3.2 • 6K Ratings
🗓️ 29 November 2018
⏱️ 13 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Eric Weinstein is a brilliant man and good friend of Joe Rogan's. This is a great conversation and a very complicated discussion into math, physics and the state of reality as we know it.
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0:00.0 | Hello and welcome to another episode of the JRE review where each week I review the Joe Rogan podcast the Joe Rogan experience podcast |
0:09.4 | I am like the news is to current events and current events being Joe show. I know affiliation, but I report on what I hear |
0:18.5 | things that I find interesting |
0:21.5 | other questions that I had things that were confusing and |
0:26.0 | often I have guests on and they will be fans of Rogan and they talk about things they love about whichever episode we're discussing as well and just generally you know how this podcast |
0:38.4 | you know may have helped improve their lives in some way. I really do feel like this Joe Rogan podcast is more than just you know kind of like a late night talk show type setup. |
0:49.6 | It's an important educational tool that's really very entertaining and so there we go and talking about things that confuse the hell out of me. |
1:04.6 | One of Joe's very close friends Eric Weinstein in podcast 1203 came on they got into discussing some things and very quickly it became |
1:18.6 | one of the more complicated podcasts to follow ever but still fascinating and it's just a great reminder that anytime you think that you know anything there are way smarter people out there. |
1:33.6 | Another shout out to thank you all for subscribing and being a part of this I really appreciate it. I do a lot of these podcasts because Joe is always pumping out material so I've always got something to review. |
1:47.6 | I love doing it thank you for listening I really appreciate it I'm gonna have some new mics soon and some intro music and things are gonna change and hopefully sound a little better and a little more professional but thanks for sticking in with me in these early days much appreciated. |
2:08.6 | So back to Eric Weinstein's conversation with Joe Rogan Eric starts off he's a biologist used to work at a university and and and now it just really goes on speaking tools and I believe has a podcast and some other things. |
2:31.6 | He's a fascinating guy definitely worth checking him out he says the biology doesn't care about your feelings which is a cool thing because basically what it's saying is there's the truth the facts of what life is doing and then there's what we think is happening and you know biology just tries to show the truth and Eric quickly jumps on to Dan Bilzerians Instagram talking and really giving me a good idea. |
3:01.6 | He's an example of what a life of absolute excess can do and if you follow Dan Bilzerian on Instagram which he should because he's hilarious dude that I mean not in a comical way more so in the bowling out of control type way but yeah I mean he's like honest vice talent is how they put it. |
3:29.6 | And basically what that's mean what that means is even if he has his vices he's truth for about it he would truthfully say you know I do this I love hot chicks I love gambling I love shooting guns and bowling out of control smoke and weed and doing it but at least he doesn't hide that from himself and anyone else and there's something important about that. |
3:57.6 | And then he moves on to the idea of you know when men give each other shit they kind of pick on each other they bully each other when they're giving each other a hard time it creates close and strong bonds so creating a world where everyone's super nice to each other all the time it's almost like these things get misconstrued at least at my work we got guys there we're always bust in each other's balls but we care about each other a lot and it actually brings us closer it's the ones that can't laugh and give it back. |
4:27.6 | But that really is how to like make close friendships with in a lot of ways you know people get defensive I guess it's that you need to know that you can count on somebody so if you can give them a hard time and they can take it like a man without getting too upset then you know they're strong they're strong enough they can they can they can they have your back right. |
4:53.6 | And this is the problem people are stepping away from these conflict conversations and they get too soft and a lot of ways too sensitive so this is seeing a lot of this in the universities now young kids coming off this expression snowflakes being used it it's just kind of it's kind of like those sorts of things. |
5:22.6 | We got a tough one up out there I think you have to do that then they start talking about UFC Joe of course knows everything that can be known about it and they were talking about wearing a tie Eric's talking about wearing a tie how he doesn't really like to do and Joe doesn't wear ties or suits and then he immediately brought up well yeah because a tie is something that's super easy to kill someone with you grab a hold on. |
5:52.6 | And he was saying the same thing about leather jacket as well like a leather jacket is a great thing to get a hold of for a judo guy just throw it over your head and you hit him with the world and Eric finds this way of seeing things quite funny because obviously he's not in this like threat management stage state all the time you know he's more of an academic whereas Joe Joe was trained to be a fighter he thinks about this he thinks about attacking and all the rest of it. |
6:22.6 | Then the podcast took a different spin and they start talking about things like gauge symmetry and there's an image online called planet halt HOPF that's like a three spherical image and it was invented by the world's most successful headphone manager and the world's best particle physicist like both came up with this like kind of the design image thing and it's like a three spherical image. |
6:52.6 | And it shows all like the countries in the world in a map but then it also makes spheres out of all of them and gauge uses like a custom level so they give the example of when you're measuring the height of Everest you do it from sea level but sea level can change and there's no sea around Everest as well so we just pick this point and you know it's kind of like a measuring rise overrun issue. |
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