Should we abandon the multiverse theory? | Sabine Hossenfelder, Roger Penrose, Michio Kaku
What is driving the mulitverse theory? Are the multiverse stories only a sticky-plaster solution to the Big Bang theory problem? Leading thinkers Sabine Hossenfelder, Roger Penrose and Michio Kaku debate.
00:00 Introduction
02:22 Michio Kaku | Multiverse theory has now dominating cosmology; it is unavoidable.
06:03 Sabine Hossenfelder | Believing in the multiverse is the logical equivalent to believing in God.
07:57 Roger Penrose | Universes are sequential and so are not independent worlds.
16:36 Theme 1 | Do scientifc theories need to be testable?
28:45 Theme 2 | Are tales of the multiverse solutions to the Big Bang theory in trouble?
42:49 Theme 3 | Will theories of the universe always be bound by untestable elements?
Multiverses are everywhere. Or at least the theory is. Everyone from physicists Stephen Hawking and Brian Greene to Marvel superheroes have shown their support for the idea. But critics argue that not only is the multiverse improbable, it is also fantasy and fundamentally unscientific as the theory can never be tested - a requirement that has defined science from its outset.
Should we reject the grand claims and leave multiverse theories to the pages of comic books? Are tales of the multiverse really sticking-plaster solutions for Big Bang theory in trouble? Or should we take multiverse theory as seriously as its proponents, and accept that modern science has moved beyond the bounds of experiment and into that of imagination?
Watch our latest scientific debate on what the universe is made of here iai.tv/video/what-the-world-i...
#TheMultiverseFantasy #BigBangTheoryProblem #SpaceTimeContinuum
Michio Kaku is the co-founder of string field theory and the author of several books including several New York Times best sellers such as ‘The God Equation: The Quest for a Theory of Everything became.’ He is also professor of theoretical physics in the City College of New York and CUNY Graduate Center.
Sabine Hossenfelder is a theoretical physicist who specializes in the foundations of physics. She is a Research Fellow at the Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies where she leads the group on Superfluid Dark Matter.
Roger Penrose is a world-renowned mathematician and Nobel Laureate in Physics. He is best known for his work on general relativity and sharing the Wolf Prize for Physics with Stephen Hawking for his work on black holes.
Hilary Lawson hosts.
The Institute of Art and Ideas features videos and articles from cutting edge thinkers discussing the ideas that are shaping the world, from metaphysics to string theory, technology to democracy, aesthetics to genetics. Subscribe today! iai.tv/subscribe?Y...
For debates and talks: iai.tv
For articles: iai.tv/articles
For courses: iai.tv/iai-academy/courses
Пікірлер: 8 900
Want to learn more about the theory behind the multiverse? Check out our newest Big Idea video with multiverse specialist Laura Mersini-Houghton! kzread.info/dash/bejne/naZnkpORoKuud6Q.html&ab_channel=TheInstituteofArtandIdeas
@rivas97
9 ай бұрын
Warum es kein weiteres Universum als ein Paralleluniversum geben kann? Die Hypothese über ein Paralleluniversum basiert auf der falschen Annahme, dass unser Gedanke, Geist, Seele oder Selbstbewusstsein eine Trennung vom Universum unterliegt. Daher können weder ein Paralleluniversum noch ein Jenseits existieren, da wir ohne eine Verbindung zwischen beiden niemals auf diese Idee kommen könnten. Deshalb führt die Kontinuität zwangsläufig zu einem Einheituniversum. Daraus folgt, dass eine Grenze nur dann als solche definierbar ist, wenn sie diffus und offen für eine Verbindung ist. Außerdem ist der Begriff Universum nicht mit Begriffen wie Erde, Stern, Galaxien vergleichbar, da Universum alles übertrifft, was wir uns vorstellen können, und auch unser Bewusstsein umfasst. Daran sollten wir immer denken! Ich zitiere an dieser Stelle von Emanuel Kant: "Zwei Dinge erfüllen das Gemüt mit immer neuer und zunehmender Bewunderung und Ehrfurcht, je öfter und anhaltender sich das Nachdenken damit beschäftigt; der bestirnte Himmel über mir und das moralische Gesetz in mir; beide darf ich nicht als in Dunkelheiten verhüllt oder in überschwänglich außer meinem Gesichtkreises suchen und bloß vermuten; ich sehe sie vor mir und verknüpfte sie unmittelbar mit dem Bewusstsein meiner Existenz!" Was heißt das eigentlich, wenn wir von einem Paralleluniversum sprechen? Um diese Frage zu beantworten, müssen wir einige Voraussetzungen festlegen: Parallel bedeutet, dass zwei Mengen keine Schnittstelle haben und keine Elemente voneinander besitzen. Oder anders ausgedrückt: Die Mengen A und B sind nicht parallel, wenn es mindestens ein Element gibt, das Teilmenge von A und B ist und somit eine Schnittmenge zwischen beiden Mengen gibt. Wenn wir jedes Universum als eine geschlossene Menge betrachten, dann sind zum Beispiel zwei Universen U und U' nur dann parallel, wenn kein Element von U oder U' existiert, das Teilmenge von beiden wäre. Es gilt: Wenn U:={ x |∀ x∈U ∧ x∉U' } ∧ U':={ x' |∀ x'∈U' ∧ x'∉U } ⇔ U ist echt parallel zu U'. Allein die Tatsache, dass wir uns vorstellen können, dass es ein Paralleluniversum gibt, ist ein Beweis dafür, dass es mindestens eine Schnittstelle zwischen unser Universum und dem gedachten Universum in unserem Bewusstsein gibt. Ansonsten hätten wir nie auf die Idee kommen können, dass es ein zweites Universum geben könnte. Die Idee eines Paralleluniversums ist zwar reizvoll, aber letztendlich nur eine Illusion. Dies würde nur dann der Fall sein, wenn man den kartesischen Dualismus annimmt, wonach Bewusstsein und Welt/Materie getrennt sind. Doch bevor man dies annehmen kann, müsste man erst beweisen, dass diese Annahme richtig ist, doch stattdessen führt es in jedem Fall zum Absurdum. Es ist eine unumstößliche Tatsache, dass wir in dieser Welt leben und unser Bewusstsein nicht ohne unseren Körper existieren kann. Es ist also unmöglich, einen Beweis für die Existenz eines vom Körper getrennten Geistes zu liefern! Es bleibt wie J.W. Von Goethe sagte: "Was wär ein Gott, der nur von außen stieße, Im Kreis das All am Finger laufen ließe. Ihm ziemt's die Welt im Innern zu bewegen. Natur in sich, sich in Natur zu hegen. So dass was in Ihm lebt und webt und ist, Nie seine Kraft, nie seinen Geist vermisst."
@Aliens-Are-Our-Friends2027
7 ай бұрын
The next step for the scientific community is psychedelics.
@teletesselator
7 ай бұрын
Why bring Michio Kaku to a serious discussion? Was it just for fun or something?
@Craft-oh7uv
7 ай бұрын
Michio Kaku is stupid compared to Roger Penrose. Embarrassing to listen to !
@jameelarosetafoya2058
6 ай бұрын
Pron
Sabine Hossenfelder is as usual the anchor of reason, Roger Pennrose the symbol of intelligence, and Michio Kaku, the representative of Hollywood.
@ZeppSiros
Жыл бұрын
This is exactly what it is!
@vibrationalmodes2729
Жыл бұрын
Nailed it. I got wayyyyyy too much pleasure out of Sabine calling michio out for making claims that are completely unfounded/non-scientific
@jasonmckay8793
Жыл бұрын
bit ruff id say machio is a real scientist has achieved alot and are u saying hes here to represent actors? i don't think that is what he is trying to do.
@sergiomanzetti1021
Жыл бұрын
@@jasonmckay8793 "is a real scientist has achieved alot" ? What would that be?
@jasonmckay8793
Жыл бұрын
@@sergiomanzetti1021 well he is a link for alot people to the scientific world, he worked on quantum mechanics helped further that research and he is willing to push against the status quo all useful things.
That Sir Roger Penrose is still doing serious scientific research at his age is astounding. Long may he last!
@holliswilliams8426
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, really impressive. I went to a lecture of his a few months back and he was so sharp you would think by listening to him that he is 30 or 40 years younger than he actually is.
@robertpirsig5011
Жыл бұрын
Of course, why would he quit doing something he loves.
@DoesThisWork888
Жыл бұрын
@@holliswilliams8426 Great genetics with constant brain stimulus will do that for you.
@jeremywvarietyofviewpoints3104
Жыл бұрын
If I were him, I would hope the universe would repeat.
@williamgreene4834
Жыл бұрын
Sir Roger came up with a way to tile a floor the size of the Universe, with a pattern that never repeats itself and has no gaps using only two tile shapes. That's pretty crazy if you think about it.
31:20 I absolutely love and respect how Dr. Penrose doesn't mind saying "I'm confused" and using that as an argument against the gobbledygook that Kaku is putting forth.
@carmensavu5122
Ай бұрын
It's not an argument, and I was quite disappointed in him for doing that.
@BS-vx8dg
Ай бұрын
@@carmensavu5122 I respectfully disagree, Carmen. As Pauli said, "Das ist nicht nur nicht richtig; es ist nicht einmal falsch!"
@user-ks1hp2pb5g
Ай бұрын
how so?
@antman7673
Ай бұрын
@@carmensavu5122 Then translate 4:55. I don’t understand it, but it is embarrassing. It is kindness to let that slip with the phrase “I am confused”.
@Hascuce
6 күн бұрын
I truely beleive he means it but.... if penrose says he doesn't understand and he is confused, that just ends up meaning whats been told is gobbledygook.
I knew Sabine when we started to study physics. She always was extremely intelligent. It is interesting to see her becoming a public figure.
@karstenschuhmann8334
5 ай бұрын
@@moonshine.squatter Really? Be more specific what do you want to say? If she is nothing you are probably less than nothing.
@TactileTherapy
4 ай бұрын
@@karstenschuhmann8334 What is nothing? I am Robert Lawrence Kuhn.
@karstenschuhmann8334
4 ай бұрын
@@TactileTherapy Had to look him up. I do not really see him as more prominent. But even more, I strongly doubt that is you.
@myhandlehasbeenmishandled
4 ай бұрын
I get a feeling she is no fan of Michio
@karstenschuhmann8334
4 ай бұрын
@@myhandlehasbeenmishandled She and Pentrose seem to agree. Michio seemed out of his out of his depth in this discussion. I know Sabine did her diploma thesis about extradimensions.
Roger Penrose has a sharper mind at the age of 91 than I have had at any point in my life.
@truth8483
Жыл бұрын
Lol
@sidog
Жыл бұрын
Give yourself some more credit... I'm assuming you're not yet 91 😀
@joaofarias6473
Жыл бұрын
Bet 😅😂
@aqibejaz7253
Жыл бұрын
Of course he has. He is Roger Penrose. And you are a nobody. There's no comparison.
@rooannaroo446
Жыл бұрын
He is remarkable. It shows the potential in humanity that is so rarely realised. I love listening to him talk, he will always make you think about stuff in new and interesting ways…
Was a fan of Kaku in my youth. Now see him as a Steven Seagal of cosmology.
@Raye938
Жыл бұрын
Same here. I used to eat up pretty much everything he said when I was younger, then I went to university and learned to think more critically. Now I cringe whenever he speaks, half due to his wrongness and half due to embarrassment that I used to believe it.
@human_shaped
Жыл бұрын
That's a really excellent and apt characterisation.
@FlushGorgon
Жыл бұрын
Ah ah!
@lucidzfl
Жыл бұрын
oh my god how accurate. Neil Tyson seems like an absolute clown to me now. Star Talk is an abomination. Sabine is all!!!!
@nsfeliz7825
Жыл бұрын
😆😆😆😆steven segal...😆😆 segal is more entertaining.
Sir Roger Penrose is so quietly and confidently dominating, it's a joy to watch.
@johannzdebor5615
4 ай бұрын
My revolution in physics has been valid for 28 years because I discovered aliens and realized that we live in the parallel universe, light years are just fairy tale lies because they don't exist. Johann Zdebor January 17, 1995 Ed & Frances Walters succeeded in real shots of Stern spaceships with the gray occupants. - Billy Meier had made excellent recordings of star spaceships (beam ships) with extraterrestrial people. Johann Zdebor discoverer extraterrestrials on 01/17/95.
@alexanderpeca7080
3 ай бұрын
Well, being a Nobel prize winner, having the "Sir" title and a British accent certainly confers authority.
@aleksandarrudic3694
3 ай бұрын
@@alexanderpeca7080Naah... Nobel prize is being steadily demoted to a mere propaganda tool, a title of Sir was recently awarded to a man of very questionable integrity, and I've seen during my life too many people with British accent rolling in mud, blind drunk, or worse. Sir Roger had it all way back in the days when it really meant something.
@3dgar7eandro
2 ай бұрын
What do you mean by dominating?! I think he is quite the opposite he is just humble and calm. As a good Physist and mathematician should be 😌
@aleksandarrudic3694
Ай бұрын
@@3dgar7eandroBro, may I assume you are an American? Am I right? In any case, trust me, there are other types of domination, other than guns blazing and bombs away.
If Sir Penrose was my grandfather I would visit him every day just to talk more about theories and scientific findings. For Sabine I can’t wait for her next books, I wish I could read her ideas about new findings, new understandings for a long time.
@e.h.5849
3 ай бұрын
she has a YT channel now
@PatrickSullivan-6462266133
2 ай бұрын
Sir ROGER!
@boogieman6529
2 ай бұрын
what about kaku
@amrendrasingh7140
18 күн бұрын
The only problem is people like him rarely reproduce and therefore the probability of a random person being a grandson of someone like him is very low 😂
Props to Hossenfelder and Penrose for their clarity and rationality, and Kaku for selling books.
@DeadeyeDaily
Жыл бұрын
Michio looks like Karl Pilkington next to these other two 😄
@cookymonstr7918
Жыл бұрын
@@DeadeyeDaily Karl Pilkington would blow all three out of the water 😀
@DeadeyeDaily
Жыл бұрын
@@cookymonstr7918 😂😂 how does string theory work, Michio? "There's a button for that, in'nit."
@patrickl8943
Жыл бұрын
Gregory spot on my man!
@OwenDavies83
Жыл бұрын
He's just returned from the cheesey dialogue universe.
Michio thought this was about string theory, Roger thought he'd been invited to talk about cosmology, and Sabine thought they were going to be talking about quantum mechanics... Penrose was clearly annoyed, Sabine tried to salvage it, and neither Michio nor the host seemed to understand that multiverse means different things to different scientists. This was really painful to watch.
@wiranazahrin6262
Жыл бұрын
Yep, agreed....the problem with modern science is that there is a tendency to compartmentalize, to break apart into divisions when Newton himself said we are only beginning to realize that how small we are "now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before me". The problem is these scientists distance themselves from integrating spirituality and the so-called "supernatural" when far advanced civilisations of our past integrate metaphysics, spirituality and so on...I remember my grandpa told me what was taught to Adam was alchemy (the pure sciences at microlevel-lower) and astrology (incldg astronomy- the sciences of the higher levels and of higher dimensions, not withstanding the conflict modern science has about multiverses...disregarding the souls, God, consciousness etc...)
@verdi2310
Жыл бұрын
Exactly. But its was pretty fun though.
@jeangove01
Жыл бұрын
I don't see this. First of all, string theory and quantum mechanics are related. And Penrose was not talking about cosmology. The background knowledge for this is that Newtonian physics works and makes accurate predictions, and quantum physics works and makes accurate predictions, but they describe the universe very differently to the point that you'd think they're describing different universes. Some scientists have come up with a mathematical untestable theory called string theory which theoretically unites both spheres of physics, and in the process predicts the existence of multiverses. Where they mainly differ is in substance and presentation. Someone like Michio Kaku is a very enthusiastic popularizer of science, and tends to gloss over a lot of details to make the science accessible, where Sabine Hossenfelder is a critic of the muddled views that emerge from such enthusiastic simplification. Roger Penrose is talking about the multiverse in general, and is wondering why they are talking about string theory as if it's the only theory that predicts multiverses - since he doesn't think string theory is very coherent at all. They're not talking at cross purposes.
@christinearmington
Жыл бұрын
Now I really want to listen! 😂
@jeffbguarino
Жыл бұрын
The thing is that all these scientists should not latch onto a favorite theory but keep everything, all options wide open. Pure math has made real predictions , as in the positron. Also not using math and only experiments have discovered most things. So all lines of pursuit should be followed up on. Scientists in all areas do this and latch onto their favorite. I don't like it.
Starting with Prof. Michio Kaku comment that quantum mechanics predicts particles can exist in two places, its clear he is not speaking about scientific prediction but only for popularizing things. Amazing to listen to clear statements of Sir Roger Penrose.
I wasn't expecting to watch a comedy sketch, but this was ridiculously funny. I can't get over the increasingly perplexed/disappointed/incredulous expressions on Sir Roger's and Sabine's faces
I remember when Michio was one of the science educators who inspired me to learn more about the universe. Now he sounds like he’s trying to sell me a book or something.
@BoogsterSugar
Жыл бұрын
YES that's precisely my impression during this debate! I used to look up to him, but now it's just a bunch of unintelligible science speech hemmed up with "...sioadn ds ksjdasQuantum theory, take that spiderman" Hosselfelder makes him look like an AI generated version of himself. Shes cut and clear, and her words make sense together into a thought.
@gregmark1688
Жыл бұрын
I just hope he's Japanese, and not Korean, because "michyo" literally means "to be crazy" in Korean lol
@yousuck6222
Жыл бұрын
How can computers run on quantum theory and then everyone else says it is nonsense.
@J0r
Жыл бұрын
Did you expect anything less from someone who calls themselves a "Futurist"?
@lt3880
Жыл бұрын
I felt off about this guy from the beginning but couldnt explain why. he does feel like a car salesman, its really obnoxious and patronizing
A long life to Sir Roger Penrose! What a legend, at 91 years of age his mind is more agile than that of most teenagers and young adults alive today!
@Gibeah
Жыл бұрын
granted the human brain doesn't fully mature until approx.25 lol.
@alexpavalok430
11 ай бұрын
He doesn't even look 90. He doesn't even look 80...maybe he is the multiverse in person, lol. No, he'd not like that 🤣
@francissreckofabian01
9 ай бұрын
Most? Probably, virtually all.
@OsvaldoBayerista
9 ай бұрын
Roger Pensrose have found the tech for eternal life and doesn't share it.
@yasser9350
8 ай бұрын
For real!! What the 92!!!!
24:10 what a jab. I know a lot of "serious" string theorists.
@gomezrock12
11 күн бұрын
that was brutal 😂
@giacomofossati402
3 күн бұрын
Check mate!
Thank you Sabine Hossenfelder for staying on topic and succinctly stating your postion, that ontological realness of mathematical implications should not be automatically ascribed.
@alecepting1371
2 ай бұрын
I think the point that was made that the math doesn't always correspond to reality ontologically, and even if it does correspond to experimental results on many fronts, like quantum theory, then the inherent contradictions such a theory presents as Penrose pointed out, is contrary to the law of noncontradiction in logic which is the basis for the mathematical rigor that the epistemology of philosophy demands and that science has adopted. How can science which is based on inductive reasoning ever prove the theory of everything for every possible claim of the theory if not every claim is testable? That seems to me to be one of the great shortcomings of the scientific method. And even if the mathematics of a theory claims much more than can actually be proven experimentally, you have Goedel's Incompleteness proof to contend with. So we all have to admit at some point, that we cannot know everything. Certain things will forever remain conjecture, if not a mystery. And that is the real issue of this debate, IMO. Occam's razor is no more provable than anything else that science assumes, such as physical laws and even so-called constants (e.g. the cosmological constant) being immutable. That being the case, we are back to Descartes dilemma, to find the one premise that is absolutely certain. Time to revisit Goedel's ontological proof of God.
This sounded like it ought to be interesting but, unfortunately it sounded like Michio had his selling hat on, Sabina was desparately trying to find out what it was he was actually selling and Roger decided what ever it was he wasn't buying.
@msunje9862
Жыл бұрын
I like Sabina approach because unless they keep calling him out and putting him to the corner, he won’t stop.
@MrEricW2008
Жыл бұрын
I was wondering why this "debate" was so bizarre. Based on a few things Michio has said in the past, I've jumped to the conclusion that Michio is try to sell science to the American public and Congress to secure funding. He once mentioned that scientists had to call the Higgs Boson the "God particle" to secure funding from Congress. If theres no sex appeal, there's no funding. Sabine is German, and I imagine things happen differently in Europe.
@Lamster66
Жыл бұрын
@@MrEricW2008 Funding is not that different in Europe from the US, it's just the source, that is different. Scientific Reseach generally gets funding from Governments, through the Horizon project, or private investment. It's also pretty well accepted in europe that 95% of scientist and the intelligencia don't believe in God, so there is no pretence. Unfortunately the intelligencia doesn't include the majority of politicians and rulemakers or the majority of people in general. As such there exists a whole raft of restrictions from an ethics committee which effectively bans certain areas of research. This seems to be not the case with the chinese for example who have no such restrictions and are currently one of the fastest growing nations in technology. Basing one's ethics and Laws on religious values isn't going to progress scientific discovery and human knowledge. Considering most of the earliest scientific discoveries and technological advances came from the middle east. Nothing has come from that region for 1400 years I leave you to decide why that is. As for Kaku. I think he is, or at least was, a great science communicator. Unfortunately he appears to have boarded the wrong boat "SS Stringtheory" is sailing in icy waters like the Titanic. Everybody except the string theorist have got the memo about the iceberg.
@Lamster66
Жыл бұрын
@@MrEricW2008 Why did you delete you post?
@MrEricW2008
Жыл бұрын
@@Lamster66 I'm glad that there are strong ethical restrictions. You don't need to have religious values to have morality, and I'm in agreement that the scientific community needs certain limitations so people's lives don't get messed up. Without those restrictions, you can end up with a technological dystopian world. What differentiates the USA from Europe is the more than the ethical considerations. In Germany, Ph.ds are respected. In the USA, it's very divided based on state. Some states have high standards of education and produce well educated leaders. Other states....do not. Some states, maybe like Texas, occupy this strange middle ground. I think Kaku is appealing to the middle ground.
Great to see Roger and Sabine on the stage.
@melvinpjotr9883
Жыл бұрын
You forgot the clown on the monitor ...
@m3rify
Жыл бұрын
@@melvinpjotr9883 lol
@I3igI30ss
Жыл бұрын
@@melvinpjotr9883 i agree
@hugegamer5988
Жыл бұрын
The interaction was great! Sabine is awesome, she has minimal belief, is consistent and complete, and probably questions her very fingers existence daily while Roger is very clever with large picture reasoning and has what are at least plausible areas of investigation for a better universal model. Michio is a bit out there with his confidence in extending a universal mathematical model - it’s like our universe is a building we’ve been in forever : Michio saying if we could simply stand outside we would see buildings forever, while roger is convinced it’s the same building just at different points in time while Sabine is saying the whole thing is pointless because no one’s going outside anytime soon.
@paulschrum4727
Жыл бұрын
@@melvinpjotr9883 I tend not to like him either, but there's no point in being mean to him. At least he's qualified to be a science communicator (unlike some others).
24:17 "I know lot of string theorists... serious string theorists" SHEESH 💀
@felipebaranao3912
13 күн бұрын
jjahahahaha
@mathspace-grab
10 күн бұрын
I was looking for this comment
What a Legend Sir. Penrose is. He is one of the few living Legends of 20th century science.
I like how Penrose just calls out the whole thing "Are we talking about String Theory or the Multiverse Theory here?".
@HM-rz8nv
Жыл бұрын
Exactly! Kaku is relying on experiments that may mathematically indicate string theory to then suggest that the multiverse theory is correct. That's not a logical jump.
@lawanbrown16
Жыл бұрын
Do you guys want a productive conversation about what might be or not? 😂
@HM-rz8nv
Жыл бұрын
@@lawanbrown16 A productive conversation would require creating a list of possibilities, each mutually contrary to each other in some way, ranking from most likely to least likely relative to the available evidence. Speculation about only one possibility, other than making for fun imagination, is not productive because you then close yourself to the other possibilities which have not yet been discounted. Kaku spends an awful lot of time speculating about one and ONLY one possibility, which hasn't been proven. He has lost balance to his perspective, making him unscientific in his approach, even if he has the knowledge and degrees to support his argument from his perspective.
@apinojilazul6571
Жыл бұрын
why believe these lies? they want people not to use the power of faith to work miracles, so it's just technology and bad people to do things.
@vinigretzky97
Жыл бұрын
@@HM-rz8nv Kaku is an american showman and also asian/superficial.
Sir Roger is a world treasure. He is over ninety and still doing mathematical physics.
@apinojilazul6571
Жыл бұрын
why believe these lies? they want people not to use the power of faith to work miracles, so it's just technology and bad people to do things.
@YogiMcCaw
Жыл бұрын
Sir Roger is a true polymath, which is exceedingly rare in modern times. He's a profound physicist, an accomplished artist, and world-class philosopher. He's able to do the far-out mathematics and understand the edge-of-science extrapolations, and then come back and ask "but does all this make any sense?" That's what I love about him.
@nellateea3238
Жыл бұрын
well hes definitely doing some real gibberish lol
@YogiMcCaw
Жыл бұрын
@@nellateea3238 Yeah, that's the thing. He's your classic elderly absent-minded genius. But if you can parse through that, or maybe watch some other science communicators explaining what he has actually done in his life, you'll see that he totally deserved being knighted by the Queen. Remember, he was Stephen Hawking's PhD advisor, so the guy is definitely no slouch.
@nellateea3238
Жыл бұрын
@@YogiMcCaw hes selling his books here
Just because I don't have a better idea doesn't means that yours is a good one.
@Blueberryminty
2 ай бұрын
It is a little embarasing indeed, that Michio Kaku tries to defend the theories he proposes to be true and useful with illogical arguments that focus on aspects that go besides the questions that are given to him.
@SplashJohn
2 ай бұрын
Yes, while I was saying to the screen several times, " *That* is your argument???", I can only assume that Sabine & Penrose were rolling their figurative eyes and telling themselves, "This guy is a clown, not a scientist." Michio's entire presentation boils down to this: "My theory will be proved someday, therefore (a) it's a good theory, and (b) you can't argue against it now."
It's embarrassing to see Penrose and Hossenfelder have to reply to Kaku directly. Flashbacks to teachers having to deal with freshman or sophomore year students who think they found some breakthrough idea and get high on their own supply. The number of jumps in conclusions, fallacies and other logical missteps are so blatant you can't but see the teacher get a depression inducing combination of decision paralysis on what to correct first as well as the struggle to not just make it for the door and go do something better with their time.
@livingmodern
Ай бұрын
yep
The faces of Hossenfelder + Penrose while Kaku speaks. Priceless.
@TheMercury79
Жыл бұрын
Kaku is still smarter than you. He's had a great career in science while you are just a nobody
@TheMercury79
Жыл бұрын
@S'probablyCancr: Kaku is still smarter than you. He's had a great career in science while you are just a nobody
@sprobablycancr4457
Жыл бұрын
@@TheMercury79 Mic drop.
@deank179
Ай бұрын
Kaku so out of his depth it's funny
30:11 - Lawson: Do you agree? - Penrose: no. 🤣
@jimmyzhao2673
Жыл бұрын
😎
Michio Kaku's theory explanation can be summed up by "just you wait and see"
@robertwarner-ev7wp
8 күн бұрын
Religious fervor.
Day by day I'm more in admiration of Sabine Hossenfelder. What a mind she has! An excellent example of clear-mindedness!
@y0k0z00na
3 ай бұрын
Were you paid to say that? Sabine is just a KZreadr and a PhD doesn't make you brilliant. She bought a Wikipedia page for herself and filled it with silly things like math cannot explain the universe. 😅
@axisskin
3 ай бұрын
@@y0k0z00na our sweet little Babsi :-)
@Master-vc6hv
3 ай бұрын
@@axisskin What's a sweet little Babsi?
@sherlyn.a
Ай бұрын
@@y0k0z00na a PhD in theoretical physics certainly does say something…and considering her background, her opinion is definitely more qualified than yours…
I love how Sabine and Roger so beautifully call out Michio and the other string theorists on their rubbish. Roger does it in such a classy British way. Sabine does it in an in-your-face German way. In both cases it's delightful to watch.
@berendharmsen
Жыл бұрын
Ah cool, that's basically all I was really interested in: what side does Penrose end up between Sabine and Kaku. None of the details were ever going to be novel in this type of venue. Having to stomach listening to a floundering Kaku is more than I'm able to handle. Thanks for the summary of the relevant detail 🙂
@antonystringfellow5152
Жыл бұрын
I think my favorite takedown was this line, from Sabine: "I know a lot of string theorists, serious string theorists..."
@commodoor6549
Жыл бұрын
You do understand that neither Sabine nor Roger have evidence that string theory is rubbish, nor that the multiverse doesn't exist. They're attacking these ideas based on philosophical approaches, not science. Science requires evidence, which they don't possess. They're skeptics, which science needs. But their opinion are still just opinions.
@nmarbletoe8210
Жыл бұрын
@@commodoor6549 I'd like to see Maldacena folks get some people on stage for this stringy discussion. Also there is some wacky progress on ER = EPR.
@commodoor6549
Жыл бұрын
@@nmarbletoe8210 Yes, exactly .Kaku pointed out correctly that science technology has a history of getting to the dance late, and that just because there is no direct evidence for a phenomenon, that doesn't negate an idea. Naysayers like Sabine supplement their income knocking ideas in their nascent stages, which are going to take more evidence to support. Einstein also doubted the concept of black holes, and he was wrong, partly because he, while brilliant, could not see past his own ideas. Science struggles to progress with regressive thinkers like Sabine, who harshly mocks these ideas yet has no alternative ideas of her own. And Penrose, is stuck in the past, and finding it difficult to even fathom anything other than his personal experiences.
This debate was a bit of a confused disaster but kind of amazing to watch as a result. It's great to watch Sabine tackle Michio and put directly to him criticisms that everyone's been thinking for the past ten years.
@rogeriopenna9014
10 ай бұрын
German directness. Blitzkrieg
@mthedu
9 ай бұрын
So...this was a "Michio Kaku" is a fraud debate? I mean, Sabine is says she knows "serious string theorists" which suggests she thinks Michio isn't. Michio Kaku brings science to the masses and has a terrific education and work background. Why not just appreciate him for who he is? Why does this debate even matter? Michio can do whatever he wants. Sabine can do whatever she wants. However, Michio is just doing his usual simplified explanations while Roger disagrees, which is fine, and Sabine sounds a bit petty. If it's not jealously, then what is it with Sabine? Is Michio negatively impacting her in some way and she feels the need to put him in his place? And the host seems to be against the multiverse theory also which is odd for what I thought was a moderator. This whole interview was awkward and I can't understand its point. Oh well. Moving on.
@someguy4405
9 ай бұрын
@@mthedu Michio Kaku has permanently damaged science communication and the public's faith in science by pushing what seems to have been an unfounded theory for 10+ years. I'm sure he's a thousand times smarter than me, but his actions have negatively impacted science in general.
@mthedu
9 ай бұрын
@@someguy4405 "Permanently damaged science communication". Haha. Okay. You do you. Take care of yourself.
@rogeriopenna9014
9 ай бұрын
@@mthedu Science is made with money. And if funding is diverted to FRUITLESS endeavours, good science you could be making instead isn´t done. This is Sabine's main point of contention. It is about String Theory not showing any good evidence for more than 40 years and still funding going there as well as time that could be spent on other research, more scientific, in her view.
Thank you for making such an intriguing conversation public. In science, disagreements produce innovations and insights.
Thanks to Host this debate...facinating,❤🎉
It's thrilling seeing Dr.Penrose and Dr.Sabine H. on the same stage!
@carlorossi2788
Жыл бұрын
penrose non la maga cosmica!
@vickiezaccardo1711
Жыл бұрын
And I come across it when my device is at 28% and we have a power outage. I bet Sabine could give me a solution, " Turns- off your device and watch tomorrow. "
@marrrtin
11 ай бұрын
This was a great debate.
@MadderMel
10 ай бұрын
Uncle Roger ! National Treasure if there ever was one !
@levels1937
10 ай бұрын
Penrose is the real deal the other two are not even close to his level of achievement.
It's pretty clear what Sabine and Penrose think of Michio in this, despite how diplomatic they were, lol.
@HS-ie8tj
8 ай бұрын
He’s a grifter and an egomaniac who lives for the fawning of the mathematically illiterate public
@eliteextremophile8895
6 ай бұрын
They're serious scientists where Kaku is more of a marketing person.
@theoyw4329
6 ай бұрын
Well said! Katu is a PR person and stuck in documentary mode, not a serious scientist at all.
@Physics072
6 ай бұрын
@@eliteextremophile8895 You don't even know what they do on a day by day basis. Did you not listen to a word he said? String theory is more than marketing, I think you watch too much TV and never had advanced physics beyond you tube videos.
@crowlsyong
3 ай бұрын
@@Physics072 I am rewatching this and it really does appear that Michio Kaku's ideas aren't very accurate/his ideas do not map to our current understanding of physics: Source: 24:15 26:28 38:17 40:14 52:10
I wish everyone involved in a talk or debate would actually be there in person. The freezing on the internet connection made it frustrating to listen to and would have been so much better in person.
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation: 02:33 🌌 Multiverse Theories - Discussion on the existence of the Multiverse theory. - Different perspectives on the Multiverse, with a focus on scientific testability. 08:13 🤔 The Testability of Multiverse Theories - A debate on whether scientific theories, including the Multiverse, must be testable. - Arguments about the testability of theories, with examples related to String Theory and deviations from the inverse square law. 23:47 📡 Indirect Evidence and String Theory - The mention of indirect evidence in supporting theories like String Theory. - Clarification that observations, even if they were made, would not necessarily provide direct evidence for String Theory. 00:00 📽️ Introduction - The panel discusses the topic of the Multiverse theory and its implications. - The question of whether the Multiverse theory can be tested and its popularity is raised. 02:47 🤔 Sabine Hossenfelder's Perspective - Sabine Hossenfelder highlights the importance of empirical evidence in physics. - She argues that the Multiverse theory currently lacks empirical support. - Discusses the role of string theory and the challenge of verifying the Multiverse theory. 09:29 🤯 Michio Kaku's Perspective - Michio Kaku explains the concept of the Multiverse and its connection to quantum mechanics. - He defends the Multiverse theory as a legitimate interpretation of quantum mechanics. - Kaku emphasizes the need for further experiments and observations to provide evidence for the Multiverse. 14:25 🕳️ Roger Penrose's Perspective - Roger Penrose expresses his skepticism towards the Multiverse theory, particularly its relationship to string theory. - He questions the lack of experimental support and the complexity of the Multiverse concept. - Penrose suggests that the Multiverse idea may not be scientifically fruitful. 21:03 🌌 The Multiverse and Cosmology - The panel discusses the connection between the Multiverse theory and cosmology. - The idea that a Multiverse could explain the fundamental constants and the role of experimental evidence is debated. 24:36 🌠 Possibility of Unverifiable Theories - The discussion centers on whether certain scientific theories will always contain unverifiable or untestable elements. - Examples of untested concepts like proton decay and the cosmological constant are mentioned. - The panel considers the inherent uncertainty in scientific theories. 27:24 🤨 Popularity and Fiction - The panel addresses the popularity of the Multiverse theory among the general public. - The appeal of parallel universes in science fiction and the distinction between fiction and scientific theory are discussed. 30:06 🧠 The Challenge of Uncertainty - The concept that science is limited by human inference and the possibility of the universe's laws changing are explored. - The uncertainty underlying scientific methods and theories is acknowledged. 48:54 🌌 Proposing Theories Beyond Testability - The discussion delves into the purpose of proposing theories that lack empirical evidence or are untestable. - Roger Penrose suggests that it's valuable to contemplate such theories as long as they simplify the overall picture without contradicting known data. - The limits of scientific understanding are acknowledged, particularly concerning the Planck energy. 50:16 🤔 The Mystery of Unexplained Phenomena - The panel addresses the notion that there may always be certain unexplained or untestable aspects in science. - Michio Kaku discusses the Planck energy as a point where known laws of physics break down and become challenging to describe. - Roger Penrose distinguishes between singularities in black holes and the Big Bang, noting that not all unexplained phenomena should be taken equally seriously. Made with HARPA AI
@VioletteToussaint
3 ай бұрын
Thank you!!
@TimGreig
2 күн бұрын
Prefer to watch it myself thanks.
I am glad there still physicists like sir Penrose and Sabina
@ralphmacchiato3761
7 ай бұрын
*Sabine
@anure1134
7 ай бұрын
Sir Roger.
@marcag9810
7 ай бұрын
I'm a cosmologist and most people in my field are like that, fringe phycisists exist but are rarer than pop science would suggest.
@SuliXbr
6 ай бұрын
I am glad there are both types. Science does not progress by everybody agreeing with everybody.
@kakistocracyusa
6 ай бұрын
@@marcag9810 Like what? Cosmologist how? Another goddam applied mathematician? Sounds like you are pretending.
As a layman, it seems like what Michio, and string theorists in general, have done, is, they develop a theory that then runs into a problem, and they theorize about what could solve this apparent problem, and then keep going. Its literally Theoretical Physicist Fan Fic
@zyansheep
Жыл бұрын
Yes, but writing fan fiction is fun! And in the case of String Theory, I think physicists getting attracted by the elegance of creating more general theories, even if the implications of those theories can't be tested or even specified... While String Theory definitely is fun, I agree with Sabine that _most_ of our efforts shouldn't be in dreaming up new and more beautiful theories, but we should be resolving inconsistencies in the theories we currently have.
@NondescriptMammal
Жыл бұрын
That approach might be workable, if the original theory had some clear evidence to support its hypotheses, such that refining the theory to account for new data would make sense. But just dreaming up some theory that has no scientific basis and then changing it every time evidence appears that contradicts it, just seems like a bait and switch to make sure your books on the theory don't stop selling. Imagination clearly has a place even in science, if it leads you to something that actually relates to the reality that your theory is meant to explain. But imagination that only produces wild speculation shouldn't be conflated with science, as Sabine put it so well. And it can even damage the perceived integrity of science when this is the approach taken by someone who has scientific credentials and put the mark of their imprimatur on it.
@benoitmetail8727
Жыл бұрын
@@NondescriptMammal they are doing that with a lot of stuff in today's science. A lot more theories than discoveries.
@gregor-samsa
Жыл бұрын
so was AI in the AI winter and now with ChatGPT we are in AGI game!
@OfficialGOD
Жыл бұрын
Human dilemma
I believe that Michio or those like him (ie: Neil deGrasse Tyson, Avi Loeb) actually need to be condemned in our new internet world of disinformation and the dangerous unmooring from reality we see out in the world at accelerating rates. It’s really unacceptable to have these types of figures maintaining memberships with otherwise credible institutions and being given just enough respect to get by grifting and selling books.
@SlightyLessEvolved
7 күн бұрын
I think Brian Greene would be a more appropriate inclusion in that list than Neil deGrasse Tyson.
I love how it started as a question about the possibility of multiverse but eventually was about Mr. Maku trying to defend his theory is real thing.
"I know a lot of string theorists, serious string theorists..." 🙂 Sabine just made my day. Wish we all had a good moderator during meetings.
@LordOfFlies
Жыл бұрын
I dont know if she meant to phrase it like that but what a thing to say!
@berendharmsen
Жыл бұрын
@@LordOfFlies She knew exactly what she was doing
@sagnorm1863
Жыл бұрын
@@LordOfFlies Just look at her face when she says it. And the context of that quote is that those "serious string theorists" would say Michio is wrong. So, 100% she was insulting Michio.
@arctic_haze
Жыл бұрын
I thought it very rude to ask a question and then interrupt a panelist before she can finish her very interesting answer.
@HuckleberryHim
Жыл бұрын
If that was her full intent and she really meant to phrase it that way I think it was needlessly rude. Everyone gets the point, Kaku is apparently sensational and poppy, that isn't really a crime worthy of actual derision though
Thrilled to see Sabine on the panel 😁
@TV-xm4ps
Жыл бұрын
Her German directness is refreshing in this context.
@TheNebulon
Жыл бұрын
Sabine can get it.
@trapdooroodpart
Жыл бұрын
aboslute queen
I do t really understand a whole lot about phywics but i find it very interesting. This interview really does show to me that there is theoretical and practical
Before exploring multi verses we should maybe get better sound quality from a giant television
@user-bi2jm2pr4r
Ай бұрын
Michou mentions baby universe and at the same time you hear a baby crying 😂
Michio Kaku is actually inspiring for young teenagers who don't yet know physics, he was for me. But he is very cringe once you know a couple things about quantum mechanics etc., it is uncomfortable listening to him recite his rehearsed analogies that sell books.
@alejandrocurado5134
Жыл бұрын
I fully agree. Penrose is the opposite. And I also like Sabine
@evans383
Жыл бұрын
Same the first books I read that set me on my path, which didnt lead me to theoretical physics, but ultimately into engineering were "A Brief History of Time" and Kaku's book Hyperspace, but I agree its been hard to hear him on these kinds of debate/discussion stages lately.
@lesliespeaker668
Жыл бұрын
> Kaku explores the history of unification theories of physics starting with Newton's law of universal > gravitation which unified our experience of gravity on Earth and the motions of the celestial bodies > to Einstein's general relativity and quantum mechanics and the Standard Model. Kaku dubs the > final Grand Unified Theory of relativity and quantum gravity The God Equation with an > 11-dimensional string theory as the only self-consistent theory that seems to fit the bill. This is a quote from Wikipedia about his 2021 book The God Equation. He is promoting his book in hardcore mode.
@generaltheory
Жыл бұрын
@@lesliespeaker668 Wow, I haven't heard of his new book. The topic is right on point. Thank you, I must read it right now!
@rbettsx
Жыл бұрын
My first shudder came with his "how do we prove that?''. Scientists don't prove. They model, observe, and disprove previous models.
I could hear Sir Penrose speak all day. He is incredibly intelligent, articulate and humble.
@alexdrudigmail
4 ай бұрын
He is not humble at all. He's just deliciously soft-spoken.
@pieterduplessis6632
3 ай бұрын
He takes time, listens then think before responding. This is a quality we all should develop in ourselves. It’s very easy to be impulsive.
@nervili583
2 ай бұрын
@@alexdrudigmail just bc he doesnt say "ugh oh maybe idk, ugh yeah maybe im wrong hshs idk" ?
@kimrunic5874
Ай бұрын
His is the voice of authority. He’s proved it time & again
@raukoring
11 күн бұрын
This was such a waste of everybody's time. Michio Kaku was already told many times that he is full of kaka. Why calling sir Penrose to do that?
GREAT CONVERSATION! I absolutely do not like string theory, so I found this delightful
@isetmfriendsofire
12 күн бұрын
I'm not a scientist, but seeing theory just does not sit with me. Just a huge distraction, in my opinion.
This wasn't a debate it was a beatdown
"Physicists who come to believe that the mathematics they deal with is actually real." Hossenfelder just became one of my favorite people.
@unfortunatebeam
9 ай бұрын
who?
@michaelhart1072
9 ай бұрын
@@unfortunatebeam the woman on the panel
@JM-us3fr
9 ай бұрын
She is my favorite scientist, full stop. Her skeptical mind is exactly what every scientist should aspire to.
@billcosgrave6232
9 ай бұрын
I agree with Hossenfelder and Penrose as well but this is going to be a long up hill fight. So many physics have staked their reputations (and in the case of Kaku, their bank accounts) on these ideas.
@dabberdan3200
9 ай бұрын
I’ve asked myself many times “Where has she been my entire KZread life?❤😂
Penrose is always the brightest bulb in the room because his ego allows him to say "I don't know"
@dodge9600
Жыл бұрын
His ego or absence of ego ?
@Anax100
Жыл бұрын
@@dodge9600 There's no escaping ego as it's an essential part of what you are. The question is "what type of ego"?
@LemonLadyRecords
Жыл бұрын
He's not overly informed by an outsized ego, like the zoomed image on the stage. Nor does he rely on embarrassing sci-fi hyperbole like Kaku.
@bernardofitzpatrick5403
Жыл бұрын
Sabine is great ❤ love her down to earth approach
@dodge9600
Жыл бұрын
@@Anax100 but saying "I don't know" is not ego. It's the absence of ego to be actual.
The multiverse theory was developed to explain the problem of fine tuning, particularly the value for vacuum energy which is 122 magnitudes smaller than what quantum field theory predicts. If the value was higher or lower by a fraction of a magnitude there would be no universe which hints at intelligent design but since that's ruled out we have the multiverse.
Penrose is a living legend !
@kipponi
Жыл бұрын
Long living legend. I hope +100years for him. Great mind!
I find Sabine an absolute breath of fresh air
@UCjNrKLyRJI-abFA8qiNo92Q
10 ай бұрын
She's brutally honest
@MattExzy
10 ай бұрын
She's fine. She's infinitely smarter than myself. But I did find some of her KZread content from a while ago a little patronising of Penrose. Everyone's making fun of Michio for selling books, but she monetises as well. Nothing against her, I'm not terribly keen on the multiverse idea either, but I take her with the same grain of salt.
@thomasjones4570
9 ай бұрын
Most uneducated people do. She is the Christopher Hitchens of Science. Making baseless attacks gets you attention and that is how she has made a living this past decade...attacking the very foundation of science...theories...where 100% of scientific advances comes from. A theory is unproven until it is, that does not mean it is not science. She herself has done nothing to advance science and has when she actually worked in the field, worked on other peoples ideas. She has created none herself. She is however a decent popular scientist and has a great channel when she explains known topics but she has a habit of backhanding theories as if an unproven one has no value. Its as if she does not understand where new ideas even come from or how knowledge is advanced.
@guillermotell2327
9 ай бұрын
She manages to impress some people, although she does not know what she is talking about. 😂
@heathen3278
8 ай бұрын
@@guillermotell2327 your laughing emoji makes your point correct
This ranks right up there with the debate over whether we should abandon the theory that the outside of the universe is green.
Thank you… It is wonderful that they can apprehend, analyse, criticise, and … each other perfectly… even though they oppose … Brain is amazing… Waves and Electrons over nerves…
great discussion, I really like how Roger And Sabine are so respectful when they are against an argument. I am not really familiar with Michio Kaku, but he seems to spread his argumentation a little all over the place without really making any real point.
@drangus3468
Жыл бұрын
Michio is great at producing enthusiastic rhetoric but pretty terrible at logic.
@TheNameOfJesus
Жыл бұрын
Indeed, I feel that one could, after watching this video, make the same conclusion, even if one couldn't understand Physics or English. In other words, you could tell from their tone of voice alone who is a deep thinker and who is a shallow one.
@Areaninetyone
Жыл бұрын
@@TheNameOfJesus that's the dumbest thing I've ever heard.
@juliahenriques210
Жыл бұрын
He's pretty good at that, yes. But he's a marketing genius, if it counts for something.
Sabine is the bomb here, incredible intellect. Roger is so refreshing to listen to, for classic science
I am not at al intelligent like most of you here who are watching this . Actually im just a master builder . Yet I find myself watching everything about Sir Roger Penrose and I just am blown away by his sheer GENIUS . I have no understanding of most of this , yet I find when he talks I like get it a bit . This man is a gift to humanity and unlike these ridiculous celebrities who the world admires . Children should be shown this marvelous man .
@deank179
Ай бұрын
Sir Roger is one of the greatest minds of his generation! Love listening to him speak. Sabine is a legit scientist too. Kaku is a joke and doesn't belong one stage with Roger and Sabine.
Excelente charla.👍👏👏
24:18 "... I know a lot of string theorists, uh, serious string theorists ..." Priceless again! This is Sabine being agreeable the German way.
@MrSeedi76
8 ай бұрын
Yes, that was a burn right there 😂.
@bsanders1
8 ай бұрын
😂
@kh9242
8 ай бұрын
Everyone loves slights
@nav579
7 ай бұрын
I was surprised she burned him so directly at that point. I was a little disappointed
@Hop754
7 ай бұрын
Being rude and unpleasant is not a proof of intelligence. Sabine could smile for a change. SMILE.
Michio Kaku is more like a cheerleader for Team Multiverse than a scientist. Anything that raises questions about his pet theories is motivation for more research to raise more questions about the unresolved questions that he's raising.
@rossmeldrum3346
7 ай бұрын
It sure guarantees a life time of paychecks while proving little to nothing for the work.
@marcag9810
7 ай бұрын
I mean, I am a phycisist and I tend to align more with Sabine's skepticism and outright rejection of fringe physics theories BUT I find that there is value in and a necessity for strange theories that push our boundaries and fight back the criticism. That's a healthy scientific environment in my opinion, even though it is not very healthy for science communication to focus on fringe science almost exclusively.
@Craft-oh7uv
7 ай бұрын
More like embarrassing !
@papertoyss
6 ай бұрын
You have to be a scientist of at least equal value to him to even spell such things, and this is measurable.
@martinmarks
6 ай бұрын
I believe that it’s simply reflected on his solid contributions in real scientific publications (quite poor considering his career stage!). Of course, for this, we have to put aside his heavily sensationalist material to catch general public’s desire for fantasy - just to earn his fortune and inflate his own name. It’s hard to look at him as a serious scientist in any sort of way…just one more canned Hollywood source of misinformation haha
BRILLIANT.......I have absolutely no idea what's going on.
This is way too entertaining to see. Thank you. The more I watch the more I want to see Mr. Penrose and Madam Sabine roasting String theory. I don't know if people undestood what happened here.
@TactileTherapy
4 ай бұрын
You want to see a prevailing theory that forwards human knowledge, roasted? What are you 11 years old?
@specialrelativity8222
4 ай бұрын
are you fool??
@PADARM
3 ай бұрын
@@TactileTherapy it is not a theory is a hypothesis
Sabina and Roger rocked this conversation. I think Kaku thought he was filming an episode of Universe with Tyson and Alex Plippinpinko.
@andrewpelham4906
10 ай бұрын
Kitty history
@thehumancondition8946
7 ай бұрын
👍😄😄😄
@cosmoscarl4332
7 ай бұрын
I think it's funny how Michio Kaku over dramatizes his discussions by adding too many catch phrases like, "and all of a sudden". Almost nothing in cosmology happens 'all of a sudden', and I'm pretty turned off by his approach to science communicating. Like Neil Tyson and his loud mouth and huge ego, I suspect that their lack of humility has scared plenty of common folk away from cosmology and science in general. Science to me has been life changing and humbling to the core of my being and has given me real spirituality that I could never get from philosophy or any religion. How we communicate science is as important as the science itself and there's no place in it for vanity or ego. I often wonder if Carl Sagan would cringe at the behavior of some of the people he mentored who seem to have forgotten how important humility is as a tool for communicating. Especially science.
@eggiweggsi
7 ай бұрын
@@cosmoscarl4332 it's because it appeals to normies in America. Having a big ego in America is important for fitting in unfortunately...
@paulbizard3493
7 ай бұрын
😄😄😄😄
I died a little inside when Dr. Hossenfelder stressed, "I know *serious* string theorists..."
@MrMeltdown
Жыл бұрын
Her little dead pan quips are easily missed. Her youtube channel is full of it. I'm sure there is a heap of snippets I'm not getting.
@carlorossi2788
Жыл бұрын
infatti dice cose non galileiane
@williamchoi808
10 ай бұрын
Dissing Kaku - The Movie
@milosv4142
10 ай бұрын
I think she says "why doofuses do what they do..." around 31 min mark lol
@thomasjones4570
9 ай бұрын
Yep, that attack actually undermined her credibility because Kaku not only won awards for his work but has far more papers accredited than she will have.
0:33: 🌌 The debate discusses the plausibility and scientific basis of the Multiverse theory. 5:15: 🌍 The video discusses the probability of waking up on Mars and the misunderstanding of physicists regarding the reality of mathematical theories. 10:27: 🔬 The video discusses the conflict between the principles of general relativity and quantum mechanics and proposes the need for a theory that combines both. 15:45: 🌌 The speaker discusses the concept of a multiverse and explains that there is only one universe that goes through a series of stages. 20:04: 🌌 The video discusses the possibility of finding a particle called fotino the funkido in a spiral chamber, the concept of higher dimensions and gravity, and the launch of Lisa to capture radiation from the early universe. 25:10: 🔬 The video discusses the challenges of proving theories like string theory and the multiverse theory, comparing it to the historical verification of the atomic theory. 29:47: 🔬 The Multiverse theory is a simpler interpretation of quantum mechanics that eliminates the need for wavefunction collapse. 34:22: 🔬 Science cannot determine the existence of other universes, but as more data is collected, we can refine our understanding of the universe. 39:09: 🌍 The idea of a multiverse is popular in the general public, but not in the physics community, and it is appealing because it involves interesting brain gymnastics. 43:58: 🤔 The speaker discusses the progress of science, the potential arguments against multiverses, and the untestability of theories. 48:50: 🤔 Is there a purpose in proposing theories without evidence or that cannot be tested? Recap by Tammy AI
I must be missing the importance of the question because we're only sure of our cosmic horizon. Meaning: The understanding of the size of the universe (and its constituents) is immensely more important to comprehend than asking a question about something where we possess even less data.
Love it when Sabine counters some of the "pop-science" which is going around quite frequently. Smart and pragmatic. Great!
@theultimatereductionist7592
Жыл бұрын
THANK you for targeting the CORRECT target: POP science. NOT actual working scientists & public education.
@gregmark1688
Жыл бұрын
She never lets the narrative magic of fictions like ST or "cold fusion" distract her from actual facts and experimental data. And that's actually, sadly, pretty rare, isn't it?
@brendanh8193
Жыл бұрын
@Greg Mark I found her latest video on cold fusion to be a selective narrative. Interesting but selective.
@user-rc2ey8sl2p
Жыл бұрын
@@gregmark1688 what's st again?
@243david7
Жыл бұрын
Smart and pragmatic, good description
It would have been nice to hear more from Roger and Sabine.
@denethordahmer.90
Жыл бұрын
I kept having to skip that other charlatan
The difference between Kaku and Penrose is mind boggling.
Seems to me that unless there is proper evidence for the multiverse, we can just approach it as phenomenon in our "uni" verse, not separate from it but a part of the one we know.
Sabine is an amazing scientist. Her rationality and love for fundamental science is refreshing and necessary. She is also incredibly talented in explaining complicated science.
@DSAK55
7 ай бұрын
I think of her as more of an _Influencer_
@yasser9350
7 ай бұрын
@@DSAK55she is a youtuber and influencer but also as academic accomplished as any of the other casts
@wefinishthisnow3883
7 ай бұрын
@@yasser9350 She's brilliant, understands the material very well and is one of my favourite science communicators, but she hasn't contributed to science as much as Penrose has.
@WiseOwl_1408
7 ай бұрын
Seems half insane on her own channel
@wefinishthisnow3883
7 ай бұрын
@@WiseOwl_1408 That's just her German sense of humour.
When Penrose says he's confused, he actually means he's hearing total BS :)
@francishunt562
Жыл бұрын
I think he's just being polite.
@mentalslave8451
Жыл бұрын
Wow that's quite an emotional response, way?
@TheGuyCalledX
Жыл бұрын
@@mentalslave8451 Sabine and Penrose both take a lot of shots at Michio, politely but often not subtly. Penrose dismisses Michio conflating a bunch of different multiverse ideas as one but also argues that they are not relevant to describing our universe. Sabine basically says Michio is a quack physicist and serious string theorists don't believe any of the things he says would prove string theory actually would.
@joeye7518
Жыл бұрын
Because Penrose knows absolutely everything, right?
@m3131m
Жыл бұрын
his skepticism is much appreciated
Fascinating
"I know a lot of SERIOUS string theorists..." I love Sabine ❤️
24:14 Sabine: "I know a lot of string theorists...ah, serious string theorists ..." Michio: 🥲
@LemoUtan
Жыл бұрын
'Shots fired', as they say.
@Areaninetyone
Жыл бұрын
He literally helped invent the theory...
@ferretappreciator
Жыл бұрын
@@Areaninetyone that's not an argument in his favor
@adram3lech
Жыл бұрын
@@ferretappreciator I have no sides here but the argument you are replying to is not really in Sabine's favor either. Pretty dumb thing to utter in a public scientific talk. She is leading us, the viewers who probably have a lesser understanding of the matter, by directly assaulting the guy, and she does this with the great KZread audience she has. The comments are full of Sabine lovers. Why are you more interested in a person in there rather than the topic itself? Pretty weird. Whatever... it's not what I'm looking for in a scientific debate.
@berendharmsen
Жыл бұрын
@@adram3lech The reason so many people love Sabine is that she is a breath of fresh air, who on an almost daily basis is showing that publicity whores like Kaku are emperors without clothes in a way that is almost unique right now: an actual scientist stepping into the role of science explanation (not some media personality like Verasitum - not a bad thing, but it still sits at a distance from the actual science as their not infrequent gaffes demonstrate) who is not afraid to state harsh truth impolitely, or, as most of us would describe it: truthfully. She also has a wicked sense of humour and there is nothing bad about bringing pompous, pretentious blowhards like Kaku or Tyson down a peg or two. Their distortions of what scientific thinking to the lay public is in dire need of some counterweight and Sabine is our champion. That's why there are all these Sabine lovers here; all people with a passion for both science and science communication.
Kaku seems completely unable to get away from the same 4 lines of text he's been repeating for years now. Sabine and Roger achieved a very coherent conversation
Give the host a trophy - he did a great job.
I only recently discovered Sabine Hossenfelder, but I think she is brilliant... she explains things so well and introduces unnecessary uncertainty into things like the confidence with which Michio Kaku speaks: telling laymen to come up with "a better theory" (than string theory) for grand unification (which is not be even necessary, but just a "nice to have" ideal that appeals to the human mind) is to rather tell us to put up or shut up in nicer language with a bit of humor. This was really a rather convoluted discussion... it was never clear that the topic was a multiverse, but rather the legitimacy of string theory. Sabine has a whole video where she tears apart the modern state of particle physics, which is where string theory falls, and explains very well how it seems that particle physicists are trying to overcomplicate particle physics by making wild predictions above energies that we have been able to explore yet instead of simply applying Occam's razor and remaining with the simplest theory that fits the standard model. I find the idea of the multiverse quite fascinating and appealing, but it's just a hypothetical philosophical thought experiment for now, and may always be. Having Penrose there to propose another face to the argument was good, but I wish he had had the chance to speak more.
While Kaku spoke about how close to confirmation String Theory already is, I could clearly see a quantum facepalm superpositioning over Sabines face. It didn't quite manifest in this part of the multiverse though, but certainly in many others.
@lemiureelemiur3997
Жыл бұрын
To be entirely fair she's appealing to intuition as much as anyone. Her camps answer to many worlds is superdeterminism, which is equally speculative. Yet she makes no qualms about taking a stand on that, presumably because that's what her particular biases allow her. There's quite a few prolific thinkers who would do more good admitting when a topic is far beyond our current understanding, and that it's pointless to engage in inflamed debate about it. In all this madness that is the world, surely Hossenfelder could do better than to reintroduce provocation as a legitimate way of communicating science... It's done enough damage already.
@WillemDemmers
Жыл бұрын
@@lemiureelemiur3997 At least Sabine has Einstein in her camp.
@StevXtreme
Жыл бұрын
@@lemiureelemiur3997 Except that she doesn't fanfare superdeterminism as a scientifically proven theory, but merely a conjecture that coincidentally solves a lot of the bullshit in quantum physics. Nice try, tho.
@lemiureelemiur3997
Жыл бұрын
@@WillemDemmers that she does. She also has his face on the sweaters she sells here on youtube.
@lemiureelemiur3997
Жыл бұрын
@@StevXtreme you're being facetious. You shouldn't be given that far more quantifiable experiments have been successful in sowing doubt about the premise of superdeterminism than Hossenfelder can muster to her defense. I. E she's the one behind the times on this question, given that her critics base their opinions on the latest real world experiments and she bases hers on what is comparatively speaking fairy tales. Local hidden variables were disproven in the 80's, which means Einstein was wrong...
I love Roger Penrose. This dude knows his sheet. And doesn't play politics on camera. Props to this man. An inspiration brother.
@jehouse61
10 ай бұрын
He's a serious scientist, not like so many.
@michael-4k4000
4 ай бұрын
Roger will be missed!
If we detect other waves in the beginning of our universe that seem to come from other blasts, other ripples that we can then trace forward? We may be able to detect the energy signatures of other universes, and the possible laws that then differ. Our own physics could just be a conglomerate of different laws from different universes that collide and coalesce into what we know as our own laws. Just ore from different countries can differ, so too can the material of different universes. Not just laws, but the matter itself could have a whole different configuration than ours.
Someone said this (below) and I want to amplify it: "Penrose and Hossenfelder were there for a serious scientific conversation and Kaku behaves like he just came from the Marvel Studios."
23:57 I love how Sabine in a less than subtle way hints at Kaku not being a serious string theorist. 😂
@jgrab1
8 ай бұрын
He's not. He's a showboat who is interested in being on TV talking about things he knows nothing about (hurricanes, literature, even food) and hawking half-baked books that have been saying the same still-unproven things for the last 25+ years. Imagine if Einstein labored that long without a single theory proven by experiment. But it's made him rich.
@RMor66
8 ай бұрын
Glad I’m not the only one that noticed that. Absolutely savage
@Ytremz
6 ай бұрын
That wasn’t subtle at all lol. Roger’s jab was a lot more tactful at 26:28.
@kakistocracyusa
6 ай бұрын
Both are just glorified applied mathematicians more than genuine physicists. That's why they both make asses of themselves when discussing other fields of physics.
@richlisola1
6 ай бұрын
Not so subtle.
"Quantum mechanics, the most wonderful theory we've ever had - or something" 😂☠️🤣 Sir Roger is killing it with every beautifully crafted, yet spontaneous sentence 38:17
@m3rify
Жыл бұрын
yeessss I love him lol
@salmanuel4053
Жыл бұрын
And that's Roger.
@jfverboom7973
Жыл бұрын
The problem is : You know the inputs, you can compute the outputs, but the inside is a black box. And we would sooo dearly love to know what is really going on inside of the black box, which we currently can't pry open. As Feynman already said : Shut up and compute.
@snarzetax
Жыл бұрын
@@jfverboom7973 As I understand, he never said that.
@commodoor6549
Жыл бұрын
Einstein believed that all times exist simultaneously. He believed that you are being born and dying today, such that all times of your life, that all past and future exist now, we just can't reach there from here. This is not testable yet, people like Sabine believe it... you know, because Einstein said it's so. Cherry picking ideas to scrutinize is not science either. There's nothing beautiful in Sabine and Roger's thinking when they are critical of quantum mechanics yet put aside other ideas that cannot be tested.
It looks like a nice bar they are sitting in. Getting on site early would have it's advantages. It appears it's free pour make your own! I've noticed so many interviews, one on one talks that were done in bars.
"I know a lot of string theorists... uh, serious string theorists" the best of digs - gotta love Sabine for calling out the truth.
Roger Penrose is very articulate at his age and what a joy to see and hear this mathematical genius ❤
Sabina's face every time Roger or the host slights Michio is fantastic. It is clear that people who have large confidence and have to campaign for their theories have dominated the public conversation around science, nothing wrong with that as that is Michios work, but just because they are the loudest about what they believe doesn't necessarily mean that they have the most careful and scientific attitude when addressing the public about the state of their field.
@TV-xm4ps
Жыл бұрын
Michio is an entertainer. Not a scientist.
@nickgibson3451
Жыл бұрын
@@TV-xm4ps I feel like gatekeeping "science" is necessary and that is one reason I love Sabina, because she is strictly about science. I think it is a little different to gatekeep the label "scientist" as Michio, no matter how non-translational or even applicable to the real world his work may be, is most definitely a scientist, I mean look at the mans CV for god sake. I think scientists aren't and should not be thought of as infallible, and by saying he is not a scientist just because he has a seemingly absurd interpretation of reality is suggesting that scientists must be rational, which is not the case, science has to be rational.
@reesetorwad8346
Жыл бұрын
Almost all theories need campaigns at their beginnings.
@alexbuckley4378
Жыл бұрын
@@nickgibson3451 science is gate kept by lack of access to information. If you are not part of an institution you cant get access to papers on sites like jstr. College has also been corrupted beyond belief, destroying the traditional path to science
@ricardodelzealandia6290
Жыл бұрын
@@TV-xm4ps "entertainer" is a bit of an overstatement don't you think.
Probably you have to go with Kant's critic: The 'pure thing' is not possible to know, to realize only the appearance of the phenomenon - in your mind.
While I appreciate the efforts of any scientist reaching out to the public to encourage and foster our curiosity, I loathe Michio's sensationalism. This debate highlights the flaws in his reasoning skills in the best way. Thank you so much!
In a way, Kaku hijacked the conversation away from the proposed topic (as was constantly pointed out by Penrose). Kaku seems to believe that his version of string theory will eventually be proven to be that holy grail of physics: the theory of everything. But let's break down just one of his arguments: Democritus' atomic theory. Democritus believed the atom was the smallest possible unit of matter, indivisible (hence, atomos). But what have we shown over the past 2K years? Atoms exist, but most of the mass is concentrated in the nucleus with a cloud of electrons. Then we discovered nuclear fission: the nucleus is not an indivisible unit of matter either. But wait, there's more! It turns out protons and neutrons aren't indivisible either - they consist of quarks. What started with Democritus and Leucippus evolved into the Standard Model: 6 quarks, 6 leptons, 4 bosons, and a Higgs. Democritus wasn't wrong, but he wasn't exactly right either. If we're honest, science does have assumptions that are untestable: natural processes are governed by laws that can be expressed mathematically and that these laws are consistent across space and time. This assumption is baked into the scientific method in terms of reproducibility. But mathematics isn't reality - it's a model of reality that is useful to describe our experience. But as I've often said, I can create any arithmetically valid equation you like - but it may not be measuring what you think it does.
@GalaxyPedlar
Жыл бұрын
I think you could still argue that an atom is indivisible because if you were to divide one, it would no longer act as the same atom. Eg, dividing a group of two neon atoms into two groups of one is a very different thing than fissioning a single neon atom.
@nemdenemam9753
Жыл бұрын
@@GalaxyPedlar wouldnt anything by indivisible by that reasoning? A ball doesnt act the same once you cut it in half.
@GalaxyPedlar
Жыл бұрын
@@nemdenemam9753 The idea behind an atom is that if you keep dividing a substance, you eventually reach a point where you cannot divide it any more. So if you have a kilo of iron and cut it, you now have two separate pieces of iron. This stops working when you get to atom, because if you divide the atom, it is no longer iron.
@nemdenemam9753
Жыл бұрын
@@GalaxyPedlarJust to be on the same page, this was my understanding of the point you were making: division != separating it into smaller pieces but division = separating it into pieces where the pieces don't behave the same as the whole Is that an incorrect understanding of your first comment? If it isn't then I don't see how that's an answer to my objection. If you cut a ball in half it's not a ball anymore. If it is incorrect then can you give a definition of 'division' how you mean it?
@GalaxyPedlar
Жыл бұрын
@@nemdenemam9753 Democratos proposed that every substance has a smallest particle which cannot be subdivided. Some people say it can, because atoms can be decomposed into subatomic particles. My point is that Democratos is still right because subatomic particles cannot be described as a particle of the original substance.
It's refreshing to see so many comments that reflect what I was thinking as I watched this. Two honorable, admirable, accomplished physicists having a conversation with a used-car salesman.
@thehumancondition8946
7 ай бұрын
👍😄😄😄
@PlanetEarth3141
7 ай бұрын
What a shame Michio has digressed into a self perpetual hole.
@nikthefix8918
7 ай бұрын
I wish Michio had been physically present on the stage. Did the monitor endow an Oracle-like presence, or was it more like Holly from Red Dwarf?
that was fire 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
Sabine put on her chefs hat at 24:05 and filleted Michio. Was definitely a fan of michio when i was a kid; gotta tear these posters down
The topic of this talk should really have been “Is Michio Kaku absolutely full of it?”. Great stuff 😂
@loturzelrestaurant
Жыл бұрын
If you like thought-provoking Video-Essays, try Some More News, Hbomberguy, and Professor Dave. They got plenty.
@shadow15kryans23
Жыл бұрын
Fr tho
@Lamster66
Жыл бұрын
Full of what, Kaku?
@nellateea3238
Жыл бұрын
or who tries to sell his/her book first in this show , that competition goes to penrose
@gerardjones7881
Жыл бұрын
kaku is fun to listen to but seems to lack rigor sometimes. Penrose is more cautious and measured.
I love how Sabine and Roger are in the same panel, and also how Sabine explains why physics has been stuck for decades because of using the "God of the gaps" strategy, then immediately Michio demonstrates himself as a live example doing in real time. Now, that's what I call direct evidence lol In a scientific discussion, especially when people's theories are being questioned, I don't tend to lend weight to those, like Michio, whose responses are 80-90% metaphors, storytelling, and redefining words and meanings, but I lend more weight to those, like Roger and Sabine, who are referencing measurements, tested theories, and testable hypotheses. I also find it funny noticing Sabine and Roger are wearing casual clothes, but Michio is wearing a suit that reminds me of a pastor preaching to a Sunday church gathering
@thomasjones4570
9 ай бұрын
You have just shown why even atheists can be very religious like. Clinging to the idea that fits your worldview very blindly. Sabine did not prove her point, she stated it. God of the gaps is a theory. God of the gaps is wrong and caused the problem is also a theory. Your statement shows you drank some kool-aid enough so to try to demonize what doesnt fit your view like someone with some kind of moral high ground. You are pathetic.
@Ilestun
9 ай бұрын
The most ridiculous part was when Michio explained that multiverse is more simple than wave collapse of quantum physics and "solve it". Then Dr Penrose answer was magistral, but he politely said that this is pure bullshit and doesnt solve what happens in our universe. Saying that it existe another universe which is miraculously "intricated" with ours, were the wave collapse ended with the other possible solution solves nothing about understanding wave collapse in our universe.....
@lordgarion514
9 ай бұрын
@@Ilestun Thing is, a "wave" has never been proven to exist. Not even close. They assume a wave exists because they shoot photons at a detector, and they land with a wave like distribution. But when they hit the detector, it's a single photon doing the hitting. That doesn't mean a literal wave is moving through spacetime. But it could be. But they all act like it's a proven fact. It's not proven until they actually detect that wave. And our technology isn't even close. We've measured down to 13 places to the right of the decimal, and haven't seen the electron...... But they know the electron exists, because while they can't see it, they can measure its different properties. No one has measured the properties of that wave, if it exists.
@kornflakesss
8 ай бұрын
I thought i was the only one. penrose and sabine were just class in this discussion.
@Red-Tape-Rending
8 ай бұрын
I agree! I thought, "surely I'll be ridiculed if I share with a science enthusiast that I dislike Michio Kaku." Good to see that there are others who seem to agree that his fantastical musings tend to contradict the spirit of science... Our understanding of the world should stem, as ever, from our tested experience. Not from mental gymnastics and the question "but what if we shot even more machines (like NASA's LISA) out into orbit?"
Whenever Michiu Kaku speaks via video link we can hear the entire New York soundscape in the background
Kaku well done for making Sabine‘s point!