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TYSON: We all feel the weight
of the shadows on our future.
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00:00:07,335 --> 00:00:11,093
But in another time, every
bit as ominous as our own,
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00:00:11,488 --> 00:00:15,121
there were those who could
see a way through the darkness
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00:00:15,201 --> 00:00:17,703
to find a star to steer by.
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00:00:19,570 --> 00:00:21,159
Carl Sagan wrote,
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"I was a child in
a time of hope...
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I wanted to be a scientist
from my earliest school days.
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The crystallizing moment came
when I first caught on that
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the stars are mighty suns...
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When it first dawned on me
how staggeringly far away they
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00:00:38,807 --> 00:00:43,381
must be to appear as mere
points of light in the sky...
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I'm not sure I even knew the
meaning of the word "science" then,
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00:00:47,746 --> 00:00:52,600
but I wanted somehow to immerse
myself in all that grandeur...
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00:00:52,720 --> 00:00:56,147
I was gripped by the
splendor of the universe...
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Transfixed by the prospect
of understanding how things
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really work, of helping to
uncover deep mysteries...
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Of exploring new worlds...
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Maybe even literally.
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It has been my good fortune
to have had that dream,
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in part, fulfilled...
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For me, the romance of science
remains as appealing and
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new as it was on that day...
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When I was shown the wonders of
the 1939 New York World's Fair.
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This is where the
future became a place."
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But, how could
there be hope in 1939?
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The angriest voices had
taken the world stage,
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00:02:01,488 --> 00:02:04,287
preaching hatred
and tribal division.
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The most
cataclysmic war in history,
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which would take the lives
of 60 million human beings,
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was only just beginning.
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Yet, even as
darkness descended,
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it was possible to awaken
the young Carl Sagan and his
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contemporaries with a
thrilling vision of the future.
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One that was powerful
enough to inspire many of them
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to do the years of
hard work required to
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become scientists and engineers.
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Advertise your product or brand here
contact www.OpenSubtitles.org today
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♪ ♪
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The "miracle" of television
became a reality to the public
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at the 1939 World's Fair.
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We had learned to manipulate
electrons into what would become a
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civilization-altering force.
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This working model of a TV
set was transparent to convince
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the skeptics that what
they were seeing was not just
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motion picture images.
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The images on the television
screen were actually live
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signals from
across time and space.
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A possible world of
revolutionary high technology
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was first glimpsed here.
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Carl Sagan was the first to
explore space and time on the
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Ship of the Imagination.
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But we have
something else in common.
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We both had life-changing
experiences in this same place
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in Flushing Meadow, New York.
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When I was about
the same age as Carl,
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my family took me to
the 1964 World's Fair.
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I'm the little
guy on the left.
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It was 25 years later and our world
faced a different set of problems.
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The superpowers had rigged
the planet with some tens of
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thousands of nuclear weapons.
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They were on short fuses that
could be lit at any moment.
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Preparing for the coming
apocalypse was a frequent
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ritual for
schoolchildren like me.
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While we all knew that our
lives could be terminated at
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any moment, the 1964 World's
Fair presented a vision of a
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boundless future,
one freed of danger,
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where science and technology
had been refocused on human
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hopes and dreams...
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I have stunning, indelible
memories of that visit.
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My father was a key
administrator for New York City
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during the civil
rights movement,
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and they named a monorail
car after him for the day...
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We proudly rode the
Tyson Comet into the fair.
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I remember the life-like,
animatronic dinosaurs and
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being amazed that we
could know about things that
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happened so long ago.
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I remember the sense that Earth
was just a place we happened to be.
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Even the fair's main symbol,
the Unisphere,
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was a vision of Earth in the
larger context of the cosmos.
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Remember, this was before
anyone had ever seen the whole
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Earth from deep space...
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It was a time when
everything soared.
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Even the buildings
seemed ready for take-off.
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You could go on a trip
to a brighter future,
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an Earth where
there were no slums,
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and no hunger...
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Some of those
promises remain unfulfilled,
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and others have been exceeded beyond
even the wildest dreams of that time...
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Do me a favor.
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Try to forget everything you
take for granted at this moment.
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Imagine you've never
seen a laptop, or tablet,
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00:06:27,113 --> 00:06:28,256
or smart phone,
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that you've never
searched for anything online,
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or ever received an email
or a text message from anyone.
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This was a world where if you
wanted to know something about
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the history of life,
or the lyrics to a song,
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you had to go to
the nearest library.
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(overlapping chatter)
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TYSON: Like many
people at that time,
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it was here that I had
my very first interaction
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with a computer.
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WOMAN: The machine on my right is
the IBM Optical Character Reader.
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It's a machine which
reads handwritten numbers.
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To illustrate its
operation to you,
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you will be able to ask for the
news of any date that you'd like.
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You simply write a date on a
card and then the IBM Optical
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Character Reader reads
your handwritten numbers.
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The computer replies
with the news event.
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TYSON: Imagine my amazement that a
machine could read the date of my birth,
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and spit out the most important events
that took place on that very day.
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How could a machine
possibly know that?
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Even in this optimistic
dream of the future,
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the long shadow cast on
it was inescapable...
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The very same vehicles that
promised to take us to other
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worlds also threatened
to destroy this one.
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They could carry explorers,
or they could carry weapons of
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mass destruction.
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This Project Mercury
spacecraft had recently taken
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00:08:00,899 --> 00:08:03,135
Scott Carpenter
into Earth orbit...
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00:08:03,817 --> 00:08:07,041
There was a two-man Gemini
spacecraft that wouldn't be
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00:08:07,078 --> 00:08:09,952
operational for
another year...
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00:08:10,016 --> 00:08:14,022
And the most ambitious of all:
The Apollo command module and
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00:08:14,076 --> 00:08:18,560
lunar lander were close enough
for me to reach out and touch.
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00:08:18,740 --> 00:08:23,370
The first actual manned trip to
the Moon was still four years away.
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00:08:23,488 --> 00:08:26,507
Think of the
audacity of that time:
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We were going to
send humans to the Moon
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and bring them back safely,
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and do it all with computers
whose best trick was to tell
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00:08:36,169 --> 00:08:38,568
you what happened on
the day you were born...
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00:08:41,523 --> 00:08:43,622
All these decades later,
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I can't believe we
really did those things.
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But like Carl,
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the hope I discovered at the
World's Fair has never left me.
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The odds were against us,
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00:08:55,947 --> 00:08:58,916
but we're still here
more than 50 years later.
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00:08:59,529 --> 00:09:04,440
And still dreaming of what the
future might hold for us...
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00:09:12,384 --> 00:09:18,294
Come with me to the New
York World's Fair of 2039.
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(theme music plays)
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♪ ♪
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♪ ♪
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Subtitles by explosiveskull
www.OpenSubtitles.org
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00:10:45,036 --> 00:10:50,901
TYSON: It's the year 2029
and there's a girl somewhere,
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00:10:50,987 --> 00:10:54,543
imaging how the
future might unfold.
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♪ ♪
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♪ ♪
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TYSON: Dreams are maps...
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00:12:22,961 --> 00:12:26,376
Without them, we go nowhere...
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This new colossus, one
of many erected in each of
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the Earth's greatest harbors,
is made of calcium carbonate,
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00:12:37,999 --> 00:12:42,283
the same material that nature
used to build life's first
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00:12:42,345 --> 00:12:46,722
home in that ancient
lost city beneath the sea.
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00:12:46,898 --> 00:12:50,527
Carbon dioxide, the main
driver of climate change,
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00:12:50,597 --> 00:12:53,948
has been extracted from our
atmosphere and converted into
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00:12:54,014 --> 00:12:58,644
the mineral used to construct
this monumental Tree of Life.
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These new wonders of the world
not only signify that our
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00:13:03,048 --> 00:13:06,469
species has found a way to
avert the worst consequences
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00:13:06,505 --> 00:13:11,143
of climate change, but they
also declare our ambition for
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00:13:11,214 --> 00:13:13,822
the kind of greatness
that lives in harmony
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with our fellow earthlings.
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Welcome to the 2039
New York World's Fair.
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Come with me.
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00:13:26,790 --> 00:13:31,229
(overlapping chatter)
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♪ ♪
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MAN: Hi.
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WOMAN: Yes, it's right that way.
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(inaudible chatter)
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00:14:29,486 --> 00:14:32,824
(inaudible chatter)
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00:14:52,488 --> 00:14:54,769
TYSON: Here, in the
Pavilion of the Searchers,
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the greatest heroes in the
history of science come to
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virtual life to
recount, one-on-one,
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how they deciphered
nature's secrets.
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00:15:03,828 --> 00:15:08,139
They tirelessly answer every
conceivable question you might have.
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And here, there is no such
thing as a dumb question,
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00:15:12,617 --> 00:15:16,015
no shame in asking anything
you really want to know.
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And these aren't just
robots whose heads are filled
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with recorded messages.
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00:15:20,975 --> 00:15:23,638
We have found a way to
reproduce the neural networks
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00:15:23,775 --> 00:15:28,087
in their brains, their ideas,
memories and associations,
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00:15:28,686 --> 00:15:30,488
their connectome.
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00:15:33,427 --> 00:15:36,605
Imagine a world where the
still unfolding story of the
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00:15:36,660 --> 00:15:40,840
universe was told to every
child as naturally as we tell
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them our nursery
rhymes and fairy tales.
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00:15:43,747 --> 00:15:45,051
WOMAN: Oh, can
they take us now?
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TYSON: Two questions: Did
it blow your mind when we
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00:15:51,621 --> 00:15:53,508
discovered
gravitational waves,
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00:15:53,545 --> 00:15:55,403
even though you
said we never would?
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EINSTEIN: Ja.
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TYSON: Second question.
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00:16:00,199 --> 00:16:03,441
Your hidden variables,
solution to the paradox of
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00:16:03,478 --> 00:16:06,420
quantum mechanics, now that
we know they don't exist,
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00:16:06,562 --> 00:16:09,372
what does that say about
the nature of reality?
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00:16:10,947 --> 00:16:12,462
EINSTEIN: Come with me.
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00:16:15,125 --> 00:16:18,997
(overlapping chatter)
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00:16:28,442 --> 00:16:32,935
TYSON: And this is the Pavilion
of the 4th Dimension, time.
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00:16:33,312 --> 00:16:37,079
It's a place where anyone can set
their coordinates in space and time,
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00:16:37,163 --> 00:16:42,123
and visit any moment in the 14 billion
year history of cosmic evolution.
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00:16:42,751 --> 00:16:45,334
Isn't it amazing that we
only started doing science
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00:16:45,436 --> 00:16:48,007
systematically
four centuries ago?
199
00:16:48,226 --> 00:16:51,660
And yet we've already been
able to reconstruct so much of
200
00:16:51,766 --> 00:16:55,726
what happened billions of
years before we even got here.
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00:17:01,339 --> 00:17:03,542
(overlapping chatter)
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00:17:23,428 --> 00:17:29,368
♪ ♪
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00:17:40,084 --> 00:17:41,750
TYSON: This Cosmic Calendar,
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00:17:41,880 --> 00:17:44,970
with all of time compressed
into a single Earth year,
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00:17:45,130 --> 00:17:47,233
is yours to explore.
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00:17:47,815 --> 00:17:50,151
What event in the
history of the universe would
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00:17:50,239 --> 00:17:52,186
you most like to witness?
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00:17:53,091 --> 00:17:54,034
Not the Big Bang,
209
00:17:54,071 --> 00:17:56,879
everybody wants to see that,
and besides,
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00:17:56,935 --> 00:17:58,791
you have to be over 14.
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But, we could go to that
nanosecond before time began...
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00:18:02,961 --> 00:18:06,382
Or that last perfect
day of the dinosaurs.
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00:18:06,646 --> 00:18:10,812
Or to spend the afternoon
with the mitochondrial Eve,
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00:18:10,849 --> 00:18:14,232
the mother of us all, the
woman to whom all humans can
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00:18:14,325 --> 00:18:16,245
trace their lineage?
216
00:18:16,322 --> 00:18:19,630
Or what about a day trip to
Giza to see the pyramids when
217
00:18:19,667 --> 00:18:21,208
they were new?
218
00:18:21,310 --> 00:18:23,246
Just take your pick...
219
00:19:08,387 --> 00:19:10,754
TYSON: Life, the escape artist,
220
00:19:10,869 --> 00:19:13,768
having found
every niche on Earth,
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00:19:13,804 --> 00:19:15,498
even ventured to the Moon...
222
00:19:15,535 --> 00:19:17,871
(radio chatter)
223
00:19:21,259 --> 00:19:24,727
When we first stood
amidst its sterile desolation,
224
00:19:24,849 --> 00:19:29,418
its lifeless dust, a world
painted only in shades of gray,
225
00:19:29,998 --> 00:19:33,231
we began to appreciate
how radically our planet
226
00:19:33,268 --> 00:19:35,728
changed when it was
touched by life's genius.
227
00:19:35,797 --> 00:19:37,393
ARMSTRONG (over radio):
The eagle has landed.
228
00:19:39,118 --> 00:19:42,557
TYSON: What form will
life's genius take hundreds of
229
00:19:42,657 --> 00:19:45,165
millions of
years in the future?
230
00:20:01,580 --> 00:20:06,953
♪ ♪
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00:20:13,158 --> 00:20:17,095
TYSON: Behold: This is the
earliest known ancestor we
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00:20:17,173 --> 00:20:21,463
humans share with almost
every animal who lives now
233
00:20:21,736 --> 00:20:24,252
or ever lived on Earth.
234
00:20:24,289 --> 00:20:27,908
The real Saccorrhytus coronarius
was actually quite small,
235
00:20:28,152 --> 00:20:30,284
just a black dot to our eyes,
236
00:20:30,476 --> 00:20:33,079
but it looms large in
our personal story.
237
00:20:33,879 --> 00:20:37,884
"Sacco" flourished more
than half a billion years ago.
238
00:20:38,060 --> 00:20:40,695
It's a progenitor of
the animal kingdom.
239
00:20:41,234 --> 00:20:45,820
So how did life, the sculptor,
carve us out of this?
240
00:20:46,996 --> 00:20:50,663
Evolution, given
world enough and time,
241
00:20:50,762 --> 00:20:53,719
makes possible the emergence
of those more complex and
242
00:20:53,810 --> 00:20:56,742
completely unexpected
qualities that can arise from
243
00:20:56,794 --> 00:20:58,694
simpler things.
244
00:21:13,197 --> 00:21:17,706
Life is a thread four
billion years long.
245
00:21:17,778 --> 00:21:21,335
It has survived at least five
mass extinction events and
246
00:21:21,426 --> 00:21:25,164
come back from each of them
stronger than ever before.
247
00:21:25,714 --> 00:21:30,149
Life demonstrates that we are
more than the sum of our parts,
248
00:21:30,251 --> 00:21:33,402
and even when we find ourselves
with our backs to the wall,
249
00:21:33,512 --> 00:21:35,871
life can find a
way into the future...
250
00:21:35,907 --> 00:21:37,909
(explosion)
251
00:21:43,614 --> 00:21:45,250
Landmine.
252
00:21:46,166 --> 00:21:51,104
A souvenir of our savagery left over
from conflicts all over the planet.
253
00:21:51,782 --> 00:21:55,216
We've infested our world with
more than 100 million of them.
254
00:21:55,393 --> 00:21:59,027
Every year they kill or
maim thousands of civilians,
255
00:21:59,151 --> 00:22:02,334
among them children at
play with their friends.
256
00:22:04,568 --> 00:22:08,446
Think of a global effort that
would be required to find and
257
00:22:08,483 --> 00:22:11,640
defuse more than 100
million explosive devices
258
00:22:11,710 --> 00:22:13,409
buried in the earth.
259
00:22:13,490 --> 00:22:15,510
Hopeless, right?
260
00:22:15,546 --> 00:22:19,215
But botanists have devised
an ingenious way to reveal
261
00:22:19,251 --> 00:22:22,437
the presence of dangerous
explosives beneath our feet.
262
00:22:22,876 --> 00:22:27,389
They have bioengineered the
thale cress plant whose roots
263
00:22:27,426 --> 00:22:30,204
can detect the nitrogen
dioxide gas that these
264
00:22:30,241 --> 00:22:32,676
landmines and IEDs emit.
265
00:22:33,374 --> 00:22:36,684
If the plant puts
out red leaves, beware.
266
00:22:37,114 --> 00:22:41,893
But if its leaves are green,
then you can play there in
267
00:22:41,930 --> 00:22:44,163
peace with your friends.
268
00:22:44,260 --> 00:22:47,786
We can use our understanding
of nature to spring the traps
269
00:22:47,823 --> 00:22:49,948
that we've set for ourselves.
270
00:22:58,125 --> 00:23:01,028
Let's take the
subway to New Jersey.
271
00:23:04,803 --> 00:23:08,462
We're riding the mycelium,
that underground network that
272
00:23:08,499 --> 00:23:12,303
connects 90% of the
world's trees and plants.
273
00:23:12,675 --> 00:23:16,812
It's an ancient coproduction
of four kingdoms of life,
274
00:23:17,297 --> 00:23:22,949
plants, bacteria,
fungi and animals.
275
00:23:25,581 --> 00:23:28,763
New Jersey was once a state
with the highest number of
276
00:23:28,800 --> 00:23:31,880
dangerously polluted
areas in the country,
277
00:23:31,950 --> 00:23:35,521
shameful artifacts of our
technological adolescence.
278
00:23:36,092 --> 00:23:40,394
But then, we partnered with
the trees and the plants...
279
00:23:40,532 --> 00:23:44,342
Poplars naturally
transform trichloroethylenes,
280
00:23:44,379 --> 00:23:48,492
known as TCEs, carcinogenic
solvents that are common
281
00:23:48,554 --> 00:23:53,269
by-products of industry,
into harmless chloride ions.
282
00:23:53,355 --> 00:23:55,047
Simple salts.
283
00:23:55,439 --> 00:23:59,345
Microbiologists discovered
that they could crossbreed two
284
00:23:59,407 --> 00:24:03,237
different species of poplar
trees to enhance their power
285
00:24:03,323 --> 00:24:06,221
to neutralize TCEs.
286
00:24:06,257 --> 00:24:09,693
The extensive planting of
these trees not only rid this
287
00:24:09,763 --> 00:24:13,198
area of its poisonous threats
to human and other life,
288
00:24:13,552 --> 00:24:16,919
but also added to the number
of trees that turn the most
289
00:24:16,966 --> 00:24:21,413
prevalent greenhouse gas,
carbon dioxide, into oxygen.
290
00:24:30,160 --> 00:24:32,158
With our wars
and our lifestyle,
291
00:24:32,358 --> 00:24:34,995
we dumped a lot
garbage on this world.
292
00:24:35,408 --> 00:24:37,676
Not just landmines and IEDs,
293
00:24:37,823 --> 00:24:40,155
but the toxins
from our fossil fuels,
294
00:24:40,233 --> 00:24:42,624
the waste from
our consumer civilization,
295
00:24:42,752 --> 00:24:45,227
nuclear power
plants and weapons.
296
00:24:45,263 --> 00:24:48,403
And the electronic toys that
we discarded at an alarming
297
00:24:48,465 --> 00:24:52,110
rate laden with
lethal heavy metals, lead,
298
00:24:52,175 --> 00:24:55,144
cadmium, beryllium
and other e-wastes.
299
00:24:56,014 --> 00:24:58,951
I have moments of
despair when I try to wrap
300
00:24:59,002 --> 00:25:02,155
my mind around the
enormity of the problem...
301
00:25:02,889 --> 00:25:07,041
But life even provides a
way out of this nightmare.
302
00:25:07,147 --> 00:25:10,084
It's called bioremediation...
303
00:25:10,249 --> 00:25:12,720
See that node at
the intersection?
304
00:25:12,837 --> 00:25:14,190
That's yeast.
305
00:25:14,421 --> 00:25:18,475
Without it, no bread, no beer.
306
00:25:18,999 --> 00:25:21,566
But in this future, we
have used it to clean up
307
00:25:21,603 --> 00:25:23,210
the whole world.
308
00:25:23,304 --> 00:25:26,031
It was a means to
neutralize the most dangerous
309
00:25:26,068 --> 00:25:27,794
garbage we produced.
310
00:25:28,099 --> 00:25:30,852
Yeast captures these
poisons and prevents them from
311
00:25:30,889 --> 00:25:34,443
contaminating the water supply
and the rest of the environment.
312
00:25:35,014 --> 00:25:36,077
Think of it.
313
00:25:36,887 --> 00:25:39,615
Nature offered us
a second chance,
314
00:25:39,686 --> 00:25:41,987
a shot at undoing
the damage done...
315
00:25:44,989 --> 00:25:47,623
But how do we keep
from doing it again?
316
00:25:57,701 --> 00:26:01,973
(inaudible chatter)
317
00:26:03,677 --> 00:26:08,157
What on Earth is designed by humans
to protect the distant future?
318
00:26:08,583 --> 00:26:10,623
We don't have a single
institution that even
319
00:26:10,677 --> 00:26:14,052
acknowledges the long-term
danger we pose to ourselves,
320
00:26:14,134 --> 00:26:17,236
let alone one
designed to plan for it.
321
00:26:17,272 --> 00:26:20,239
Our time horizon looms
three months from now,
322
00:26:20,275 --> 00:26:23,491
or four years, the
corporate balance sheet,
323
00:26:23,553 --> 00:26:25,376
the next election.
324
00:26:25,568 --> 00:26:29,227
But science is telling us that
life's time scale measures in
325
00:26:29,305 --> 00:26:31,383
the billions of years.
326
00:26:31,521 --> 00:26:34,052
How do we maintain
awareness of the continuity
327
00:26:34,088 --> 00:26:35,242
of life's past,
328
00:26:35,347 --> 00:26:38,431
and our personal role
in being a link to its future,
329
00:26:38,520 --> 00:26:41,249
so that it has
operational consequences?
330
00:26:41,658 --> 00:26:47,185
Science, as of now, has no means
of making us wise and far-sighted.
331
00:26:47,810 --> 00:26:49,400
That's up to us.
332
00:26:52,766 --> 00:26:56,555
How many have lost the
battle that we fight now?
333
00:26:57,355 --> 00:27:01,086
How many worlds lie buried
beneath the surface of this one?
334
00:27:01,715 --> 00:27:03,414
Maybe we'll never know.
335
00:27:03,527 --> 00:27:07,948
But here at this fair, there's
a pavilion where long-dead
336
00:27:08,031 --> 00:27:11,388
civilizations come
roaring back to life...
337
00:27:12,455 --> 00:27:14,952
I know of one lost
world that flourished for
338
00:27:14,989 --> 00:27:16,593
thousands of years.
339
00:27:16,636 --> 00:27:18,802
Their accomplishments were many.
340
00:27:18,967 --> 00:27:22,066
They left behind a written
language that no one has ever
341
00:27:22,102 --> 00:27:24,001
been able to decipher.
342
00:27:24,114 --> 00:27:27,159
We have yet to discover
a clue that could explain
343
00:27:27,229 --> 00:27:28,774
why they vanished.
344
00:27:28,890 --> 00:27:32,323
They are just one of
the mysteries of the
345
00:27:32,394 --> 00:27:34,670
Pavilion of Lost Worlds...
346
00:27:50,672 --> 00:27:52,892
TYSON: In 5th century
B.C.E. Greece,
347
00:27:52,992 --> 00:27:55,488
Herodotus,
the father of history,
348
00:27:55,552 --> 00:28:00,324
wrote of the opulent lifestyle of the
Tartessians on the Iberian Peninsula.
349
00:28:00,386 --> 00:28:04,342
Their wealth came from the silver and
gold they extracted from the earth.
350
00:28:04,804 --> 00:28:08,505
They had their own
language, culture, dances,
351
00:28:08,564 --> 00:28:11,451
music, and yet
very little survives of them
352
00:28:11,529 --> 00:28:15,119
besides a handful of
trinkets of marvelous design.
353
00:28:15,684 --> 00:28:19,955
Theirs is one of the lost
worlds of planet Earth...
354
00:28:33,328 --> 00:28:36,334
As are the nameless people,
who lived in what is now
355
00:28:36,371 --> 00:28:39,907
Nigeria, in a
place called "Nok."
356
00:28:40,608 --> 00:28:44,294
For 1,500 years, their
engineers were on the cutting
357
00:28:44,363 --> 00:28:48,181
edge of technology, forging
new ways to work with iron.
358
00:28:49,274 --> 00:28:51,191
Just as with the Tartessians,
359
00:28:51,271 --> 00:28:54,170
they had their own
unique civilization.
360
00:28:54,238 --> 00:28:57,573
All that remains of them
are some ceramic statues in a
361
00:28:57,678 --> 00:29:02,098
style unlike any other and
an inscription on this wall.
362
00:29:02,660 --> 00:29:06,096
Everything else about them
has been devoured by time...
363
00:29:06,627 --> 00:29:10,952
But inside this pavilion,
these lost civilizations live,
364
00:29:11,127 --> 00:29:14,130
they breathe,
they dance again...
365
00:29:14,939 --> 00:29:18,312
Of them all, which one to
bring back to life tonight?
366
00:29:19,589 --> 00:29:20,505
I know...
367
00:29:20,542 --> 00:29:22,668
the Indus Valley civilization
368
00:29:22,705 --> 00:29:25,706
at its high point
in 2,500 B.C.E.,
369
00:29:25,969 --> 00:29:30,778
when it was a vast network of cities
with a population of five million.
370
00:29:31,986 --> 00:29:34,592
Come with me to
their most famous city,
371
00:29:34,665 --> 00:29:36,534
Mohenjo Daro...
372
00:30:04,344 --> 00:30:07,716
(clucking)
373
00:30:23,287 --> 00:30:27,225
(chanting in native language)
374
00:30:28,443 --> 00:30:32,459
We don't know how this pool
called the "great bath" was used,
375
00:30:32,730 --> 00:30:37,825
but we do know that this
city was planned and laid out,
376
00:30:37,934 --> 00:30:40,784
while the Greeks
wandered in small tribes,
377
00:30:40,868 --> 00:30:43,301
just a band of
itinerant merchants...
378
00:30:45,991 --> 00:30:48,423
(running water)
379
00:30:49,022 --> 00:30:50,485
Wait...
380
00:30:50,537 --> 00:30:51,402
Do you hear that?
381
00:30:51,469 --> 00:30:52,601
Listen...
382
00:30:52,638 --> 00:30:54,305
(toilet flush)
383
00:30:54,371 --> 00:30:59,072
Yes, the Indus Valley people
of nearly 5,000 years ago
384
00:30:59,217 --> 00:31:01,533
installed modern
plumbing in their homes!
385
00:31:01,970 --> 00:31:05,675
Something most people didn't
have until the late 20th century.
386
00:31:06,286 --> 00:31:10,121
And, they mastered other
forms of hydro-engineering,
387
00:31:10,376 --> 00:31:13,343
underground pipes,
sewage management,
388
00:31:13,627 --> 00:31:15,763
kitchens with running water.
389
00:31:24,631 --> 00:31:28,023
They had dentistry, and
standardized measures for the
390
00:31:28,060 --> 00:31:29,729
tiniest quantities.
391
00:31:29,934 --> 00:31:33,351
They were great sculptors
who introduced natural reality
392
00:31:33,435 --> 00:31:36,132
into the three dimensional
depiction of the human form.
393
00:31:43,826 --> 00:31:46,731
They had writing, and
hung signs on buildings,
394
00:31:46,768 --> 00:31:49,477
but we have yet to
understand their meaning.
395
00:31:51,047 --> 00:31:56,045
They used dice to play games
of chance and wiled away their
396
00:31:56,082 --> 00:31:58,078
evenings with board games.
397
00:31:58,652 --> 00:32:01,092
And there's something
curious about them.
398
00:32:01,147 --> 00:32:03,981
They left no depictions
of war in their art,
399
00:32:04,121 --> 00:32:06,287
nor large caches of weapons.
400
00:32:06,613 --> 00:32:10,548
There's no evidence that their
meticulously planned cities
401
00:32:10,716 --> 00:32:13,720
were ever burned to the
ground by enemy invaders.
402
00:32:14,256 --> 00:32:15,828
In the study of
their contemporaries,
403
00:32:15,894 --> 00:32:20,179
and human history generally,
this is most unusual.
404
00:32:27,401 --> 00:32:32,691
This figurine is one of the only
surviving remnants of their civilization.
405
00:32:33,437 --> 00:32:38,266
And yet, they were
as real as we are.
406
00:32:38,416 --> 00:32:41,619
Their moment as
real as ours...
407
00:33:01,436 --> 00:33:07,709
♪ ♪
408
00:33:08,254 --> 00:33:10,913
Just beyond the
Pavilion of Lost Worlds,
409
00:33:10,978 --> 00:33:12,342
there's another one...
410
00:33:12,458 --> 00:33:15,126
The pavilion of
worlds still to come...
411
00:33:15,318 --> 00:33:18,118
We've launched five
ships to the stars.
412
00:33:18,185 --> 00:33:21,053
They are backward
and primitive craft, moving,
413
00:33:21,090 --> 00:33:23,788
compared to the immense
interstellar distances,
414
00:33:23,887 --> 00:33:26,760
with the
slowness of a race in a dream.
415
00:33:27,342 --> 00:33:30,143
But in the future
we will do better.
416
00:33:30,327 --> 00:33:33,443
We've located and begun to
study thousands of worlds that
417
00:33:33,552 --> 00:33:37,626
orbit other suns, all this
from our remote confinement in
418
00:33:37,735 --> 00:33:42,183
the suburbs of the galaxy, all
this in just 400 years since
419
00:33:42,297 --> 00:33:45,067
Galileo's first look
through a telescope.
420
00:33:45,617 --> 00:33:49,481
The Milky Way has
hundreds of billions of stars,
421
00:33:49,590 --> 00:33:51,950
and likely even more worlds.
422
00:33:52,108 --> 00:33:54,152
Somewhere in the vastness,
423
00:33:54,188 --> 00:33:58,097
there may be an
Encyclopedia Galactica,
424
00:33:58,457 --> 00:34:04,369
a reference work that includes
all the worlds of all the stars.
425
00:34:19,684 --> 00:34:21,650
♪ ♪
426
00:34:21,687 --> 00:34:24,723
TYSON: Our vague perceptions
and inferences of thousands of
427
00:34:24,760 --> 00:34:28,619
exoplanets have given way
to a more intimate degree of
428
00:34:28,670 --> 00:34:31,901
knowledge of some
half a million worlds.
429
00:34:32,477 --> 00:34:35,110
Imagine a huge
galactic database,
430
00:34:35,256 --> 00:34:38,390
a Library of Alexandria
for the whole universe...
431
00:34:38,466 --> 00:34:43,802
a means for our small world to attain
some measure of cosmic citizenship...
432
00:34:44,494 --> 00:34:46,860
Imagine an
Encyclopedia Galactica
433
00:34:46,959 --> 00:34:49,460
that is constantly
evolving and growing,
434
00:34:49,497 --> 00:34:51,580
an open
source where the knowledge of
435
00:34:51,617 --> 00:34:55,350
the worlds of the universe
would be available to all.
436
00:35:03,556 --> 00:35:08,740
These guys, who call
themselves "We Who Survived,"
437
00:35:08,801 --> 00:35:12,781
are only a little more
advanced than we are.
438
00:35:13,199 --> 00:35:15,064
If we could only
communicate with them,
439
00:35:15,154 --> 00:35:19,731
maybe they could tell us how they
got through their stormy adolescence.
440
00:35:37,003 --> 00:35:39,472
And these guys, too...
441
00:35:39,636 --> 00:35:42,724
"We Who Flower in Darkness."
442
00:36:12,071 --> 00:36:15,772
What about a civilization far
more advanced than ours?
443
00:36:15,989 --> 00:36:18,770
There may be worlds with
engineering on a scale that
444
00:36:18,807 --> 00:36:21,146
dwarfs our
proudest achievements.
445
00:36:21,485 --> 00:36:24,530
There may be cultures that
disassemble other planets in
446
00:36:24,610 --> 00:36:28,267
their system and reassemble
them around their world to
447
00:36:28,304 --> 00:36:32,784
make a ring, buying them
more room and more resources.
448
00:36:37,869 --> 00:36:40,272
Well, their
future looks bright.
449
00:36:48,830 --> 00:36:52,856
But the poor beings of these
worlds have only a 1 in 3 chance
450
00:36:52,893 --> 00:36:54,410
of making it through.
451
00:36:56,641 --> 00:36:58,029
What is that?
452
00:37:00,876 --> 00:37:05,120
Could this be their attempt to solve
a solar system-wide energy crisis?
453
00:37:06,701 --> 00:37:08,600
They depend on solar power,
454
00:37:08,667 --> 00:37:11,431
but their star is
only a feeble red dwarf,
455
00:37:11,468 --> 00:37:13,828
incapable of
providing direct energy
456
00:37:13,865 --> 00:37:16,564
for their
multi-planetary civilization.
457
00:37:17,689 --> 00:37:20,484
Maybe, they've used
up all their fuel.
458
00:37:20,577 --> 00:37:23,607
So, they're building a
shell to surround their star
459
00:37:23,697 --> 00:37:26,268
and harvest every
photon of sunlight.
460
00:37:41,125 --> 00:37:43,279
How would we frame
our own entry in the
461
00:37:43,316 --> 00:37:46,153
Cosmic Encyclopedia
of Possible Worlds?
462
00:37:46,495 --> 00:37:50,282
Perhaps, even now,
someone has written it for us,
463
00:37:50,444 --> 00:37:54,237
a planetary dossier garnered
from our television broadcasts
464
00:37:54,301 --> 00:37:56,962
or from some
discreet survey mission.
465
00:37:57,632 --> 00:38:00,792
They might summon up the index
of blue worlds in our province
466
00:38:00,840 --> 00:38:04,812
of the Milky Way, until they
came to the listing for Earth.
467
00:38:05,645 --> 00:38:08,065
What would they think of us?
468
00:38:15,944 --> 00:38:19,063
We have long watched the stars
and mused about whether there
469
00:38:19,100 --> 00:38:22,405
are other beings who
think and wonder about us.
470
00:38:23,055 --> 00:38:26,733
In a cosmic setting vast
and old beyond ordinary human
471
00:38:26,770 --> 00:38:29,858
understanding,
we're a little lonely.
472
00:38:34,971 --> 00:38:38,085
50%, huh? That's all?
473
00:38:41,005 --> 00:38:43,821
I know a way we
can up those odds...
474
00:38:45,421 --> 00:38:49,466
It's about taking what science
is telling us to heart.
475
00:38:58,118 --> 00:39:02,123
(overlapping chatter)
476
00:39:02,592 --> 00:39:06,140
This is the dream of Cosmos.
477
00:39:06,520 --> 00:39:10,157
And this is the story that
science is telling us...
478
00:39:33,961 --> 00:39:38,266
Our universe began,
some 14 billion years ago,
479
00:39:39,123 --> 00:39:43,895
when matter, energy, time
and space burst forth...
480
00:39:45,456 --> 00:39:50,176
And the darkness was cold,
and the light was hot and the
481
00:39:50,238 --> 00:39:54,331
union of these extremes
gave shape to matter and
482
00:39:54,406 --> 00:39:56,190
there was structure...
483
00:40:00,538 --> 00:40:03,739
There were great stars,
hundreds of times the mass of
484
00:40:03,776 --> 00:40:08,821
our Sun and these
stars exploded,
485
00:40:09,292 --> 00:40:13,216
sending oxygen and carbon
to the worlds to come and
486
00:40:13,289 --> 00:40:16,593
adorning them with
gold and silver...
487
00:40:19,928 --> 00:40:25,642
And in their deaths, the stars
became darkness and the weight
488
00:40:25,679 --> 00:40:28,749
of their darkness
vanquished the light...
489
00:40:31,910 --> 00:40:38,079
And new stars were born from
their death shrouds and they
490
00:40:38,116 --> 00:40:40,748
began to dance with each other.
491
00:40:53,045 --> 00:40:55,948
And now there were galaxies...
492
00:41:12,106 --> 00:41:14,743
Galaxies make stars...
493
00:41:19,657 --> 00:41:22,494
(gasping)
494
00:41:26,889 --> 00:41:29,559
(cheering and applause)
495
00:41:33,688 --> 00:41:36,525
TYSON: Stars make worlds...
496
00:41:41,820 --> 00:41:45,289
And a world made life...
497
00:41:47,523 --> 00:41:50,648
And there came a time when
heat shot out from the molten
498
00:41:50,701 --> 00:41:55,207
heart of this world, and it
warmed the waters and the
499
00:41:55,244 --> 00:41:57,982
matter that had rained
down from the stars came
500
00:41:58,060 --> 00:42:05,048
alive and that star stuff
became aware...
501
00:42:09,830 --> 00:42:12,656
And that life was
sculpted by the Earth,
502
00:42:12,693 --> 00:42:15,680
and its struggles with
the other living things...
503
00:42:18,521 --> 00:42:23,599
And a great tree grew up,
one with many branches,
504
00:42:23,740 --> 00:42:26,823
and six times it
was almost felled...
505
00:42:26,903 --> 00:42:32,888
But still, it grows and we
are but one small branch...
506
00:42:33,440 --> 00:42:36,517
One that cannot
live without its tree.
507
00:42:38,533 --> 00:42:42,470
And slowly, we learned to
read the book of nature...
508
00:42:43,476 --> 00:42:47,548
To learn her laws...
To nurture the tree...
509
00:42:47,980 --> 00:42:52,710
To become a way for
the cosmos to know itself
510
00:42:55,603 --> 00:42:58,941
and to return to the stars.
511
00:43:09,722 --> 00:43:14,722
Subtitles by explosiveskull
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511
00:43:15,305 --> 00:43:21,573
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