Einstein vs Stephen Hawking -Epic Rap Battles of History #7

Download this song: bit.ly Last chance for these TEEshirts: bit.ly Tweet this Vid-ee-oh: clicktotweet.com Hi. My name is Nice Peter, and this is an Epic Rap Battle of History. Your suggestions make these videos possible, so keep them coming. Special thanks to all the cast and crew: Directed by: Dave McCary www.youtube.com Albert Einstein: MC Mr Napkins (aka Zach Sherwin) www.youtube.com Carl Sagan: Lloyd Ahlquist www.youtube.com Beat Produced by: DJ Naydee & Julian B Track title: The Funeral www.beatsplanet.com Director of Photography Jon Na www.youtube.com Assistant Editor: Brandon Perna Special Effects and General Epicness: Blake O'Neal Behind the Scenes: Mike Schroeder www.youtube.com Additional writing and research by: Dante Cimadamore, Phil Haney, Joe Felice Props and costumes: Mary Gutfleisch (yup, the same Mary) Produced by Nikki Fancy for Maker Studios. I hang out here: www.youtube.com www.twitter.com www.facebook.com see you soon, -nice peter
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Albert Einstein (01)

Original footage ... thanks to the efforts of the whole community *) it was finally possible to "decipher" what Einstein is saying: "Now I will add a few words unprepared. [laughter] A country becomes really a soul only in consciously serving the intellectual life, and in the case of our Jewish people it was really this endeavour, which conserved the Jewish people as a whole. We would not be in existence today, as a community of people, without this continued, or discontinued ... ehh ... activity into learning and in thought and in literature." The occasion of this speech is still unknown, though. *) Thanks to rubyslippez, ElmaFudd2 and especially RuniToconillo.
Einstein's General Theory of Relativity | Lecture 1

Lecture 1 of Leonard Susskind's Modern Physics concentrating on General Relativity. Recorded September 22, 2008 at Stanford University. This Stanford Continuing Studies course is the fourth of a six-quarter sequence of classes exploring the essential theoretical foundations of modern physics. The topics covered in this course focus on classical mechanics. Leonard Susskind is the Felix Bloch Professor of Physics at Stanford University. Stanford Continuing Studies: continuingstudies.stanford.edu About Leonard Susskind: www.stanford.edu Stanford University Channel on YouTube: www.youtube.com
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Gravity - From Newton to Einstein - The Elegant Universe

From the NOVA PBS series "THE ELEGANT UNIVERSE', host Brian Greene guides us through Newton's discovery of gravity to the explanation of it, through Einsteins Theory of Relativity. Brian Greene is a theoretical physicist and one of the best-known string theorists. Since 1996 he has been a professor at Columbia University. The Elegant Universe was adapted for a three hour program in three parts for television broadcast in late 2003 on the PBS series NOVA. www.pbs.org
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Time Travel: Einstein's big idea (Theory of Relativity)

To watch the whole documentary in High Quality go to: www.youtube.com Here is a little clip about how time travel can occur. The clip was taken from: The World's First Time Machine (Discovery Channel). Dr Ronald Mallett
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Einstein: The Autism Connection

Short film which looks at the evidence for Albert Einstein being on the autism spectrum. This possibility also highlights the strong positives that many people with autism can have. Too many films focus on the negative aspects, but there are positives too for most!
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Einstein's Proof of E=mc²

Ever wonder how Einstein proved E=mc²? This is how. Pi day (3.14) is Albert Einstein's Birthday! To celebrate, we'll explain 4 of his most groundbreaking papers from 1905, when he was just 26 years old. minutephysics is now on Google+ - bit.ly And facebook - facebook.com And twitter - @minutephysics Minute Physics provides an energetic and entertaining view of old and new problems in physics -- all in a minute! Music by Nathaniel Schroeder NEW ALBUM!! -- juliansaporiti.bandcamp.com youtube: bit.ly Thanks to Nima Doroud and Alex Yale for contributions and to Perimeter Institute for support.
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Albert Einstein: Why Light is Quantum

Pi day (3.14) is Albert Einstein's Birthday! To celebrate, we'll explain 4 of his most groundbreaking papers from 1905, when he was just 26 years old. minutephysics is now on Google+ - bit.ly And facebook - facebook.com And twitter - @minutephysics Minute Physics provides an energetic and entertaining view of old and new problems in physics -- all in a minute! Music by Nathaniel Schroeder NEW ALBUM!! -- juliansaporiti.bandcamp.com youtube: bit.ly Thanks to Nima Doroud and Alex Yale for contributions and to Perimeter Institute for support.
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Einstein - The Smallest Horse In The World

www.SmallestStallion.com. EINSTEIN - The smallest Foal In The World. Born April 22, 2010 in Barnstead New Hampshire at Tiz A Miniature Horse Farm. Owned by Charles Cantrell and Rachel Wagner. Einstein weighs 6 Lbs and is 14 inches tall. Music in video called Raspberry Blues off the album Raven Project by Anna Schaad and David MacVittie. Visit them at www.AnnaSchaad.com. www.einsteinminihorse.com
Art With Salt - Albert Einstein

bashirsultani.com Facebook: www.facebook.com Twitter:twitter.com Google+ gplus.to • REAL TIME - 40 min. • I REUSE THE SAME SALT ALL THE TIME • TOOLS: 1-2 FULL SHAKER OF ANY FINE SALT +PIECE OF SHARP PAPER + iPHONE4 + iMOVIE • PATIENCE Track "Pure Attitude" by Kevin Macleod incompetech.com
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Einstein and Music

A flash back of Einstein and his love for music and the intersection of physics and music in his life. Mozart and Bach were his favorite composers, so I chose two pieces he liked to go with this video; Mozart's Quartet in G major, K.156 - I. Presto, and Bach's Concerto in D Minor for Two Violins - Vivace.
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NASA | Beyond Einstein: Part I

View "Beyond Einstein: Part II" at: youtube.com Want more? Subscribe to NASA on iTunes! phobos.apple.com Albert Einstein's theories rank among humanity's greatest achievements. They sparked the scientific revolution of the 20th Century. In their attempts to understand how space, time and matter are connected, Einstein and his successors made three predictions... First, that space is expanding from a Big Bang. Second, that black holes exist -- these extremely dense places in the universe where space and time are tied into contorted knots and where time itself -- stops. And third, that there is some kind of energy pulling the universe apart. These three predictions seemed so far-fetched, that everyone, including Einstein himself, thought they were unlikely. Incredibly, all three have turned out to be true. This is where NASA's Beyond Einstein program begins. Using advanced space-based technology to explore these three questions, NASA and its partners begin the next revolution in our understanding of the universe. NASA's Beyond Einstein program is poised to complete Einstein's legacy -- and ultimately unravel the mysteries of the Universe. For more information visit: universe.nasa.gov
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Walter Isaacson - Einstein's God

Complete video at: fora.tv Albert Einstein biographer Walter Isaacson discusses the famous scientist's views on God and religion. ----- Walter Isaacson speaks about his book, "Einstein: His Life and Universe." Walter Isaacson is the President and CEO of the Aspen Institute. He has been the Chairman and CEO of CNN and the Managing Editor of Time Magazine. He is the author of Benjamin Franklin: An American Life (2003) and of Kissinger: A Biography (1992) and is the coauthor of The Wise Men: Six Friends and the World They Made (1986). His biography of Albert Einstein - Einstein: His Life and Universe - was released in April 2007. Isaacson was born on May 20, 1952, in New Orleans. He is a graduate of Harvard College and of Pembroke College of Oxford University, where he was a Rhodes Scholar. He began his career at the Sunday Times of London and then the New Orleans Times-Picayune/States-Item. He joined Time Magazine in 1978 and served as a political correspondent, national editor and editor of new media before becoming the magazine's 14th managing editor in 1996. He became Chairman and CEO of CNN in 2001, and then president and CEO of the Aspen Institute in 2003. He was appointed after Hurricane Katrina to be the vice-chairman of the Louisiana Recovery Authority. He is on the Board of Directors of United Airlines, Tulane University, the National Constitution Center, and he is chairman of the board of Teach for America.
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Einstein's Greatest Blunder

Watch this and other space videos at SpaceRip.com Excerpt from "Mysteries of a Dark Universe." Albert Einstein sought to explain why the gravity of all the stars and gas out there didnt simply cause the universe to collapse into a heap. Following the discovery of the expanding universe, he admitted to the "greatest blunder" of his career.
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Einstein the Parrot: Talking and squawking

www.ted.com This whimsical wrap-up of TED2006 -- presented by Einstein, the African grey parrot, and her trainer, Stephanie White -- simply tickles. Watch for Einstein's moment with Al Gore.TEDTalks is a daily video podcast of the best talks and performances from the TED Conference, where the world's leading thinkers and doers give the talk of their lives in 18 minutes. TED stands for Technology, Entertainment, Design, and TEDTalks cover these topics as well as science, business, development and the arts. Closed captions and translated subtitles in a variety of languages are now available on TED.com, at http Follow us on Twitter www.twitter.com Checkout our Facebook page for TED exclusives www.facebook.com
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Legalize Everything - Einstein 2012

Senator Jefferson Einstein, Junior Republican from South Dakota, eloquently elaborates on the libertarian views which have helped him surge in the polls -- and that he believes will carry him to victory. Shirts: www.thegregorybrothers.com Tweetin: www.twitter.com Facebookin: www.facebook.com Find out MORE about Junkie Einstein's voting record as the race for President heats up: On drug legalization: www.youtube.com On smoking lettuce: www.youtube.com On prescription medicine: www.youtube.com On the existential crisis of not knowing if life is really happening: www.youtube.com On how one can understand the poetry of Congress: www.youtube.com On the economic benefit of marijuana legalization: www.youtube.com Lyrics: When you look on this stage Under all these bright lights, You just see some guys That you don't really like At all, grow some balls When you choose tonight! But if you vote for me You'll be doin the country A really, really big favor--trust me, you can thank me later When I legalize everything I can guarantee you'll be Much, much more happy With me I can satisfy all your needs For shady activities As you please, like Prostitutes and drugs Panda skin rugs Automatic weapons Exposin your erections It's high time You vote for Einstein I'll legalize everything Euthanizin old people Poachin bald eagles I'll fire the regulators Of asbestos toilet paper It's high time for Einstein I'll legalize everythiiiiing If you vote for him You'll be helpin the nation - God's <b>...</b>
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Einstein on God

Often misquoted, Einstein strove for clarity in regard to his personal beliefs. Some early photographs, thoughts written down by his own hand and the writings of his biographers comprise this well-referenced excerpt from the Christopher Hitchens book The Portable Atheist. I hope this will shed some light on this controversial topic. Read by Nicholas Ball. Another good one: "The word God is for me nothing more than the expression and product of human weaknesses, the Bible a collection of honorable, but still primitive legends which are nevertheless pretty childish." -Albert Einstein Keywords: Bible anthropomorphic god hebrew religion mystical mysticism faith truth reality childish delusion biography dr doctor albert einstein physics universe existence baruch spinoza philosophy philosopher agnisticism atheism atheist agnostic priest jesuit jewish german intellectual evolution darwinism creationism science energy time e=mc2
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Einstein's Brain part 1

Story of Kenji Sugimoto, professor in Math and Science history at Kinki university in Japan on a pilgrimage to find Einstein's brain. Kenji Sugimoto is a professor in mathematics and science history at the Kinki university in Japan. He has spent thirty years documenting einstein's life and person. To complete his life's work, the professor travelled to America in search of the key to the mind of the great thinker.
Einstein's Messengers

Watch this and other space videos at SpaceRip.com Ripples in the fabric of space-time from monumental collisions between black holes, and how scientists are trying to measure them with lasers and mirrors. From LIGO and the National Science Foundation.
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Einstein and The Special Theory of Relativity

How Einstein (& others) discovered Special Relativity. Pi day (3.14) is Albert Einstein's Birthday! To celebrate, we'll explain 4 of his most groundbreaking papers from 1905, when he was just 26 years old. minutephysics is now on Google+ - bit.ly And facebook - facebook.com And twitter - @minutephysics Minute Physics provides an energetic and entertaining view of old and new problems in physics -- all in a minute! Music by Nathaniel Schroeder NEW ALBUM!! -- juliansaporiti.bandcamp.com youtube: bit.ly Thanks to Nima Doroud and Alex Yale for contributions and to Perimeter Institute for support.
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Optical Illusions with an Einstein Mask - QI Series 9 Ep 1 - BBC Two

More about this programme: Stephen Fry shows Jimmy Carr, Sandi Toksvig, Lee Mack and Alan Davis some optical illusions.
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Simultaneity - Albert Einstein and the Theory of Relativity

Imagine two observers, one seated in the center of a speeding train car, and another standing on the platform as the train races by. As the center of the car passes the observer on the platform, he sees two bolts of lightning strike the car - one on the front, and one on the rear. The flashes of light from each strike reach him at the same time, so he concludes that the bolts were simultaneous, since he knows that the light from both strikes traveled the same distance at the same speed, the speed of light. He also predicts that his friend on the train will notice the front strike before the rear strike, because from her perspective on the platform the train is moving to meet the flash from the front, and moving away from the flash from the rear. But what does the passenger see? As her friend on the platform predicted, the passenger does notice the flash from the front before the flash from the rear. But her conclusion is very different. As Einstein showed, the speed of the flashes as measured in the reference frame of the train must also be the speed of light. So, because each light pulse travels the same distance from each end of the train to the passenger, and because both pulses must move at the same speed, he can only conclude one thing: if he sees the front strike first, it actually happened first. Whose interpretation is correct - the observer on the platform, who claims that the strikes happened simultaneously, or the observer on the train, who claims that the <b>...</b>
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HEAVY IS EINSTEIN

Don't let Heavy do math. EVER. Bad things happen. Yeah, I'm contributing to another fad, go cry somewhere else. This video was mostly a test for HWM faceposing, lip-syncing, and special effects in Sony Vegas. ("HWM" stands for "Hardware Morph", basically they're higher quality TF2 models with more face flex options.)
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Visualization of Einstein's special relativity

This video demonstrates the effects of Einstein's special relativity on objects that move at high velocities. More particularly, it visualizes the Lorentz transformation. The video shows a 3-dimensional view containing 2 dimensions of space and one dimension of time. This view is used to demonstrate the difference between classical physics and Einstein's relativity, and why the latter was necessary to understand experimental results. Visit our sponsors: www.therockerspaniels.com
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Albert Einstein: The Size and Existence of Atoms

How do we know atoms exist? And just how big are they? Pi day (3.14) is Albert Einstein's Birthday! To celebrate, we'll explain 4 of his most groundbreaking papers from 1905, when he was just 26 years old. minutephysics is now on Google+ - bit.ly And facebook - facebook.com And twitter - @minutephysics Minute Physics provides an energetic and entertaining view of old and new problems in physics -- all in a minute! Music by Nathaniel Schroeder NEW ALBUM!! -- juliansaporiti.bandcamp.com youtube: bit.ly Thanks to Nima Doroud and Alex Yale for contributions and to Perimeter Institute for support.
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The Extraordinary Genius of Albert Einstein

The core of the video is a workshop pedagogical on the Theory of Special Relativity as part of the educational process conducted by our youth leadership, not for the sake of understanding the theory itself, but using Einstein's particular discovery as a case study to demonstrate and walk people through real human thinking, as being something above sense perceptions or opinions. We end with reflecting on the principle of relativity in terms of social relations and individual identities or thought processes, asking the question --how was Einstein able to make his breakthrough?
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NASA | Beyond Einstein: Part II

View "Beyond Einstein: Part I" at: youtube.com Want more? Subscribe to NASA on iTunes! phobos.apple.com Albert Einstein's theories rank among humanity's greatest achievements. They sparked the scientific revolution of the 20th Century. In their attempts to understand how space, time and matter are connected, Einstein and his successors made three predictions... First, that space is expanding from a Big Bang. Second, that black holes exist -- these extremely dense places in the universe where space and time are tied into contorted knots and where time itself -- stops. And third, that there is some kind of energy pulling the universe apart. These three predictions seemed so far-fetched, that everyone, including Einstein himself, thought they were unlikely. Incredibly, all three have turned out to be true. This is where NASA's Beyond Einstein program begins. Using advanced space-based technology to explore these three questions, NASA and its partners begin the next revolution in our understanding of the universe. NASA's Beyond Einstein program is poised to complete Einstein's legacy -- and ultimately unravel the mysteries of the Universe. For more information visit: universe.nasa.gov
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Time Dilation | Einstein's Relativity

facebook.com ... Albert Einstein's Theory of Relativity (Chapter 2): The Phenomenon of Time Dilation. Time dilation is a phenomenon (or two phenomena, as mentioned below) described by the theory of relativity. It can be illustrated by supposing that two observers are in motion relative to each other, and/or differently situated with regard to nearby gravitational masses. They each carry a clock of identical construction and function. Then, the point of view of each observer will generally be that the other observer's clock is in error (has changed its rate). Both causes (distance to gravitational mass and relative speed) can operate together. --- Please subscribe to Science & Reason: • www.youtube.com • www.youtube.com • www.youtube.com • www.youtube.com --- Time dilation can arise from (1) relative velocity of motion between the observers, and (2) difference in their distance from gravitational mass. (1) that the observers are in relative uniform motion, and far away from any gravitational mass, the point of view of each will be that the other's (moving) clock is ticking at a slower rate than the local clock. The faster the relative velocity, the greater the magnitude of time dilation. This case is sometimes called special relativistic time dilation. It is often interpreted as time "slowing down" for the other (moving) clock. But that is only true from the physical point of view of the local observer, and of others at relative rest (ie in the local observer's frame of <b>...</b>
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Einstein's Word Practice

This is several clips of Einstein practicing her words on the shower ledge and on her perch in the kitchen. This is what we hear across the house when we're out of the room. (This isnot the famous "Einstein" that was featured on the TV show Animal Planet Pet Stars. The only things they have in common is the name, good looks, and the desire to entertain humans!) Visit Einstein the Talking Texan Parrot Website: www.einsteinparrot.com Blog: einsteinparrot.blogspot.com Facebook: www.facebook.com Twitter: twitter.com Ringtones for Avian Charities: www.myxer.com -
Albert Einstein Humanoid Robot

A Humanoid robotic body developed by Kaist called 'Hubo Humanoid' has installed an animatronic head of Albert Einstein from a well known engineer David Hanson of Hanson Robotics. Visually looking at it your mind plays a trick thinking how real the head really looks to the real Albert Einstein.
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Albert Einstein's Theory of Relativity

Easy to understand animation explaining all of Einstein's Theory. Covers both Special Relativity and General Relativity.
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