@@Brasilmerda In all black and white photos showing Einstein at around the age he is here, his hair looks white. Which is what the colour of his hair in this video would look like if it was a black and white video. So this may be exactly what it looked like in real life. Trying to find fault or take offence over a trivial coloring attempt that only might be slightly less than 100% accurate is taking it waaay too seriously. And how would changing his hair color from brown be changing him into Aryan even if that's what they'd done?
@@darrylschultz9395 you have to be color blind to believe there is anything accurate in this video. Now if you think that hair in this video is white, let me tell you something, you are not aryan, you are yellow!
@Brasilmerda I didn't say the hair in this video is white-I said the slightly blonde color it is in this video would appear to be white, if this video was a black and white video. Same as he looks in all black and white photos at around the same age as he is here. His hair looks white(or very close to it)-in those black and white photos-which would include being slightly blonde in real life . When he was a young man yes, his hair was brown-but that's irrelevant, as he's clearly not a young man here. Many others commenting on here have said what a good job this colorisation is. And so to them it looks real-not just to me. Any deviation from what the actual colours were that you would've seen if you were there with them when this film was done, are so small as to be not worth mentioning.
Interesting fact - he was in his late twenties and early thirties when he did the majority of his discoveries in physics yet we we all know him as an elderly man.
@@craigepignosistv2765 most big math and physics breakthroughs are done by researchers under 40; our mental acuity goes downhill after some time. Even though a 60 yo Einstein or Terence Tao were/will still be immensely brilliant, they are mentally at their peak and most likely to make breakthroughs before 40. It's something you observe among chess players as well; despite chess not being physical, players usually reach their peak in their early thirties and experience a steady decline after 40 give or take.
@@Frost53021 I think that's bullshit. I'm of the opinion that there's a limited number of things a person can figure out, and that this window happens to be during youth for most people since most scientists enter their field when young. Maybe if they hadn't become interested in science until 45, they would have made the same discoveries and come up with the same insights, but during the 45-55 range. The level of decline experienced with age is massively, massively, *massively* overstated and exaggerated. My grandfather at 85 was as lucid, sharp, and quick-witted as any young person. It's ridiculous to make out normal cognitive decline as being anything dramatic. In the absence of dementia, cognitive decline is mild, and it sure as fuck doesn't become significant at an age as obscenely young as 40.
@@DrCasey No, it's true, but it only applies to one kind of intelligence. Fluid intelligence, the ability to solve problems without relying on prior knowledge, really does peak at around 25 and taper off after that, but crystallized intelligence, the ability to solve problems using prior knowledge, doesn't decline until much later.
Who, Einstein or Szilard? Leo Szilard 'the other dude' in this video was the actual inventor of the nuclear bomb....His problem was that he was such a huge jerk that no one could give him credit...Funny fact....
@@ok-vk9fv Szilard is almost completely responsible for creating the nuclear bomb. Oppenheimer read all of Szilard's notes on how to make it. The US HATED Szilard because, well, he was a jerk, they wanted nothing to do with him, he was too controlling of his own ideas. They kicked Szilard to the curb.
@@lookupverazhou8599 Einstein didn't invent the atomic bomb, nor was he the one who dropped them on Japan. Unless you are suggesting that he had some sort of superpower that allowed him to kill 100,000 people with a click of his fingers?
Interesting fact: Einstein was a PLAGIARIST and was HATED by the science community because he was known for STEALING others work and saying it was his own.
I don’t know how to feel. This is literally my fist time seeing him in color. Especially moving, every time I seen him it’s always a still image. This is surreal.
I cant describe the feeling either but the closest to how it feels is like you've gone back in time and you are sitting at the table with Albert Einstein.
This is insane! This might sound stupid but to me seeing him in colour brings him to life, It’s like seeing a photo of a rare animal and then you see it in person
Yes, we generally associate black-and-white videos with very old recordings, so colorized videos give us the feeling that they happened fairly recently; especially when they are in high quality like this.
Even if the colors might not be entirely accurate, it still brings it so much more alive and relatable. I thank science for inventing AI for coloring and upscaling videos.
The truth to be told, Einstein's English was quite limited. He didn't have a talent for foreign languages - he wasn't able to write in English, he could speak, but it wasn't too good.
There is nothing wrong with having a lot of sexual partners before marriage. In order for behavior to be immoral it needs to have negative effect on society. If everyone has a lot of sexual partners before marriage and uses contraceptives there are no unwanted pregnancies, there is no spreading of diseases, there is no negative effect on society.
Seeing this in color and high resolution makes this document exceptional. It looks like filmed yesterday. Everything becomes more modern and closer to us in time, making us feel less distant to those historical characters and events. The sweater, the jackets, the shirts, the faces, the expressions, even the grains of powder on the clothes are spectacular and make this footage timeless.
@@ShinyFlakesShinyFlakes what are you saying? It's just the colors are reconstructed through an AI. Just that. And the algorithm is pretty realistic, considering how the thing looks in B&W.
The answer was like x=1 or any other algebraic answer. He listened the whole speech, understood and made the equation in his mind. Simplified and told us as “I agree”
Watching THE MAN in video, interacting like any normal human being, is such a unique emotion to me. It’s like watching Galileo Galilei in video and not only through history books.
To add to that feeling: Einstein was a co-founder of a political party in Germany before Hitler took power. (left during the lead up to Hitlers reign.)
Finally with the potential of colourised videos, I can see what that era actually looked vs how my brain perceives it. For some reason, back in the 20th century, I imagine those times like the quality of the cameras were that they had at the time because I kinda want around those days
For those wondering, Leo Szilard is probably the single most influential person in the decision for the United States to create the Atom Bomb. He realized very early on the potential of atomic energy as a weapon and was fearful Germany would create a super bomb before anyone else. He was the one who influenced Einstein to write the famous letter to FDR to start the Atom Bomb program. This is masterfully covered in Richard Rhodes "The Making of the Atomic Bomb". It's a long and detailed book, but well worthwhile reading. Oppenheimer was basically a supporting actor in this drama when compared to Szilard.
My reading gave me the impression that Szilard wrote the letter, and later convinced Einstein to sign it. What source reports that Einstein wrote the letter?
And then came John von Neuman to the project. He was the other essential figure. He is not even mentioned in Nolan's movie. I mean I knpw.it's not a documentary, but not even a mention of Neumann? And both Szilard and Teller seem to be opponents.of Oppenheimer. I mean they did hVe disagreements, but... I reall, didn't like how Nolan treatdd these geniuses. Esp the Martians.
*To see Einstein and hear him is impressive. The quality of work put into this video is incredible. Thank you for bringing to life, 2022 life that is, a history-changing legendary figure.*
@@fuckmeinthepants *bruh, this man influences your daily life yet you don't appreciate it. For example:* *Every time you buy groceries and they scan them Einstein is there.* *Every time you use your phone for directions or your GPS, guess what? Einstein is there.* *When you think about your freedom not being controlled by a monarchy or communism, Einstein is there.* *I can go on and on but I won't. Just be thankful to God for Einstein's mind.*
“I agree.” Gave me chills, what a profound statement from a literal genius. I am forever a changed man. Edit: I have come back to this comment to see what a profoundly positive impact my words have had on society. Good day, fellow intellectuals.
This is a really good colorization, most of them I see are sloppy and slapped in like a filter, but this one was very clear and the skin tones were very lifelike
Actually Einstein plagiarized most of the work and the powers supported him to turn him into a hero to control the public as a scientific authority and the "genius". Check it out!
Am I the only one who remembers precisely where I was, when I heard the announcement of the death of Albert Einstein, at the start of the 7 o'clock BBC Home Service news, on the 18th April 1955 ? With my parents I was sitting at our mahogany round table, in the living-room after supper, looking out into the back garden, and I was gabling away at ten-to-the-dozen, as was my habit - after all, I was all of twelve years old. When suddenly my mother screamed, 'stop, stop, listen to the radio'. The news reader began in a deep sombre tone (they were all men in those days) "The death has been announced today of Albert Einstein". My parents were shocked. For me it was the first I had heard of Einstein, but the News that evening made a deep impression upon me.
Actually Einstein plagiarized most of the work and the powers supported him to turn him into a hero to control the public as a scientific authority and the "genius". Check it out!
Well there are Big Scientists among Scientists and 'God' Scientists among Big Scientists ... Einstein was The God of all Scientists Gods... The God among Gods of Science !
What I would pay to have him teach me physics… sometimes I wonder how many like him could have been if things were taught better. To what degree might he have been lucky to know “how to learn” as well as how to think
Even sitting casually in what amounts to effectively a modern day sweater or a sort of "hoodless hoodie", he retains the charm and magic/mystique many of us have always viewed Einstein with. What a beast.
Still shows how much color means to us as humans, the color adds so much personality. Sure it’s easy to complain as Einstein’s lip’s probably weren’t that pink, but he looks so relaxed. The blue of the shirt and how calm his face looks, the way he patiently waited for the speech to end, how causal everything looks as they huddle around the table. You wouldn’t get that much emotion from black and white
Bruh it's AI generated. Id like to see you do better. Also who cares? U trying to make him seem black or what? LMAO. he was born in germany, ain't no black people born there back in the days@@volcanorabbit