Joe Rogan Experience Review podcast - A Review of Episode 1216 Sir Roger Penrose
Episode Date: December 27, 2018Sir Roger is a brilliant man. Joe and Roger get in to one of the most fascinating yet complicated discussions I’ve ever heard on the Rogan Podcast. This was complicated and amazing to review with my... brother Will. Have a listen and figure it out for yourselves. Merry Christmas! Enjoy my review folks! Please email me with any suggestions and questions for future Reviews:                                                                       Joeroganexperiencereview@gmail.com
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Pero ¿cómo es posible que sean las tres de la tarde?
¿Qué lleves casi una hora de atascote?
¿Qué de todo el camino por delante?
¿Y tú estas ahà dan tranquila a tus cosas?
¿Cómo si te deseo todo igual? ¿Cómo es posible?
Vamos.
Que tú vas a trabajar no estás lleno, ¿no?
¿A dónde vas tú tan contenta? ¿Eh?
¿A dónde?
Llega el mejor momento del año.
Llegan tus vacaciones.
Este uno de Julio sortió extraordinario de vacaciones
de LoterÃa Nacional con 20 millones
aún decimos.
LoterÃas te recuerda que juegue con responsabilidad y solo si eres mayor de dad. Hello and welcome to another episode of the JRE Review. I review each week. I and my guests will review Joe Rogan podcast and
generally we look at what is the most interesting podcast of the week.
One's that brought up the most questions. Maybe the most confusing. I know that a
lot of people listen to Joe and people are listening to this one. So it's important that
I put out the ones that in a lot of ways, often are the most confusing. My guest today,
since I'm in England for Christmas, is my brother Will, say hi Will. And the guest that
was on Roga and that we're reviewing is podcast 1216 so Roger Penrose. Now so Roger Penrose is a pretty fascinating guy. Super smart. If you haven't heard this podcast you've got to check it out. It's it's a tough one. You know whether you take notes or not it's complicated but it's fascinating. He's like a philosopher of science, PhD, of course. He's been knighted.
His work is incredible. He's looked into kind of what makes consciousness.
And he has some interesting theories that that Joe is kind of really into.
And he starts off with something that's pretty fascinating. He talks about what
God him into doing this type of thought process and work into consciousness and it was the fact
that he started to notice from these obscure lectures he was going to that you cannot prove
everything with math, right? So you know and you've taken some advanced math
class as well, probably along the way, calculus or the rest of it. So there's a
lot of functions, they use functions and the curve and then it's like this
explains why this happens. And then you also have other formulas that prove
things, but he's basically saying from what he understands I have no experience with this that that there are certain things that exist in the universe
that you can't prove with math.
Unquantifiable.
Yeah, exactly.
Like yeah, exactly unquantified like things that even if you punch in all the formulas, it spits out something that says
this even if you punch in all the formulas, it spits out something that says, this doesn't make sense, you can't line this up, like there's nothing that proves it.
And that leaves like kind of a complicated point in at least the
war of mathematics or physics because you know these guys that are very
smart are under the impression that you can prove everything but not necessarily. So his idea is
consciousness comes into the somehow. What we are when we're paying attention to consciousness is
not it's taking away the idea that consciousness is just another formula that it's something higher, not necessarily spiritual in a sense, right? But it could be,
it's a manifestation of the same though, it's, yeah. Sure, it's something, something that is, is in,
like, it's just something else. It's an observation of all of the things that we can prove and the observation point which is us in
the way that we observe things is non-provable because maybe consciousness is
coming from another point. Fascinating. If a tree falls, the forest does it? Is it
heard? Exactly. Yeah, exactly. So look, with the mic speak up a little bit in front of it, but it's
Exactly if the tree falls in the woods and no one's there to hear it does it make a sound?
Well that brings up the kind of thought process of like simulation theory right where if it is a simulation
You know if you're playing like the Sims
The stuff goes on all the time even when you're not there. Do you ever play that game?
Yeah, absolutely.
Exactly, what's up with it?
Yeah, so if you're in a different room,
stuff's happening, but there's no visual part of it.
It's just the numbers crunching.
So if you go back to someone's house on fire,
it wasn't making a noise before that.
You had to walk in and observe it.
Or, you know, so it's along with these sorts of things.
So he talks about these things in your brain
that are called microtubules.
And they're in like every cell,
but they're also surrounding all the neurons
and they're like the structure of the things
in your brain that he thinks brings consciousness.
Weird, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I need some more explanation.
Well, he doesn't really get into to at least the where I could understand like why that is other than like there this
Standardized structure there the things that pull
chromosomes apart in my toses they're like this element of life that's incredibly important and
Doesn't divide or change like other
cells is more standardized but other than that honestly I did not really
think I don't think he like he doesn't know 100% this is related to
consciousness this is just his theory and I don't think he's done like
Master Theory, yeah. Well, he's written some papers on it and he has some colleagues
out of like Poland and other things and they speculate, but he's not a biologist. So he's
coming from a different point of thought, but you know, there are some theories out there
that saying like, this might be the element.
So, when you're thinking of consciousness in a way, you've got to think of the
consistencies of what is like in the brain or in the cell, and then what things are changing.
So, what is just like fueling the creature, what is just keeping all the functionality, the blood flowing, the heart going, or the rest of it?
And what is different?
What is there just for the brain?
What is there just to allow thoughts move from one point of the brain to another in the
fashion that makes up what we think consciousness is, yeah.
And what really is, I guess, the scaffolding for it.
And that's where these things come in.
So I think he's coming from the point of like a scaffolding
which is what we all strive towards, really understanding
that this kind of thing.
Oh, of course.
It's got to be the biggest question of all time.
Like why do we even think about anything
or know what we are?
But I found that kind of fascinating.
I don't know how they came to that conclusion,
but you know, but in the same way
when Joe is talking to Roger Penrose, you know, he says you got to be careful because when you talk
consciousness, you get into the area of like, woo, you know, crystals, fucking, you know, star signs
and all the rest of it. It's like, you've got to be very careful. No, there isn't. And people like to just throw that stuff out and say,
oh, it comes from the deeper meaning and blah, blah, blah. And then it's hard
to cross that boundary between science and that kind of spirituality thing.
And then, you know, there was that movie, what the bleep do you know? Did you ever see that?
Yeah, which was mostly bullshit,
made by a cult leader. And it was like something that made people think that that was science
and most of it was dog shit. And when you have that, I mean, I remember first watching,
I thought it was fascinating. I was like, no way is that happening. Well, most of it
didn't. It was utter shit. So you do need people out there that are legit that kind of stepping
Yeah, stepping into the world of woe but are not afraid to kind of do their best
the back of it with science because otherwise it's just a bullshit
opinion that goes nowhere. The next part is he steps into talking about quantum
mechanics which is always like a fascinating
portion of any understanding that only really intelligent people understand, and even when they do,
they can't describe it. But he talks about certain parts of quantum mechanics that are really
fascinating. One is quantum entanglement. Do you know much about that? Touch.
fascinating one is quantum entanglement, you know much about that?
Touch Right, so it's basically where two
Atoms will sync up and one will move in a way that the other one does the same and you can separate them over
Group vast distances and the idea is it's an infinite distance so you could put one on Mars one on Earth and have an incident
Communication it with the machine that could like read them. Exactly. We don't have any of that yet, but at least we
know the process potentially. And he was saying, I guess the
world record is like, we move one like a hundred miles away,
and we could see that the movements were the same. But you
know, it's not like we have some sort of, um, more code device
connected to it. I mean, we're talking like, left and right. Yeah, that's all we see, but there's something. And then there's another one called
superposition, which is maybe more well-known, but it's just about how the electron or whatever
you measure could be in any position, right? As well as all sort of... Yeah, that's right.
Yeah, like it can't
dead, but alive at the same time, which is multiple things. And it's complicated,
and it doesn't really necessarily mean it's like a live all dead. It just means
that like in a sense the choice hasn't been made before it's observed, which is
very strange. Yeah, that's a very strange aspect.
And then the universe, it's ever expanding.
That's hard for people to wrap their heads around because what does it expand into?
Like, when someone says to you the universe is infinite,
how do you perceive the universe?
The right from a sense of purpose of individuals, what we all generally try and do.
Right, but where is it going? Do you think about it as it's infinitely big already,
or it's getting larger, or how does your mind answer that when you hear that question?
That's an interesting one. I think we all strive for a set of purpose. So I guess it is
rapidly expanding is the most positive point of view on that.
We have to work but what do you think it expands into? It's so weird, right? We have to apply our own sense of purpose and meaning
and existence in the world to actually kind of pretend we have an aspiration to understand
that question. Yeah, that's it. Yeah, it's it's wild and in some of the other theories are like the multiverse, for example, where
Every decision you make another decision could have been made and then in the universe splits off from that infinite
Existence has happened. He's not feeling that one and I have to say
Knowing nothing about anything even closer this. I'm glad that he feels that way because I've never liked that one
No, it's really, it's great, it's great, absolutely, no.
Well, it takes all of the fun out of it.
Why?
It takes, you can't take credit for any of your actions if you're just one of an infinite
amount of decision-making.
I mean, it makes it really boring if that's the case.
So he doesn't believe that's there, but what he does see is he sees some accidents in
the universe that make us kind
of support that theory. And accidents being inconsistencies to what we think should be
there. Like for example, the neutron is slightly heavier than the proton, which is kind of odd.
And it might, the idea might be that, well, hold on, maybe there's a universe where they
both weigh exactly the same and things
Measure up differently and then therefore different things happen and beyond that is they talk about alien life
Why haven't we heard from alien life?
Well, there could be two fucking far away
but if
They have been around long enough, how much longer would it take us to be like,
how long are you watching us to realize that they don't want to be friends? Well, that might
be it, right? Yeah, that could be it. And that's what the UFO conspiracy theorists surely
believe, because they're like, you know what, they come all the time and they don't want
to talk to us. But in a way, if they're coming here, it're like, you know what, they come all the time and they don't want to talk to us.
But in a way, if they're coming here,
it's probably drones anyway.
It's probably not creatures in there.
Like, we're already sending drones out.
We send out like the voyage of things
and like, why would we even need to be in that?
Especially if you didn't want the earthlings
to know you were going to the planet,
but at the same point he's saying, well maybe we're the oldest living things in the universe.
That could be it's such an overgrowth.
Well yeah, right, but it also, at least from what we know, it's supported.
You can't assume that it's not. So one really interesting theory that he threw out that I thought was fantastic was that
the universe is repeat.
So the Big Bang happens.
The universe expands, spreads out, all the energies lost, and then it loses its gravitational
push, sucks back in.
So it's tension.
Yep, and then another Big Bang happens.
So he was saying there's a possibility that a life form could be so advanced.
He could leave something that when the universe sucked back in, once it knows all the calculations,
it could leave a message for the next universe that expands through space like that background
radiation and somehow it has a message in it.
Yeah.
If it did and we calculated it and then we
figured out what it was, it would be really fucking depressing whatever the message is.
I guarantee it. Really? I just think it would be, what do you think they're going to say?
It's great. Hang in there now. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Podcasts. You've got to have some
positive aspirations. Maybe. But what are they going to tell us?
Leave another message.
Tell them to hang in there.
Keep your chin up.
I mean, what are you going to say?
Some stuff I'll put in.
Yeah.
Leave some instructions on how to build a really cool computer.
I mean, well, there's no point leaving any technology.
You just trying to leave a message that is like the information
that you know. And it's like,
I don't know, I'm too dumb to even think about what they should put together, but what would
they even say? I think it's going to be like, this continues for a long time. Hang in there.
Right? This just keeps going. It's a mixture of comfort and
we look like France. What do you look like? Yeah, I don't know.
It's just like what are they even going to pass that would be worth it. But maybe, maybe there could
be a message from the Big Bang that's left there forever. And you know, towards the end of that
podcast, they Joe brings up an interesting quote from JDS Hal, and he goes, the world is not only queer as you
suppose, it is queer, the queerer than you can suppose. That's cool. That's a
really cool message that they laugh, but you know, the takeaway is like,
obviously, there are some really fucking smart people out there. And if you're
smart enough to understand what he's saying when you listen to this podcast,
my hat off, my hat is off to you.
He was a fascinating dude to listen to and hearing Joe kind of like, you know, give his end
of it and try and make sense of what's happening was awesome.
And it's definitely worth listening to. It's one of those things, especially come
the new year to kind of sit back and reflect on and just take a moment and look up into
the stars, you know, get a space where hopefully you don't have a bunch of lights giving
you a bunch of feedback that makes it impossible to see the Milky Way. Hopefully you got a good
view like you're at Montana somewhere.
Maybe better than family members that are just gonna.
Yeah, take a break from it all and just it's the end of the year.
Reflect on on where you are and what you're doing and
understand sure you're a small spec but you're an important part of
of all the things. I want to thank my brother Will for
helping me out and he's also a badass sound engineer so
hopefully he's gonna teach me a thing or two
about making the sound better on my podcast,
which I promise to put that effort into you guys.
And thank you so much, Mary Christmas,
have a happy new year.
Thanks for downloading and we will talk more next year,
2019.
Thanks folks, say bye.
Say bye, well.
Good bye.
Next year 2019, thanks folks. Say bye. Good bye. you