Today: Scientific Entertainment xD

1 month ago
57

Scientific Conversations

1.
Why the Golden Ratio Works [Explained Historically]
Fabian Roeglin, March 28, 2021
Where does this rule of the golden ratio actually come from?

(AI slightly altered after ut editing with audio voiceover, why?)

2.
Climate Science vs. Germany's Outsider Position-part
December 29, 2025 Podcast Klartext Finanzen
Klartext Finanzen - RealUnit Schweiz AG

@realunitschweiz
"Professor Gerd Ganteför is a physicist and climate scientist and warns of dark times ahead. Germany is hopelessly falling behind. People are unaware of the outsider position Germany has with its climate policy! Nuclear energy is the energy source of the future, capable of providing baseload power and CO2 neutral. The long-term effects of climate policy will affect everyone – Germany will no longer be able to pay pensions in the future."

Professor Gerd Ganteför is a physicist and climate scientist and warns of dark times ahead. Germany is hopelessly missing the boat. @realunitschweiz

"RealUnit Schweiz AG is a listed investment company that invests its capital in various tangible assets to protect it as effectively as possible against crises and loss of purchasing power. The statements of the guests may differ from the opinion of RealUnit Schweiz AG. The information provided is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice, an offer, or a solicitation to enter into a contract or to purchase or sell securities. Please read the disclaimer in the video description."

3.

via X:
Stefan Homburg

@SHomburg
Professor |

@UniHannover

| Non-partisan | Videos & Audios: http://youtube.com/@StHomburg | "Politics is downstream from culture" | Not on Telegram/Facebook.

``` Science and Technology, Hanover, Germany, stefan-homburg.de

"The anchor of the largest US television network, CBS, apologizes for pandering too much to politicians, advertisers, and industry. He promises to do better immediately.

Background: Could something like this be conceivable in Germany? Probably not, because while CBS is a mass-market broadcaster, it's a private one that needs viewers. German public broadcasters don't need viewers, but rather the support of politicians who fund them with mandatory fees.

Private media outlets, in turn, have hardly any resources for their own research and therefore usually reproduce the content of public broadcasters uncritically. Commendable exceptions like @JoergZajonc, @cicero_online,
or the @berlinerzeitung
confirm this rule.

In the US, news interest is shifting, similarly to Germany, from "legacy media" to social media." CBS is bucking this trend with bestsellers like "60 Minutes," which exposed our Göttingen prosecutor's office's hate campaign.

Credit: @mz_storymakers

--

>CBS officially apologizes for having treated politics, advertising, and industry like fragile eggs for years. From now on, they will report more critically—within the framework of sponsorship guidelines, of course.<

via lol

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