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00:00Newton
00:00My Newton heart
00:02When are we getting married?
00:04a question
00:05Science has failed to understand Ecbatton
00:07Yes
00:08Be careful, my love
00:09You know how scientists work, and all that.
00:12I'm currently working on a theory
00:14If it turns out to be true
00:15It will change our perspective on the entire universe.
00:19God
00:20What theories are you talking about, brother?
00:22I don't know yet
00:23I'm waiting for revelation to descend upon me.
00:25Yes
00:25What is this garbage?
00:27Overflow
00:27Go on, Newton, what were you saying?
00:29I was telling him I was waiting for a sign or a signal
00:31Something that can guide me to the nuclei
00:33any
00:33Is this tree damaged or what?
00:35Oof
00:35What's wrong, Newton?
00:36A tree and it bears fruit
00:38It means there's no other headscarf on my mother's head.
00:42Okay, let's get back to our topic.
00:43Did you get the internet?
00:45Yes
00:45The network
00:46I really wanted to talk to you about this internet issue.
00:48Don't you feel that this network is a bit outdated?
00:52For example
00:54No, that's too much.
00:58One second
00:59I, sir, have never thought about this before.
01:02What's the topic?
01:02Every time I talk about our marriage
01:04An apple fell on her from the tree
01:09What do you think this means?
01:10This means, Shaimaa, that there is a hidden power.
01:13A force pulls down the lower apple
01:15Then it falls on her
01:16power?
01:17What kind of power?
01:18This power remains
01:20The power of envy
01:23any?
01:25option?
01:26So, what about the chat room that brought us together?
01:28Did this chat bring us here to chat?
01:30No, by God, there are no men.
01:32any?
01:40Remove this, it's not healthy and it's paper-based.
01:41Welcome to a new episode of the Dabke program
01:43Let me tell you about a cold night, my dear.
01:45December 25, 1642
01:47That's my dear, according to the old tweet.
01:48If you're ahead of the clock and set the tone for the new tweet
01:50So today's date is January 4, 1643
01:53At that time, he was at Worcester Farm in Lincolnshire, England.
01:57You will need something, my dear
01:58It will change all of human history.
02:00Something that shouldn't have happened now
02:01It was supposed to happen after three months
02:03Sweet Sweet, high-class, fills the place
02:04Many women from both groups in one room
02:06And among them is a woman who screams
02:07She struggled with the labor pains that came early.
02:09three months
02:10Willas runs, Willas brings hot water
02:11Why was Willas ambulance delayed?
02:13The important thing, my dear, is that after two or three hours
02:15From conflict and pain, our episode's hero arrives
02:17The baby has a chance of survival.
02:19Very few
02:20Because its size is very, very small
02:22To the point that his mother
02:23Hanna Ayiskov
02:23She says she could have put it in the barley porridge
02:26Aziz didn't expect his child to survive.
02:28But this man lived
02:30This will be the reason for the conversion of 80% of Egyptian students.
02:32From my science to my literature
02:33To escape from him and his ideas
02:34And as we see in this episode of his madness
02:36Isaac Newton, my dear
02:37He was born into a very simple family
02:39His father worked as a farmer
02:40He died three months before he was born.
02:42His mother decided here that she would name him after her father.
02:44And so Isaac Isaac Newton remained
02:46His mother, Aziz, lived with him for the first three years of his life.
02:49And then she decided to get married
02:50And she will marry a rich man named Barn Bath Smith
02:52Farah lived with him
02:53She flew to baby Isaac
02:55And his friend is living with his new one
02:56This topic, my dear, is very fascinating; it involves Newton's psychology.
02:58And let him always lean towards solitude and isolation.
03:00To the point, my dear, that he was saying
03:02His age is married because of this topic.
03:04When Newton, my dear, grows up and turns 19
03:06He will still write down his sins
03:08He once got angry at Umm Smith and her husband.
03:10He threatened those who burn them while healthy
03:12His groom was Hamad
03:13How could he think of the antidote when he was 19 years old?
03:15Aziz burns his mother
03:15My dear, let me tell you that this was a sin from the midst of 48
03:18There are 47 other disasters that are their work
03:21During the period
03:21The life Newton lived with his grandmother
03:22It is said that her uncle, William Iscove, was the one who took care of her.
03:25Give him his old books
03:27And here Newton's football began to grow and grow
03:29He started asking questions beyond his years.
03:30And then he goes down to play with the children around him in the street
03:33He used to make models of windmills
03:35The one who was looking for it in the oven
03:36He is dear to me, given the circumstances of his birth.
03:38He was a bit of a strange child
03:39Not only was my dear Newton making his inventions
03:41He also sometimes makes the tools he uses to create inventions.
03:44And in 1653, part of the mother died.
03:47Newton lives with his mother, his house, and his siblings.
03:50Those who were not in love with him
03:51Newton's grandmother decides to send him to school to study.
03:54King's School of Grammar (Free)
03:56Free Grammar School
03:57The one who was in another city, about 6 miles away from his house
04:00Here, Newton, instead of going on the trip every day
04:03He will live with another family called the Clark family.
04:05There he will meet the pharmacist William Clark
04:08Which will be very influential in his life
04:09From 12 years old, but 16 years old
04:11Newton will live his life with William Clark
04:13At that time, Newton was very interested in pharmacy and chemistry.
04:15He learned from William how to mix medicines and herbs.
04:18Bouhamel, you're definitely going to tell us this part.
04:19To prepare us for how Newton became a genius
04:21When he enters school, he will bully his teachers and become the top student.
04:24Unfortunately, my dear school technician, you're saying he's a lazy and oblivious student.
04:27The teachers were complaining about him.
04:29When his mother decided in 1659
04:31What a complete lack of education!
04:33So what will you turn out to be, Newton?
04:34The world of history
04:35You, Isaac, go find yourself a job.
04:37You cultivate land like your father
04:38And you have a need from us, we're still waiting for your stepfather
04:40So you come to the monastery, the affairs, the properties, and the real estate that he left behind.
04:43And because of my dear, I got him out of school.
04:44Isaac Newton was threatened with being employed in the real estate sector.
04:47My dear uncle, Isaac Newton, used to send you messages on WhatsApp.
04:49Dear customer, he says he is interested in units
04:51Its price exceeds seven million.
04:53The truth, my dear, is that thank God for science, technology, and all that is to come.
04:56Newton was unsuccessful as a real estate agent.
04:59Neither in the fields nor among the craftsmen
05:00At this point, his uncle intervened and convinced his mother to send him back to school.
05:03But Al-Muradi Newton moves in and lives with the same school principal.
05:07Professor Hindi Stokes
05:08He will not only rely on Newton and his teachings
05:10This will also convince his mother to let him enroll in university as well.
05:13Because Newton was joking the first time he went to school
05:16They said of him that he was lazy and oblivious.
05:17Al-Maradhi combined passion and academic brilliance
05:20Their methods left a great mark on the school.
05:22My dear friend, his name was written on your desk.
05:24But he wasn't writing about the memories of that awful time and those days of suffering like you.
05:26The important thing, my dear Newton, is that when he turned 18
05:29After discussions and negotiations between the school principal and Yahel Newton
05:32And given Newton's mother's refusal that the valley fears the university and succeeds
05:34Newton's mother finally agrees that he should go to university
05:37Indeed, in the year 1661
05:38Newton, my dear, is attending Trinity College at Cambridge University.
05:42God bless Abu Ahmed, it seems that time is a day when things go wrong, like this.
05:44Cambridge University, the prestigious university
05:46Graduated from it to Professor Omar Azizi Al-Jamal
05:49Dear, in the seventeenth century the situation in Cambridge was a little different
05:53Firstly, Omar Abdel Aziz El Gamal was not born
05:54Secondly, the university was not in the state it is in today.
05:57correct?
05:58At that time, theories emerged from osteologists such as Kepler and Jalali.
06:02However, the prestigious University of Cambridge
06:04She was still studying the works of Aristotle and Plato.
06:07The one who says that the Earth is the center of the universe
06:08Does the Earth carry the Earth from the center of the universe?
06:10No, my brother
06:10You are the center of the universe, you unconscious one, you who are the ultimate goal of her daughter's command.
06:14This issue greatly bothered Newton during his early studies.
06:17Newton, my dear, liked the works of Godad's philosophy, like De Carte.
06:20And the works of the physicists of Al-Jadad, like Jallih
06:21So you would find him ignoring the university curriculum.
06:23He studies physics and mathematics on his own.
06:26He was also very interested in astronomy.
06:27But unfortunately, I didn't understand it at first.
06:29Because his knowledge in engineering was insufficient.
06:31It wasn't enough that he understood the stars' movements.
06:33He was studying from a book called Euclid's Elements
06:35Just like you feel the difference between something written on the outside of books
06:38Newton was not satisfied with just one book.
06:39He also took a great interest in optics and light.
06:41He spent days and days experimenting with light.
06:44My dear friend, Newton was in a state of confusion.
06:46Workers learn here, study here, and learn about this and learn about that.
06:50It will happen, my dear, just like what happened to humanity in 2020.
06:52And it will keep the world moving.
06:54It kills almost a third of Europe's population
06:57And in some cities, 80% of the population is killed.
06:59black spleen
07:00My uncle, Abu Hamid, said that this is definitely Newton's fault.
07:03But let me suddenly realize that this was a blessing in disguise for Newton.
07:06Oh, Tays Abu Hamid
07:07Why? He was gloating over people's misfortunes.
07:08Are there still 49 sinners left, or what?
07:10The truth, my dear, is that we cannot say that Newton had a position on the objections.
07:13But in a retrospective era, we can look back at history.
07:15We find that there are important scientific discoveries.
07:18Newton received it due to the appeals
07:20Because of the state of society at the time of the appeals
07:23The challenges paved the way for one of Newton's most famous ideas.
07:26Due to social distancing measures and a high number of rapid deaths
07:29Trinity College is closed
07:30Newton returned to the farm and the house where he was born.
07:33Instead of Newton making ten-minute biscuits and spraying supermarket bags
07:36Something very important happened to him
07:38The overflow during the most famous scene in Newton's life
07:41There is disagreement about whether it happened.
07:43In this place, my dear, on this farm
07:44The overflow time was on Newton's head
07:46Of course, the scientific approach, dear friend, does not contain any distorted source.
07:48He says that the float was on Newton's head
07:50The picture is probably of Newton sitting down.
07:52And the overflowing time was on his head
07:54Often the imagination of a writer, photographer, or painter
07:56But according to the writer William Stockley
07:58In the book "Memoirs of the Life of Sir Isaac Lutton"
08:01He says there was an apple
08:02And this apple is probably already overdue.
08:04It doesn't necessarily have to be time on his head
08:06In the same way and at the same time, inspire him with this idea.
08:09Because life isn't about cinema and romance.
08:12However, what we can say is that the overflowing time is a sip.
08:15At one time or another
08:16The falling apple sparked his curiosity about a very important question.
08:19obvious question
08:19Why did the apple fall on a straight line, vertically?
08:22Regarding the land?
08:23Why didn't he promise something else, for example?
08:24or at an angle of inclination
08:25Why didn't you go upstairs?
08:26Come on, my dear, this topic took Newton about 20 years
08:28In order to publish the answer to this question
08:30Newton was convinced that the subject of hidden power
08:34The next one is called gravity.
08:36It's not just about the ground and the apple
08:37No, this is something that affects the apple.
08:40And it affects the large celestial bodies above us.
08:42It is a need that is often present in all celestial bodies.
08:44A need that exists in heaven and earth and what is between them
08:47The only issue was a small problem.
08:48The problem, my dear, was that it was mathematics.
08:50He couldn't explain these movements.
08:52There is no explanation for the phenomenon.
08:54Here, dear Newton, think simply.
08:56The topic is simple
08:57I don't have enough math skills to help me.
08:58So he did mathematics
08:59Newton decided to make mathematics his own.
09:02Something to get by
09:03Newton, my dear, will create a branch in mathematics.
09:05Its name is differential and integral calculus
09:07That's what you're saying, Abu Hamad, that you're going to develop it.
09:08No, he will do it
09:09Oh, this is his bride, Abu Hamad
09:10The work of differential and integral calculus
09:11Ah, my dear Mali
09:12I forgot to tell you
09:13It was during the two or three years that he worked on this project.
09:15Discover the general law of the binomial expansion
09:17Benomail
09:18Do you know algebra?
09:19Remember, my dear, he said to the one who was free of sin
09:21Yes, Newton is the one who came up with this question.
09:22And in the year 1666, he was 23 years old.
09:25Newton made revolutionary inventions and discoveries.
09:27In calculus
09:28Motion, optics, and gravity
09:30But he doesn't publish any of the things that killed you.
09:33He makes discoveries and puts them on the path
09:35Al-Azizi has been putting these needs in the market for 20 years.
09:37Until the end of the month
09:391687
09:40Because he was saying that at that time
09:41These things are just feelings
09:44That's how the world ends.
09:45If we use these equations with these sports
09:48That's how it will work
09:48This opening in his life dates back to 1664.
09:50From the year 1667
09:52They call them the great years
09:54Brigadier General Azizi was responsible for the deaths of approximately one-fifth of the world's population at the time.
09:57But thank God Newton was protective
09:58My workers are making scientific discoveries
10:00My dear Newton, his work wasn't limited to mathematics and physics.
10:02Newton was also interested in optics and light.
10:04He would try anything that came to his mind.
10:06It is said that the passageway is a long sewing needle, one long one.
10:09And he inserted it into his eyelid.
10:11The area between the eye and the star
10:12Just to see what would happen
10:14He said, "Well, that's how Abu Ahmed won't see it."
10:16No, my dear, nothing happened.
10:17Newton only recorded that he saw colored circles after this movement.
10:20Another time, my dear Newton, he kept looking at the sun.
10:22In a one-eyed mirror
10:23Until he couldn't see anything but blue and red.
10:26But this is for the general public to enjoy for three days.
10:28But thank God, it healed and it subsided after a while.
10:31Newton's strange experiments often killed him.
10:33According to Al Johnson
10:34It is said that she suffered from zebra poisoning
10:36He is trying to transform the elements
10:38From ordinary elements to fatty elements
10:40The alchemist's costume turns dust into gold.
10:42Newton's intense interest in optics also
10:44This made him suggest a rather strange proposal.
10:46The fact is, the date palm is white, not white.
10:48It is actually the product of mixing all the colors of the color blue.
10:51one another
10:52At that point, my dear, this will be a suggestion.
10:53After that, it will turn into a discovery.
10:55A discovery capable of explaining the phenomenon
10:57The chromatic aberration in the telescopes that were present
11:00At that time, this phenomenon causes the colors to appear inaccurate.
11:03In order for Yuten to solve these two problems, he created his own telescope.
11:06It uses mirrors in addition to lenses.
11:09Not just lenses, this is for the telescopes that exist
11:11No, he added mirrors to it.
11:12And that's how he was able to solve a problem that existed at the time.
11:15This is a problem that sheds light
11:17This made the telescope images clearer and more accurate.
11:20The limit is that it is displayed by the Jotun telescope and reflecting telescopes.
11:22Which includes the Hubble Space Telescope
11:24They are considered the fundamental pillars of astronomy.
11:26After many achievements, we reach the year 1669
11:30Why, my dear, is Newton being honored?
11:33A head of the mathematics department at Cambridge University is needed.
11:36The place of the Madranos, the previous question was asked by Isaac Baron.
11:38In 1671, Newton published an essay on death.
11:41And it is important to note that white is a mixture of other colors.
11:43Colors are formed as a result of the refraction of white light.
11:47At that time, my dear, people were convinced that this color was a mixture of light and darkness.
11:51The great scientist Robert Hooke was a supporter of this theory.
11:54He preferred to criticize Newton's words, methods, and explanations.
11:58Let me tell you, at that time ordinary people were clinging to old ideas with all their might.
12:02They always criticize the scientific community.
12:04These criticisms, my dear, made Newton hesitant.
12:06He postpones many ideas about important discoveries he will make
12:10Gravity costume
12:10Newton would not hesitate to activate his scientific ideas.
12:13Newton would abandon all natural sciences and specialize in the study of the Bible and theology.
12:18And by percentage, my dear, it will constitute about 27% of his writings.
12:22That means, my dear, that Newton wrote more on religion than on any other topic as a category alone.
12:28Newton means a religious scholar
12:29Newton, my dear, still has some rather strange ideas about society.
12:32For example, he would reject the idea of ​​slackness.
12:33He will reject the idea of ​​Trinity
12:34What is it?
12:35The name of his college in Cambridge
12:37Trinity College
12:38It wasn't easy, my dear, for him to talk about ideas.
12:40Newton, my dear, was religious.
12:42Newton also said that gravity could explain the movement of planets and celestial bodies.
12:46But you can't explain who made her move.
12:48In 2002, a piece of loyalty was discovered that Newton had calculated for the Day of Judgment.
12:52In complex calculations with religious references
12:54And after a block of his private accounts
12:56It has been reported that the Day of Judgment will be in the year 2060.
12:59Let's leave Newton for a bit, my dear, and go to a truly great scientist.
13:02The world is Edmond Hali
13:03My current situation, my dear, was that of an auditory person.
13:05He worked as a sea captain and a painter of ruins
13:07Professor of Engineering at Oxford University
13:08And the deputy of the currency exchange garages
13:11Astronomer and inventor of the diving bell
13:13Pedersen wrote about magnetism, matter, islands, and planetary motion.
13:18He invented a weather map
13:20He invented a few methods for calculating the age of the Earth.
13:22And its distance from the sun
13:23Not only that, dear Edmond Dahalli
13:25He invented a method for preserving fish.
13:26So that Toza stays like that and plays
13:28Oh, how I praise this man! This world is great, a leader!
13:29I had already passed the test on my daughter.
13:30I'm grateful for the discovery you made, which you didn't mention.
13:33Maznab Hali
13:33Okay, look
13:34Firstly, his name is Maznab Hali
13:36Sinan
13:37You've definitely heard of him
13:38Here you didn't hear it at Mazagangi's
13:39Thirdly, we say the paradox
13:41The one who is guilty is his own
13:42That's because it's Haley's most famous thing
13:44He basically didn't do it
13:45It means that Haley did not discover Haley's fault.
13:47Edmond Dahalli simply explained and wrote
13:49He is the same as the one who is guilty
13:50What other people saw
13:511456
13:53and 1531
13:54and 1675
13:56And the sinner will not be named after him.
13:57Changed 16 years after his death
13:59Despite all of Hale's scientific achievements, my dear
14:02That which is said
14:03Halley's greatest contributions to human knowledge
14:06She is the Easterner in a scientific bet with a dragon and his companions over coffee
14:08This is the greatest thing, Abu Hamad
14:09This is the greatest thing
14:10Haley, my dear, are you with Robert Hooke?
14:12Mr. Christopher Wren
14:13Robert Hooke, my dear, who's always drinking coffee.
14:15This is after people consider him the first person to describe Hebron
14:17As for Christopher D
14:18So it was astronomy
14:19And an architect who is the world
14:21The great nations
14:21They were ordinary people having lunch in London
14:22And the conversation led them to talk about celestial bodies.
14:25At that time, my dear, he was well-known
14:26The planets tend to rotate in a specific elliptical shape.
14:29Its name is the ellipse
14:30A very specific and precise curve
14:32Nobody knew
14:33Why do the planets rotate like this?
14:35Frien
14:35The day he opened his chest
14:36The prize is forty shekels.
14:38Why can he find a solution and explanation for this issue?
14:40Forty shillings, my dear, was a large sum of money back then.
14:42Half a month's salary
14:43Hook, my dear, heard this.
14:52And many times he forgot to give credit to himself
14:54His ideas aren't even his own.
14:55He tells them that, "I know," to explain to Rich
14:58I'm telling you guys, but it's not a big deal.
14:59Then you'll say, "I know, but I'm not going to tell anyone."
15:01Here, dear parents
15:02And thanks to this greed, I mean
15:03It was of course in the forties.
15:04And he preferred to do something that would lead him to search for an answer.
15:07Until he decided that he had traveled to Cambridge
15:08Who will he meet in Cambridge?
15:09Isaac Newton
15:10What I'm saying is, let's guess
15:11What was Halley thinking when he went to Newton in 1684?
15:14But, my dear, he used the help of one of Newton's friends.
15:17Strange, just like Newton
15:18His name is Aberhan Demover
15:19This man, my dear, is counting the day he will die.
15:22And the shocking thing is that he actually died in it.
15:23The important thing, my dear, is that Haley will meet Newton.
15:25He asks him what he thinks about the curve the planets make.
15:27And what do you think of Kepler's laws?
15:29And how can we explain the movement of the planets around the sun?
15:31Here Newton answered with three and with ease, and asked
15:34He told him, "This is a cut-off."
15:35I know the explanation for this matter.
15:37Don't you know him or what?
15:37Here, Haley asked
15:38How did you find out about this?
15:39We're playing with drinks
15:40Did you figure out the answer that easily?
15:41This coffee is upside down
15:42Newton, my dear, in his famous way
15:44He will simply say, "I calculated it."
15:45But I don't remember where I put the accounts?
15:47He was looking through some papers he had in the drawer
15:49But unfortunately, he couldn't find the paper.
15:51The one who was calculating the reverse parenting issue
15:53The ellipse
15:53planetary motion
15:54He, my dear, dealt with his watery ideas with utmost simplicity.
15:57So I sighed for Hali
15:57He told him, "Sorry, I can't find the paper."
15:59Halley was very confused by Newton
16:01She had a dangerous relationship
16:02And I can't find the paper with the medication.
16:04the important
16:04After a lot of pressure from Halle
16:06Newton agreed that he was recalculating.
16:07And this time he publishes it on a sensual paper.
16:09Newton is indeed keeping his promise to Halle
16:11Not just this promise, my dear
16:12This does much more than that.
16:14Newton was independent for two years
16:16Two years of intense thinking and scribbling
16:18And cups of mint tea on the balcony
16:20And in the end, he presented us with his great book.
16:22Philosophia naturalis principia matmatica
16:24Now you know why, my dear
16:25When I told you that Haley's greatest achievements
16:27Newton's spectators
16:28This visit freed Newton from his entanglements.
16:30It made him go back to doing research in the natural sciences again.
16:33And it completes the work they started on the law of gravity.
16:35Also, my dear
16:36What motivated Newton to publish his words
16:38There is a scientist named Leibniz
16:40He published what he had achieved in calculus before Newton.
16:42I agree that Newton had already discovered these things.
16:44But I put it in the drawer and didn't take it out.
16:46Newton, my dear, published his book *Principia* in 1687.
16:49At the time, it was described as one of the most comprehensive books one could ever obtain.
16:53But whoever managed to reach him would find a real treasure in their hands.
16:56A book explaining the orbits of celestial bodies
16:58He explains the reasons for its movement
16:59Newton explains gravity in this book.
17:01He explains the three laws of motion.
17:03Those whose problems are driving them crazy
17:04After this explanation, most of the movements that exist in the universe remain logical.
17:08Hey, my dear, I'll give you a simple review of Newton's three laws.
17:10First, my dear Newton
17:12A stationary object remains stationary, and a moving object remains moving.
17:15No external force affected it to change its state.
17:18Okay, Abu Ahmed, fine.
17:19A stationary object remains stationary so that no one moves it.
17:22But this moving object will keep moving like this without gasoline.
17:25It is not something that can be replicated or reproduced from nothing.
17:27What are you saying?
17:28Just one year, you
17:29My dear, a moving object is acted upon by an external force that we cannot see.
17:33That's why in all your viewing on planet Earth
17:36Anything that moves stops
17:37Because there is something called gravity
17:39Because there's something called friction
17:40friction
17:41These are all things that affect something
17:43So make it stop
17:44But in space, if you let something move
17:46You will keep moving
17:47But it will continue
17:49This, my dear, leads us to Newton's second law.
17:51The second statement says
17:52If a force acts on a body of water
17:54It gives it acceleration
17:55This acceleration, my dear
17:56Which is the wheel
17:57Not the speed
17:58The extension
17:59Not philosophyte
18:00Hurry up, my dear!
18:01It is the rate of increase in speed
18:03acceleration
18:04Acceleration is not the same as speed.
18:05He tells you then
18:06This acceleration
18:06It is directly proportional
18:08With the force acting on this body
18:10And vice versa
18:11With the body mass of the body
18:12Meaning
18:12any body
18:13We had a strong influence on him
18:14Bouhamda is fake, Sidro
18:16Here, acceleration was gained
18:17His body's speed
18:18It kept increasing at a certain rate
18:20This rate
18:21The more force you hit him, the greater the impact.
18:22The more the acceleration increases
18:24Bigrami when he comes and hits her
18:25Your acceleration will be much greater
18:27Except when Professor Alaa Morsi comes and messes with it
18:30Your acceleration will be less
18:31So, the more power increases
18:33acceleration increases
18:33Well, the more my body mass increases
18:36The acceleration will decrease
18:38You, my dear, if you came and hit Alaa Morsi with a gram
18:40Bigrami will bite
18:40I'm not going to get a piece
18:41But if you came and hit my profile
18:42Is Morsi really in a relationship? No, he's just a little bit in a relationship.
18:44Do you understand, my dear? Do you understand?
18:46In the first law, my dear
18:47Objects are not affected by any force
18:49The resultant force is a row.
18:50The stationary begins as stationary, and the moving begins as moving.
18:52When we entered the second law of power
18:54Now, my dear, there's the third law, which we all know.
18:56It is said five hundred times in sixty sequences for each action.
18:59An equal and opposite reaction.
19:02Now, Muhammad, we don't have to ask.
19:03If Estes had a gram of his own, he would have punched Alaa Morsi.
19:06Does this law apply to Alaa Morsi?
19:09Should they retaliate with a blow?
19:10My dear friend, Buton is telling you that he's a greedy person.
19:12You, my dear, when you get hit like that
19:14You're not just getting hit like that
19:15Power isn't just that.
19:16Just as the restraint strongly affects your face
19:19Fushk, but he's a bit weak.
19:21It strongly affects the restriction
19:22An equal and opposite reaction.
19:25Anything that falls to the ground and breaks
19:27It is what broke due to a single force
19:28It did not break due to the reaction.
19:30When these bodies collided with each other
19:33Here, my dear
19:33The one who is in pain is Estes Alaa
19:35Your training isn't grammatically correct.
19:36But his body's reaction is
19:38On the Bigramian Reg
19:40Luyton, my dear, is also in the book.
19:41The law of universal gravitation was established
19:43Wali says that every being and everything in the universe
19:45They attract each other
19:46It means she's obsessed with attracting girls
19:48In Madra, two came
19:49Why are you all talking to me, Aman?
19:50My dear, you sit in the school
19:51It attracts everything around you
19:52Not just girls
19:53You, my dear, are attracting the ceiling and walls
19:55Even the projector and the doctor
19:57The law of universal gravitation states
19:58Any attractive force between two bodies
20:00It is directly proportional
20:01With the product of their masses
20:03And inversely, with respect to the square of the distance between them
20:05Meaning that all the two needs
20:07Their mass increases
20:08The more they attract each other
20:10And the greater the distance between them
20:12Their attraction is overwhelming
20:13That's how it is in the country.
20:15To help you with your human relationships
20:17The more you eat, the more love you'll have.
20:18Out of sight
20:19Far from the heart
20:20Put these countries together, my dear.
20:21These two sittings
20:22According to the law of universal gravitation
20:23The secret
20:23Let's go
20:24law of attraction
20:24The grain is heavier, the mass is greater
20:26And I didn't enjoy the sight
20:27He said the distance
20:27The attractor strikes
20:29This law, my dear
20:30One of the first general laws
20:33What a human mind would think
20:40I'm going along with what I've seen.
20:41That's why, my dear
20:42People were very appreciative of Newton's work in real history.
20:44This is the book of principles
20:45It was truly a hotel for all people.
20:46Newton's laws explained the needs of Keir
20:48There was no explanation for it at the time.
20:49The movement of matter and its propulsion
20:50planetary motion
20:51Projectile motion
20:52All these things people have come to accept over time.
20:54But Newton's laws, when they first came out
20:55The concept has changed among people; it has existed for a long time.
20:58And that is, praise be to God.
20:59After most people became convinced that the earth is round
21:01Ji Yuten, but he says to them
21:02According to my calculations and rules, everyone
21:05The Earth is not spherical
21:07Be careful, my dear, of Newton's laws.
21:08Centrifugal force of Earth's rotation
21:11It will cause a slight flattening at the poles
21:13And when he invaded, he flattened at the equator.
21:15You know, my dear, when you try to hold something like that
21:17And it is preferable to damage it, damage it, damage it, damage it
21:18You can't find the thing to do
21:19Pulling force
21:21She wants to run out like that
21:23Your land is being rotated by Coca-Cola, and the entire workforce is rotating.
21:25The middle of the fan is like the middle of the skirt
21:27Workers are getting bigger, bigger, bigger, bigger, bigger
21:29So it creates a shape similar to Ajdawi
21:31Because of the streptal force
21:32centrifugal force
21:33This makes the Earth's radius
21:35Not equal everywhere
21:36So, my dear, this makes Coca-Cola look bad in front of him.
21:38After all, my dear, great discoveries
21:40Newton gained unnatural fame
21:42And all the closed doors began to open to him.
21:44Newton became an important scientist
21:45His writings and important writings
21:47But my dear, you'll start to pose an obstacle for Newton.
21:50Her name is Robert Wok
21:51Dear Robert Walker, the cell's guy, blew up
21:52The one who criticized Newton for his explanation of white pressure
21:55And let him stop posting for a while.
21:57He's the same one who was sitting with Haley and drinking coffee.
21:59He told them that he knew the secret of the movement and shape of celestial bodies.
22:02But I won't tell you about it.
22:03So he decided to speak up.
22:04They accused Newton of taking the idea of ​​the inverse square law from him.
22:08Here Newton decides that he will not publish the third and final volume.
22:12From his book of principles
22:13Let's light it up
22:13Am I not a thief?
22:14I'm sick, don't make decisions that are forbidden.
22:16Now, let's see how you can lie to each other.
22:17Except for Volume 3
22:18The first two volumes
22:20They will lose much of their importance
22:21But thank God, my dear
22:23Haley the second time
22:24He is doing the second greatest achievement of his life.
22:26Newton agrees to publish his book
22:28Thank God, the volume will finally be published.
22:30Royal University
22:31The one who promised to publish the book
22:33She withdraws from publishing the topic
22:34Because young people don't have money involved.
22:36So, Ahmed wants to publish novels and specialized collections.
22:38So that he can display it at the exhibition
22:39And Jamal Zayfa lowers her clouds from her center
22:41Things like that
22:42So that ordinary people can read and understand
22:44The truth, my dear, is that this is correct.
22:46The university had published a book on the history of fish.
22:48The book was very successful and widespread.
22:50And he remained a seller
22:51And honestly, we're not very convinced.
22:52The Book of Principles
22:53It will achieve the same success as the history of fish.
22:55This book, my dear, has lost its oil.
22:56Lemon broke the world
22:57Every time a squash buys it, it opens in a squash.
22:59Manos price of the Sabeh according to weight
23:00And if you love poetry to a certain extent
23:01They told him to separate it for you
23:02Okay, my dear, I'll fix the ring, the stench won't remain.
23:04Nutt, my dear, was broke at the time and had no ability
23:07Because he published it on his account
23:08But as usual, our story is about Macali.
23:10The book is published on his own account.
23:12In rap, he was also broke.
23:14Because, my dear, he held a position before that.
23:16University writer at the university publisher
23:17Oh God, they didn't know how to publish it for Newton
23:19Because there's no budget
23:20No, my dear, he doesn't pay with his money.
23:21The rest of it is recorded in the book "History of Fish"
23:24Is this for real?
23:25Two years after my writing, my dear
23:26Specifically, the year 1689
23:28Newton is elected as a member of parliament.
23:31He spent many years in parliament.
23:32It is said that the length of these years
23:34He only speaks there once.
23:36There's only one sentence, my dear.
23:37Hey young man, could someone please put up some window coverings? It's cold outside.
23:39Is this for real?
23:40And Habib is not a friend, no
23:41Come, my dear, and look at Newton's history.
23:43How much do you feel?
23:44And how strange the world is
23:45And we still haven't produced anything, my dear.
23:47Newton, my dear, was probably someone who tried to understand himself.
23:49The matter was difficult
23:50He made it easier and understood the world
23:52Understanding how celestial bodies move
23:54and dismantling light
23:55Differential and integral calculus
23:57They understood all of this about the world
23:59Never, what is it? Goodbye
24:00And in 1692, Behani Newton suffered a nervous breakdown.
24:03Besib Al-Khair at Cambridge University for two years
24:05Goodbye, my dear, time is up. Add to the study of optics.
24:08But these studies were not published until 1704.
24:10And goodbye, my dear, he was a fool.
24:12He refused to publish his research until after Robert Hooke's death.
24:16What happened in 1703
24:17And then, my dear, what's wrong with you? You're dying.
24:18Newton takes his position
24:20He takes his position at the Royal University
24:21But before he catches her, something happens
24:23The world-renowned Leibniz is applying to the Royal University
24:26They accuse Newton of plagiarism.
24:27And Newton derived his calculations in differential and integral calculus from it.
24:30And the problem with me, my dear, is that this was something strange.
24:32Because Newton was a member of the Royal College
24:35He was on the way, and he remained its president.
24:37Even more surprising is that Newton himself achieved it.
24:39The required report on the subject of the indictment was submitted.
24:42My dear uncle, you're having a fight with one of your university classmates.
24:44I went to complain to the dean, and I found that he was the dean.
24:46And what's more, he turned out to be innocent.
24:48Of course, my dear, for the sake of historical accuracy, Newton is indeed innocent.
24:50He didn't steal
24:51But my dear, officially in 1912
24:53It is officially announced that Newton is the father of calculus.
24:57What most likely happened was that Newton and Leibniz arrived at differential and integral calculus.
25:00At the same time
25:01But each one alone
25:02Abu Ahmed's father was a natural person; one of them would take differential calculus and the other would take integral calculus.
25:05No one, my dear, likes to take integrals because they forget the constant.
25:07Newton, my dear, is the father of differential and integral calculus.
25:10And it does not include a part of differentiation and integration.
25:12So I tell you, my dear, no one who argues with Newton ever comes out victorious.
25:15Unfortunately, my dear Newton, he won't just win this time.
25:18But Newton will prevail over Hooke
25:20Newton's reaching this level will cause Hooke to lose a lot.
25:23Newton, my dear, because of his intense hatred of the hook
25:25Herzegovina experiences an exaggerated and opposing reaction to the anesthetic.
25:29His hand included his image
25:30Indeed, my dear, there was a picture of Robert Hooke attached to the Royal Collection
25:35Luton ordered it to be cut up
25:36That's why, my dear, we don't have any pictures of Hook.
25:38We don't know what it looks like.
25:39The picture that just came up isn't his.
25:41All we received about him were two written descriptions of his appearance.
25:44This was contrary to the views of most scholars of that period.
25:46Those whose appearance we know
25:47Again, my dear, from those who call themselves teachers.
25:48To diminish Hawk's achievements
25:50Hook is a great scientist, but unfortunately he played with the starlings.
25:53Shall I tell you, my dear, that in the past it was easy to counterfeit a coin?
25:56We are talking about Britain in 1696
25:59The country was suffering from a financial crisis at that time.
26:01But the Minister of Finance is determined to find a solution to this issue.
26:04Isaac Newton is appointed director of the Mint.
26:07Here Newton is making some readings
26:08Which makes it difficult for counterfeiters to forge the currency.
26:11For example, things like the weight of the currency itself
26:14After nine years, my dear, since the crisis
26:15He will receive a recommendation from the Treasury Secretary's friend who appointed him.
26:19She commends his role as director of currency integrity.
26:22So that the year 1705 would come
26:23And Isaac Newton receives the title of Secret
26:26Leave me alone, my dear
26:27Newton, what a secret!
26:28For statics, dynamics, calculus, optics, and science
26:33All these discoveries
26:35Nor the laws he put in place
26:36I have the weight of ten sakh
26:38Come on, you're just like Magdy
26:39The idea, my dear, is that over time Newton began to drift further and further from his own scientific knowledge.
26:43He felt that he was likely locking the game in science.
26:45So he returned again, insisting on studying what he had missed.
26:47He tried to calculate the age of the world by calculating the ages of the prophets.
26:50He felt that much of what he was doing
26:52More important than his scientific discoveries
26:53During this same period, specifically in the year 1711
26:56Newton enters the world of the stock market
26:58Britain establishes the Southern Sea Company
27:00So that she can get rid of her debts
27:01The company's shares were offered in exchange for money.
27:04When people buy it, the government takes it and pays off its debts.
27:07Newton, my dear, how many people bought shares in this company?
27:09Indeed, the value of the plain increased tenfold.
27:12Very late at night
27:13Newton, my dear, didn't lie.
27:14He sold his shares
27:16He earns the equivalent of one million dollars at that time.
27:18But my dear, like any investor and anyone who sees them
27:22They were ignorant of his understanding
27:23It is good that as long as he lives well, he will live many times over.
27:25But maybe it will rise again.
27:26Especially since the shares remained
27:28Its price kept increasing
27:29Fadl turns his conscience
27:30I almost waited
27:31I just had to wait a little while
27:32Why don't I buy again since the stock is going up anyway?
27:34This, my dear, is the kind of person who sells a third or a quarter of his possessions.
27:37He buys shares with it
27:38Suddenly, my dear
27:39They are the Babylonians of Taberest
27:40Everything is gone, everything is lost, everything is broken, everything has changed.
27:43The stock is falling very, very, very
27:45This is one of the first major economic bubbles.
27:48Which is known as the South Sea Bubble
27:50Unfortunately, Newton lost far more than he disbelieved.
27:53In January 1725
27:54Newton's illness worsens considerably.
27:57And he leaves his job at the mint
27:59And at the Royal University
28:00And he goes to live in Crumpley Bar
28:01With between his taghtah and his
28:02On March 31, 1727
28:05After two days of extreme fatigue and delirium
28:08Isaac Newton bids farewell to the world
28:09And here, my dear, dies Isaac Newton, this eccentric fellow.
28:13And Isaac Newton is born again, alive, remaining, and continuing.
28:17In his life and mind, everyone is interested in understanding the world.
28:20My dear friend, Isaac Newton's life was not easy at all.
28:22From the moment he opened his eyes to the world without a father
28:25His mother was captive when he was three years old, so that she could get over him.
28:27When she returned to his life, she decided to take him out of school.
28:30A child who has lost his childhood and is alone
28:31And we isolate even when he was discovering a theory or explanation
28:34He kept it to himself
28:35Because people were criticizing him
28:36But one day he decided to leave his mark on the world.
28:38But I won't just be at the school disco.
28:39Newton left his mark everywhere in the world.
28:41In physics, chemistry, astronomy, mathematics, and religion
28:44Open the book for the first year of primary school.
28:46External Exam Book
28:47Page 2235
28:48You will find Newton's First Law
28:49And he reviewed it during the revision study.
28:51Page 10
28:51Open the third-year dynamics book
28:53You will find the sayings of Newton's motion
28:55Open Al-Jaber's 3rd year textbook
28:56You will find Newton's binomial theorem
28:58Open the book of grace and perfection
28:59On which page? Because it's a factor of 3/4
29:01The factor is the science itself, of course, not the book, my dear.
29:03Look how many people Newton has influenced so far
29:05Newton is the unit of measurement for force, named after him.
29:07Einstein
29:08The most famous flag in the world
29:09He had a picture of him hanging on his cat.
29:11Side by Fard and Maxwell
29:12Newton, my dear, even though he built from a madman
29:14And I think that's true.
29:16However, he was somewhat modest.
29:17He said in one of his letters to Robert Hope
29:19If I could see beyond people
29:20That's only because I'm standing on the shoulders of giants like you.
29:23That's all, my dear.
29:24You can also stop at giants like them
29:26In past and future cases
29:28Tennis, check out the sources we went to on YouTube and subscribe to the channel.
29:30But my dear, regarding the end of the episode, let me tell you
29:32Traditional Scientific Doctor
29:33He tells you once
29:34Newton, Freddie, and Pascal
29:35They were playing hide-and-seek
29:36Individual will count
29:37All the scientists hid except Newton.
29:39Fadl stood in his place
29:40He drew a square around it with sides measuring one meter.
29:43When he finished, he was alone.
29:45Newton went and caught him
29:46Newton, what's he waiting for?
29:48You didn't catch me
29:49You're holding Newtons per square meter.
29:51You caught Pascal

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