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Jo Brand

2episodes
1podcast

We have 2 summarized appearances for Jo Brand so far. Browse all podcasts to discover more episodes.

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→ WHAT IT COVERS Comedian Jo Brand requests a quantum mechanics tutorial from physicists Ben Allanach and Faye Dowker, exploring wave-particle duality, measurement problems, Schrodinger's cat paradox, and why quantum gravity remains unsolved despite quantum theory's success. → KEY INSIGHTS - **Double slit experiment:** When electrons pass through two open slits instead of one, they cannot reach certain screen locations they previously could reach, demonstrating that particles simultaneously explore multiple paths and interfere with themselves in ways classical physics cannot explain. - **Measurement collapse:** Quantum theory successfully predicts experimental outcomes across scales from early universe element formation to semiconductor technology, yet provides no definition of what qualifies as an observer or measurement device, leaving this fundamental concept entirely to individual interpretation. - **Quantum gravity challenge:** Combining Einstein's general relativity with quantum mechanics produces mathematical infinities and nonsensical probability predictions. String theory attempts resolution by replacing point particles with vibrating loops, requiring six hidden spatial dimensions curled up at every point. - **Big Bang limitation:** Current physics breaks down at the universe's origin moment. A working quantum gravity theory would enable physicists to calculate what occurred before the Big Bang and whether the universe had an actual beginning, answering cosmology's most fundamental questions. → NOTABLE MOMENT Dowker explains that despite quantum mechanics being our most successful physical theory with unlimited applications, physicists have reached no consensus on what actually happens inside a quantum system between measurements, leaving a conceptual gap where understanding should exist. 💼 SPONSORS [{"name": "Pandora Jewelry", "url": "pandora.net"}, {"name": "Paycor", "url": "paycor.com/leaders"}, {"name": "Coca Cola", "url": null}, {"name": "Optum", "url": "optum.com"}, {"name": "Homes.com", "url": null}, {"name": "Wolf Tactical", "url": "wolftactical.com"}] 🏷️ Quantum Mechanics, Quantum Gravity, String Theory, Measurement Problem

AI Summary

→ WHAT IT COVERS Brian Cox and Robin Ince explore altruism with psychologist Matti Wilks, geneticist Steve Jones, and comedian Jo Brand, examining whether humans are genuinely selfless or driven by evolutionary self-interest across cultures and species. → KEY INSIGHTS - **Early moral development:** Children as young as six months prefer helpers over hinderers in experiments, showing innate prosocial awareness, though they become more group-focused as they age before potentially expanding moral circles again compared to adults. - **Blood donation systems:** Countries with unpaid voluntary blood donation systems like Britain produce safer blood supplies than paid systems like the US, where financial incentives historically attracted high-risk donors and reduced intrinsic motivation to give altruistically. - **Identifiable victim effect:** People donate more money to help one named individual child than eight anonymous children because larger numbers trigger scope insensitivity, making it harder to emotionally connect with suffering at scale or understand proportional impact. - **Reciprocal altruism foundation:** Human civilization requires pure altruism beyond family groups, enabled by language which reduces tension and allows assessment of others' attitudes, distinguishing humans from chimps who would fight to death on public transport. → NOTABLE MOMENT Kidney donors who give to strangers without expectation of return challenge evolutionary models, as psychology struggles to explain why humans extend costly altruism beyond family groups or reciprocal relationships to people they will never meet or interact with again. 💼 SPONSORS None detected 🏷️ Evolutionary Biology, Moral Psychology, Prosocial Behavior, Altruism Research

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