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science saved my soul
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jupiterone
pkcRAISTLIN
i liked his delivery, even if he didnt say anything particularly profound. and adagio in d minor is popping up everywhere these days!
Regurgitated
nice video. Its good to put things in perspective every once in awhile. Appreciate the arcade fire song at the end as well.
Acton
Quite a good watch, I loved the quirky humour.
-FSP-
That sounds like a cool religion. Where do I sign up?
Jake Benson
That's awesome. I'm angry that I'm born at this time when there's SO MANY religious people out there wasting their time on trying to save themselves when they should be finding cures to diseases and researching more depth into the Universe.
Saka
Sounds like a douche, I mean, who stands outside that long smoking before looking up, when its pitch black?
If he listens to science so much why hasn't he stopped smoking?
rofl
Jake Benson
^ good point.
Moongoose
quote:
Originally posted by pkcRAISTLIN
i liked his delivery, even if he didnt say anything particularly profound. and adagio in d minor is popping up everywhere these days!


Delivery like this should be mandatory in every science classroom around the world.
Saka
quote:
Originally posted by Moongoose
Delivery like this should be mandatory in every science classroom around the world.

No, no it shouldn't.
He says he can see the edge of the big bang, yet the big bangs a theory, so therefore, he doesn't know what he is talking about.
Intelligent design.

dj_alfi
quote:
Originally posted by Kenny Rogers
we are all just water and carbon. thats my religion.


so we're hydrogen, oxygen and carbon, then?
MrJiveBoJingles
quote:
Originally posted by Kenny Rogers
we are all just water and carbon.

And phosphorus and nitrogen and calcium and manganese and selenium and iron...
quote:
Originally posted by MrJiveBoJingles
Fifty million years lay under my feet, fifty million years of bellowing monsters moving in a green world now gone so utterly that its very light was traveling on the farther edge of space. The chemicals of all that vanished age lay about me in the ground. The iron did not remember the blood it had once moved within, the phosphorus had forgot the savage brain. I had lifted up a fistful of the ground and held it while that wild flight of southbound warblers hurled over me into the oncoming dark. There went phosphorus, there went iron, there went carbon, there beat the calcium in those hurrying wings. Alone on a dead planet I watch that incredible miracle speeding past. It ran by some true compass over field and wasteland. It cried its individual ecstasies into the air until the gullies rang. It swerved like a single body. It knew itself, and lonely, it bunched close in the racing darkness, its individual entities feeling about them in the rising night. And so, crying out to each other their identity, they passed away out of my view. - Loren Eiseley, The Unexpected Universe
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