Some beauty, even if you don't understand it, you will be moved by it.

Frida 2022-11-07 18:11:04

On the desktop were the black hard-skinned "A Brief History of Time" and scattered astronomical notes.
I am a liberal arts student. Although I spent some time in the Astronomical Society, I still don’t have the brains and persistent pursuits of science students. Many things I knew before are now forgotten, and things I didn’t know before are now even more confused. But not understanding does not mean not being able to appreciate it. Even if you don't understand the beauty of some things, you will be moved by it.

Like many people, I watched the documentary "Hawking" because of BC, and like many people, it was not just BC that made us amazed and moved in the end.

At the beginning of the film, I don’t know if it can be described by the term grand. There is no spectacular scene, no impressive special effects, but it is indeed grand. Because time and space are grand in themselves.
This is a story of a search for the beginning of time
this is a story about exploring the origins of time.
This sentence shown on the screen, because Yin Si, who involves Yin Si, has its own shocking charm. Not to mention that the TV interview with the two Nobel Prize winners interspersed throughout the film begins with the words: I swear to you, that this is the most profound thing you will hear in your entire life. I assure you, This is the most meaningful voice you can hear in your life.
What is the most meaningful voice that can be heard in this life? What is the answer we want to know since we were children? I think it's probably all about the beginning, especially about the beginning. For example, "Where do we come from?" "Where do the stars come from?" When you know the term "universe" a little bit older, you should have asked questions like "where did the universe come from". This is a question in the early stages of the formation of a simple world view. As we grow older, when we are slowly assimilated by the world around us, we slowly realize the incomprehensibility of these questions, so we are silent, we no longer ask these, as if we will ask again after a certain age It seems a very silly question. Even when learning the theory of Schleiden and Schwann in high school, we asked, "New cells are derived from the division of old cells, and generations of new cells are continuously produced from old cells. Then the first Where do the cells come from?" The answer is: "When you ask where the first thing comes from, there is often no answer." Since there is no answer, then what is the use of asking? We are neither geniuses nor children, so we were silent. (Here we seem to be able to infer some of the reasons why there are few Nobel Prize winners in China)
However, the reason why Hawking is Hawking is just as the reason why Newton is Newton, and the reason why Einstein is Einstein is probably because he insisted on that. Simple and simple.
We looked up at the splendid skip of the sky, we felt small, and we felt the beauty that was moving. This is enough for ordinary people like me. However, while the Hawkings are shocked by such beauty, their brilliant brains hope to make them more beautiful with scientific rules.
We lay on the grass, just like Hawking’s girlfriend Jane in the play, lamenting our smallness, then clapped our hands and stood up from the grass. Hawking lay on the grass, thinking about how fast the stars are moving away from us, thinking about the death of a star, and the light of stars that have met our eyes for thousands of years... He could not get up from the grass. ——Of course we now know that he was diagnosed with Lou Gehrig’s disease——He was lying on the grass, lying under the wonderful starry sky, asking for help from the people around him: "Hello? Can you hear me?"
At first glance, I thought he was talking to Xingkong.

He was diagnosed with Lou Gehrig's disease, his muscles slowly atrophy, and eventually he would die like a drowning due to slow breathing. But when he realized this, he asked the doctor: "What about the brain? The brain itself?" What will happen to the brain? What will happen to the brain itself, which can no longer issue commands to the muscles to allow the muscles to move normally? When the doctor answered: "untouched, brain is left untouched." When he learned that the brain would not be affected, we saw a trace of peace of mind on his face.
I don’t know how many BC fans think of another SH classic thesis created by BC after seeing this passage: breath is boring. Brain is everything. The meaning of breathing is far less than thinking.
He was thought to live for only two years. His father asked his PhD supervisor to give him a simple subject that he could solve in his lifetime. His doctor said sorry to him because there was no cure for this disease. His mother asked him Does Hawking’s mentor have enough time to pursue what he wants to pursue...
However, he himself did not give up on the pursuit. When his mentor gave him some less difficult topics, his answer was this:
Faraday rotation?
- boring……I want to do something significant.
He used the method of holding his breath in the bathtub to delay his death as much as possible. He tying shoelaces, twisting taps, and cutting tomatoes with difficulty, never giving up more difficult calculations and thinking. He chose the stable universe as the starting point for his thinking, and while striving to gain time for his dreams, he did not worry about the limitation of the length of his life.
——When he and Penrose were listening to Bach’s music, Penrose said that unfinished movements can be so perfect and so beautiful. Penrose said, can you hear? can you hear? Did you hear it?
Just as he said under the stars: Can you hear me?

Even if his movement is out of chapter, can't he let the world hear the perfect melody?


At the beginning of the film, Hawking tilted his head and lay halfway on a sofa, listening to Professor Hoyle's speech on the steady-state universe. His focused expression made me very moved. In the middle of the film, he realized the loopholes in the theory of the steady-state universe at the home of his mentor. He said: "It's a problem. Isn't it? Isn't it?" His persistent look moved me very much. When I saw Hoyle's paper, he stayed up all night, using his deformed hands to write down the entire blackboard with difficulty. He smiled at the blackboard with a silly but brilliant smile, which made me very touched. When listening to Hoyle's speech, he was unstable, but still stood up, telling him that your calculation was wrong, your physics was wrong, because I calculated the correct result. Hoyle was very angry and asked him if someone instructed him to make a fool of himself. Hawking said: "It's just wrong, that's all. I did say it, didn't I? the physics is wrong." Your theory is wrong. That's it. I told it, is it wrong? His innocent eyes moved me very much. When he listened to Penrose’s speech, he heard Penrose’s singularity theory, and he heard Penrose tell him It takes you to places where the rules say you can’t go. He knew that the rules and common sense were not always correct. In some These rules will all collapse in this place. That is a brand new field... He smiled, which touched me a lot. When he realized the problem of time going backwards, he stumbled down from the train, stood unsteadily and fell to the ground, not forgetting to call Penrose's name to let him go back to share, he picked up the chalk, ignoring the differences of the people, and walked by the railroad. He drew his time and space on the ground, his Roger had an incoherent discussion, the expression on his companion's face finally realized, and the joy that was actually uncontrollable when he gently uttered the word "bang", which moved me very much. His mentor told him, Do something! All of your own! Be original! Let him do something greater than the theory of perfectly attacking others, and he finally did it-he finished the thesis and was at the end of the thesis , Using his deformed hand, write a line askew: This dissertation is my original work.
Everything in nothing. Nothing into everything. ……I am talking about the beginning of the universe
.

This is the Big Bang Theory, the Big Bang Theory that Hoyle ridiculed as a cartoon but is now regarded as common sense by us. This is something that ordinary people can still be moved by their imagination...beautiful. Because this is the origin of the universe, this is the most ambitious and beginning thinking. As the two Nobel Prize winners at the beginning of the film said in a TV interview: I swear to you, that this is the most profound thing you will hear in your entire life. , The most meaningful voice.
This noise this god damn beautiful hiss. It connects. It's the sound of the beginning of time, the leftover heat from the Big Bang, the three degrees that hasn't cold yet. It's everywhere, it's all around us. It's fifteen billion years old.
The large-scale irregular noises they heard, those "damn beautiful noises", those "the most meaningful sounds we can hear in this life", "the sounds of the origin of the universe", "the time "The sound of the beginning", "It is the residual heat of the Big Bang-that has not yet cooled down to 3 degrees."
"They are all around us, everywhere", these 15 billion-year-old sounds are not moving. , Isn't it trembling people's hearts?

At the end of the film, after one of the two Nobel Prize winners said the above words, he lowered his head and was silent for half a minute. I think he was also deeply moved by what he said. What they found added to the already beautiful things.

Isn't it beautiful that such a small person can see such a magnificent mystery in a universe that is vast and even beyond human imagination?
As Hawking said, I believe in the possible. I believe small though we are, insignificant though we may be, we can reach full understanding of the universe. …… we are very very small, but we are profoundly capable of very very big things
despite our small, even though we may be insignificant in terms of the entire universe, but we can ascertain the most profound implication of our universe ...... very small, but we thought it could reach to touch the stuff most widely-ho.

Isn't this, damn beautiful?

This beauty is the soul of this film, and Hawking, shaped by BC, is the carrier of this soul.
This is the reason for a liberal arts student to pick up "A Brief History of Time"; this is the reason for a poor student with a lot of summer tasks to push everything away and watch this film twice; this is a person Reasons to like a thing purely and persistently.
This is a story of a search for the beginning of time……I am talking about the beginning of the universe……you have to fight for what you believe in to the nail, or the buggers will stop you……I want to do something significant……It's a problem. Isn't it? Isn't it? ……Your calculation is wrong…… it's all wrong. I worked it out. ……It's just wrong, that's all. I did say it, didn 't I? the physics is wrong. ……It needed to be said.……I know what it is like to have obstacles in your path, I know what it is like to be told you can't do something. That's why I became a teacher. I would never ever stop a student of my from pursuing something because I didn't agree with their opinion. Never. I know you can do more than brilliant attacks on others. Do something! All of your own! Be original!…… It reverse. Oh, of course it reverse, the direction of time.An explosion? – bang……This dissertation is my original work. SWHawking. ……I was thinking about time going in the opposite direction.……I am talking about the beginning of the universe……

His mantra is fine. No matter when he suffered from illness, when he was "sentenced" to not survive for two years, when he fell down the stairs, when he was exhausted all night... he always said: fine.
He is good, he is really good.
Because he is "A man of huge courage, brilliant mind and capacity to imagine fates like a piece of nothing"-a person full of courage and wisdom, with fanatical passion and pure perseverance, who treats bad luck like nothing.
I could be bounded in a nut shell and count myself a king of infinite space, were it not that I have bad dreams.
If I do not have nightmares of it, even if I'm stuck in a Nutshell, I can do an infinite space of king.
Even if his movement is only out of context, even if his journey of life and thinking is not over, he can let the world hear the perfect melody. Did you hear it?

Can you hear me?

Can you hear me?

Can you hear me?

——At first glance, I thought he was talking to the stars.
——But, who can say no?

View more about Hawking reviews

Extended Reading
  • Trycia 2022-06-13 20:38:58

    Because Benedict Cumberbatch watched it.

Hawking quotes

  • Stephen Hawking: We are very very small. But we are profoundly capable of very very big things.

  • Stephen Hawking: What about the brain, I mean the brain itself?

    Dr. John Holloway: Untouched. The brain is left untouched.