Questions That Science Still Can't Answer
0:022 secondswelcome to the worst of the best podcast you wanted the best well they didn't freaking make
0:1010 secondsit so here's what you get from Canada Ryan and Jason
0:1616 seconds[Applause]
0:2222 seconds[Music]
0:2828 seconds[Applause]
0:3535 secondswelcome to another episode of the worst of the best podcast I'm your host and with me today is my brother Jason how
0:4343 secondsyou doing brother doing very well thanks for having me on your show again well you know what's funny we're in person we're next to each other we're moving up
0:5151 secondsin the world because I think we figured out how to have both of our mics recording like to sound more professional cuz the last time we tried it it didn't quite Works sharing a mic
1:001 minuteso I think we got two mics going here so fingers crossed it sounds a little bit better but we appreciate everyone listening yes you have cracked the code
1:071 minute, 7 secondsI believe in uh how to use a microphone with a computer just after 200 episodes or whatever 150 episodes I'm finally
1:161 minute, 16 secondsfiguring things out okay well usually we record they say remotely that means you're in your home I'm in mine and that's easy to edit but uh or it easy to
1:251 minute, 25 secondshave the persons might come through but when you're in person with each other it's a little bit more fin angling okay enough shop talk as they say before we move into today's topic Jason our last
1:331 minute, 33 secondscouple of episodes we've been plugging our email you know we've been like hey come on guys send us an email and give us some suggestions and give us some
1:411 minute, 41 secondslove well we got one after 100 plus episodes we finally got an email Grant we've only been plugging the email for last couple episodes we got an email
1:491 minute, 49 secondsfrom our only listener in Australia so this is really exciting so if everyone from every country that listens to our show send us an email we get at least 10
1:571 minute, 57 secondsemails so if you're out there if you're from the UK or if you're from Canada the USA you know send us an email just say
2:062 minutes, 6 secondshey I love you guys keep it up we'd love to hear from you so Jason this is from Peter okay he says this thoroughly enjoying your worst of the best podcasts
2:142 minutes, 14 secondsRyan and Jason especially as you are both my contemporaries he was born in 1978 and can thoroughly and amusingly relate to all of your topics and
2:232 minutes, 23 secondsperspectives I especially enjoy your album podcast episodes so he likes our album reviews or music episodes those
2:302 minutes, 30 secondsconspiracy wants seem to be kind of a it's the bread and butter it once it yeah I mean it pays the bills right keeps the lights
2:362 minutes, 36 secondson all that ad Revenue that comes in he says here now we did call out a challenge that if you give us a
2:442 minutes, 44 secondssuggestion we'll do it if it's something that's in our wheelhouse something we could actually speak to so here's his suggestion Jason you let me know if this
2:522 minutes, 52 secondssomething you want to do he goes I'd recommend you both break down Nirvana's seminal Album never mind 19
2:592 minutes, 59 seconds1991 released this album epitomizes he says my youth as I had just turned 13 entered high school and the Australian
3:083 minutes, 8 secondseconomy was the worst it had been since 1945 The Angst and Melancholy that reverberates throughout this album
3:163 minutes, 16 secondshighlights the existential loneliness and disdain I felt entering my first year of high school so wow he had a
3:243 minutes, 24 secondsrough year there it seems and the recession was down and this album spoke to him he goes on to say keep up the wonderful work guys especially as you
3:313 minutes, 31 secondsreminisce with one another as brothers of Years Gone by love hearing the antidotes and foibles of Youth hey we haven't shared any foibles have we we're
3:383 minutes, 38 secondsperfect perfect youth we're good children much admiration and respect from Down Under Peter Scher so thank you
3:463 minutes, 46 secondsPeter so much for your faithful listenership and for your wonderful email and if you want to be a Peter send us an email and send us a suggestion
3:543 minutes, 54 secondsbecause we'll keep doing what we're doing but you know if you have an idea that you cuz I actually didn't think of this album I admit this is a big alum album n's never mind it probably
4:014 minutes, 1 secondwouldn't have been on my list for a long time I don't know when we would have gotone around to it but it's definitely an album of such where you and I did listen to it it was a big part of our
4:104 minutes, 10 secondsyouth whether we liked it or not but okay today Jason science I like science what I like about science is is it
4:184 minutes, 18 secondsdoesn't have an agenda or shouldn't it shouldn't have an agenda well that was ironic yeah I know what I mean by that is if you just
4:274 minutes, 27 secondsfor example 2+ 2 equaling 4 that's just is what it is is what I'm getting at yeah okay so Math Science and Math are very correlated as you know
4:354 minutes, 35 secondseverything is number so what I'm getting at here is science in of of itself shouldn't have an agenda now people can use science for an agenda but what
4:454 minutes, 45 secondsthings are or how they are and how we measure those things I.E through the scientific method doesn't have an agenda
4:514 minutes, 51 secondsjust is rain wet the air we breathe makes us live all that stuff that is what should be great about science is
4:594 minutes, 59 secondsthat it is is an unbiased view of existence of the world around us
5:055 minutes, 5 secondsor the universe around us okay today's topic well people have already seen the topic cuz they've seen the title of the episode 10 questions science still in
5:155 minutes, 15 seconds20122 can't answer all right so yeah we've tried scientists have tried people much smarter than me and you have used their math used their backgrounds use
5:245 minutes, 24 secondstheir training to say how is this thing a thing or we know this thing or this idea exists because we can talk about it
5:325 minutes, 32 secondsbut how come science still can't prove it we're not going to necessarily talk about how or why it's not provable we're just going to basically talk about what are the things science s can answer and
5:405 minutes, 40 secondsthen we're going to talk about you know what that means to us and at the end of the episode we're going to pick the one thing that science can answer the one thing that if we could have science
5:485 minutes, 48 secondsanswer nine of these things which is the one we could live without the answer the worst thing the one that we care the least amount I would still like to know
5:565 minutes, 56 secondsall 10 answers as we go through them but there might be one that's like ah I can wait till the quote unquote next life to find that answer okay is there a god
6:046 minutes, 4 secondsstarting off right away with a big big question Jason is there a God we know there's numerous religions out there
6:136 minutes, 13 secondsthousands if not tens of thousands of ideas of God who is God he she it what what does God look like and all this
6:206 minutes, 20 secondsstuff so is there God science has not proven this idea or thought science estimates that
6:276 minutes, 27 seconds13.7 billion years ago the Big Bang created the universe this is an interesting Concept in of itself I guess
6:356 minutes, 35 secondsthere is some math behind this that I'm not aware of but this the idea that Boop here we go here's an explosion here
6:426 minutes, 42 secondswe go that came from somewhere yeah that's still beyond my ability to comprehend Jason science has never
6:506 minutes, 50 secondsrevealed why the Big Bang happened and what preceded it that's another mindboggling idea what came before the
6:586 minutes, 58 secondsbig what was there so science you know this is kind of a 1 a and 1B because the science can't explain or the Big Bang
7:067 minutes, 6 secondswell they can explain the Big Bang but why it happened is right yeah then they can't explain what happened before it
7:147 minutes, 14 secondshappened or what was around before it happened you see a tree and you can say well this tree now exists what came before the tree well the seed there's
7:227 minutes, 22 secondssome sort of idea the tree was seed once before and how did that seed get there well it traveled from another tree there some sort of back ground with just
7:307 minutes, 30 secondsplants and trees but we don't have that with the big bang moreover Jason evolutionists are still perplexed about
7:367 minutes, 36 secondshow the first living organisms Grew From lifeless matter Christians or people that believe in God or the creationists
7:437 minutes, 43 secondsI guess they call them this is great evidence for their cause in a sense because science can't explain the Big Bang or where life came from so to speak
7:517 minutes, 51 secondsthis is their saying well right we start coming to other conclusions as to how these things have come together I believe that's called the god Gap I've
7:597 minutes, 59 secondsheard that is it called the god Gap basically what science can't prove people just say well well yeah it's not just even science I mean I think the god
8:088 minutes, 8 secondsGap would be almost any scenario unexplainable situation or scenario in your life I me it could be very personal
8:168 minutes, 16 secondsthe chances that we met and or you know whatever like how did this all come together serendipitous situation yeah yeah so I mean that would go to
8:258 minutes, 25 secondssomething even much bigger like a big bang or why we're here and why the Earth was created we start filling in those
8:328 minutes, 32 secondsgaps cuz we as people we tend to need conclusions we don't like open-endedness very much we need a resolution of
8:428 minutes, 42 secondsquestions so we start creating these uh these answers for ourselves so if science can't answer it with a high
8:508 minutes, 50 secondsprobability then we start filling in those gaps I suppose I'm sorry we don't like not knowing yeah have you ever heard of the mathematician Roger Penrose
8:588 minutes, 58 secondsin your your travels through life Jason well mathematician Roger Penrose calculated that the probability of
9:059 minutes, 5 secondscreating our universe filled with life would be a number closer to zero than anyone has ever imagined we understand
9:139 minutes, 13 secondsthe concept of zero zero means there's just no chance so he's saying we know that it happened We're Here We Exist the mathematical probability that we should
9:229 minutes, 22 secondsexist or life exists is closer to zero than a number we can't even imagine that number which makes a lot of sense considering we have not been able to
9:319 minutes, 31 secondsfully identify life outside of our Earth right or at least intelligent life outside of
9:389 minutes, 38 secondsour Earth becoming a little bit more open with the UFO phenomenon you know the last year it's been quietly just
9:479 minutes, 47 secondslike accepted almost to say that there's intelligent life and that we're not seeing the type of life that we believe
9:549 minutes, 54 secondsto be life outside of our Earth's experience the question therefore remains whether there is an omnipotent
10:0110 minutes, 1 secondindividual that Against All Odds had the power to create our Cosmos okay so uh number nine here that we're going to
10:1010 minutes, 10 secondstalk about is how are memories stored and retrieved I find this interesting because this is something I thought that
10:1710 minutes, 17 secondswould have already been fairly well understood I assumed we kind of knew this but I guess we don't yeah so when a
10:2510 minutes, 25 secondsnew fact is learned physical changes in the brain occur across a network of synapsis and neurons do you know what
10:3310 minutes, 33 secondsthose are Ryan yeah yeah I do actually synapsis and neurons I I remember a little bit from my time I did a little bit of college Believe It or Not Jay back of the day I did some college and I
10:4110 minutes, 41 secondsdid some uh bioscience or biopsychology sorry that anyway yeah so basically psychology and how the brain works like a neuroscience early Neuroscience which
10:5010 minutes, 50 secondsI really enjoy so basically synaptics and neurons so synaptics are like these I'm going to butcher it so people could just Google this and emails that we're going to get we're going to get a lot of
10:5810 minutes, 58 secondsCorrections but my is synapsis is kind think of like um two points at the end of the cell or whatever that aren't
11:0611 minutes, 6 secondsconnecting and it's called the synaptic gap for example so what there's a gap between the two I think you know those like those lightning things those
11:1311 minutes, 13 secondslightning machine think of that right so you got the two rods and the lightning is connecting the gaps sure so the gap between that's called the synaptic gap
11:2211 minutes, 22 secondsokay and so the neurons that's uh those are just part of the atoms what happens for example people that are depressed there's a break in their synaptic gap
11:3011 minutes, 30 secondswhere their neurons aren't firing that's what they say everything's not firing in all cylinders so what's happened is the part of the brain that takes care of
11:3811 minutes, 38 secondsdealing with sadness in a quote unquote normally developed brain it just deals with the sadness so to speak but people
11:4511 minutes, 45 secondswho have depression clinical depression they don't have their synaptic gaps firing and they're not connecting and what the medication does it just bridges
11:5411 minutes, 54 secondsthat Gap okay so anyway so synaps is working that way obviously that's just a I just use depression part as an example but this is for all the way the brain
12:0212 minutes, 2 secondsworks there there's things firing between the synapses right so we have the synapsis and the neurons and and the way that they connect but neurologists
12:1112 minutes, 11 secondsdo not fully understand what these changes are and how they hold knowledge it's well think of it like looking at a car engine you can see how the car
12:1912 minutes, 19 secondsengine is combusting you can see that it's firing again firing on all cylinders you can see that maybe they're saying they don't know how the engine started or what what's moving what
12:2812 minutes, 28 secondswhat's inside these things almost why is this working so what are some of the theories that ex so they have some ideas about how the memories might be stored
12:3812 minutes, 38 secondsbut the concept that has left the neurologist most baffled is the ability to retrieve memories we get it that
12:4612 minutes, 46 secondsthere's information stored in the brain but they're not even sure quite how they we getting that information back out well and especially after the memories
12:5412 minutes, 54 secondsare able to be retrieved so quickly so let's say we're having a conversation and then I can all of a sudden recall an experience
13:0313 minutes, 3 secondsfrom 40 years ago and be able to talk about it like how is it that that we're able to pull these memories or even facts
13:1213 minutes, 12 secondslike you talked about your science class your biology science class and college came how it just came right like how did you and how did your brain know to go to
13:2113 minutes, 21 secondsthat space to ret where to go it hasn't been accessed in 25 years and all of a sudden you decided to access it yeah
13:2913 minutes, 29 secondsthat is interesting and I would assume of course that people that study Alzheimer's and what have you this is probably what they're trying to figure
13:3613 minutes, 36 secondsout how do we bridge this Gap how do we get these patients who suffer from Alzheimer's to to retrieve who they are
13:4313 minutes, 43 secondsand all that we have memories and the ability to recall these memories but science hasn't been able to truly crack
13:5013 minutes, 50 secondsthat code yet as to how that all works that's very interesting that was a surprise to me that we don't know that
13:5813 minutes, 58 secondsinformation okay yeah why do we dream this again is a question that science has not been able to answer we know that
14:0514 minutes, 5 secondswe dream we can talk about our dreams we can share our dreams we can even have fun dreams bad dreams sad dreams
14:1214 minutes, 12 secondsnightmares but we don't know why again we know why we drink water right our body needs water to we know why we have to have air air is oxygen for the brain
14:2014 minutes, 20 secondsto function so we know a lot of wise about how the body works so dreaming does take place in our body it takes place in our brain another brain one but
14:2814 minutes, 28 secondswe don't know the evolutionary reason or the scientific reason why the why is this necessary so it's interesting that we just talked about memories and being
14:3614 minutes, 36 secondsable to recall memories and then it we go into now dreams and they seem like they would be somewhat interconnected and they may they might be this one
14:4414 minutes, 44 secondsfascinates me what a mystery as to why it is that we participate in dreaming I suspect we might all dream every night I
14:5214 minutes, 52 secondsno I think it is that you dream every night but speaking of memory you're not able to recall the dreams necessarily every night I actively dream every night
15:0015 minutesI may not be able to recall the dream like today like right now this moment what did I dream last night but I know as I sleep kind of go in and out of
15:0715 minutes, 7 secondssleep that I am dreaming it's like I live two lives honestly it's like I live two lives I have my own theories about dreams I think everyone does dream
15:1615 minutes, 16 secondsobviously I think some people I've heard things like people dreaming black and white people dream lucid dreaming believe that's what it's called they feel like they're controlling their
15:2415 minutes, 24 secondsdreams I can do that want to hear my theories on dreams just do that so really quick my own personal theories is I've done a lot of very hobby likee
15:3215 minutes, 32 secondsstudying of a past life regression it's a fascinating concept whether you believe it or not is irrelevant maybe it's an episode we could do past life
15:3915 minutes, 39 secondsregression is done through hypnosis and that's a fascinating Topic in of itself as well but we understand hypnosis is if you're to believe what it is is the
15:4815 minutes, 48 secondsperson will control uh will tell the patient or the whoever let's go back in time let's talk about your time as a 5-year-old and the time as when you're
15:5615 minutes, 56 secondsborn and then they go back to past life have you ever gone to these past life discussions or yes I mean I I've listened to I mean I don't really read
16:0516 minutes, 5 secondsbooks but I listened to a lot of books audio books yeah audible I have listened to some people talk about past life
16:1216 minutes, 12 secondsexperiences person they record this so this individual who's like Peter Jones comes in and just expounds on this
16:2016 minutes, 20 secondsinformation and then they will quote unquote wake up and they're like okay well that was a waste of time they're like no I've got the recording here of everything you've just said they'll
16:2816 minutes, 28 secondslisten to it the guy is if it's a con job I don't understand it because here's the con job the con job would be I'm cuz it costs money by the way past life
16:3516 minutes, 35 secondshypnotists they actually go on a course they actually have to get training and if you go to them you pay money a lot of money it's like 300 thou 300 $300 or
16:4416 minutes, 44 secondssomething like it's a lot of money it wouldn't make sense for me to go I'm sure maybe some people do because you know there's people that go to the doctor when they're not sick I get it
16:5116 minutes, 51 secondsbut the idea is I give you hundreds of dollars for one visit and I'm going to tell you a fake story just so I can like
16:5916 minutes, 59 secondswell even yeah but there's even other people with past life stories where they have historical pieces of information
17:0717 minutes, 7 secondsright yeah who gone to these people Sor just shared them they still remember them yeah and and yeah there's people that remember past lives and there's
17:1517 minutes, 15 secondspeople that don't remember them but they come out when they go when they go under hypnosis that's sorry I shouldn't say it's only through hypnosis so there's
17:2117 minutes, 21 secondspeople that it's a fascinating topic it definitely intrigues me it kind of get makes me hopeful of life in general that
17:3017 minutes, 30 secondsthis isn't it I feel the very same way righty I I do it provides you know hope for there isn't nothingness there might
17:3817 minutes, 38 secondsbe something that we are growing we are learning we are all those things that there's no Heaven or Hell per se but there is a I don't know progression is the right word but the idea that we can
17:4717 minutes, 47 secondsexperience things this is a fast I knew this would get us off a little bit but one last here's my theory so talk about past lives dreams have you ever had a
17:5617 minutes, 56 secondsdream Jason where it was a short dream or or the of course the dream isn't very long cuz you're only sleeping for X number night X number hours in a night
18:0318 minutes, 3 secondsbut in the dream you had a relationships in history and like you're in the storyline so to speak almost like in the middle of a movie but everything makes
18:1018 minutes, 10 secondssense nothing was explained to you whatever the scenario is the people you're talking to the scenario that you are in it all makes sense in the dream
18:1818 minutes, 18 secondslike you're not confused by the fact that you're in this situation and you have these relationships sometimes it could be love I've had love in dreams
18:2618 minutes, 26 secondslove loss fights angry things of people I don't no I've had death I've died so to speak in dreams face my death it's a
18:3418 minutes, 34 secondsvery disconcerting feeling to to die in a dream and I thought to myself what if that is past lives that's my hypnosis
18:4218 minutes, 42 secondsthat's me reaching the back of my brain while you're sleeping because all your hypnosis is is literally putting you under an awake sleep digging into your
18:5018 minutes, 50 secondsbrain so you could argue well dreams are just crazy stories and so hypnosis just tackles dreams or your dreams are your
18:5918 minutes, 59 secondspast lives and experience maybe mingled a little bit with your current life situations cuz that's in your memory banks right now yeah I can fully
19:0619 minutes, 6 secondsunderstand what you're saying you me oh yeah for sure I get it I would tend to agree with a lot of with a lot of what
19:1419 minutes, 14 secondsyou're saying feel like there's times I'm Dreaming I know that person or I'm in love with a person relationships and
19:2119 minutes, 21 secondsI'm sometimes I'm male and sometimes I'm female like I've had that too where I'm old I'm young I or the sex is irrelevant
19:2919 minutes, 29 secondsalmost like it's weird anyways it's an interesting yeah I like it yeah so early civilization Jason believed that dreams
19:3619 minutes, 36 secondswere a Gateway between the Earth and the gods so maybe kind of what we're talking about that was early civilizations of course you know those uneducated early
19:4519 minutes, 45 secondscivilizations which I think knew a lot more than we think however this was later scientifically rejected along with Freud's theory that dreams express our subconscious desires and that to me
19:5319 minutes, 53 secondsthat's too that's too simplistic the frauding desires there's so much more my dream and just Desiring sex and food like come on there's the subconscious
20:0320 minutes, 3 secondsdesires will creep in you're kind of uninhibited in a sleep state right so anything that you kind of okay for an
20:1120 minutes, 11 secondsexample people feel like and I can do this as well from time to time depends on how deep of asleep I am or what I'm
20:1820 minutes, 18 secondsthinking about prior to going to sleep you kind of manipulate the dream state I don't think Freud's completely wrong no
20:2720 minutes, 27 secondsbut just about the idea is just that's the only they're just throwing easy that's that's easy yeah every dream just can't be about no no yeah for sure money
20:3520 minutes, 35 secondsmoney sex and food but it is widely agreed upon by those who study this that dreams are crucial to help process emotions like you're talking about sleep
20:4320 minutes, 43 secondsresearch has revealed the existence of rapid eye movement dreams and the point at which we are most likely to remember dreams so they've been able to narrow
20:5120 minutes, 51 secondsdown at least they figure rapid eye movement that deepest part of your sleep is the majority of our dream kind of takes place again I argue that's when you go in that subconscious Freud might
21:0021 minutesbe talking about yes when you go deep into your who is the real Ryan who is the real Jason part of your brain this is where we might most likely remember to
21:0821 minutes, 8 secondsdream is those deep parts of our dreaming however a scientific explanation as to why we see strange
21:1621 minutes, 16 secondsimages when we sleep remains in question so there we go why is it we see what we see I'm going to stick with my theories past life past life images but they
21:2421 minutes, 24 secondsdon't know why it's happen we do know it's happening we kind of know when it happens we've got the how we dream when it happens but we still just don't know
21:3321 minutes, 33 secondswhy that reason to dream interesting that we have a difficult time understanding how memory is completely
21:4121 minutes, 41 secondscreated how we have a difficult time understanding how memories are recalled and the dreaming is connected with all
21:4921 minutes, 49 secondsthat if you want to believe in the past life experience as a part of that our memories of those past lives are going
21:5721 minutes, 57 secondsto be more difficult to understand as to why we bring those into our sleep but why is it always happening in our sleep though why can't it happen I guess
22:0622 minutes, 6 secondsthat's hypnosis though right kind of awaken hypnosis the hypnosis puts you in a sleeping State you could almost argue hypnosis allows the dream to be recorded
22:1522 minutes, 15 secondsin real time imagine if you were able to physically record your dreams so maybe that's what's happening so maybe it
22:2222 minutes, 22 secondshypnosis it's either two things dreams are just a holid de going crazy in your brain just your own brain is just running ramp it on its own creating
22:2922 minutes, 29 secondsimages and relationships that you couldn't come up with in a sleeping and an awake state but you seem to be able to do a sleeping state or you are tapping into the memory of past lives in
22:3722 minutes, 37 secondsyour DNA but can then people can add in psychedelic drugs Etc
22:4422 minutes, 44 secondsiasa F man yeah yeah it is all right okay now going along with sleep why do
22:5122 minutes, 51 secondswe yawn interesting that science hasn't been able to resolve this question as to why we yawn and it always seems to be
23:0023 minutesassociated with sleep or being tired on average a person will yawn around 250,000 times in their lifetime that's a
23:0823 minutes, 8 secondslot of yawning yeah 250,000 times what's the quick math on that so say you live 80 years that's generous but it's I
23:1423 minutes, 14 secondsthink 80 80 times 365 is a day daily okay so it's 29,200 29,200 so
23:2323 minutes, 23 seconds250,000 divided by 29,200 days you on about 8 to nine times a day do you think
23:3123 minutes, 31 secondsyou yawn that I don't know if I do I don't think I've yawned once today as the time of this recording it's 11:00
23:3823 minutes, 38 secondsit's 11 o'cl in the morning and I don't think I've yawned now I'm thinking about it despite the fact that most humans on
23:4623 minutes, 46 secondsaverage will yawn about 250,000 times in their life they still don't know why we yawn now a recent study suggests that
23:5423 minutes, 54 secondsyawning chills the brain to allow a boost and intellectual per performance okay interesting I was under the impression that we yawn to access more
24:0324 minutes, 3 secondsoxygen have you heard of that idea yeah I've heard about the yes I've heard about the oxygen which is always kind of funny to me I need to chill my brain to
24:1124 minutes, 11 secondshave more intellectual power okay well we need a little bit more oxygen to the brain so let's do a little bit of a deep breath but is y really that's what I was
24:1924 minutes, 19 secondsgoing to say to me that's a silly I'm not a neuroscientist I'm not a biologist but the idea like think about jogging I just went for jog this morning and I'm
24:2824 minutes, 28 secondsmy breathing increases as I jog yeah you're not I don't need to
24:3424 minutes, 34 seconds[Applause]
24:3524 minutes, 35 secondsgo you see these you see these marathon runners like ya all yawning through the whole race so that's a silly Theory does
24:4324 minutes, 43 secondsit like it's this big gulp of eror like okay doesn't make sense so I don't like that one the other thing is and I'm not
24:5024 minutes, 50 secondssure if you feel this and I don't know if it's do you find that yawning is contagious if you see somebody yawn or if you talk about ya I've done it so to
24:5924 minutes, 59 secondssay it's not I would be lying to say that I haven't seen someone yawn and then I haven't done it afterwards isn't true it's happened and I've seen it happen yes even talking about it there's
25:0825 minutes, 8 secondsbeen a couple times not talking about I know I'm kind of resisting right now to be honest who's ya since no one has because they're not listening people that do listen to their podcast probably
25:1625 minutes, 16 secondsyawn quite frequently they're yawning for like 40 minutes while they listen they get their 250,000 yawn per
25:2525 minutes, 25 secondsepisode talking about the contagiousness of yawning this might go along with evolutionary theories that the claim that yawning stems from our Evolution
25:3425 minutes, 34 secondsfrom apes when the action was used as a communication signal however there's no evidence to support this Theory either I
25:4225 minutes, 42 secondsdon't necessarily disagree with it in the sense of again I have yawned because I've seen someone else yawn I think everyone has I think we either have witnessed it or we've participated in
25:5025 minutes, 50 secondsmutual yawning back and forth like this massive feedback loop I can't stop yawning I think yawning if
25:5925 minutes, 59 secondsyou rcon the yawn there you go I bet that's never been said before rcon the yawn so if you reccon it and say hey we
26:0726 minutes, 7 secondscame from apes and if I'm yawning and we see Apes in the wild today you know back at each other that's
26:1426 minutes, 14 secondshow we're reconing the is like we see Apes do today so we must have done it you know 2 million years ago sure but we just don't know at the end of the day
26:2226 minutes, 22 secondsscientists cannot prove with their scientific method why are we on what is the purpose of it we don't know we know it can happen when you're tired it can
26:3026 minutes, 30 secondsalso happen when you're not tired it can happen when you see someone else do it so we don't know we still don't know scientifically we can't prove without a shadow of a doubt why we ar and it's
26:3826 minutes, 38 secondskind of funny isn't it it is kind of funny that we cuz it's a pretty we know why we sneeze that's an easy one you know the things in your follicles and your nose get tickled and it's a
26:4726 minutes, 47 secondsreaction we know a lot of stuff why do we bleed why do we cry all those things are measured but we don't know why we ya
26:5326 minutes, 53 secondsJason this is a big question but still science doesn't know the answer answer what is the universe made of atoms which
27:0227 minutes, 2 secondsform everything we see around us account for five% of the Universe I thought it was more than that but astronomers can't
27:1027 minutes, 10 secondsexplain what the other 95% of the universe is made of that's scary yeah it's yeah if we don't fully understand
27:1827 minutes, 18 secondsthe Big Bang if we don't fully understand a lot of the other things that we've talked about how can we understand who we are so for the last 80
27:2527 minutes, 25 secondsyears Jason astronomers have determined the majority of the universe is made up of two entities dark matter and dark
27:3327 minutes, 33 secondsenergy now we're not going to go deep into those topics those are things I do not understand but these are things that scientists have agreed on they exist that dark matter and dark energy exists
27:4127 minutes, 41 secondsI guess dark matter and dark energy don't have atoms they're saying that the measurable universe is 5% atoms and 95% dark energy and dark matter yeah I can't
27:5127 minutes, 51 secondsanswer your question there's just no way for me to expound on that so dark matter though Jason is believed to bind galaxies
28:0028 minutestogether while dark energy is believed to be pushing the universe's expansion so check this out so dark matter finds
28:0828 minutes, 8 secondsgalaxies ying and yang yes right and dark energy is pushing that same universe out so weird to me we all agree
28:1728 minutes, 17 secondsthat the universe is expanding that's a weird concept so the universe is expanding it had a quote unquote beginning with a big bang as we understand it what's beyond the universe
28:2628 minutes, 26 secondswhat is the universe pushing like it's expanding so what is behind that which has not been for example
28:3428 minutes, 34 secondsthink of a a glass of An Empty Glass right that glass is empty I pour water into it that's expanding the universe what did the water replace we know it
28:4328 minutes, 43 secondsreplace air but air is a air is a thing so what is beyond the universe so what is it pushing on like what is it replacing what is yeah what is it
28:5128 minutes, 51 secondsfilling up does nothing exist is nothing a something like can nothing be some I yeah yeah right yeah so it it's as it
29:0129 minutes, 1 secondexpands what is it what is it expanding what it replacing yeah it's going into something yeah like when I go into I have a nice little hot tub out in the
29:0929 minutes, 9 secondsbackyard there and it's not a big one but it's a nice little four person hot tub oh yeah I like it yeah yeah when I go into the hot tub I'm pushing water
29:1629 minutes, 16 secondsout like so I I repl so what is the universe pushing on that's a really good question like seriously I it can't be
29:2329 minutes, 23 secondsnothing nothing can't be something like it's I don't I don't know I don't people come to the show for the big question no answers question well that's the whole
29:3229 minutes, 32 secondsthis is the whole purpose of this episode we actually have no answers but as dark matter and dark energy are invisible to light in electromagnetic
29:4029 minutes, 40 secondsradiation it is impossible to detect or understand what they actually are so we know that dark matter exists we know that dark energy exists we have no way
29:4929 minutes, 49 secondsof measuring them or analyzing them so we don't know what it actually is that is so freaking freaky to me that we can know that something exists and it prises
29:5829 minutes, 58 seconds95% of everything and we don't know how to analyze it we don't even know what that is yeah I mean it's just theories
30:0530 minutes, 5 secondsobviously at this point what tests are possible to be able to provide that answer and obviously they don't have any because they would have had those
30:1230 minutes, 12 secondsanswers there's a few things on here that would seem to be unanswerable speaking of maybe the next one this is do Shakespeare call this the
30:2130 minutes, 21 secondsUndiscovered Country so yeah like what happens after we pass away science hasn't been able to properly answer that question either they do know that
30:3030 minutes, 30 secondsthere's two stages of our demise the first one is like the clinical death when our heart stops speeding and
30:3730 minutes, 37 secondsthere's a biological death you know in all our organs they shut down however what happens after death remains elusive
30:4430 minutes, 44 secondsto researchers some people believe who have had near-death experiences claim to have felt outof Body Sensations and seen
30:5230 minutes, 52 secondsDC's loved ones I know this is a topic of Interest with you Ryan it is it is I was about to say I know you've done a
31:0031 minuteslot of hobbyist like research with near what's your feeling on the near-death experience what is your feeling on that well kind of going along with the
31:0831 minutes, 8 secondsdreams it provides me with a little bit of Hope of a continuation and really an improvement
31:1631 minutes, 16 secondsof existence that we're building on something that we have started I'm hoping previous to this our life's
31:2431 minutes, 24 secondsexperience now and that there's a brighter future as we move forward into the into the next life or when we die or
31:3331 minutes, 33 secondshowever we want to word that experience yeah I knew this was a topic that you were interested in your death experiences I've done a lot of reading
31:4131 minutes, 41 secondsof books on them again this is a situation where you can argue they've done some things of people studied these things where they're like oh you're just
31:4831 minutes, 48 secondsbringing your past or your own knowledge into the Afterlife that's why you dreamed what you dreamed or saw what you saw even though you came back but this is some fascinating and correlating
31:5731 minutes, 57 secondspeople who've never spoken to each other have very similar accounts of things and so I don't know if everything's to be believed but again there's enough
32:0532 minutes, 5 secondschatter about it and throughout thousands of years this isn't like a new phenomenon this is something people talk about anybody who's studied near-death
32:1232 minutes, 12 secondsexperiences or we'll hear these uh stories of people being able to recall conversations when they were clinically
32:2032 minutes, 20 secondsdead from within the doctor you know the operating room or they en able to identify landmarks
32:2832 minutes, 28 secondsor specific parts of a building as they float up into the next life and they're able to look down and be able to go I
32:3532 minutes, 35 secondssaw this and this and this they're like well it'd be impossible for you to be able to see what you're describing because you were dead yet they can
32:4332 minutes, 43 secondsrecall this information yeah it's weird such and such patient was in the hospital pronounced dead and they like walk around the hallways of the hospital and
32:5232 minutes, 52 secondsthey're they're actually hearing the conversations outside of their body with the doctors talking about them then they go back into their body and they tell the doctors you guys were saying XYZ and
33:0033 minutesthey're like no but you were dead but no but I was there so what which one is it so well what's interesting is you're saying that a lot of these neurological
33:0833 minutes, 8 secondsbrains you know how they're all kind of connected our ability to recall memory our dream state and now near-death
33:1633 minutes, 16 secondsexperiences they all seem to be somewhat interconnected brain and what it's capable of of either creating or
33:2433 minutes, 24 secondsrecalling and I'm not sure or maybe it's a combination of both are we creating this experience within
33:3133 minutes, 31 secondsourselves or are we recalling these experiences we don't know there's just no way the fact that
33:3933 minutes, 39 secondsthat each individual topic is UND is unknown to scientists I mean these are questions that are open-ended and aren't
33:4633 minutes, 46 secondsresolvable at least within our podcast no I don't know what number we're on is it five six I don't know I don't speet
33:5433 minutes, 54 secondsof recalling I don't recall where we are all right what doesn't matter next one could we wake up 200 years in the future
34:0334 minutes, 3 secondsthe idea of chronic preservation has been a running theme in science fiction for decades it just means you're freezing your brain your ideas your body
34:1134 minutes, 11 secondsall those things so it can be reanimated at a later time I.E the great action film Demolition
34:1834 minutes, 18 secondsMan Cry genetically Frozen probably that uh whole script probably should have stayed frozen how dare you so it
34:2634 minutes, 26 secondsinvolves preserving a person person's body at very low temperatures with the hope that future medical technology will restore it one day if they had this
34:3434 minutes, 34 secondsability to cryogenically freeze your body right now to be reanimated so the moment you close your eyes open them
34:4334 minutes, 43 secondsagain you're going to be 200 years in the Future No Matter What that future is would you do it with basically air quotes dying now dying now to wake up
34:5134 minutes, 51 seconds200 years later uh no in this terrible alternate universe everyone I love is gone dead or they never existence I'm
34:5834 minutes, 58 secondsjust a solo yeah I would do it but I can't do this to my wife and kids No so that's the problem and why would you do that okay the reason why I would do it's
35:0635 minutes, 6 secondsjust because I got to know I got to know what the world is like 200 years from now okay and the reason why I would and
35:1335 minutes, 13 secondsit goes back to my feelings about dreaming near-death experiences what happens when we pass away I guess the
35:2235 minutes, 22 secondspreservation of life here as I know it isn't as important to me as the idea of
35:3035 minutes, 30 secondsan improved State and a progressive State a higher state of existence where
35:3935 minutes, 39 secondslife can be maybe it's better than what we think it is and better than what we've experienced and there's kind of
35:4735 minutes, 47 secondsthat hope that what we see and experience on here on Earth and our day-to-day existence that there is actually something bigger and better and
35:5635 minutes, 56 secondsso to try and Preserve life as I know it isn't as important as the hope of a of a better brighter future that's more
36:0536 minutes, 5 secondsexpansive and and has a deeper understanding as to why we exist like the meaning of life sure and so by
36:1236 minutes, 12 secondsholding on or grasping onto this concept of I want to live forever as I know it right now isn't as appealing as what I
36:1936 minutes, 19 secondshope it will be and in 200 years from now Earth even be around so the whole world will be China the reality though
36:2836 minutes, 28 secondsis whether you cryogenically freeze in 200 years from now you wake up at some point I'm guessing you will die so
36:3836 minutes, 38 secondseither way you're going to die yeah at some point you will die could argue maybe some of these questions will be answered in 200 years so you have these answers yeah or I just died I'll have
36:4636 minutes, 46 secondsthose answers so cryobiology Dr GA says that quote we know we can successfully preserve very small things like insects
36:5536 minutes, 55 secondsand simple tissues like blood vessels but freezing the human body is far more challenging I'm not even a scientist I could have told you that come on yeah
37:0337 minutes, 3 secondsbut we can put people to sleep and operations but you know and I don't know like cryogenically freezing like all
37:1037 minutes, 10 secondsthose tissues and membrane like if all those things preserved yeah well even if you wanted to preserve just the brain it
37:1837 minutes, 18 secondswould require dozens of different cryopreserving procedures just don't have available that sounds like we're not really quite there yet so science
37:2637 minutes, 26 secondscan't quite answer how long long it will take for the human cryopreservation to be successful if even possible at all
37:3437 minutes, 34 secondsthey're able to do insects and blood vessels and stuff so the technology is there we know that we can reanimate something that has been cryogenically
37:4137 minutes, 41 secondsfrozen so we have the technology but so the question here is will we ever have the technology to do it for humans how
37:4837 minutes, 48 secondswould you test that theory people would have to go I'm willing to for a year year probably and then you go okay who's
37:5537 minutes, 55 secondsgoing to go five years yeah 20 years so it's it's that's a long term this is a long term a walk in the park for the person being frozen the sense of it's
38:0338 minutes, 3 secondsnot boring for them to wait right it' be like a a 10e dream a blink of an eye well that would be weird though do they
38:1038 minutes, 10 secondsdream do they dream they ya when they're frozen but is if their brain still I would assume their brain activ is it
38:1738 minutes, 17 secondsstill active anyways those are questions for another day all right what's what do you got there okay so what is at the
38:2438 minutes, 24 secondsbottom of a black hole and science has not been able to answer this question black holes are crazy fascinating scary
38:3338 minutes, 33 secondsthe most menacing thing in the universe it literally just sucks in everything around it it's gravitational pole so
38:4038 minutes, 40 secondsstrong that it sucks in light from what we understand it's now permanently trapped within the black hole weird what is going on
38:4838 minutes, 48 secondshere it's a fascinating topic and I'm not sure I will ever understand what's instead of black hole do know the stuff
38:5638 minutes, 56 secondsgoes in things get sucked in but we are unable to understand what lies at the bottom of them so it's like having a
39:0439 minutes, 4 secondsendless well or things can fall into it where is it going what's holding those
39:1139 minutes, 11 secondsthings exist or they existed yeah I assume black holes get suck in planets and stars yeah absolutely they so it's
39:1939 minutes, 19 secondslike a garburator of space yeah where is the stuff going when it sucks it all in I just had an idea so you know the idea
39:2639 minutes, 26 secondsof tagy within your body like you kind of recycle your own dead cells or your own it's kind of a self-healing process
39:3439 minutes, 34 secondswithin your body MH maybe black holes is kind of like the process of it cleans up the universe in in in a way or bad idea
39:4339 minutes, 43 secondsbut I don't think there's enough of them is there enough of them doing that though well how many black holes do we need I mean do we need any do we how
39:5039 minutes, 50 secondsmany I don't know why do we have any yet well Einstein theorizes that black holes continue to cave in until they become infinitely SM all and some physicists
39:5939 minutes, 59 secondsbelieve that they act as a port hole to other universes I love that I mean it's fascinating okay going along with
40:0640 minutes, 6 secondsmitophagy idea right maybe it's not a port hole to another universe but it's a recycling okay creating other universes
40:1540 minutes, 15 secondsokay sure yeah and that's the alternate universes that's our Multiverse we currently don't have the tools or technology advanced enough to prove any
40:2340 minutes, 23 secondsof these theories or ideas so the truth remain a mystery for now fascinating fascinating black holes are
40:3040 minutes, 30 secondsjust space is space you crazy I love this question Jason and I love to hear your thoughts on this is do ghosts exist
40:3940 minutes, 39 secondsscience hasn't been able to prove this and that's an interesting question because there are more Ghost Stories the near-death experience stories than the
40:4640 minutes, 46 secondspast life regression stories if you want to talk about tribal knowledge or tribal experiences if you want to measure
40:5340 minutes, 53 secondssomething you could at least measure the accounts the story people who are just normal quote unquote not insane people
41:0141 minutes, 1 secondsaying I saw something and what happened what did I hear what I and we're talking some of this stff has been caught on camera for peace sakes the closest we've
41:1041 minutes, 10 secondsgotten to studying this is quote unquote Ghost Hunters scientists have used electromagnetic field detectors and
41:1741 minutes, 17 secondsthermal imaging to try and find some sort of scientific evidence of their existence but to no avail but let me play ball for the people that believe in
41:2641 minutes, 26 secondsghost or seen go let me play a little bit of ball here for them you know how we're saying we don't have the right equipment to measure dark matter and
41:3341 minutes, 33 secondsdark energy yeah but we know it exists we know it's there mhm all right so why can't we have that same reasoning
41:4041 minutes, 40 secondsregarding ghosts sure we just don't have the proper equipment to quote unquote capture ghost like the movie Ghostbusters we don't have the ability
41:4941 minutes, 49 secondsto measure them per se or to capture one or to interview one or say my goodness I know I know I've seen things I can't
41:5841 minutes, 58 secondsexplain I think you have seen things you can't explain I've heard noises my house I used to live in the railroads there mhm it was haunted it was it was legit
42:0642 minutes, 6 secondsmy name being called in my room once it was very disconcerting I was lying down with my wife at the time going to sleep no normal going to sleep and I heard at the foot of my bed Ryan you're scaring
42:1642 minutes, 16 secondsme Ryan we're in broad daylight as no as clear as day and I was like my wife at the time her name was it wasn't her cuz she was right next to my ear it was at
42:2342 minutes, 23 secondsthe foot of the bed Ryan ever since then it was so clear and so disconcerting I
42:3142 minutes, 31 secondshave gone to sleep with a white noise machine to drown out any more whisperings there was other instances in that house the boys they were terrified
42:3842 minutes, 38 secondsat their bedroom they said there something in the closet they were just horrified to be in their room I it was a weirdly scary house felt bad they were
42:4642 minutes, 46 secondsin that room cuz they were terrified of it another thing was in that house I was downstairs in the basement semi-finish basement playing video games and I was
42:5342 minutes, 53 secondsoff work the wife was at work kids were at school and I remember hearing this and it was the running of footsteps up
43:0143 minutes, 1 secondup the stairs two floors up and I'm like why are the boys home from school they're supposed to be at school so I went upstairs guys what do you guys what
43:0943 minutes, 9 secondshello like what and so I went downstairs I played
43:1643 minutes, 16 secondsagain and I ran up the stairs as fast as I could who are you where are you what are you doing here no answer and then it
43:2543 minutes, 25 secondshappened more than once and it got to the point I kid you not that I just started ignoring it throughout the days that house was a 50 plus year old house it's actually on if you want to Google
43:3343 minutes, 33 secondsit in fact Google it so people know that not lying it's military housing on a place in Victoria called Royal Roads University there's a Hatley Castle as a
43:4043 minutes, 40 secondspart of that property and that has many haunting stories at at that property yeah I got a feeling that property in general in that area is haunted Google
43:4943 minutes, 49 secondsHatley Castle hauntings and uh you'll see that I'm not totally crazy that people have written accounts that they're H I did not know that yeah I've
43:5743 minutes, 57 secondsseen and H stuff I don't know I've had I've had not as defined as your experiences but I've had moments you
44:0544 minutes, 5 secondsknow like sleep paralysis where you're kind of stuck between being awake and asleep I've had which is can be scary
44:1344 minutes, 13 secondsbut as I've gotten older I've embraced those experiences and actually go with it I don't feel as Afraid from those
44:2044 minutes, 20 secondssleep paralysis experiences now that's not completely a ghost story but in those experiences often we
44:2744 minutes, 27 secondsfeel the presence of something looming I've had a couple experiences when I was like quite young so I I don't know if I
44:3444 minutes, 34 secondscan attribute it to just an over heightened imagination maybe brain development whatnot there's a couple experiences that are very Vivid but
44:4344 minutes, 43 secondsagain it was when I was younger there was one home that seemed a little bit unsettling
44:5044 minutes, 50 secondsmhm but the ghost thing is I'm not as sold on it as you are I'm more sold on a
44:5844 minutes, 58 secondsnear-death experience on the fascination with dreaming Etc I'm not 100% sold on
45:0745 minutes, 7 secondsghosts per se I'm not to say no one's experienced these things or they're not real there's so many experiences that's
45:1445 minutes, 14 secondswhat's yeah is everyone lying is everyone no no it's it's the people there's billions of people that have lived yeah many of these experiences are
45:2345 minutes, 23 secondsgoing to be replicated if you want to I almost believe in the Multiverse more than I do and go so I think there's some overlay yeah there's film you get old
45:3145 minutes, 31 secondsfilm and if you're processing film in in some sort of whatever processing Department the film can overlap so it looks like there's a figure in the film
45:3945 minutes, 39 secondssure yeah so I wonder if life is like that where we overlap other existen yeah yeah multi-dimensional there could be like multiple living ex we bup into each
45:4845 minutes, 48 secondsother oh hey oh what the hell yeah and there could be like a little glitch or a little bit of a a a gap in oh yeah check out our episode of simulation Theory I
45:5645 minutes, 56 secondsthink we we did we did that didn't we we talked about the simulation Theory all right so they're glitching The Matrix with one of those ideas so what
46:0346 minutes, 3 secondsscientists have said though jable ghost they believe these signs are just caused purely by mental phenomena electrical fields and ocular vibration so basically
46:1146 minutes, 11 secondsour minds Playing Tricks on us that's what they're saying everyone's experiencing but I could argue come on science like I I feel it's a bit of a cop out because they don't know so it's
46:2046 minutes, 20 secondslike the backwards God Gap oh it's just it's just your brain Playing Tricks on you my question or my again playing for the ghost team
46:2746 minutes, 27 secondsis what about people experiencing the same thing at the same time you hear about that people are in the same haunted house or room and they hear or
46:3446 minutes, 34 secondssee the same things people gotten scratched and it's weird just but people are in the same room well how is there
46:4146 minutes, 41 secondssimilar experiences being Happ anyway I don't the the fact that we're even talking about right a ghost it shouldn't
46:4846 minutes, 48 secondsexist if it doesn't exist exactly why is it you know there's this kind of this phenomenon and it's not new it's been
46:5746 minutes, 57 secondsdiscussed and talked about and recorded history yeah that has got to be um there's something going on yeah I think
47:0547 minutes, 5 secondsyou've got the last one J yeah how does the placebo effect work I thought they would have an answer to this I thought
47:1147 minutes, 11 secondsso too honestly the phenomenon where a fake treatment can improve a patient's Health simply because they believe it
47:1947 minutes, 19 secondshas stumped doctors for decades so again we know this is happening but they don't know how it's interesting all this many
47:2847 minutes, 28 secondsof these ideas and that we talked about comes back to not understand fully understanding the brain the brain the
47:3547 minutes, 35 secondsbrain so experiments have since been carried out to understand the power the mind has to improve health and how some
47:4347 minutes, 43 secondspatients are more susceptible to the placebo effect than others hypnosis is probably another example when you know some people are more susceptible or more
47:5247 minutes, 52 secondseasily hypnotized and others same with the placebo effect but however there there's no viable explanation has ever
47:5947 minutes, 59 secondsbeen found as to why this happens have you had any experiences with the placebo with the place I bet we all have I bet you we all have to a degree without
48:0748 minutes, 7 secondsknowing it how do you vouch for that but I I feel like take this and you'll feel better okay let's say you've taken medicine for a headache I wonder how
48:1548 minutes, 15 secondsmany times we've taken medicine for a headache and we felt better before the Scientific medicine actually took over
48:2248 minutes, 22 secondsits job right because we took the pill we knew that pain relief was coming it does come and eventually the medicine
48:2948 minutes, 29 secondsdoes do its job but I wonder how many times the effects as we would say of that payment kicked in before it kicked
48:3748 minutes, 37 secondsin because we knew it was coming so to go along with that as you were saying that was making me think the power and more recently we've people talk about
48:4548 minutes, 45 secondsthe power of meditation mhm going through the need to meditate to help lower stress and Etc that to me is maybe
48:5548 minutes, 55 secondsan indication of a place effect meditation has been I would say scientifically proven but it's pretty much universally yes meditate that clear
49:0349 minutes, 3 secondsyour mind helps everything helps your body yeah your nervous system etc etc and I would suspect the placebo effect
49:1049 minutes, 10 secondsis a very similar approach I would assume it's probably the exact same thing is happening but again how does quote unquote having a clear mind or not
49:1849 minutes, 18 secondsbeing well we know if you're constantly under stress your body breaks down so there's still that so there is there is something happening to your body a physiological response to how you're
49:2649 minutes, 26 secondsbreak brain is functioning right placebo effect is um connected to is is all connected whether it's uh thinking you're taking actual medication or
49:3549 minutes, 35 secondsyou're trying to improve the your state of health your state of your mind etc etc I mean the power of thought trying
49:4449 minutes, 44 secondsto speak something into existence the idea that like the secret Yeah the secret right or you have your board up
49:5249 minutes, 52 secondsand you got like you know your Ferraris and your mansions and your you know beach house Retreat all these ideas to
49:5949 minutes, 59 secondshelp promote a healthier outcome why that works science doesn't know yeah that's it that is our 10 things or 10
50:0850 minutes, 8 secondsquestions science still can't answer let's go over it really quickly just as a refresher here are the 10 questions science still can answer is there a God
50:1750 minutes, 17 secondshow are memories stored and retrieved why do we dream why do we yawn what is the universe made of what
50:2650 minutes, 26 secondshappens after we pass away could we be cryogenically frozen one day what's at the bottom of a black hole do ghosts
50:3550 minutes, 35 secondsexist how does the placebo effect work there you go those are our 10 questions sign still can answer Jason which one is
50:4350 minutes, 43 secondsthe one question so nine of them you're going to get answers whether you like it or not you're going to get answers but which one could you live without knowing I wish it was more difficult to answer
50:5250 minutes, 52 secondsthis and if it was a list of nine not including the one that if if there was one without the one I'm going to give as
50:5950 minutes, 59 secondsmy answer it would have it would have been way more difficult yeah I think I I think I'm going have the same one go
51:0551 minutes, 5 secondsyawning oh okay why do we yawn yeah of all in that list yawning has I'm going
51:1451 minutes, 14 secondsto yawn over yawning it's not that interest iist because it's one of those things that in of itself it's pretty un fascinating thing yawning we all do it
51:2251 minutes, 22 secondswe all seen it it's not a mystery as to like yawning existing but I think it's just because it's so maybe so common
51:3051 minutes, 30 secondsthat we don't know why we don't truly understand it's a frustrating thing yeah I can see this an irritant to scientist like how come we can't figure this out I
51:3851 minutes, 38 secondsthink that's what it is I think it's such a it is such a small thing it seems like every other bodily function we get why these things are and where they're
51:4651 minutes, 46 secondsstored and how come we don't know why is that we have to
51:5151 minutes, 51 seconds[Laughter]
51:5351 minutes, 53 secondsgo silly cuz someone did it and there was a is hey why'd you do that I don't know I guess I'm just tired but I've
51:5951 minutes, 59 secondsyawn when I'm not tired or bored we can even say hey you're tired so you yawned but what did it do what did the yawning
52:0852 minutes, 8 secondsdo because you're tired it's still a whenn we know how it's done but we don't know why the body requires it if this
52:1552 minutes, 15 secondswasn't on the list I'm going to probably say ghosts if I had a second one if I was allowed to second pick oh
52:2352 minutes, 23 secondsinteresting one that comes to my mind is probably be ghosts okay so my first one is yawning to When I saw this list and we went through it and talked about I
52:3152 minutes, 31 secondswould say again if if I could live without the answer I could live I could go the rest of my life never knowing why we yawned it still would be kind of interesting to really truly get to know
52:4052 minutes, 40 secondsthe answers to what it does for our body I mean I don't know if there's an evolutionary answer to the question or or or a physical like what's the truth
52:4852 minutes, 48 secondswhat's the actual truth your body says I am doing this because because I need a physical Improvement of some sort yeah we haven't been able to prove that
52:5552 minutes, 55 secondsreason yet I find that fascinating I find yawning the subject of yawning boring but ironically I find it fascinating we don't know why we yawn I
53:0453 minutes, 4 secondsdo not know that we did not know like that that's actually just as fascinating as yawning but I could live without I could live without the answer but if I
53:1253 minutes, 12 secondshad to have a second pick if there was nine things and yawning wasn't on there for me it' be the cryogenically frozen oh I forgotten about that one it'd be
53:2053 minutes, 20 secondscool to one day being be able to do it so the answer the question you know will we ever have the ability M but with the ability that's a
53:2853 minutes, 28 secondsfascinating answer would you do it so who knows I think it was a fascinating discussion all around yeah that's good all right if you want to send us an
53:3653 minutes, 36 secondsemail to give us a topic or just to tell us that you love us it doesn't have to be that it could be either or or both worse of the best podcast gmail.com be a
53:4453 minutes, 44 secondsPeter let us know I guess the goal Ryan really is to have listeners that don't yawn as much while they listen to our if
53:5253 minutes, 52 secondsyou've yawned send us an email we might get some more okay well remember remember in front of every Silver Lining there's a cloud and today it was yawning
54:0154 minutes, 1 secondor more specifically why do we yawn gam Gator Productions
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