Joe Rogan Experience Review podcast - A Review of 1233 Brain Cox
Episode Date: February 1, 2019Brian is a physicist and astronomer that is going on a world tour to teach people all about the universe. He is always a fascinating person to listen to and Joe really gets some good questions in. It�...��s kind of mind blowing what’s going on out in the cosmos. I got a lot out of their conversation. Enjoy my review folks! Please email me with any suggestions and questions for future Reviews: Joeroganexperiencereview@gmail.com
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Hello and welcome to another episode of the JIE review. This week I'm reviewing a really fascinating conversation
Joe Rogan had with Brian Cox podcast 12.33
Brian Cox is a British guy a scientist professor and now a lecturer
He's someone I've known of some time it used used to be on, or still is on TV in England.
And it's just a fascinating scientist, in a lot of ways he's like the British, Neil the Grass Tyson,
always bringing fun facts about the universe to people that ordinarily wouldn't be interested,
but this guy makes it pretty fascinating.
And this conversation is just the same.
If you've never heard Brian
talk you're gonna love this podcast, it really is fascinating and he really does just make
the most complicated sounding things easier to digest and quite a lot more fun than any
science class you probably ever took. Anyway, let's get started with a review!
Welcome to the Joe Rogan Experience Review!
Where each week I review every single episode of the Joe Rogan Experience.
What more do you want?
So Brian talks, well starts by talking about how big the universe is, so that one comes
as no surprise to us.
But he was saying that it might be even larger than you had previously thought, because it
may not just be the creation of one big bang and one universe, but as it expands super
infinitely fast, these might just be big bands happening and expanding in an already
infinitely massive universe, which is too insane and too crazy for my brain to even contemplate
to be honest. But from the way he was making it sound,
it's like one big bang has happened,
and there's big bangs happening within
a massive universe big bang, right?
I don't know.
How these mathematicians, the scientists,
and astronomers are even able to figure any of this out really still blows my mind.
I think it's so fascinating.
And then they put a story to it, you know.
The multiverse one is weird, the idea that there could be so many that infinite versions
of all types of things are happening or that there's another version of you out there.
It just seems very bizarre, but hey, what is it bizarre?
Right?
One of the big scientific breakthroughs Brian was talking about is the measurement of gravity
and finding the particle, I think it was called the Higgs boson, which is like the gravity
particle, but anyway, they did it with they used two lasers to measure
two giant black holes that were crashing into each other and kind of absorbing each other and
With these lasers and two lasers were set in different states
So they were far enough apart to be able to measure the differences between these waves as they came in.
They were able to figure out the gravity particle from there, like a gravity wave, I think they call it.
And what was really interesting about what happened with the black hole, as he was saying, that when they were getting close,
they went from a third, the speed of light to two thirds the speed of light
traveling into each other in like a split second and then at one point just for a very short period of time
released as much energy as all the stars in the night sky all at once
even though it's for a very short period of time that's an immense amount of energy
unbelievable. So crazy stuff going on out in the universe there
and guys like this guy
bringing it to the forefront I think is really pretty fascinating.
So he has a new show as well that he's touring with
with some other guys and he uses giant LCD screens, massive screens
it's gonna be in L.A. and it was in London and went to Wembley
and it's just like the touring intellectual scene, it's getting popular, people like to go and see these animations and see these guys talk
and learn about what's going on, it's almost...
I don't know, it's like a college class you want to go to and probably far more interesting as well
So I really like that he's doing that. I think it's really fascinating
He was saying also that there is a lot of resources in space. This is why you know possibly
Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos want to get up there so much because the mineral content
everywhere is so
much, I mean he gave the example that you could build
like a half mile high skyscraper all over the whole planet with the amount of resources you
can find, you know, just nearby in our galaxy, which is pretty interesting. And then again, Jeff
Bezos, Elon Musk Musk making rockets that are reusable
reusable rockets are cheaper so maybe they've got some plans to get up there and start mining away the economy makes sense You know it can pay for itself
The next big stop for us
Brian was saying is Mars
Not really news in the sense of like yeah, obviously Elon Musk wants to go there
But it the only realistic stop for us other than the moon because
Any of the planets closer the Sun too hot and beyond Mars that just gas so we can't do anything with them
So for us to get good at planet hopping we've got to we've got to practice on Mars
And then I guess we can practice on different moons and just kind of go from there. He in this podcast had a really
fascinating description of wormholes. I'm too dumb to remember how he explained
it but he really gave it a good breakdown for at least from anything that I've
heard about bending time and space and how it's kind of like theoretically possible but
what doesn't really exist. So if you're into that and that's something that
fascinating to you, definitely pay attention during that part of Rogan's
podcast because it seemed to be the best description I've heard. I thought it
was really pretty cool.
When it comes to life, on earth, Brian was saying that's very rare, probably, and it seems quite unusual.
A lot of things come into play. Single cellular life could be far more likely, maybe on old Mars, or maybe under the ground, or on some of the moons that
have water, but multicellular life seems far more unusual, because it seems to have happened at
one point with like two different organisms combining into one cell and allowing multicells to
continue. And then he gets on to how our solar system seems pretty unusual as well as solar systems go
just from the position of all the planets and the gas giants and that Jupiter's obviously
given us some sort of protection by swallowing up meteors and asteroids that could have just crashed into the earth and killed all the life anyway, so
it may be life is
rarer in the universe than the optimists of finding aliens think just because of the odd
things that are going on in our solar system. It supposedly our solar system is fairly odd
just with the fact that it has one sun because I think I
read or heard somewhere that most solar systems have two. They have a binary star
system. So we got some unusual stuff going on and maybe maybe that's why life
popped up. He makes a little story about proving that there's no soul and he
does that by saying that there's no measurable forces
that are interacting with matter that we don't know about.
And if a soul existed, it's a pretty strong reaction
between the body and the brain.
This thing that can control it, move it, make decisions,
completely function it.
He's saying that we just don't see it anyway. So from a scientific standpoint
You just there's no forces that are interacting with gravity or just in our body that aren't interacting with anything else
And he's saying they should be measurable which I thought was a fascinating way of putting it and then gee
Rogomy did you well that's because it's Jesus and you can't measure God putting it. And then the end of the podcast,
he gets onto something that he's worked with closely-surn, the big head-drawn collider,
it's in like Switzerland, France, and I think Belgium or something, I don't know. It spans a
few countries and it's very, very long, and he talks about how it's put together after the 50s, after World War II, as like a
Conglomeration of countries working together for the betterment of humanity, that sort of thing
And it was set up with an international treaty. So all the countries pay into it
You know like England, France, Germany, all the different countries that are a part of it
They pay about a hundred million dollars a year, which is actually on a GDP
standpoint quite a small amount of money. And so, so soon has this money coming in all the
time, even though it's not a ton of money, but it knows it gets it, so it can always
continue and like plan into the future and do really good science, which is cool. And
some of the discoveries that have come out of it
work help create the internet, the web.
Certain types of electromagnets, super magnets
that they use for a lot of different things,
cancer therapies, and it discovered the Higgs-Bosin
gravity particle.
And it's helping discover things like dark matter,
which makes up like 25% of all the stuff.
Dark Energy, that he was saying makes up 75% of all the stuff.
And so it's a useful tool.
And it's down at the moment, but it'll be back online.
And it's hoping to figure out some more crazy things that, you know, we should know.
So it's cool that device exists.
I think it's pretty cool. And again Brian is touring. So if you're into this podcast after you
listen to Rogan's conversation, jump online, go to his website, try and track him
down. I know he's coming to San Diego, San Francisco, and LA. So see if there's
some tickets. And Joe even said he'd be going out to it.
So it sounded that cool. Check it out. Thanks for listening. Make sure to check out this
podcast, this conversation and I appreciate you guys. Peace.
you