the

[41:29.760 --> 41:34.360] only two methods, that is a complete game changer.

[41:34.360 --> 41:39.800] So, you know, then, you know, then interstellar space travel becomes massively more feasible.

[41:39.800 --> 41:43.160] Well, let's hope it doesn't happen for a few years at least then.

[41:43.160 --> 41:47.920] I'm assuming it's, you know, I mean, even that, remember what they, what they've achieved

[41:47.920 --> 41:48.920] in the laboratory.

[41:48.920 --> 41:51.280] This was, you know, a 10th of a centimeter.

[41:51.280 --> 41:52.280] Now sure.

[41:52.280 --> 41:53.280] It doesn't matter.

[41:53.280 --> 41:54.280] It's a testament.

[41:54.280 --> 41:55.280] It doesn't, it doesn't matter.

[41:55.280 --> 41:56.280] But that really doesn't matter.

[41:56.280 --> 41:57.280] It doesn't necessarily.

[41:57.280 --> 41:58.280] Yeah.

[41:58.280 --> 42:00.720] The fact that that it happened is, is kind of big.

[42:00.720 --> 42:02.160] It is absolutely big.

[42:02.160 --> 42:06.080] But translating that to the possibility, it might be the situation where, yup, this is

[42:06.080 --> 42:07.200] absolutely real.

[42:07.200 --> 42:12.200] It happens, but you, you know, you would need infinite energy to translate it into a rocket

[42:12.200 --> 42:16.400] that could, that could travel in, you know, in a interstellar in a way that would actually

[42:16.400 --> 42:17.400] be beneficial.

[42:17.400 --> 42:20.080] That, that, that's what I suspect it would happen.

[42:20.080 --> 42:21.080] But who knows?

[42:21.080 --> 42:22.780] This could be, you know, pie in the sky.

[42:22.780 --> 42:27.800] This could be like the future of industries could be based on this at some point.

[42:27.800 --> 42:29.600] But that's so premature at this point.

[42:29.600 --> 42:34.360] It's just, it's just a fun little thing that could become something, but you know, cross

[42:34.360 --> 42:35.360] your fingers.

[42:35.360 --> 42:36.640] Let's just see what other scientists say.

[42:36.640 --> 42:37.640] Yeah, absolutely.

[42:37.640 --> 42:41.800] It could be the zero point energy of acceleration, you know.

[42:41.800 --> 42:42.800] That's a bit interesting.

[42:42.800 --> 42:43.800] Yeah.

[42:43.800 --> 42:44.920] And again, I hope that we were wrong about this.

[42:44.920 --> 42:51.120] I hope there is some subtle aspect of the laws of space, time and quantum physics or

[42:51.120 --> 42:57.480] whatever the hell, like quantum gravity, something, there's something there that we could exploit

[42:57.480 --> 43:01.480] to produce the equivalent of propellantless acceleration.

[43:01.480 --> 43:03.680] Oh my God.

[43:03.680 --> 43:04.960] That will give us the universe.

[43:04.960 --> 43:09.280] I mean, that would just be a complete game changer for space travel.

[43:09.280 --> 43:15.680] It may be even intraplanetary travel, but yeah, even small scale uses could be amazingly

[43:15.680 --> 43:16.680] beneficial.

[43:16.680 --> 43:22.240] If it's just something that's limited in that way, it really wouldn't be useful for beyond

[43:22.240 --> 43:23.600] the solar system.

[43:23.600 --> 43:26.400] Even that could be an absolute game changer.

[43:26.400 --> 43:29.400] But you know, but we have to be as amazing as it is.

[43:29.400 --> 43:31.440] That's how skeptical we need to be about it.

[43:31.440 --> 43:32.440] Yeah, absolutely.

[43:32.440 --> 43:33.440] All right.

Structured Water (43:34)

[43:33.440 --> 43:37.600] Speaking of being skeptical, that stuff, Kara, tell us about structured water.

[43:37.600 --> 43:38.600] What is that?

[43:38.600 --> 43:39.600] Yeah.

[43:39.600 --> 43:42.840] This is, I feel like I'm like doing an Evan story today.

[43:42.840 --> 43:43.840] I'm excited.

[43:43.840 --> 43:48.880] I don't often talk about like scams on the show, but I love it.

[43:48.880 --> 43:55.400] So I came across an article in The Conversation, which was also picked up by Science Alert

[43:55.400 --> 43:56.400] that was recent.

[43:56.400 --> 44:04.320] It was like within the last week because apparently Courtney Kardashian on her website, do you

[44:04.320 --> 44:05.920] know that she has a website called Poosh?

[44:05.920 --> 44:06.920] Poosh?

[44:06.920 --> 44:07.920] How do you spell that?

[44:07.920 --> 44:08.920] P-O-O-S-H?

[44:08.920 --> 44:09.920] P-O-O-S-H.

[44:09.920 --> 44:12.560] She's trying to outdo goop or something?

[44:12.560 --> 44:15.000] Yeah, she's trying to outgoop goop.

[44:15.000 --> 44:16.000] Posh with an extra O.

[44:16.000 --> 44:17.520] Is it just as ridiculous?

[44:17.520 --> 44:18.520] Yes.

[44:18.520 --> 44:19.520] Oh.

[44:19.520 --> 44:20.800] Oh, absolutely.

[44:20.800 --> 44:26.600] So there is an article that was published in Poosh this past month.

[44:26.600 --> 44:31.240] The title is, Is Your Water Creating Chaos?

[44:31.240 --> 44:33.440] And it's amazing.

[44:33.440 --> 44:35.640] Like this, oh, it's so bad.

[44:35.640 --> 44:41.960] So the whole thing is trying to hawk something called hexagonal water.

[44:41.960 --> 44:43.520] Oh, I love hexagons.

[44:43.520 --> 44:47.140] Yeah, which like the more I've learned about it, the more, it's just there's so much good

[44:47.140 --> 44:48.140] stuff here.

[44:48.140 --> 44:49.140] There's like so much to unpack.

[44:49.140 --> 44:51.980] They also sometimes call it structured water.

[44:51.980 --> 44:59.320] And as the Poosh article explains, its molecules are beautifully formed hexagonal configurations

[44:59.320 --> 45:02.060] that look like perfect little snowflakes.

[45:02.060 --> 45:08.320] They also say it's formed in nature from endless swirls and tumbles over smooth rocks and stones,

[45:08.320 --> 45:12.360] creating vortexes that magnetize the water, pulling the components of each molecule into

[45:12.360 --> 45:13.360] a symmetrical shape.

[45:13.360 --> 45:14.360] Oh, yeah.

[45:14.360 --> 45:15.360] Oh, wow.

[45:15.360 --> 45:18.200] So it gets everything in alignment and balances.

[45:18.200 --> 45:19.200] Yeah.

[45:19.200 --> 45:20.200] Sounds great.

[45:20.200 --> 45:21.200] Right.

[45:21.200 --> 45:22.200] You could do that right now with a turbo-encabulator.

[45:22.200 --> 45:23.200] Right.

[45:23.200 --> 45:29.400] So, well, the funny thing is, of course, they're not just saying your water isn't hexagonal

[45:29.400 --> 45:30.400] enough.

[45:30.400 --> 45:34.920] They're also hawking a filter or a machine.

[45:34.920 --> 45:35.920] The hexagonator.

[45:35.920 --> 45:36.920] Yeah.

[45:36.920 --> 45:40.920] That will hexagonify your water.

[45:40.920 --> 45:41.920] And guess how much it costs?

[45:41.920 --> 45:42.920] Oh, got $995 at least.

[45:42.920 --> 45:43.920] $2,420.

[45:43.920 --> 45:44.920] Sure.

[45:44.920 --> 45:45.920] Oh, my gosh.

[45:45.920 --> 45:46.920] Sure.

[45:46.920 --> 45:47.920] Yeah.

[45:47.920 --> 45:48.920] Because in numerology, that's an important number.

[45:48.920 --> 45:49.920] Yeah.

[45:49.920 --> 45:50.920] It will vortex your water.

[45:50.920 --> 45:51.920] But isn't your health worth it, Kara?

[45:51.920 --> 45:52.920] To make it more structured.

[45:52.920 --> 46:02.320] So I was like, yeah, I was like, well, this is stupid.

[46:02.320 --> 46:04.660] So I started to dig a little bit deeper.

[46:04.660 --> 46:11.280] And I found a lot of websites hawking hexagonal water, structured water.

[46:11.280 --> 46:14.680] It's also apparently called EZ water.

[46:14.680 --> 46:15.680] And EZ.

[46:15.680 --> 46:16.680] Oh, it's easy.

[46:16.680 --> 46:17.680] Yeah.

[46:17.680 --> 46:18.680] It's very easy.

[46:18.680 --> 46:19.680] As in the letters EZ.

[46:19.680 --> 46:20.680] Oh, my gosh.

[46:20.680 --> 46:22.400] Here's a great website.

[46:22.400 --> 46:23.400] I don't want to give the...

[46:23.400 --> 46:26.520] I'm not even going to say the dude's name because I don't want to give him any traffic.

[46:26.520 --> 46:32.120] But the article is literally called, what is EZ water and why do I have to get naked

[46:32.120 --> 46:34.480] in the sun to make it?

[46:34.480 --> 46:35.480] Why?

[46:35.480 --> 46:36.480] Why?

[46:36.480 --> 46:42.160] Because apparently, as he says, who shall be unnamed, EZ water is a special type of

[46:42.160 --> 46:44.480] water that forms in your cells.

[46:44.480 --> 46:46.240] It's like a charged battery.

[46:46.240 --> 46:50.040] It stores energy and can deliver that energy to cells that need it.

[46:50.040 --> 46:54.480] EZ water makes your mitochondria stronger so that you can produce more energy.

[46:54.480 --> 46:58.760] It also acts as an antioxidant, protecting you from stress and slowing down aging and

[46:58.760 --> 47:02.960] improves protein folding across your whole body, which makes you more resilient to stress

[47:02.960 --> 47:04.360] and speeds up recovery.

[47:04.360 --> 47:09.840] Oh, and if we read below, we'll have five ways to make more EZ water in our cells.

[47:09.840 --> 47:11.020] Let's find those five ways.

[47:11.020 --> 47:12.620] Here we go.

[47:12.620 --> 47:18.240] Drink raw vegetable juice or fresh spring water, because I guess it just naturally occurs

[47:18.240 --> 47:20.000] in those places.

[47:20.000 --> 47:30.400] Blend regular water in the blender or drink bulletproof coffee.

[47:30.400 --> 47:32.160] Apparently that helps too.

[47:32.160 --> 47:33.720] Get naked in the sun.

[47:33.720 --> 47:34.720] So you want to know why?

[47:34.720 --> 47:35.720] Here we go.

[47:35.720 --> 47:40.280] Sunlight has plenty of the 1200 nanometer light that creates EZ water, plus a bunch

[47:40.280 --> 47:41.280] of other spectra.

[47:41.280 --> 47:42.280] Yeah.

[47:42.280 --> 47:45.280] Yeah, a bunch that makes sunlight great for you.

[47:45.280 --> 47:47.280] I can't with this.

[47:47.280 --> 47:50.400] It's so stupid, it's unbelievable.

[47:50.400 --> 47:52.640] And then you also, oh, infrared sauna, of course.

[47:52.640 --> 47:56.760] And then use some sort of, again, not going to give the name of the machine, some sort

[47:56.760 --> 48:02.080] of stupid machine that sends water through 1200 nanometer radiation.

[48:02.080 --> 48:03.880] And then you breathe it in.

[48:03.880 --> 48:04.880] What?

[48:04.880 --> 48:05.880] Okay.

[48:05.880 --> 48:07.180] So I was like, this is the dumbest thing ever.

[48:07.180 --> 48:12.780] But the interesting thing, and also I found the Wikipedia page, and you know the gorilla

[48:12.780 --> 48:17.440] skeptics did some, a number on this, it's amazing.

[48:17.440 --> 48:23.580] So like hexagonal water, also known as gel water, structured water, cluster water, H3O2

[48:23.580 --> 48:26.200] is a term used in a marketing scam.

[48:26.200 --> 48:31.140] That is the first sentence of the Wikipedia entry that claims the ability to create a

[48:31.140 --> 48:34.660] certain configuration of water that is better for the body.

[48:34.660 --> 48:38.200] But what I learned is that, A, the scam is not new.

[48:38.200 --> 48:39.200] It's quite old.

[48:39.200 --> 48:43.220] We're finding websites from 2011 that are hawking hexagonal water.

[48:43.220 --> 48:46.760] So I guess poosh is a little late to the party.

[48:46.760 --> 48:52.660] Also it's one of those types of pseudoscience that I find the most fascinating, where it's

[48:52.660 --> 49:00.260] based on legitimate research that then went into like crazy town.

[49:00.260 --> 49:05.720] So there was a researcher, or I shouldn't say was, I don't know if he's still around,

[49:05.720 --> 49:11.860] and I am a little concerned about his, about some of the conclusions that he draws on his

[49:11.860 --> 49:13.460] labs page.

[49:13.460 --> 49:21.540] But there is a laboratory by a researcher named Gerald Pollock, and he does research

[49:21.540 --> 49:24.120] on the structure of water, among other things.

[49:24.120 --> 49:25.860] And water is fascinating.

[49:25.860 --> 49:30.780] Like water is really cool and has all sorts of really amazing properties that like only

[49:30.780 --> 49:33.820] water seems to have, and it's fascinating.

[49:33.820 --> 49:38.900] And so we know about the three different states of water, matter, right, solid, liquid, and

[49:38.900 --> 49:39.900] gas.

[49:39.900 --> 49:44.140] His research laboratory looks at something called a fourth phase, exclusion zone water,

[49:44.140 --> 49:48.420] and that's where the name EZ water actually comes from.

[49:48.420 --> 49:54.380] Exclusion zone water is water that occurs at interfaces with surfaces, because the water

[49:54.380 --> 50:03.300] properties do change, and the structure changes a bit as water interfaces with either surfaces,

[50:03.300 --> 50:07.540] whether it's air surfaces or the surfaces of the container that it's in.

[50:07.540 --> 50:11.880] I mean, you guys remember way back when you were taking your biology lab and you would

[50:11.880 --> 50:13.800] put things in a graduated cylinder?

[50:13.800 --> 50:15.740] Do you remember where you had to measure from?

[50:15.740 --> 50:16.740] The bottom of the meniscus?

[50:16.740 --> 50:17.740] The bottom of the meniscus, yeah.

[50:17.740 --> 50:18.740] You remember that?

[50:18.740 --> 50:19.740] Yeah.

[50:19.740 --> 50:26.660] Because it clings to the edge of the graduated cylinder, clings to that, because of these

[50:26.660 --> 50:32.420] properties that make it basically stick, like bond, to the edge of the glass.

[50:32.420 --> 50:37.260] And so this lab really studies exactly what's happening at the molecular level in these

[50:37.260 --> 50:42.320] exclusion zones, and they've looked at all sorts of different cool things where they're

[50:42.320 --> 50:48.260] finding that certain solutes are excluded from hydrophilic surfaces, and they're using

[50:48.260 --> 50:55.180] their findings to develop interesting technologies, desalination technologies, filter technologies

[50:55.180 --> 51:00.220] that don't require, like filterless filters, as they call it, by utilizing the exclusion

[51:00.220 --> 51:07.940] zone properties of water to separate solutes from the solution, basically.

[51:07.940 --> 51:14.460] His lab does not study the magical, mystical properties of hexagonifying water and then

[51:14.460 --> 51:18.140] drinking it and, I guess, making your cells super efficient.

[51:18.140 --> 51:22.980] But I do worry that there is a portion on his website called Water and Health that just

[51:22.980 --> 51:25.140] starts to feel a little, like, weird.

[51:25.140 --> 51:27.420] So I'm curious what you guys' take is on this.

[51:27.420 --> 51:29.220] I'm just going to read you, like, two paragraphs.

[51:29.220 --> 51:31.820] We're studying the central role of water in health.

[51:31.820 --> 51:33.420] We're two-thirds water by volume.

[51:33.420 --> 51:36.660] In terms of the percentage of molecules that two-thirds can figure computes to a lot of

[51:36.660 --> 51:37.660] water molecules.

[51:37.660 --> 51:40.780] More than 99% of our molecules are water molecules.

[51:40.780 --> 51:44.820] Evidence suggests that those 99% don't merely sit as background carriers, but they're central

[51:44.820 --> 51:47.660] participants that what the cell does depends on water.

[51:47.660 --> 51:49.140] Okay, so far you've got me.

[51:49.140 --> 51:52.740] This leads to the hypothesis that proper hydration is a central feature of function and therefore

[51:52.740 --> 51:53.740] of health.

[51:53.740 --> 51:54.740] Uh-huh.

[51:54.740 --> 51:55.740] Yeah.

[51:55.740 --> 51:56.740] I don't think anybody's arguing with you.

[51:56.740 --> 51:57.740] Hydration is important.

[51:57.740 --> 51:58.740] Yes.

[51:58.740 --> 51:59.740] Yes.

[51:59.740 --> 52:02.460] Considerable evidence supports this point of view.

[52:02.460 --> 52:04.140] And then the next sentence, you guys.

[52:04.140 --> 52:07.900] Informal discussion of the evidence for the role of water in health appears in an interview

[52:07.900 --> 52:10.380] I did with Dr. Mercola.

[52:10.380 --> 52:11.380] Really?

[52:11.380 --> 52:12.380] Why?

[52:12.380 --> 52:17.220] And a recent lecture dealing with easy water in health is found here and a grant proposal

[52:17.220 --> 52:19.660] submitted earlier to the NIH, blah, blah, blah.

[52:19.660 --> 52:21.780] We're actively seeking funding, blah, blah, blah.

[52:21.780 --> 52:27.420] And then he ends this section with, who knows, easy water may become the next wonder drug.

[52:27.420 --> 52:32.700] So I am not going to take Dr. Pollack off the hook for this.

[52:32.700 --> 52:37.500] Yes, I think that he's probably got a fair amount of really legitimate research.

[52:37.500 --> 52:42.920] And yes, I think that a lot of scammers and snake oil salesmen took a handful of things

[52:42.920 --> 52:50.820] that he studied and ran with it into a bizarre kind of totally different dimension.

[52:50.820 --> 52:54.380] But don't seem like he's doing a whole lot to stop them.

[52:54.380 --> 52:55.380] Mm-hmm.

[52:55.380 --> 52:56.380] Doesn't seem like he is.

[52:56.380 --> 52:57.380] No, he's totally responsible.

[52:57.380 --> 53:03.140] First of all, my sense is, and I'd have to look into it deeper to see if this holds up,

[53:03.140 --> 53:04.860] but there's two things.

[53:04.860 --> 53:09.740] One is he's some nerdy scientist in a lab who has no idea about the world out there

[53:09.740 --> 53:14.260] and pseudoscience and how his research can be exploited.

[53:14.260 --> 53:19.360] The fact that he has no idea who Mercola is and what a complete and total scam artist

[53:19.360 --> 53:24.080] and pseudoscientist he is is inexcusable.

[53:24.080 --> 53:29.300] And second, a lot of basic science researchers, of course, they want their research to change

[53:29.300 --> 53:30.300] the world.

[53:30.300 --> 53:31.300] Right?

[53:31.300 --> 53:37.320] And I've seen a lot of them get seduced by pseudoscientists who say, oh, your research

[53:37.320 --> 53:42.160] could actually be this huge clinical thing, the new wonder drug or whatever it is.

[53:42.160 --> 53:44.680] And they buy it because they're not clinicians.

[53:44.680 --> 53:46.460] They don't know.

[53:46.460 --> 53:54.020] This happened with when I was sued, the doctor who did that, where he had these basic research

[53:54.020 --> 53:59.340] scientists on the hook who he's telling them that, oh, yeah, your basic science research

[53:59.340 --> 54:02.220] led to this amazing clinical breakthrough.

[54:02.220 --> 54:06.220] They didn't have the first clue.

[54:06.220 --> 54:13.720] I remember I told my lawyer when they were on the stand, I'm like, ask them what a phase

[54:13.720 --> 54:15.080] three clinical trial is.

[54:15.080 --> 54:17.440] Just ask, what's a phase three clinical trial?

[54:17.440 --> 54:22.500] And he asked that question and she gets this embarrassed smile on her face and goes, it's

[54:22.500 --> 54:24.420] the one that comes after phase two?

[54:24.420 --> 54:27.540] That was literally her answer.

[54:27.540 --> 54:28.540] She had no idea.

[54:28.540 --> 54:29.540] No idea.

[54:29.540 --> 54:30.540] Oh, my gosh.

[54:30.540 --> 54:31.540] Right.

[54:31.540 --> 54:32.540] Because she's not doing translation work.

[54:32.540 --> 54:33.540] Right.

[54:33.540 --> 54:34.540] Exactly.

[54:34.540 --> 54:35.540] She's not a clinical scientist.

[54:35.540 --> 54:36.540] So shut up and get off the stand.

[54:36.540 --> 54:38.540] You have no idea what you're talking about.

[54:38.540 --> 54:41.940] So it's possible that he's falling into this category.

[54:41.940 --> 54:42.940] Yeah.

[54:42.940 --> 54:45.380] He is a bioengineering professor, right?

[54:45.380 --> 54:49.220] And he's studying, again, behavior at these hydrophilic surfaces.

[54:49.220 --> 54:54.340] And he's discovering that, whoa, water has these cool properties where it pushes away

[54:54.340 --> 54:55.660] certain materials.

[54:55.660 --> 54:57.820] It pushes away certain solutes.

[54:57.820 --> 55:02.860] And so, yeah, it could have some cool industrial, some cool material science outcomes.

[55:02.860 --> 55:03.860] It's diamagnetic.

[55:03.860 --> 55:05.740] I don't even think that's anything like new.

[55:05.740 --> 55:07.380] And here's the interesting thing.

[55:07.380 --> 55:10.940] Well, I shouldn't say interesting, but here's the part where I feel like we would be remiss

[55:10.940 --> 55:13.140] if we didn't just straight up debunk this.

[55:13.140 --> 55:17.660] I know we're debunking it by being like, this is stupid, but let's debunk it by looking

[55:17.660 --> 55:21.180] at what the claims are and systematically dismantling them.

[55:21.180 --> 55:29.100] Basically the main claim is that at this exclusion zone, which does seem to exist, water, we

[55:29.100 --> 55:30.200] know what water is, right?

[55:30.200 --> 55:37.740] It's two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom, yep, H2O, may change into H3O2.

[55:37.740 --> 55:43.300] So we've got this negative electric charge and that sort of induces this layered kind

[55:43.300 --> 55:45.760] of hexagonal network arrangement.

[55:45.760 --> 55:49.840] And in doing that, certain solutes now can no longer bind to it.

[55:49.840 --> 55:54.160] And we do see this happening within our cells all the time because our cells have membranes.

[55:54.160 --> 55:59.900] So there are going to be these kind of zones, these surface zones with water.

[55:59.900 --> 56:02.180] But this is where the massive jump comes, right?

[56:02.180 --> 56:04.180] Well, that's what happens in your cells.

[56:04.180 --> 56:05.580] That's what happens in nature.

[56:05.580 --> 56:07.900] Why aren't we drinking this kind of water?

[56:07.900 --> 56:11.620] And let's talk about why this is not science.

[56:11.620 --> 56:17.460] If water could change into H3O2, first of all, it wouldn't and doesn't stay that way

[56:17.460 --> 56:25.540] because then it wouldn't be water because water is H2O.

[56:25.540 --> 56:30.340] If it formed this hexagonal lattice-like structure, it would not be wet.

[56:30.340 --> 56:31.940] It would not flow.

[56:31.940 --> 56:41.060] That would no longer be the liquid phase of water if in large quantities like in the macro,

[56:41.060 --> 56:42.060] it stayed this way.

[56:42.060 --> 56:44.260] This only happens at the surface, right?

[56:44.260 --> 56:49.140] It could not happen throughout the whole water or it wouldn't be water.

[56:49.140 --> 56:50.140] Get this.

[56:50.140 --> 56:54.920] If you were to look at like a big vat of water, about every one molecule in every billion

[56:54.920 --> 56:59.500] molecules already has an extra hydrogen atom because like, you know, not everything's super

[56:59.500 --> 57:00.500] stable.

[57:00.500 --> 57:03.280] Sometimes you get these positively charged and negatively charged ions.

[57:03.280 --> 57:05.260] They just happen spontaneously.

[57:05.260 --> 57:06.460] These protons are mobile.

[57:06.460 --> 57:07.740] They move around.

[57:07.740 --> 57:09.800] And it happens really fast.

[57:09.800 --> 57:15.020] Like we're talking about what this site says a thousand times each second.

[57:15.020 --> 57:20.980] On the Wiki page, it says that hydrogen bonds continually break and reform at timescales

[57:20.980 --> 57:25.280] shorter than 200 femtoseconds.

[57:25.280 --> 57:32.060] So even if you could produce hexagonal water with like some sort of weird filter, it would

[57:32.060 --> 57:39.140] just become water again within femtoseconds because chemistry.

[57:39.140 --> 57:45.020] So it's one of those things where not only is it a clear and total scam, it's not even

[57:45.020 --> 57:46.500] feasible.

[57:46.500 --> 57:51.580] We can debunk it, sure, but it doesn't even have face validity from the beginning.

[57:51.580 --> 57:52.580] It's homeopathy.

[57:52.580 --> 57:53.580] It's so important.

[57:53.580 --> 57:54.580] Oh, that's a good point.

[57:54.580 --> 57:55.580] Yeah.

[57:55.580 --> 57:56.580] It's like water has a memory.

[57:56.580 --> 57:57.580] It's all that.

[57:57.580 --> 58:03.900] And again, they refer to this femtosecond structure of water to say that, see, water

[58:03.900 --> 58:06.420] can have other structure and information.

[58:06.420 --> 58:08.060] They're like bricks building a building.

[58:08.060 --> 58:11.780] So yeah, at the femtosecond scale, you're going to drink that.

[58:11.780 --> 58:14.740] It's going to survive to interact with your body in some way.

[58:14.740 --> 58:15.740] It's ridiculous.

[58:15.740 --> 58:20.200] It's water is water and I'm sorry, but like really when it comes down to it, whether they're

[58:20.200 --> 58:24.300] changing the pH on you, whether trying to change the molecular structure, whether they're

[58:24.300 --> 58:27.540] dissolving stuff into it, whatever, it's water.

[58:27.540 --> 58:31.060] And you know what water is in a lot of places in the world?

[58:31.060 --> 58:32.060] Not all.

[58:32.060 --> 58:35.900] We definitely have struggles with water insecurity, but in most developed nations, you know what

[58:35.900 --> 58:39.020] water out of your tap is pretty cheap, if not free.

[58:39.020 --> 58:40.020] Yeah.

[58:40.020 --> 58:45.780] So, you know, don't, don't spend ridiculous amounts of money on scamming water and mind

[58:45.780 --> 58:48.460] the pockets of, yeah, of hucksters.

[58:48.460 --> 58:51.220] Magic water is a whole category of scams unto itself.

[58:51.220 --> 58:52.220] Absolutely.

[58:52.220 --> 58:53.220] Yep, yep, yep.

[58:53.220 --> 58:54.220] All right.

[58:54.220 --> 58:55.220] Thanks, Cara.

Cryonic Horror Stories (58:58)

[58:55.220 --> 58:57.580] Evan, tell us about cryonic horror stories.

[58:57.580 --> 58:58.580] Oh boy.

[58:58.580 --> 59:00.540] Jack, Jay, you're going to love this story.

[59:00.540 --> 59:03.180] Well, a long time ago.

[59:03.180 --> 59:04.180] No?

[59:04.180 --> 59:05.180] Yeah.

[59:05.180 --> 59:06.180] What?

[59:06.180 --> 59:07.180] Anyone?

[59:07.180 --> 59:08.180] In a galaxy far, far away?

[59:08.180 --> 59:09.180] Oh.

[59:09.180 --> 59:10.180] Okay.

[59:10.180 --> 59:11.180] Let's just see who was awake.

[59:11.180 --> 59:14.940] A protocol droid once said, oh, they've encased him in carbonite.

[59:14.940 --> 59:19.180] He should be quite well protected if he survived the freezing process, that is.

[59:19.180 --> 59:23.620] Well, fast forward to today in our very own galaxy, and we have a newly released article

[59:23.620 --> 59:29.780] over at bigthink.com with the title, Horror Stories of Cryonics, the Gruesome Fates of

[59:29.780 --> 59:33.420] Futurists Hoping for Immortality.

[59:33.420 --> 59:38.780] So I guess we have to decide how we went from quite well protected to cryonic horror stories.

[59:38.780 --> 59:42.940] Cryonics, we've spoken about it before on the show, I'm certain.

[59:42.940 --> 59:47.200] But for those who are not familiar with it, cryonics is the practice of deep freezing

[59:47.200 --> 59:52.500] bodies of people who have entered the earliest state of the dying process in hopes that future

[59:52.500 --> 59:56.920] scientific advances may allow them to be revived in the future.

[59:56.920 --> 01:00:01.240] In some cases, it's only the head of the person that gets frozen as opposed to the

[01:00:01.240 --> 01:00:02.240] full body.

[01:00:02.240 --> 01:00:06.900] And the goal is to freeze the body or the head before the natural decaying processes

[01:00:06.900 --> 01:00:09.160] take hold for too long.

[01:00:09.160 --> 01:00:13.420] So what they do, they prepare a body, the bodily liquids are removed and replaced with

[01:00:13.420 --> 01:00:16.500] what they call an organ preservation solution.

[01:00:16.500 --> 01:00:19.220] And I believe that process is called perfusion, right?

[01:00:19.220 --> 01:00:22.060] When you take the blood out and you put something else in.

[01:00:22.060 --> 01:00:25.380] The solution is described as sort of a human antifreeze.

[01:00:25.380 --> 01:00:29.300] The body is then wrapped in several layers of insulating material.

[01:00:29.300 --> 01:00:35.940] It's embedded in dry ice until the body reaches a temperature of about negative 130 degrees

[01:00:35.940 --> 01:00:37.060] Celsius.

[01:00:37.060 --> 01:00:41.760] Then the frozen body is placed inside a Dewar, D-E-W-A-R.

[01:00:41.760 --> 01:00:45.180] That's an insulated container used for storing cryogens.

[01:00:45.180 --> 01:00:51.400] Body goes into the Dewar, head down to keep the brain the coldest and most stable to also

[01:00:51.400 --> 01:00:53.620] guard against leakage.

[01:00:53.620 --> 01:00:58.700] The Dewar lies within a second outer vessel separated by a vacuum to avoid heat transfer

[01:00:58.700 --> 01:01:03.560] from the outer room temperature vessel wall to the cold inner vessel wall.

[01:01:03.560 --> 01:01:08.260] Then that Dewar in that pocket is filled with liquid nitrogen and that gets the body down

[01:01:08.260 --> 01:01:12.660] to 196 degrees below Celsius.

[01:01:12.660 --> 01:01:14.420] So yeah, that's where you are.

[01:01:14.420 --> 01:01:17.660] That's about as frozen I think as a body can get with using modern technology.

[01:01:17.660 --> 01:01:23.420] Oh, and you have to fill up the liquid nitrogen periodically in order to keep it stable at

[01:01:23.420 --> 01:01:24.420] that temperature.

[01:01:24.420 --> 01:01:28.740] Now, the freezing of people using dry ice and liquid nitrogen has been in practice since

[01:01:28.740 --> 01:01:31.140] the 1960s.

[01:01:31.140 --> 01:01:35.620] And as you can imagine, the first instances of attempting to preserve people using freezing

[01:01:35.620 --> 01:01:39.820] techniques didn't go so well.

[01:01:39.820 --> 01:01:42.060] Techniques were generally poor.

[01:01:42.060 --> 01:01:46.540] Bodies were at room temperature in most cases for too long before they froze them and that

[01:01:46.540 --> 01:01:49.020] really made them unviable from the start.

[01:01:49.020 --> 01:01:54.740] Some companies did not use cryoprotectants or the perfusion with their patients.

[01:01:54.740 --> 01:01:59.940] Some only put them on dry ice and did not use liquid nitrogen and others skip the liquid

[01:01:59.940 --> 01:02:02.380] nitrogen and went straight to freezing them.

[01:02:02.380 --> 01:02:03.380] I'm sorry.

[01:02:03.380 --> 01:02:07.980] And then others skip the dry ice and went straight to freezing them in the liquid nitrogen.

[01:02:07.980 --> 01:02:11.500] Although the idea they said initially wasn't for future revival, it was more for cosmetic

[01:02:11.500 --> 01:02:12.500] preservation.

[01:02:12.500 --> 01:02:15.760] But even that didn't go so well.

[01:02:15.760 --> 01:02:19.480] And they have several cases in which, you know, they tell you about how some of these

[01:02:19.480 --> 01:02:21.740] things failed ultimately.

[01:02:21.740 --> 01:02:25.660] So in one case, there's a facility that was paid to keep people frozen in just the dry

[01:02:25.660 --> 01:02:30.660] ice and that would get your body to about 130, negative 130 Celsius.

[01:02:30.660 --> 01:02:31.660] And that was it.

[01:02:31.660 --> 01:02:36.740] They're just lay there on beds of dry ice until they decided to finally obtain a Dewar

[01:02:36.740 --> 01:02:40.500] capsule that could do the liquid nitrogen process.

[01:02:40.500 --> 01:02:44.860] And then when they did get it, they got the Dewar, there was already a body inside of

[01:02:44.860 --> 01:02:45.860] it.

[01:02:45.860 --> 01:02:50.300] So they opened it up, they took that body out and then they packed it back in with a

[01:02:50.300 --> 01:02:54.500] total of four bodies, you know, managed to kind of get it in there.

[01:02:54.500 --> 01:02:58.580] But the original body that they took out, it thawed too much.

[01:02:58.580 --> 01:03:05.560] It was just out of there too long and unfortunately it started to, you know, unfreeze.

[01:03:05.560 --> 01:03:08.900] They refilled it, they got it all in there though eventually.

[01:03:08.900 --> 01:03:12.380] They held everyone there for about a year, but then they stopped receiving money from

[01:03:12.380 --> 01:03:15.540] the relatives, so after a while they couldn't pay for it anymore.

[01:03:15.540 --> 01:03:19.940] They had to thaw everyone out and then give them more of a regular resting place in a

[01:03:19.940 --> 01:03:22.100] cemetery vault.

[01:03:22.100 --> 01:03:27.340] Reporters who visited the crypt where those failed operations as they call them took place,

[01:03:27.340 --> 01:03:30.620] they reported a horrifying stench.

[01:03:30.620 --> 01:03:34.340] So that's not good, whatever the heck they were smelling.

[01:03:34.340 --> 01:03:39.420] Another case, a group of three bodies packed into one Dewar, the liquid nitrogen system

[01:03:39.420 --> 01:03:40.420] failed.

[01:03:40.420 --> 01:03:45.540] Yep, the Dewar design failed and couldn't hold the liquid nitrogen and then just one

[01:03:45.540 --> 01:03:49.340] day they were checking and the technician noticed, uh-oh, we got a problem here.

[01:03:49.340 --> 01:03:55.140] They thawed out and they were eventually removed and buried elsewhere, so that's another case.

[01:03:55.140 --> 01:04:02.060] Oh, here's a case where a boy, a young boy's body was frozen, but they found it to be cracked

[01:04:02.060 --> 01:04:07.220] and they said the cracking likely occurred because it was frozen too quickly by the liquid

[01:04:07.220 --> 01:04:08.220] nitrogen.

[01:04:08.220 --> 01:04:13.260] They had to go over a specific sort of slow gradual process of getting to that temperature,

[01:04:13.260 --> 01:04:15.420] but apparently it went too quickly.

[01:04:15.420 --> 01:04:19.540] Once again they had to abandon it and the boy had to be thawed out and buried in a more

[01:04:19.540 --> 01:04:21.120] traditional sense.

[01:04:21.120 --> 01:04:27.540] And then there's the one in, here's one where the Dewar, again poor design, led to a series

[01:04:27.540 --> 01:04:31.300] of incidents, at least one of which was the failure of the vacuum jacket.

[01:04:31.300 --> 01:04:35.460] Remember I said the Dewar is dropped in and then there's another inside and then there's

[01:04:35.460 --> 01:04:37.220] an exterior piece to it.

[01:04:37.220 --> 01:04:41.660] So you got these two layers, but problem with the vacuum that took place, the bodies in

[01:04:41.660 --> 01:04:46.780] the container partially thawed, they moved, and then they froze again.

[01:04:46.780 --> 01:04:54.020] And when that happens, the bodies contort, they'll go into these strange shapes, which

[01:04:54.020 --> 01:04:55.140] is not good.

[01:04:55.140 --> 01:04:57.380] They wind up sticking to the side of the capsule.

[01:04:57.380 --> 01:05:02.420] They described it like a child's tongue to a cold lamp post, eventually when they got

[01:05:02.420 --> 01:05:04.200] these bodies out, yeah.

[01:05:04.200 --> 01:05:08.380] So ultimately after a year, they deemed it a total failure.

[01:05:08.380 --> 01:05:13.540] The bodies decomposed into a plug of fluids, as they described it, and sort of pooled at

[01:05:13.540 --> 01:05:17.380] the bottom of the capsule and they had to scrape out their remains and bury them.

[01:05:17.380 --> 01:05:20.580] So basically when the process goes bad, it goes really bad.

[01:05:20.580 --> 01:05:23.940] But here's the interesting part of the article, the part that I didn't know about.

[01:05:23.940 --> 01:05:30.300] This was in 1983, Alcor, which is one of the main companies that manages the freezing of

[01:05:30.300 --> 01:05:34.900] people, they had to lighten three cryonauts.

[01:05:34.900 --> 01:05:38.540] You're a cryonaut, by the way, when you go into these duars.

[01:05:38.540 --> 01:05:41.060] That's your designation.

[01:05:41.060 --> 01:05:47.500] And the orders were to take the bodies out and we're just going to use the heads.

[01:05:47.500 --> 01:05:49.860] They're just going to keep the heads frozen.

[01:05:49.860 --> 01:05:53.580] I imagine for financial reasons, but they wouldn't really get into that.

[01:05:53.580 --> 01:05:55.360] But in any case, that's what had to happen.

[01:05:55.360 --> 01:06:00.460] So the corpses were removed from the duar capsules, the heads were cut off, and they

[01:06:00.460 --> 01:06:04.140] used a chainsaw to do it because obviously you're still very much frozen.

[01:06:04.140 --> 01:06:05.500] And then the heads were stored separately.

[01:06:05.500 --> 01:06:11.180] But this gave the scientists an opportunity to see, okay, so what happens to the thawing

[01:06:11.180 --> 01:06:13.660] process of the bodies?

[01:06:13.660 --> 01:06:17.760] They had these three bodies to observe and watch.

[01:06:17.760 --> 01:06:22.120] So while the bodies were still frozen, they said the skin was only moderately cracked

[01:06:22.120 --> 01:06:24.100] in a few places.

[01:06:24.100 --> 01:06:28.420] But they said once the bodies thawed, then things started to go downhill rapidly.

[01:06:28.420 --> 01:06:34.420] Cracks appeared in the bodies, cutting through the skin and subcutaneous fat, all the way

[01:06:34.420 --> 01:06:37.420] down to the body wall and muscles beneath.

[01:06:37.420 --> 01:06:38.940] No, you should.

[01:06:38.940 --> 01:06:45.540] But I mean, what happens at the macro level, think about what's happening inside the cells.

[01:06:45.540 --> 01:06:49.700] These ice crystals are ripping the cell membranes apart.

[01:06:49.700 --> 01:06:53.100] They're losing all of their integrity.

[01:06:53.100 --> 01:06:59.420] That's what that liquid, that's what that perfusion method is supposed to be minimizing.

[01:06:59.420 --> 01:07:04.660] And from my understanding, the material that they're using and the formula that they're

[01:07:04.660 --> 01:07:08.780] using is constantly being improved upon.

[01:07:08.780 --> 01:07:13.340] I've never seen any proof of how well it's working or there's also different companies.

[01:07:13.340 --> 01:07:16.740] But if they're just perfusing in blood, that's probably not enough.

[01:07:16.740 --> 01:07:17.940] You know what I mean?

[01:07:17.940 --> 01:07:19.540] You need to get into the neurons.

[01:07:19.540 --> 01:07:20.940] You need to get into...

[01:07:20.940 --> 01:07:25.420] I just remember working in a lab years and years and years ago and one of my lab mates

[01:07:25.420 --> 01:07:29.700] was trying to figure out how to ship these like in vitro nerve cell networks that we

[01:07:29.700 --> 01:07:30.700] made.

[01:07:30.700 --> 01:07:31.700] And she was trying to...

[01:07:31.700 --> 01:07:32.980] And this was an exposed nerve cell network.

[01:07:32.980 --> 01:07:38.540] Just use the right basically antifreeze in order to allow them to be frozen and then

[01:07:38.540 --> 01:07:43.100] come back without ripping through microtubules and really destroying the integrity of the

[01:07:43.100 --> 01:07:44.100] cells.

[01:07:44.100 --> 01:07:45.100] And it was very hard to do.

[01:07:45.100 --> 01:07:48.740] I know we've gotten to the point where we're better at that now with cultures, but with

[01:07:48.740 --> 01:07:49.740] whole bodies?

[01:07:49.740 --> 01:07:50.740] Yeah, whole bodies.

[01:07:50.740 --> 01:07:51.740] It's not fair.

[01:07:51.740 --> 01:07:55.780] They said for as bad as the skin and the muscles and the tissue damage was, it's the organs

[01:07:55.780 --> 01:08:02.340] that really took horrible, horrible beatings, badly cracked, severed in some cases.

[01:08:02.340 --> 01:08:07.820] The spinal cords were snapped into three pieces, the heart was fractured, every major blood

[01:08:07.820 --> 01:08:13.460] vessel had broken near the heart, the lungs and spleen were almost bisected.

[01:08:13.460 --> 01:08:19.500] And yeah, the liver and kidneys, although weren't completely destroyed, they were severely

[01:08:19.500 --> 01:08:20.580] damaged.

[01:08:20.580 --> 01:08:26.780] So these are the cases in which they emphasize in this particular article.

[01:08:26.780 --> 01:08:32.300] The thing is that there are still plenty of people who remain frozen.

[01:08:32.300 --> 01:08:35.100] So obviously we don't know exactly what's going on with all cases.

[01:08:35.100 --> 01:08:40.880] These are just the cases they were able to study of the few that have had to be thawed

[01:08:40.880 --> 01:08:42.900] out for whatever reason.

[01:08:42.900 --> 01:08:46.800] If the scientists know that this is the case, especially when it comes to the whole body

[01:08:46.800 --> 01:08:52.880] freezing process, perhaps maybe they should be more focusing on really just offering the

[01:08:52.880 --> 01:08:54.420] service for the head alone.

[01:08:54.420 --> 01:08:59.500] And again, you can imagine what's going to happen to the brain during any sort of thaw

[01:08:59.500 --> 01:09:00.500] process.

[01:09:00.500 --> 01:09:03.960] But again, you're relying on a future technology that doesn't exist.

[01:09:03.960 --> 01:09:04.960] That's the gamble.

[01:09:04.960 --> 01:09:09.180] However, some people pay as much as almost a quarter million dollars to have their entire

[01:09:09.180 --> 01:09:12.980] body frozen and maintained.

[01:09:12.980 --> 01:09:18.380] And the company's knowledge about sort of how the history of this has worked out and

[01:09:18.380 --> 01:09:24.220] what they do know about the thaw out process with the body, it's a red flag to me that

[01:09:24.220 --> 01:09:30.160] they kind of still continue to offer that as a service, sort of knowing that the end

[01:09:30.160 --> 01:09:34.860] result here in at least all of these cases turned out to be a big zero.

[01:09:34.860 --> 01:09:39.860] The problem here is that the kind of gross damage that you're describing and said like

[01:09:39.860 --> 01:09:45.780] the heart was split, the spine was split in three pieces, to me that's all irrelevant

[01:09:45.780 --> 01:09:51.220] because the point is, the entire point is that you're anticipating a future technology

[01:09:51.220 --> 01:09:53.700] that will be able to do repairs at the nanoscale.

[01:09:53.700 --> 01:09:59.280] So those gross damage would be trivial assuming that technology.

[01:09:59.280 --> 01:10:05.180] But it also misses the point of the way a lot of these companies are now preserving

[01:10:05.180 --> 01:10:06.180] the brain.

[01:10:06.180 --> 01:10:08.580] They're not using these cryopreservation fluids.

[01:10:08.580 --> 01:10:12.260] They're using vitrification which is much superior.

[01:10:12.260 --> 01:10:18.180] I've read studies where they've taken hippocampal slices from rats and vitrified them and then

[01:10:18.180 --> 01:10:23.820] they undid that process and it was comparable to controls that were not cryopreserved or

[01:10:23.820 --> 01:10:25.200] vitrified at all.

[01:10:25.200 --> 01:10:32.380] So I mean the key is, can you infer the working state of the neurons, of the brain from what

[01:10:32.380 --> 01:10:33.380] is left?

[01:10:33.380 --> 01:10:38.420] So some damage is essentially inevitable but if you can infer, all you have to be able

[01:10:38.420 --> 01:10:42.840] to do, you assume that the technology will be developed and then if we can infer the

[01:10:42.840 --> 01:10:48.620] working state then you have a decent shot of having some sort of positive result here.

[01:10:48.620 --> 01:10:53.500] More nuanced damage would probably be hard to predict but to me that's the key.

[01:10:53.500 --> 01:10:57.700] So this other, this damage that you're talking about, you know, it kind of misses the point.

[01:10:57.700 --> 01:11:02.620] It's like because the whole thing is anticipating and expecting this technology that doesn't

[01:11:02.620 --> 01:11:06.860] seem to, you know, it's not breaking any laws of physics in my book.

[01:11:06.860 --> 01:11:09.580] Yes it is.

[01:11:09.580 --> 01:11:11.860] So you're talking quick care.

[01:11:11.860 --> 01:11:18.260] I mean we've got, you know, we've got biology itself, you know, creates structures that

[01:11:18.260 --> 01:11:20.380] work at this level.

[01:11:20.380 --> 01:11:25.620] So you're saying that repair at the molecular level is not something that we could achieve

[01:11:25.620 --> 01:11:27.700] within a century or two or ten?

[01:11:27.700 --> 01:11:32.180] No, I think we could easily repair things at the molecular level but then to reanimate

[01:11:32.180 --> 01:11:34.020] them is a completely different question.

[01:11:34.020 --> 01:11:37.660] Well you've got to put them on a table, you lift them up when there's an electrical storm

[01:11:37.660 --> 01:11:42.300] and then, you know, just let it work but I mean the thing is it's not like we've got

[01:11:42.300 --> 01:11:44.420] to like find a spark of life to throw in there.

[01:11:44.420 --> 01:11:45.420] What do you mean?

[01:11:45.420 --> 01:11:49.700] I mean once you get things working, well I don't know what that comment means.

[01:11:49.700 --> 01:11:54.420] It would take nanotechnology, right, it would take a full blown developed nanotechnology

[01:11:54.420 --> 01:11:57.420] to be able to even contemplate doing something like this.

[01:11:57.420 --> 01:11:58.420] Of course.

[01:11:58.420 --> 01:12:01.420] I feel like the breakdown in reasoning is the same parallel breakdown in reasoning that

[01:12:01.420 --> 01:12:05.580] we often get to the crux and maybe it's a philosophical difference.

[01:12:05.580 --> 01:12:10.700] When you guys talk about space colonialism and I'm like why would we do that, we haven't

[01:12:10.700 --> 01:12:14.740] even figured out how to terraform our own planet and make it livable.

[01:12:14.740 --> 01:12:18.300] It's the same kind of thing like you're just saying oh well you just put bodies in a blender

[01:12:18.300 --> 01:12:21.940] then we'll just figure out how to fucking fix it all later.

[01:12:21.940 --> 01:12:25.660] Like it's like no we won't, like it just doesn't make sense.

[01:12:25.660 --> 01:12:30.140] Good luck inferring a working brain from a blender but I mean that's not a good example.

[01:12:30.140 --> 01:12:31.340] I see what you mean.

[01:12:31.340 --> 01:12:34.660] But it's not that different than why don't we just freeze them on ice.

[01:12:34.660 --> 01:12:39.220] Like why do all this extra tech, why vitrify even if we come up with good tech?

[01:12:39.220 --> 01:12:42.700] Because I think if you just did it on regular ice, I mean you will have decay.

[01:12:42.700 --> 01:12:47.820] You will have decay and you will not be able to infer the working state and that's what

[01:12:47.820 --> 01:12:48.820] death is.

[01:12:48.820 --> 01:12:54.100] You know we all know the definition of death is almost meaningless in that it changes over

[01:12:54.100 --> 01:12:55.100] time.

[01:12:55.100 --> 01:12:58.520] You're right, a century ago or so or two, if you stopped breathing you were dead.

[01:12:58.520 --> 01:13:00.580] Now you are not dead at all when you stop breathing.

[01:13:00.580 --> 01:13:06.780] So death is not a point, it's a process and just because somebody is frozen in the future

[01:13:06.780 --> 01:13:12.220] doesn't necessarily mean that for all time this person is going to be considered dead.

[01:13:12.220 --> 01:13:16.700] No but it's also a wild assumption to think that we will just figure out a mechanistic

[01:13:16.700 --> 01:13:25.440] and feasible ability to re-induce consciousness when we don't understand the emergent property

[01:13:25.440 --> 01:13:26.440] that is consciousness.

[01:13:26.440 --> 01:13:32.580] I don't think you need to understand consciousness to thaw out and repair a body and potentially

[01:13:32.580 --> 01:13:33.580] make it work.

[01:13:33.580 --> 01:13:36.780] But you're just assuming it will then just become conscious after you do that.

[01:13:36.780 --> 01:13:38.820] I think that's a pretty good conclusion.

[01:13:38.820 --> 01:13:41.100] My odds of coming back otherwise are zero.

[01:13:41.100 --> 01:13:45.180] I'll take fractionally above zero, over zero any day.

[01:13:45.180 --> 01:13:47.420] And that's a fine, I mean if that's the gamble you're taking that makes sense.

[01:13:47.420 --> 01:13:49.220] Of course it is, of course it is.

[01:13:49.220 --> 01:13:53.460] But to really think that it's actually going to happen to me is pseudoscience.

[01:13:53.460 --> 01:13:55.140] We're not talking about magic here though.

[01:13:55.140 --> 01:14:02.380] Like if they were going to repair a brain, bring it back up to temperature and actually

[01:14:02.380 --> 01:14:07.740] have blood pumped to it, if that brain is put together in a way that makes sense from

[01:14:07.740 --> 01:14:12.580] a neurological perspective, why would we think that that consciousness would be impossible

[01:14:12.580 --> 01:14:13.580] to achieve?

[01:14:13.580 --> 01:14:17.940] I mean you're really just trying to build, it is the most complicated thing in the universe,

[01:14:17.940 --> 01:14:20.200] I'll give you that without a doubt.

[01:14:20.200 --> 01:14:26.620] The real question is not will we be able to do this because like ever is a very long time.

[01:14:26.620 --> 01:14:31.260] It's really a matter of how long is it going to take before we can repair the amount of

[01:14:31.260 --> 01:14:33.860] damage that's going to happen.

[01:14:33.860 --> 01:14:38.780] And so the better you preserve the body at the front end, the less time it will take

[01:14:38.780 --> 01:14:43.500] to be able to repair it at the back end in terms of advances in technology.

[01:14:43.500 --> 01:14:48.180] But to just have a blanket assumption it's not an if, it's a when, I think is a little

[01:14:48.180 --> 01:14:49.180] overreaching.

[01:14:49.180 --> 01:14:53.940] There's a lot of assumptions there.

[01:14:53.940 --> 01:14:59.420] If you assume that human civilization doesn't collapse and it continues indefinitely, then

[01:14:59.420 --> 01:15:04.140] you know I think it's not unreasonable to say that this technology can happen.

[01:15:04.140 --> 01:15:08.300] It is very, very difficult but it is not breaking the laws of physics.

[01:15:08.300 --> 01:15:13.300] There's no theoretical reason why it's impossible, it's just really hard.

[01:15:13.300 --> 01:15:17.420] It may prove impractical and it may prove that we won't really be able to ever practically

[01:15:17.420 --> 01:15:21.620] do it or we may find that yeah, we could get the brain working again but like you have

[01:15:21.620 --> 01:15:22.620] none of your memories.

[01:15:22.620 --> 01:15:29.100] Like whatever, it's insufficient information for any continuity, that's also totally possible.

[01:15:29.100 --> 01:15:30.420] I would take that chance.

[01:15:30.420 --> 01:15:39.500] But how is buying into cryonics then any different than buying into the pseudoscientific snake

[01:15:39.500 --> 01:15:44.740] oils that we often see sold that do have, that don't fly in the face of physics?

[01:15:44.740 --> 01:15:45.740] Like what?

[01:15:45.740 --> 01:15:51.260] It's not like everything that's pseudoscience is pseudoscience simply because it breaks

[01:15:51.260 --> 01:15:52.260] the laws of physics.

[01:15:52.260 --> 01:15:56.220] Oh yeah, there's a lot of pseudoscience that doesn't define the laws of physics, they're

[01:15:56.220 --> 01:16:01.060] just wrong or there's insufficient evidence to, they're making claims that go beyond the

[01:16:01.060 --> 01:16:02.060] evidence.

[01:16:02.060 --> 01:16:06.660] And you think that cryonics isn't making claims that go beyond, that's what I'm saying.

[01:16:06.660 --> 01:16:08.020] This is pseudoscience.

[01:16:08.020 --> 01:16:11.860] I'm not defending the ROI on cryonics.

[01:16:11.860 --> 01:16:15.380] But I feel like our tone is very different as a skeptical podcast when we talk about

[01:16:15.380 --> 01:16:16.660] this kind of stuff.

[01:16:16.660 --> 01:16:19.180] And it's like, why are we not applying the same skepticism?

[01:16:19.180 --> 01:16:20.180] I disagree.

[01:16:20.180 --> 01:16:21.860] I think the tone is very much the same.

[01:16:21.860 --> 01:16:25.380] Like I'm very careful to always say like, yeah, this is impossible.

[01:16:25.380 --> 01:16:26.460] This isn't impossible.

[01:16:26.460 --> 01:16:29.700] This could work, you know, but like we could be being visited by aliens.

[01:16:29.700 --> 01:16:31.660] There's nothing impossible about that.

[01:16:31.660 --> 01:16:36.000] There just isn't enough evidence to support it that I'm willing to accept that claim.

[01:16:36.000 --> 01:16:37.000] That's all.

[01:16:37.000 --> 01:16:39.980] So I think we're talking about it very similarly.

[01:16:39.980 --> 01:16:44.660] There isn't any reason why, again, you're talking about the future, all bets are off

[01:16:44.660 --> 01:16:49.340] and when you're talking about the deep future, especially, we just can't know that.

[01:16:49.340 --> 01:16:54.140] What I think the real question is, what's the probability that the infrastructure is

[01:16:54.140 --> 01:16:56.860] going to keep you properly preserved until that?

[01:16:56.860 --> 01:16:57.860] Yes, it's low.

[01:16:57.860 --> 01:16:59.460] It's probably damn low.

[01:16:59.460 --> 01:17:02.660] We may be talking about the far future of what's going to be possible then, but we're

[01:17:02.660 --> 01:17:06.700] talking about a commercial enterprise right now that people are spending money on.

[01:17:06.700 --> 01:17:07.700] Yeah, I'm not defending that.

[01:17:07.700 --> 01:17:08.700] I'm not defending that.

[01:17:08.700 --> 01:17:09.700] Yeah, of course.

[01:17:09.700 --> 01:17:10.940] Because to me, this is pseudoscience.

[01:17:10.940 --> 01:17:15.980] It's like cord blood stuff, it's like all of these different industries that prey on

[01:17:15.980 --> 01:17:20.820] people's fears and their concerns and then they take their money away from them in the

[01:17:20.820 --> 01:17:23.820] hopes of giving them some sort of salvation.

[01:17:23.820 --> 01:17:24.820] That's pseudoscience.

[01:17:24.820 --> 01:17:25.820] No, I agree.

[01:17:25.820 --> 01:17:27.820] I mean, I'm not defending crime as an industry.

[01:17:27.820 --> 01:17:31.380] I just want to make that clear because I don't think that comes across in the conversation.

[01:17:31.380 --> 01:17:33.140] Well, you're assuming a lot.

[01:17:33.140 --> 01:17:37.980] We're talking about it theoretically versus this is a good investment of your money.

[01:17:37.980 --> 01:17:39.220] We're not saying that.

[01:17:39.220 --> 01:17:43.260] No, and that's great, but I'm saying nobody made that explicit.

[01:17:43.260 --> 01:17:47.940] And so I'm trying to put myself in the shoes of the listener.

[01:17:47.940 --> 01:17:48.940] This needs to be made explicit.

[01:17:48.940 --> 01:17:49.940] Yeah.

[01:17:49.940 --> 01:17:50.940] Well, we're making it explicit.

[01:17:50.940 --> 01:17:51.940] Yeah.

[01:17:51.940 --> 01:17:52.940] I'm just saying.

[01:17:52.940 --> 01:17:53.940] That's why I'm asking.

[01:17:53.940 --> 01:17:54.940] That's why I started talking about it.

[01:17:54.940 --> 01:17:56.640] And for most people, I mean, the ROI absolutely is not there.

[01:17:56.640 --> 01:18:00.780] You're better off spending your money in other ways, enjoying the life that you have.

[01:18:00.780 --> 01:18:08.940] You're going to spend $200,000 on a very slim chance of a partial future.

[01:18:08.940 --> 01:18:09.940] It's not that.

[01:18:09.940 --> 01:18:10.940] It's not that expensive.

[01:18:10.940 --> 01:18:11.940] I agree.

[01:18:11.940 --> 01:18:13.260] You know, I don't disagree.

[01:18:13.260 --> 01:18:20.280] I'm not going to I'm not going to take money out of my kids' future, you know, to do this.

[01:18:20.280 --> 01:18:27.060] But but it also and as Steve said, we're talking theoretical here and zero percent chance sucks

[01:18:27.060 --> 01:18:28.260] and a little bit better than that.

[01:18:28.260 --> 01:18:30.780] I bought a lotto ticket when it was a billion dollars.

[01:18:30.780 --> 01:18:32.420] I bought some lotto tickets.

[01:18:32.420 --> 01:18:33.420] Sure.

[01:18:33.420 --> 01:18:35.380] It was it was just for fun.

[01:18:35.380 --> 01:18:41.220] I had no expectation that it was going to work, but there was the there was the possibility

[01:18:41.220 --> 01:18:45.660] that it could have worked and there was a potential that I could be a billionaire right

[01:18:45.660 --> 01:18:46.660] now.

[01:18:46.660 --> 01:18:48.940] And otherwise, I would not have that chance.

[01:18:48.940 --> 01:18:52.540] So it would to me it was worth, you know, the few dollars that I spent for that for

[01:18:52.540 --> 01:18:56.100] that chance, which was infinitely greater than zero.

[01:18:56.100 --> 01:18:58.100] If it gave you five dollars of entertainment, sure.

[01:18:58.100 --> 01:18:59.100] It did.

[01:18:59.100 --> 01:19:00.100] Exactly.

[01:19:00.100 --> 01:19:01.100] That's how you treat it.

[01:19:01.100 --> 01:19:07.340] But by scientific standards, if something is point one percent chance of being real,

[01:19:07.340 --> 01:19:08.340] it's for all intents and purposes.

[01:19:08.340 --> 01:19:11.420] I'm not but I'm not talking about like I'm not talking about winning money.

[01:19:11.420 --> 01:19:13.740] I'm talking about my life.

[01:19:13.740 --> 01:19:15.460] So it's kind of, you know, I'll take that.

[01:19:15.460 --> 01:19:17.380] I'll take a chance.

[01:19:17.380 --> 01:19:20.740] I think you're creating a little bit of a straw man about how we talk about pseudoscience.

[01:19:20.740 --> 01:19:26.500] Again, I'm usually very careful to distinguish when I think something is impossible versus

[01:19:26.500 --> 01:19:31.340] just unlikely versus we don't know and you should stop charging people for claims that

[01:19:31.340 --> 01:19:35.380] you can't prove or just your claims are not true, whether or not this phenomenon might

[01:19:35.380 --> 01:19:38.020] be plausible or possible or not.

[01:19:38.020 --> 01:19:41.940] Anyway, I think, you know, this is just this is on that spectrum.

[01:19:41.940 --> 01:19:45.740] This is I just think we have to be really careful because I think sometimes we make

[01:19:45.740 --> 01:19:49.660] the mistake of assuming that the audience remembers.

[01:19:49.660 --> 01:19:50.660] I agree with that.

[01:19:50.660 --> 01:19:54.260] And we talked about something, you know, nine months ago or a year and a half.

[01:19:54.260 --> 01:19:55.260] It is.

[01:19:55.260 --> 01:19:56.260] It is good to make it explicit.

[01:19:56.260 --> 01:20:00.140] Because we always get emails where people assume all kinds of things about what we're

[01:20:00.140 --> 01:20:02.140] saying that we didn't say.

[01:20:02.140 --> 01:20:06.260] And this is the trick of being a good science communicator, like how much background and

[01:20:06.260 --> 01:20:10.620] caveats do we throw in on every discussion versus like, this is critical, I want to make

[01:20:10.620 --> 01:20:11.620] it clear.

[01:20:11.620 --> 01:20:12.620] This is what we're talking about here.

[01:20:12.620 --> 01:20:17.140] Yes, this is vanishingly improbable from on many levels.

[01:20:17.140 --> 01:20:20.520] And it's certainly not the kind of thing I would say is like a good investment.

[01:20:20.520 --> 01:20:25.300] But and I would definitely ask, you know, make sure that people know exactly what they're

[01:20:25.300 --> 01:20:28.900] doing, you know, if they're going to, you know, put their money into this, because the

[01:20:28.900 --> 01:20:33.500] chances are pretty overwhelming that you're going to end up a smelly mess and then have

[01:20:33.500 --> 01:20:36.660] to be just be buried later.

[01:20:36.660 --> 01:20:41.700] It's overwhelmingly likely, especially the whole body option as opposed to just the head.

[01:20:41.700 --> 01:20:44.860] But we'll say like, for a lot of things, like on a theoretical basis, like, again, I do

[01:20:44.860 --> 01:20:47.980] the space alien things, there's no reason why they can't be visiting us right now.

[01:20:47.980 --> 01:20:49.740] I just don't think the evidence supports it.

[01:20:49.740 --> 01:20:51.620] I think it's kind of the same thing.

[01:20:51.620 --> 01:20:52.620] Yeah.

[01:20:52.620 --> 01:20:53.620] Like, there's face validity there.

[01:20:53.620 --> 01:20:57.340] I think this I think this was a good skeptical exercise, this conversation.

[01:20:57.340 --> 01:20:58.340] Absolutely.

[01:20:58.340 --> 01:20:59.340] That's why we included it.

[01:20:59.340 --> 01:21:00.340] Absolutely.

[01:21:00.340 --> 01:21:01.340] Okay.

[01:21:01.340 --> 01:21:03.900] Well, everyone, we're going to take a quick break from our show to talk about one of our

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[01:22:27.460 --> 01:22:31.020] All right, guys, let's get back to the show.

[01:22:31.020 --> 01:22:32.020] Let's move on.

Who's That Noisy? (1:22:32)

[01:22:32.020 --> 01:22:33.020] Jay, it's who's that noisy time.

[01:22:33.020 --> 01:22:34.020] All right, guys.

[01:22:34.020 --> 01:22:35.020] Last week I played this noisy

[01:22:35.020 --> 01:22:54.540] Oh, yeah.

[01:22:54.540 --> 01:23:00.580] I'm not going to lie, I picked this noisy because I knew that I would kind of like it.

[01:23:00.580 --> 01:23:02.460] Halloween is afoot.

[01:23:02.460 --> 01:23:06.100] You know, there's some weird things going on in this noisy and I think it was it's very

[01:23:06.100 --> 01:23:09.580] provocative because, you know, what could it possibly be?

[01:23:09.580 --> 01:23:13.500] You know, like this is not one where it kind of sounds like a, you know, a thing hitting

[01:23:13.500 --> 01:23:15.700] another thing like this is weird.

[01:23:15.700 --> 01:23:18.820] You guys have any idea what this might be?

[01:23:18.820 --> 01:23:19.820] I really don't.

[01:23:19.820 --> 01:23:20.820] Yeah, man.

[01:23:20.820 --> 01:23:21.820] It's weird.

[01:23:21.820 --> 01:23:24.540] Well, listener named Shane Hillier wrote and said, Hey, Jay, this week, I think the who's

[01:23:24.540 --> 01:23:27.200] that noisy is someone playing a water phone.

[01:23:27.200 --> 01:23:31.300] So real quick, if you don't know what a water phone is, it's a very similar to a banana

[01:23:31.300 --> 01:23:32.300] phone.

[01:23:32.300 --> 01:23:36.260] Ring ring, ring, ring, ring, ring, ring, ring banana phone.

[01:23:36.260 --> 01:23:38.100] The hex water phone.

[01:23:38.100 --> 01:23:39.100] I gotta feel it.

[01:23:39.100 --> 01:23:45.280] A water phone is an instrument that they use for thriller and for horror movies.

[01:23:45.280 --> 01:23:51.160] It's that high pitched, like screechy kind of metal type of noise.

[01:23:51.160 --> 01:23:56.120] You know, like from Psycho when the when the when the knife is going to that.

[01:23:56.120 --> 01:23:57.440] That that might be a water.

[01:23:57.440 --> 01:23:58.620] That might be a water phone.

[01:23:58.620 --> 01:23:59.620] They're really great.

[01:23:59.620 --> 01:24:03.480] Just look it up on YouTube real quick if you want to take a look at one in action.

[01:24:03.480 --> 01:24:06.060] They don't look like a traditional instrument.

[01:24:06.060 --> 01:24:12.740] They are strummed with a bow, typically, and they make incredible sounds, and you've heard

[01:24:12.740 --> 01:24:15.380] them before, but take a look on your own.

[01:24:15.380 --> 01:24:19.580] It's not a water phone, but that was a good guess because of the level of strangeness

[01:24:19.580 --> 01:24:20.840] we have here.

[01:24:20.840 --> 01:24:27.820] Another listener named Joe Vanden Enden, remember Fridging Jensen, remember that person?

[01:24:27.820 --> 01:24:30.860] It's probably Vanden Enden.

[01:24:30.860 --> 01:24:31.860] It's probably Dutch.

[01:24:31.860 --> 01:24:32.860] You're right.

[01:24:32.860 --> 01:24:33.860] Vanden Enden.

[01:24:33.860 --> 01:24:34.860] You're right.

[01:24:34.860 --> 01:24:35.860] Thank you.

[01:24:35.860 --> 01:24:36.860] I think so, yeah.

[01:24:36.860 --> 01:24:37.860] Kara, I love having you with us in so many ways.

[01:24:37.860 --> 01:24:43.100] And even that was a terrible accent, sorry, but yeah, it's probably close to that.

[01:24:43.100 --> 01:24:47.500] Joe said, it's the center bearing on the Ferris wheel at our summer fair.

[01:24:47.500 --> 01:24:49.260] That thing is terrifying.

[01:24:49.260 --> 01:24:54.060] I thought that was funny because I did take my kids to a carnival and the Ferris wheel

[01:24:54.060 --> 01:24:56.020] was making this crazy noise.

[01:24:56.020 --> 01:24:57.020] Scary.

[01:24:57.020 --> 01:25:03.420] It rung a bell, like I didn't really sound like that, but it definitely was making a

[01:25:03.420 --> 01:25:07.020] creepy noise where I'm like, I don't think my kids are going on that this time, not in

[01:25:07.020 --> 01:25:08.020] this one.

[01:25:08.020 --> 01:25:10.900] And as a side question, are carnival rides safe?

[01:25:10.900 --> 01:25:14.220] Can somebody just email me and let me know, is this a bad idea?

[01:25:14.220 --> 01:25:17.220] Because they all look like they're bus buggers, man.

[01:25:17.220 --> 01:25:18.220] They look janky as hell.

[01:25:18.220 --> 01:25:22.460] Yeah, you're talking about the ones that fold up into their own trucks right away.

[01:25:22.460 --> 01:25:27.820] Are these the types of things that they fix them when they break, you know what I mean?

[01:25:27.820 --> 01:25:28.820] Define fix them.

[01:25:28.820 --> 01:25:31.020] They literally look 50 years old.

[01:25:31.020 --> 01:25:34.180] How many injuries or deaths though have you really heard about though?

[01:25:34.180 --> 01:25:35.180] Yeah.

[01:25:35.180 --> 01:25:38.020] It's like that whole thing that Trevor Noah did about food trucks and how he doesn't trust

[01:25:38.020 --> 01:25:41.580] them because he wants the establishment where he gets food that they're preparing that's

[01:25:41.580 --> 01:25:44.420] going into his body to still be there when he comes back.

[01:25:44.420 --> 01:25:45.420] But Bob, that's a good point.

[01:25:45.420 --> 01:25:49.620] The millions of people who ride those things every year and how many fatalities, it's probably

[01:25:49.620 --> 01:25:50.620] relatively low.

[01:25:50.620 --> 01:25:51.620] Yeah.

[01:25:51.620 --> 01:25:52.620] I hope so.

[01:25:52.620 --> 01:25:53.620] Yeah, right.

[01:25:53.620 --> 01:25:54.620] Hope so.

[01:25:54.620 --> 01:25:55.620] Four people die every year from carnival rides.

[01:25:55.620 --> 01:26:00.420] 3,000 people were sent to hospital for carnival ride injuries and 7,000 were sent for amusement

[01:26:00.420 --> 01:26:01.740] park ride injuries.

[01:26:01.740 --> 01:26:04.820] And do they estimate the number of people who participated in those things?

[01:26:04.820 --> 01:26:05.820] Oh, yeah.

[01:26:05.820 --> 01:26:06.820] What's the-

[01:26:06.820 --> 01:26:07.820] That's important to know.

[01:26:07.820 --> 01:26:08.820] It's got to be millions.

[01:26:08.820 --> 01:26:09.820] It has to be millions.

[01:26:09.820 --> 01:26:14.300] Because it can't be 4,000 people ride them and 3,000 go to the hospital, you know?

[01:26:14.300 --> 01:26:15.300] All right.

[01:26:15.300 --> 01:26:16.300] So let's continue here.

[01:26:16.300 --> 01:26:19.420] Jacob Lutzin said, thanks for a fantastic Nexus.

[01:26:19.420 --> 01:26:20.860] You are so welcome, Jacob.

[01:26:20.860 --> 01:26:26.260] I'm hearing a melody in the background that's distinctly Asian sounding, probably Chinese.

[01:26:26.260 --> 01:26:32.820] The timber and the way the ornaments go makes me think it's a so-called Chinese violin,

[01:26:32.820 --> 01:26:36.280] also called an earhugh, E-R-H-U.

[01:26:36.280 --> 01:26:38.260] I'm wondering why the quality is so bad.

[01:26:38.260 --> 01:26:41.020] The artifacts actually sound digital, but that wouldn't make sense.

[01:26:41.020 --> 01:26:45.580] So I'm going to say that this is a historical and primitive recording of a Chinese earhugh

[01:26:45.580 --> 01:26:47.180] playing a traditional melody.

[01:26:47.180 --> 01:26:48.180] All right.

[01:26:48.180 --> 01:26:53.700] So that is not correct, but there are a couple of things in here that aren't completely out

[01:26:53.700 --> 01:26:54.700] of bounds.

[01:26:54.700 --> 01:26:56.100] Just, you know, keep that in mind.

[01:26:56.100 --> 01:26:58.260] Let me go on to the next person here.

[01:26:58.260 --> 01:27:00.260] This was from Zao Wang.

[01:27:00.260 --> 01:27:05.700] Hi Jay and Skeptics crew, greetings from China and congratulations on making more than 888

[01:27:05.700 --> 01:27:06.700] episodes.

[01:27:06.700 --> 01:27:10.840] Actually, I've been listening for years and especially enjoying learning about the newest

[01:27:10.840 --> 01:27:13.240] tech developments with skepticism.

[01:27:13.240 --> 01:27:16.420] This week's noisy sounds vaguely like some kind of Chinese opera.

[01:27:16.420 --> 01:27:25.060] It is one of the recordings made by Berthold Laufer in 1901.

[01:27:25.060 --> 01:27:28.640] He used two phonographs at the same time, one for vocals and one for instruments and

[01:27:28.640 --> 01:27:32.620] may have created the earliest stereo sound recording by chance.

[01:27:32.620 --> 01:27:36.540] So anyway, this one is not correct as well, but there's a couple of things in here too

[01:27:36.540 --> 01:27:39.080] that are not completely worthless.

[01:27:39.080 --> 01:27:43.020] So there was no winner for this week and I read through a lot of guesses.

[01:27:43.020 --> 01:27:44.940] I was really hoping that someone was going to get it.

[01:27:44.940 --> 01:27:48.220] But let me let me reveal to you what this thing is.

[01:27:48.220 --> 01:27:53.100] This is something from Operation Wandering Soul.

[01:27:53.100 --> 01:27:59.880] This was a propaganda campaign and psychological warfare efforts exercised by U.S. forces during

[01:27:59.880 --> 01:28:02.920] the Vietnam War, Operation Wandering Soul.

[01:28:02.920 --> 01:28:08.500] It was an attempt to increase desertions and defections from Viet Cong forces and weaken

[01:28:08.500 --> 01:28:09.500] their morale.

[01:28:09.500 --> 01:28:13.860] So what they did was they set speakers up and they played this crazy sounding music

[01:28:13.860 --> 01:28:17.160] that had some ghostly voices in there.

[01:28:17.160 --> 01:28:22.380] And the Viet Cong thought that they were the ghosts of dead soldiers.

[01:28:22.380 --> 01:28:24.100] Some of them believed in that.

[01:28:24.100 --> 01:28:28.020] And when they heard the noise, it scared them to death.

[01:28:28.020 --> 01:28:29.020] You know what I mean?

[01:28:29.020 --> 01:28:33.780] It was actually a very interesting way to demoralize the enemy.

[01:28:33.780 --> 01:28:39.100] So there is very deliberately, there is Asian sounding music in there.

[01:28:39.100 --> 01:28:43.660] There is ghostly voices, you hear that repetitive laughing.

[01:28:43.660 --> 01:28:46.140] And that was that was the reason why they did this.

[01:28:46.140 --> 01:28:52.220] And you know, it's just one of the many, many things that one army tried to do to another

[01:28:52.220 --> 01:28:55.460] army during a war.

[01:28:55.460 --> 01:28:56.460] So take a listen again.

[01:28:56.460 --> 01:29:10.380] I won't play the whole thing, but you can get an idea of what it is.

[01:29:10.380 --> 01:29:12.980] That would be the ghosts, you know?

[01:29:12.980 --> 01:29:18.780] No, that would definitely be disturbing if they were played loudly, continuously in your

[01:29:18.780 --> 01:29:19.780] environment.

[01:29:19.780 --> 01:29:24.540] In the middle of the night, you know, it's creepy, you know, hopped up on adrenaline

[01:29:24.540 --> 01:29:27.720] anyway, because you're, you know, at war for sure.

[01:29:27.720 --> 01:29:31.960] So anyway, so that I thought that was a really interesting little piece of history there.

[01:29:31.960 --> 01:29:34.740] So thank you very much, Quinn, for sending that in.

New Noisy (1:29:34)

[low chiming then intermittent, increasingly loud buzzing coupled with rising chime notes]

J: ... what this week's Noisy is, ...

[01:29:34.740 --> 01:29:37.280] I have a new noisy this week for you guys.

[01:29:37.280 --> 01:29:40.820] This one was sent in by a listener named Naomi.

[01:29:40.820 --> 01:29:46.380] And I have to say that this one goes on my top, probably my top five list, because it's

[01:29:46.380 --> 01:29:48.540] really interesting.

[01:29:48.540 --> 01:30:15.900] When you hear the reveal, I think you'll really appreciate what you're about to hear.

[01:30:15.900 --> 01:30:21.140] So this week, be specific, guys, this one, you know, I'm looking for something more than

[01:30:21.140 --> 01:30:22.140] just a plain answer.

[01:30:22.140 --> 01:30:24.220] You got to give me some background to it.

[01:30:24.220 --> 01:30:26.260] If you think you know what this week's noisy is.

[01:30:26.260 --> 01:30:30.980] Or if you would like to send me a noisy, because I got a lot of good noisies this past week,

[01:30:30.980 --> 01:30:32.700] by the way, thank you everyone who sent them in.

[01:30:32.700 --> 01:30:36.580] But just email me at WTN at the skeptics guide dot org.

[01:30:36.580 --> 01:30:42.660] Steve, in December, in December, something is taking place.

[01:30:42.660 --> 01:30:43.660] Something wonderful.

[01:30:43.660 --> 01:30:46.980] How did you know?

[01:30:46.980 --> 01:30:47.980] You bastard.

[01:30:47.980 --> 01:30:48.980] In Arizona?

[01:30:48.980 --> 01:30:49.980] Yes.

[01:30:49.980 --> 01:30:54.740] So in Arizona, we are going to be doing for the very first time, we're going to be doing

[01:30:54.740 --> 01:30:59.300] two holiday themed extravaganza.

[01:30:59.300 --> 01:31:01.460] One in Phoenix and one in Tucson.

[01:31:01.460 --> 01:31:02.460] We also have-

[01:31:02.460 --> 01:31:04.100] What holiday we're not saying?

[01:31:04.100 --> 01:31:05.100] Yeah.

[01:31:05.100 --> 01:31:06.100] It's December.

[01:31:06.100 --> 01:31:07.100] It's December.

[01:31:07.100 --> 01:31:08.500] There are many.

[01:31:08.500 --> 01:31:14.180] We will be doing two SGU private shows, which is you could come and watch us do a live recording

[01:31:14.180 --> 01:31:15.540] of the podcast.

[01:31:15.540 --> 01:31:17.140] There's lots of interaction.

[01:31:17.140 --> 01:31:22.460] These particular private shows are considered to be super private shows because we're actually-

[01:31:22.460 --> 01:31:23.460] Enhanced.

[01:31:23.460 --> 01:31:24.460] They're enhanced.

[01:31:24.460 --> 01:31:26.700] We're going to be spending more than just the time that we do the show.

[01:31:26.700 --> 01:31:30.420] We're going to be spending an additional hour just hanging out and talking to the people

[01:31:30.420 --> 01:31:31.420] that come.

[01:31:31.420 --> 01:31:32.420] Having fun.

[01:31:32.420 --> 01:31:33.420] George will be there.

[01:31:33.420 --> 01:31:38.340] We're going to definitely be doing something fun with everybody, including George.

[01:31:38.340 --> 01:31:40.100] Maybe some music, maybe some games.

[01:31:40.100 --> 01:31:41.100] Who knows?

[01:31:41.100 --> 01:31:42.100] It's going to be-

[01:31:42.100 --> 01:31:45.540] We're going to do different things in different locations, but please do join us because that's

[01:31:45.540 --> 01:31:46.700] going to be a lot of fun.

[01:31:46.700 --> 01:31:49.660] Then you could come see us at one of the two extravaganzas.

[01:31:49.660 --> 01:31:53.940] So there's two private shows, one in each city, and there's two extravaganzas, one in

[01:31:53.940 --> 01:31:54.940] each city.

[01:31:54.940 --> 01:31:57.980] The dates are a little weird because we're going to be bouncing back between the two

[01:31:57.980 --> 01:31:58.980] cities.

[01:31:58.980 --> 01:31:59.980] It was-

[01:31:59.980 --> 01:32:03.940] Just trust me when I tell you, I tried my best to make it as easy on us as possible,

[01:32:03.940 --> 01:32:07.380] but sometimes things get a little wacky, but join us.

[01:32:07.380 --> 01:32:11.900] It's going to be a lot of fun and I doubt we'll ever do the holiday theme thing again.

[01:32:11.900 --> 01:32:13.620] So this is your chance.

[01:32:13.620 --> 01:32:14.620] Go to-

[01:32:14.620 --> 01:32:15.620] This is it.

[01:32:15.620 --> 01:32:19.900] Go to theskepticsguide.org forward slash events for all the specific details.

[01:32:19.900 --> 01:32:20.900] Thanks Jay.


Announcements (1:30:36)

Questions/Emails/Corrections/Follow-ups

Correction #1: Photons Have Momentum (1:32:21)

_consider_using_block_quotes_for_emails_read_aloud_in_this_segment_
with_reduced_spacing_for_long_chunks –

[01:32:20.900 --> 01:32:22.500] All right, just one quick email.

[01:32:22.500 --> 01:32:24.540] We had a couple of people email us on this.

[01:32:24.540 --> 01:32:30.320] I want to read one from Armando who says, hey all, this is Armando, your friendly pathologist

[01:32:30.320 --> 01:32:32.760] recently featured on your live stream.

[01:32:32.760 --> 01:32:35.580] Just wanted to comment on something Jay said during science or fiction.

[01:32:35.580 --> 01:32:41.380] He said, it can't be that the photons are pushing anything because they're massless.

[01:32:41.380 --> 01:32:44.260] Jay, you know why that's wrong now, right?

[01:32:44.260 --> 01:32:46.300] Yes, but that, so that is wrong?

[01:32:46.300 --> 01:32:47.300] That is-

[01:32:47.300 --> 01:32:49.940] That's what he's alluding to.

[01:32:49.940 --> 01:32:51.140] It's partly wrong.

[01:32:51.140 --> 01:32:55.860] So the photons are massless, but they can push things.

[01:32:55.860 --> 01:32:56.860] That's how solar sails work.

[01:32:56.860 --> 01:32:59.180] And Steve, I am so disappointed in us.

[01:32:59.180 --> 01:33:00.980] Steve, how did we miss that?

[01:33:00.980 --> 01:33:01.980] I didn't hear him.

[01:33:01.980 --> 01:33:02.980] It was live.

[01:33:02.980 --> 01:33:03.980] You know, whatever.

[01:33:03.980 --> 01:33:05.780] Oh, this was the live show.

[01:33:05.780 --> 01:33:07.060] Oh, I feel so much better.

[01:33:07.060 --> 01:33:08.060] I do.

[01:33:08.060 --> 01:33:09.060] I really do.

[01:33:09.060 --> 01:33:13.460] Now if I had like heard and processed what he said, I definitely would have made a correction.

[01:33:13.460 --> 01:33:16.580] Although I try not to kibitz too much when you guys are talking yourself into a wrong

[01:33:16.580 --> 01:33:17.580] answer.

[01:33:17.580 --> 01:33:18.580] You know what I mean?

[01:33:18.580 --> 01:33:21.860] I try to remember to do it afterwards and sometimes I forget, but I don't remember hearing

[01:33:21.860 --> 01:33:22.860] this at all.

[01:33:22.860 --> 01:33:23.860] I blame Steve.

[01:33:23.860 --> 01:33:28.280] So yeah, so photons are massless, but they have momentum because of their energy.

[01:33:28.280 --> 01:33:33.000] And because they have momentum when they smack into things, they can push them.

[01:33:33.000 --> 01:33:37.620] You can, so like Armando says, he used optical tweezers in his research.

[01:33:37.620 --> 01:33:38.820] That's how he knows about it.

[01:33:38.820 --> 01:33:43.500] But also like we, there are things like light sails, solar sails, where just the light from

[01:33:43.500 --> 01:33:49.580] the, from a laser or from the, from the sun can push a little bit, a little tiny, a little

[01:33:49.580 --> 01:33:51.780] bit, but it picks, it adds up over time.

[01:33:51.780 --> 01:33:55.300] It is counterintuitive to think that light has momentum, but yeah.

[01:33:55.300 --> 01:33:56.300] Right.

[01:33:56.300 --> 01:34:01.300] Well it's a whole energy mass thing, you know, it's just weird, but yeah, they have, photons

[01:34:01.300 --> 01:34:03.140] have momentum.

[01:34:03.140 --> 01:34:04.140] Absolutely.

Science or Fiction (1:34:08)

Theme: Robots

Item #1: Robot-assisted lobectomy for lung cancer had better outcomes than video-assisted lobectomy in a recent double-blinded clinical trial.[5]
Item #2: A University of New Hampshire team has developed a robot that can independently take care of a demented patient's entire daily needs.[6]
Item #3: A robot armed with a new AI algorithm was able to map its own body without any outside help or input and use that information to plan its own movements.[7]

Answer Item
Fiction Caring for the demented
Science Robot-assisted lobectomy
Science
Robot maps its own body
Host Result
Steve swept
Rogue Guess
Cara
Caring for the demented
Evan
Caring for the demented
Bob
Caring for the demented
Jay
Caring for the demented

Voice-over: It's time for Science or Fiction.

Cara's Response

Evan's Response

Bob's Response

Jay's Response

Steve Explains Item #1

Steve Explains Item #2

Steve Explains Item #3

[01:34:04.140 --> 01:34:11.180] Um, okay guys, let's go on with science or fiction.

[01:34:11.180 --> 01:34:20.580] It's time for science or fiction.

[01:34:20.580 --> 01:34:23.900] Each week I come up with three science news items or facts, two real and one fake.

[01:34:23.900 --> 01:34:27.620] And I challenge my panelists, get things to tell me which one is the fake.

[01:34:27.620 --> 01:34:29.780] We have a theme this week.

[01:34:29.780 --> 01:34:32.820] These are news items, but these are news items around a theme.

[01:34:32.820 --> 01:34:39.340] And the theme is robots, robots, three robot related news items.

[01:34:39.340 --> 01:34:40.940] Are you guys ready?

[01:34:40.940 --> 01:34:42.580] I am totally ready now.

[01:34:42.580 --> 01:34:43.580] Yeah.

[01:34:43.580 --> 01:34:44.580] All right, here we go.

[01:34:44.580 --> 01:34:48.780] Item number one, robot assisted lobectomy for lung cancer.

[01:34:48.780 --> 01:34:51.440] So that's lung lobe, not brain lobe, right?

[01:34:51.440 --> 01:34:56.180] Lobectomy for lung cancer had better outcomes than video assisted lobectomy in a recent

[01:34:56.180 --> 01:34:58.180] double blinded clinical trial.

[01:34:58.180 --> 01:35:03.500] Item number two, a University of New Hampshire team has developed a robot that can independently

[01:35:03.500 --> 01:35:08.380] take care of a demented patient's entire daily needs.

[01:35:08.380 --> 01:35:13.460] And item number three, a robot armed with a new AI algorithm was able to map its own

[01:35:13.460 --> 01:35:19.460] body without any outside help or input and use that information to plan its own movements.

[01:35:19.460 --> 01:35:22.500] Kara, you missed last week, so you get to go first.

[01:35:22.500 --> 01:35:24.220] Okay, let's see.

[01:35:24.220 --> 01:35:25.700] As in last week as in next week.

[01:35:25.700 --> 01:35:26.700] Yes.

[01:35:26.700 --> 01:35:27.700] Right?

[01:35:27.700 --> 01:35:28.700] Yeah.

[01:35:28.700 --> 01:35:29.700] Yeah.

[01:35:29.700 --> 01:35:30.700] Yeah.

[01:35:30.700 --> 01:35:31.700] Okay, so robot assisted.

[01:35:31.700 --> 01:35:37.300] Oh, this one like speaks to me because I recently had not a robot assisted laparoscopy.

[01:35:37.300 --> 01:35:41.220] But I know people who had robot assisted laparoscopies.

[01:35:41.220 --> 01:35:47.820] So did those with lung cancer who had a lobectomy have better outcomes than when a robot assisted

[01:35:47.820 --> 01:35:49.260] them?

[01:35:49.260 --> 01:35:52.980] Not in a double blind trial better outcomes.

[01:35:52.980 --> 01:35:53.980] What does that mean?

[01:35:53.980 --> 01:35:58.260] Yeah, I'll get more specific, but I'm not going to give you the details now.

[01:35:58.260 --> 01:35:59.260] Oh, okay.

[01:35:59.260 --> 01:36:00.260] All right.

[01:36:00.260 --> 01:36:01.260] Yeah.

[01:36:01.260 --> 01:36:03.700] Like, did they get more of the cancer or I'm assuming this, yeah, for lung cancer.

[01:36:03.700 --> 01:36:08.260] Okay, so that's no, no, no, University of New Hampshire team developed a robot that

[01:36:08.260 --> 01:36:14.220] can independently take care of a patient with dementia's entire daily needs.

[01:36:14.220 --> 01:36:16.340] I mean, it says they just developed it.

[01:36:16.340 --> 01:36:20.620] It doesn't say that they actually tested it or that it actually works very well, right?

[01:36:20.620 --> 01:36:27.900] Because I'm reading online about people like robot cats giving people with dementia companionship,

[01:36:27.900 --> 01:36:32.460] not like robots that are helping them dispense meds and, and eat and clean and cook and all

[01:36:32.460 --> 01:36:33.460] of those things.

[01:36:33.460 --> 01:36:38.740] I mean, whether you could make it and whether it would actually work are two different issues.

[01:36:38.740 --> 01:36:44.580] And then a robot armed with a new AI algorithm, I'm sure there's a new AI algorithm every

[01:36:44.580 --> 01:36:52.340] day was able to map its own body without any outside help or input and use that information

[01:36:52.340 --> 01:36:53.340] to plan its own movements.

[01:36:53.340 --> 01:36:54.340] Oh, okay.

[01:36:54.340 --> 01:36:59.140] So like it had sensory, somatosensory feedback is what you're saying, right?

[01:36:59.140 --> 01:37:04.580] Yeah, or somato, basically the robot equivalent of somatotopic mapping was able to know its

[01:37:04.580 --> 01:37:07.700] own body enough to use it.

[01:37:07.700 --> 01:37:11.140] I mean, they all seem plausible.

[01:37:11.140 --> 01:37:18.980] The dementia robot in practice to me is the least plausible, but in theory, it's quite

[01:37:18.980 --> 01:37:20.060] plausible.

[01:37:20.060 --> 01:37:26.580] And the way you worded it, the team developed a robot that can do this leaves a lot of open

[01:37:26.580 --> 01:37:27.580] endedness.

[01:37:27.580 --> 01:37:30.340] But I do think a robot could map its own body.

[01:37:30.340 --> 01:37:35.020] I do think because with like computer vision, and then obviously use that information like

[01:37:35.020 --> 01:37:40.940] in neural net, like in machine learning to then kind of know where its body is in space.

[01:37:40.940 --> 01:37:47.140] And I think probably a robot assisted lobectomy might like result in a faster heal time or

[01:37:47.140 --> 01:37:51.480] something because you can make smaller incisions because everything's a little bit more precise.

[01:37:51.480 --> 01:37:56.860] So yeah, I guess I got to say that the dementia robot is probably going to be the fiction

[01:37:56.860 --> 01:37:59.460] even though it could be science, but yeah.

[01:37:59.460 --> 01:38:00.460] Okay, Evan.

[01:38:00.460 --> 01:38:02.860] Oh, yeah, Kara, well done.

[01:38:02.860 --> 01:38:05.660] I'm leaning towards your way of thinking about this.

[01:38:05.660 --> 01:38:11.100] I think the one about taking care of the demented patient's entire daily needs.

[01:38:11.100 --> 01:38:18.900] How would the robot be able to shift its programming based on the fact that the demented patient

[01:38:18.900 --> 01:38:26.580] will be kind of going through probably these shifts of their own and sort of keeping up

[01:38:26.580 --> 01:38:30.980] with that unpredictability or unpredictability of it?

[01:38:30.980 --> 01:38:37.260] I don't know that that gap could be closed, so that one seemed the least plausible of

[01:38:37.260 --> 01:38:38.540] these three to me.

[01:38:38.540 --> 01:38:42.580] So yeah, I'll just go with that and I think Kara, you're right.

[01:38:42.580 --> 01:38:43.580] Okay Bob.

[01:38:43.580 --> 01:38:48.180] The lobectomy sounds totally, yeah, I mean, I don't have a tremendous amount to add.

[01:38:48.180 --> 01:38:52.220] One thing I would add about the robot that can map its own body.

[01:38:52.220 --> 01:38:56.940] I mean, I would think it wouldn't need specialized sensors.

[01:38:56.940 --> 01:39:03.620] I think it could potentially just visually look at itself and divine and ascertain what

[01:39:03.620 --> 01:39:09.500] the likely things it would have to do in order to understand its body well enough so that

[01:39:09.500 --> 01:39:12.620] it could attempt to walk or something like that.

[01:39:12.620 --> 01:39:16.700] So yeah, but that sounds absolutely the most plausible.

[01:39:16.700 --> 01:39:23.020] The first one about the assisted lobectomy seems almost as plausible.

[01:39:23.020 --> 01:39:29.300] And of course, the second one here, this one with the robot helping a demented patient's

[01:39:29.300 --> 01:39:36.540] entire daily needs just leaked out, like, come on, I'm with my mom most days and taking

[01:39:36.540 --> 01:39:39.340] care of her and she's not even demented yet.

[01:39:39.340 --> 01:39:43.060] And there's no way, come on, but it all depends, what are you talking about?

[01:39:43.060 --> 01:39:48.020] Independently take her, you're going to help her out of bed or cook food or go get medicine

[01:39:48.020 --> 01:39:52.300] or, I mean, it just totally depends on what that means.

[01:39:52.300 --> 01:39:53.300] Their daily needs.

[01:39:53.300 --> 01:39:55.860] I mean, how demented are we talking about?

[01:39:55.860 --> 01:40:02.180] There's so many unknowns here that I think could make this much more restricted than

[01:40:02.180 --> 01:40:03.180] we're assuming.

[01:40:03.180 --> 01:40:06.780] And then I think in that case, the lobectomy then would be the fiction.

[01:40:06.780 --> 01:40:12.780] But I'll just, this one's so obvious and Steve, you know that this one is the most obvious

[01:40:12.780 --> 01:40:13.780] one.

[01:40:13.780 --> 01:40:17.300] I don't want to metagame it, whatever, I'll just say that's fiction as well.

[01:40:17.300 --> 01:40:18.300] And Jay.

[01:40:18.300 --> 01:40:22.660] Yeah, I'm going to have to agree that the one about the robot taking care of the demented

[01:40:22.660 --> 01:40:26.740] patient, I mean, you know, the devil's in the details here, but I just don't see that

[01:40:26.740 --> 01:40:32.700] we have a robot that can do all the physical things that need to be done with a mind behind

[01:40:32.700 --> 01:40:37.980] it to make decisions because, you know, unexpected things happen that I don't think the robot

[01:40:37.980 --> 01:40:38.980] could handle.

[01:40:38.980 --> 01:40:40.340] So I definitely agree with these guys.

[01:40:40.340 --> 01:40:41.340] All right.

[01:40:41.340 --> 01:40:44.260] Well, you all agree with number two, so we'll just take these in order.

[01:40:44.260 --> 01:40:48.740] Number one, robot-assisted lobectomy for lung cancer had better outcomes than video-assisted

[01:40:48.740 --> 01:40:51.800] lobectomy in a recent double-blinded clinical trial.

[01:40:51.800 --> 01:40:55.100] You guys all think this one was science.

[01:40:55.100 --> 01:40:58.420] And this one is science.

[01:40:58.420 --> 01:41:00.740] This one's, yeah, this one's pretty cool.

[01:41:00.740 --> 01:41:07.860] Not surprising, you know, robot-assisted surgeries are progressing fairly quickly.

[01:41:07.860 --> 01:41:12.660] And you know, the robots could just make very, you know, precise movements and very tiny

[01:41:12.660 --> 01:41:13.660] movements.

[01:41:13.660 --> 01:41:17.940] And yeah, it's like the perfect tool for a surgeon.

[01:41:17.940 --> 01:41:22.540] They don't drink coffee before the surgery and get jitters.

[01:41:22.540 --> 01:41:26.660] So the ways in which the outcomes were superior, there were two ways.

[01:41:26.660 --> 01:41:27.920] One was kind of subjective.

[01:41:27.920 --> 01:41:35.100] The patients who had the robotic surgery had improved quality of life assessment afterwards.

[01:41:35.100 --> 01:41:43.460] But the more objective one was that the robot-assisted surgery were able to find more lymph nodes

[01:41:43.460 --> 01:41:44.460] to dissect.

[01:41:44.460 --> 01:41:48.020] Oh, so like their diagnostic ability was better.

[01:41:48.020 --> 01:41:49.020] Yeah.

[01:41:49.020 --> 01:41:50.020] Oh, yeah.

[01:41:50.020 --> 01:41:51.020] Oh, cool.

[01:41:51.020 --> 01:41:52.020] Yeah.

[01:41:52.020 --> 01:41:53.020] I'm surprised.

[01:41:53.020 --> 01:41:54.020] Yeah.

[01:41:54.020 --> 01:41:55.020] So that might be actual hard outcome improvement.

[01:41:55.020 --> 01:41:56.020] All right.

[01:41:56.020 --> 01:41:57.020] Let's go on to number two.

[01:41:57.020 --> 01:42:00.340] A University of New Hampshire team has developed a robot that can independently take care of

[01:42:00.340 --> 01:42:03.080] a demented patient's entire daily needs.

[01:42:03.080 --> 01:42:06.140] You guys all think this one is the fiction.

[01:42:06.140 --> 01:42:09.140] And this one is the fiction.

[01:42:09.140 --> 01:42:10.140] This is the fiction.

[01:42:10.140 --> 01:42:11.140] Yay!

[01:42:11.140 --> 01:42:12.140] Yeah.

[01:42:12.140 --> 01:42:13.140] All right.

[01:42:13.140 --> 01:42:21.100] But the news item was that the New Hampshire team got a research grant to develop a robot

[01:42:21.100 --> 01:42:23.060] to take care of Alzheimer's patients.

[01:42:23.060 --> 01:42:25.380] But they've already developed a prototype.

[01:42:25.380 --> 01:42:29.140] But it's not really like taking care of the patient.

[01:42:29.140 --> 01:42:32.020] It's more like, you know, those robots now that wander around the store.

[01:42:32.020 --> 01:42:33.020] You know, I don't know.

[01:42:33.020 --> 01:42:34.020] Yeah.

[01:42:34.020 --> 01:42:35.020] But it's like that.

[01:42:35.020 --> 01:42:39.100] But it will do things like monitor whether or not they took their medication.

[01:42:39.100 --> 01:42:43.540] And then if they don't take their medication, it'll tell them, take your medication.

[01:42:43.540 --> 01:42:46.340] And if they still don't take their medication, eventually they'll then call their doctor

[01:42:46.340 --> 01:42:48.840] and say, hey, they're not taking their medication.

[01:42:48.840 --> 01:42:50.900] So it's not really physically doing anything.

[01:42:50.900 --> 01:42:57.140] It's just sort of monitoring the patient, communicating with them, giving them reminders,

[01:42:57.140 --> 01:43:01.180] communicating with other, with caretakers as necessary.

[01:43:01.180 --> 01:43:05.620] And they're trying to now do research to build more functionality into it.

[01:43:05.620 --> 01:43:11.540] But robots in people living spaces and doing people things is still a little bit of a ways

[01:43:11.540 --> 01:43:12.660] off.

[01:43:12.660 --> 01:43:15.180] So this is, I think, a little ahead of the curve.

[01:43:15.180 --> 01:43:17.380] Yeah, that sounds like a butler to me.

[01:43:17.380 --> 01:43:21.100] I mean, if you could do that, then that would make also a decent butler, which we are just

[01:43:21.100 --> 01:43:22.100] not there.

[01:43:22.100 --> 01:43:23.100] Totally.

[01:43:23.100 --> 01:43:24.100] Yeah.

[01:43:24.100 --> 01:43:25.100] It's also a Roomba.

[01:43:25.100 --> 01:43:26.100] Yeah.

[01:43:26.100 --> 01:43:27.100] Vacuums the floors.

[01:43:27.100 --> 01:43:28.100] Yeah.

[01:43:28.100 --> 01:43:31.700] So number three, a robot armed with a new AI algorithm was able to map its own body

[01:43:31.700 --> 01:43:35.660] without any outside help or input and use that information to plan its own movements

[01:43:35.660 --> 01:43:38.100] is also science.

[01:43:38.100 --> 01:43:43.120] The writing about this as the robot was taught how to imagine itself, but I think that's

[01:43:43.120 --> 01:43:45.020] too much of a cognitive description.

[01:43:45.020 --> 01:43:46.020] Yeah.

[01:43:46.020 --> 01:43:53.460] It basically, yeah, the robot was functioning with five streaming video cameras, so it could

[01:43:53.460 --> 01:43:57.580] see itself and then uses that information in order to map its own movements and its

[01:43:57.580 --> 01:44:03.580] own body and then use that information in order to execute maneuvers.

[01:44:03.580 --> 01:44:08.220] And there was no outside information, so it was totally self-taught, which is one type

[01:44:08.220 --> 01:44:14.140] of AI algorithm where the AI is unguided.

[01:44:14.140 --> 01:44:22.780] It's learning entirely with information it's picking up from the world around it, not fed

[01:44:22.780 --> 01:44:25.300] to it by a program or anything.

[01:44:25.300 --> 01:44:30.420] So self-modeling, of course, the other researcher says that self-modeling is a primitive form

[01:44:30.420 --> 01:44:31.420] of self-awareness.

[01:44:31.420 --> 01:44:32.420] Okay.

[01:44:32.420 --> 01:44:33.420] That's misleading.

[01:44:33.420 --> 01:44:39.380] I just don't know why they feel like they need to go there to try to use consciousness

[01:44:39.380 --> 01:44:40.380] metaphors.

[01:44:40.380 --> 01:44:41.380] I think it's confusing.

[01:44:41.380 --> 01:44:43.460] Anyway, so yeah, robots are cool.

[01:44:43.460 --> 01:44:47.900] I ran across several robot news items like, oh, I'll just do a theme on robots.

[01:44:47.900 --> 01:44:48.900] Yeah.

[01:44:48.900 --> 01:44:49.900] Yeah.

[01:44:49.900 --> 01:44:50.900] All right, guys.

[01:44:50.900 --> 01:44:51.900] Good job, everyone.

[01:44:51.900 --> 01:44:52.900] Thanks.

Skeptical Quote of the Week (1:44:53)

Death might appear to destroy the meaning in our lives, but in fact it is the very source of our creativity. As Kafka said, "The meaning of life is that it ends." Death is the engine that keeps us running, giving us the motivation to achieve, learn, love, and create.
Caitlin Doughty, American mortician, author, blogger, YouTube personality, from her book, Smoke Gets in Your Eyes & Other Lessons from the Crematory (2014)

[01:44:52.900 --> 01:44:53.900] Evan, give us a quote.

[01:44:53.900 --> 01:44:58.660] Death might appear to destroy the meaning in our lives, but in fact, it's the very

[01:44:58.660 --> 01:45:00.700] source of our creativity.

[01:45:00.700 --> 01:45:04.540] As Kafka said, the meaning of life is that it ends.

[01:45:04.540 --> 01:45:09.780] Death is the engine that keeps us running, giving us the motivation to achieve, learn,

[01:45:09.780 --> 01:45:12.260] love, and create.

[01:45:12.260 --> 01:45:17.140] Caitlin Doty, from the book Smoke Gets in Your Eyes and Other Lessons from the Crematory.

[01:45:17.140 --> 01:45:19.660] Yeah, I mean, it's an interesting idea.

[01:45:19.660 --> 01:45:25.340] I jokingly responded to Evan when he sent this quote out saying, this is pro-death propaganda.

[01:45:25.340 --> 01:45:29.700] But I would love to have information about the counterfactual.

[01:45:29.700 --> 01:45:33.020] I'd love to do research, which is impossible to do.

[01:45:33.020 --> 01:45:34.020] But what would it be like?

[01:45:34.020 --> 01:45:35.580] Yeah, this is a philosophical question.

[01:45:35.580 --> 01:45:36.580] Yeah.

[01:45:36.580 --> 01:45:40.420] If people lived hundreds or thousands of years or just indefinitely, what would it do to

[01:45:40.420 --> 01:45:41.420] human psychology?

[01:45:41.420 --> 01:45:44.180] Would people just lay around and lose all interest?

[01:45:44.180 --> 01:45:52.560] Or will they just have multiple jobs, multiple careers, multiple families, and would it re-energize

[01:45:52.560 --> 01:45:53.560] them every now and then?

[01:45:53.560 --> 01:45:56.220] Or would it just completely sap them of all motivation?

[01:45:56.220 --> 01:45:57.220] I don't know.

[01:45:57.220 --> 01:45:58.220] I'd love to know.

[01:45:58.220 --> 01:45:59.220] It's hard to say.

[01:45:59.220 --> 01:46:00.220] Right.

[01:46:00.220 --> 01:46:01.220] It's hard to say.

[01:46:01.220 --> 01:46:04.380] But I think what's important, related to the quote that was just read, was that even if

[01:46:04.380 --> 01:46:11.800] death is inevitable, immortality is such obvious bullshit, but death will happen even if you

[01:46:11.800 --> 01:46:13.380] live for 1,000 years.

[01:46:13.380 --> 01:46:16.540] I mean, that doesn't mean that, oh, life won't have any meaning.

[01:46:16.540 --> 01:46:20.900] Of course it will have more meaning if you died at 1,000 years instead of a mere 80,

[01:46:20.900 --> 01:46:21.900] you know?

[01:46:21.900 --> 01:46:23.700] Wait, you mean of course it'll have more meaning?

[01:46:23.700 --> 01:46:24.700] No, no.

[01:46:24.700 --> 01:46:25.700] What?

[01:46:25.700 --> 01:46:26.700] No, of course it will still have meaning.

[01:46:26.700 --> 01:46:27.700] I see.

[01:46:27.700 --> 01:46:28.700] Okay.

[01:46:28.700 --> 01:46:29.700] It will still have meaning.

[01:46:29.700 --> 01:46:30.700] It will still have absolute meaning.

[01:46:30.700 --> 01:46:33.220] It's not like... Because I read this quote, I hear this quote, and I think that it's kind

[01:46:33.220 --> 01:46:39.740] of like saying that it would be against... Somebody would say that would be against extended lifespans.

[01:46:39.740 --> 01:46:41.500] But to me, it doesn't matter.

[01:46:41.500 --> 01:46:46.180] 80 years or 800, it's still... Death would have meaning and people would still...

[01:46:46.180 --> 01:46:47.180] Still finite.

[01:46:47.180 --> 01:46:48.180] Could still, yes.

[01:46:48.180 --> 01:46:49.500] Also, our sense of time would be different.

[01:46:49.500 --> 01:46:50.500] Yeah, sure.

[01:46:50.500 --> 01:46:51.500] Totally.

[01:46:51.500 --> 01:46:56.100] And that's sort of the counterfactual to your counterfactual or to your asking for the counterfactual

[01:46:56.100 --> 01:47:01.740] that I would say, Steve, is that regardless of what it would be like if, it's not like

[01:47:01.740 --> 01:47:02.740] that.

[01:47:02.740 --> 01:47:04.100] It is like it is.

[01:47:04.100 --> 01:47:10.700] We die at a certain age or younger, and the fact that we die and many philosophers have

[01:47:10.700 --> 01:47:15.540] grappled with this and many of them come to the same conclusion and existential psychologists

[01:47:15.540 --> 01:47:21.500] like myself come to that same conclusion that life has purpose and meaning fundamentally

[01:47:21.500 --> 01:47:23.800] because we die.

[01:47:23.800 --> 01:47:24.800] That is where we find it.

[01:47:24.800 --> 01:47:31.380] The same way that love, that we feel the depths and the ache and the power of love fundamentally

[01:47:31.380 --> 01:47:32.420] because we lose it.

[01:47:32.420 --> 01:47:33.420] The absence of it.

[01:47:33.420 --> 01:47:34.420] Yes.

[01:47:34.420 --> 01:47:38.700] We would not know it if we didn't know what the absence of it was.

[01:47:38.700 --> 01:47:41.260] It's fundamental to our human psychology.

[01:47:41.260 --> 01:47:45.540] And I believe that in my bones and I know that's not scientific.

[01:47:45.540 --> 01:47:46.620] It is philosophical.

[01:47:46.620 --> 01:47:50.260] There is no way to actually scientifically test that, but it's something that resonates

[01:47:50.260 --> 01:47:51.820] deeply with me.

[01:47:51.820 --> 01:47:55.900] And part of the reason that I love this quote, it obviously jibes with everything I study

[01:47:55.900 --> 01:48:00.660] and all of my academic work that I do, but I see it in my patients.

[01:48:00.660 --> 01:48:03.260] I see it when they get a terminal diagnosis.

[01:48:03.260 --> 01:48:09.140] I see the way that they change their relationship with what matters to them, how they find meaning

[01:48:09.140 --> 01:48:10.940] and purpose in their lives.

[01:48:10.940 --> 01:48:12.860] And it's really beautiful to see.

[01:48:12.860 --> 01:48:13.860] Yeah.

[01:48:13.860 --> 01:48:18.220] I do watch one of the things I think about, like if people were super long lived, would

[01:48:18.220 --> 01:48:20.260] they be really petty?

[01:48:20.260 --> 01:48:21.260] You know?

[01:48:21.260 --> 01:48:22.260] Right.

[01:48:22.260 --> 01:48:23.260] Yeah.

[01:48:23.260 --> 01:48:30.820] Well, if what we do in the shadows is a documentary, they definitely are.

[01:48:30.820 --> 01:48:35.740] That is a very, obviously it's comedy, but there is a little bit of an inadvertent experiment

[01:48:35.740 --> 01:48:36.740] going on.

[01:48:36.740 --> 01:48:37.740] Yeah.

[01:48:37.740 --> 01:48:38.740] Absolutely.

[01:48:38.740 --> 01:48:39.740] Next you're going to tell me Highlander isn't a documentary.

[01:48:39.740 --> 01:48:40.740] Okay.

[01:48:40.740 --> 01:48:41.740] Yeah.

[01:48:41.740 --> 01:48:42.740] Yeah.

[01:48:42.740 --> 01:48:44.140] But the funny thing is what we do in the shadows is filmed like it's a documentary.

[01:48:44.140 --> 01:48:45.140] Yeah.

[01:48:45.140 --> 01:48:46.140] Right.

[01:48:46.140 --> 01:48:47.140] Oh, yeah.

[01:48:47.140 --> 01:48:48.140] Yeah.

[01:48:48.140 --> 01:48:49.140] Sometimes they kill the cameraman.

[01:48:49.140 --> 01:48:50.140] Like, whoops.

[01:48:50.140 --> 01:48:51.140] They do, right?

[01:48:51.140 --> 01:48:52.140] That's interesting.

Signoff

[01:48:52.140 --> 01:48:53.140] All right.

[01:48:53.140 --> 01:48:57.660] Well, thank you all for joining me this week.

[01:48:57.660 --> 01:48:58.660] Roger that, Steve.

[01:48:58.660 --> 01:49:00.260] Thank you, Steve.

S: —and until next week, this is your Skeptics' Guide to the Universe.

S: Skeptics' Guide to the Universe is produced by SGU Productions, dedicated to promoting science and critical thinking. For more information, visit us at theskepticsguide.org. Send your questions to info@theskepticsguide.org. And, if you would like to support the show and all the work that we do, go to patreon.com/SkepticsGuide and consider becoming a patron and becoming part of the SGU community. Our listeners and supporters are what make SGU possible.

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Today I Learned

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