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فسيلة - transplant
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هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات
It is a digital library containing thousands of Arabic videos in all fields.
قوائم تشغيل فسيلة
https://www.dailymotion.com/fasela/playlists
Category
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LearningTranscript
00:00Hi
00:00Hey, how are you?
00:03Okay, how are you? What's your name?
00:05Kinda
00:05And you?
00:07My name is Frang
00:07various
00:09What did you download?
00:11What is this?
00:12Rasus remained
00:13This brother treated me more
00:15Have you ever downloaded a date before?
00:17No, this is the first time
00:17I'm afraid of problems like this when I meet anyone.
00:20But after this time, they said, "This is me, with a big smile, who's fed up with me."
00:23So she took advantage of the opportunity with her silence.
00:25Why is it like this?
00:26From the sound of your voice, does it make sense that your heart is kind?
00:28Yes
00:29What's wrong with my mother's heart? It's not like that at all.
00:31I just took it like that
00:33Let's keep this situation going for about two months.
00:35But if it's after you, let it be normal, I remember.
00:39So tell me, what's the thing you like most about your appearance?
00:41I honestly don't remember what's related and what's not.
00:44Or are you just sitting there, opening your laptop?
00:47Do you mean the appearance of Ahmed Ezzi, for example?
00:50I'm not going with you, the iron guy.
00:52Is it possible to be a good person, for example?
00:54It's a bit difficult, but I'm happy with it.
00:57It's not mine, but it's available.
01:00Franco, what's your favorite song?
01:03The Angel of Death brought himself to visit you.
01:06Get ready, because it's your turn.
01:08Pew Pew
01:10I'm technically very far off like this
01:12So, if your husband needed something from you, would you give it to him normally?
01:15By God, if I love him, why would I care for both of them?
01:18What? Both of them for real?
01:20I'm telling you, you ugly ones
01:21I'm living a sweet life together
01:23Or do you like to learn about new people?
01:26Reet means
01:26One will tell me, "It's not about sustenance."
01:28good
01:29What would you think if I had a male best friend?
01:31No, no, no, no, sir, this is a fluffy lead.
01:33But only if he's in good health and doesn't smoke
01:36He won't lose anything at all.
01:37So, you Egyptians, the cigars, the sobak
01:40Raqqa was destroyed for them
01:41good
01:42If a gang comes out against us
01:44Will you pay for me?
01:45It depends on the number of bay leaves we have.
01:47But my goal is to serve you well, and I won't be intimidated by anyone.
01:50gentle and strong
01:51Cube? You look nice.
01:54Your neck
01:55And I honestly have a question I want Sally to ask
01:57period
01:58Does the shape flatten you?
01:59And you're not making this sacrifice?
02:02No, of course not.
02:02The most important thing is, who are you inside?
02:08Are you going to sit here until the opening is complete?
02:10Aren't you afraid of me?
02:12Sin
02:13Two
02:14and that
02:16any
02:18any
02:20any
02:20any
02:20any
02:22any
02:23any
02:23any
02:23any
02:23any
02:24Hey guys, why don't you choose good candidates for the program?
02:27Are you subjugating me?
02:28Why is he really saying that?
02:29He is the ugly Dahya
02:30Lana, I really loved him
02:31No, no, no
02:32No, no, no
02:34No, no, no, no, my love
02:36any
02:37any
02:38any
02:38any
02:39any
02:41any
02:42any
02:45any
02:45Dear viewers, greetings and blessings. I know you are in a new episode of the Al-Daheeh program.
02:49And love, doubt, light, you have changed size, oh
02:51Are you on a staircase?
02:52Unfortunately, if you were to run, there's nothing wrong with that.
02:54And the sweet guy recognized me, so he wanted to be a little polite.
02:55any
02:56any
02:56Exhausting, beautiful viewer, let me take you by the hand and we go to 2018
02:59What will happen?
03:03My dear, this event will change the climate of the entire planet.
03:06Mohammad, I feel there's some exaggeration here. How can a volcano change the course of the planet's climate?
03:10Hassan, my dear, the volcanic ash and light particles rose to a layer in the stratosphere.
03:15This will do what Bill Airsol Cloud is saying
03:17A pull, my dear, the size of an Australian corn cob
03:20This cloud will block sunlight, thus affecting global temperatures.
03:26My dear, it will be affected by a rate of 2 to 7 Fahrenheit.
03:29That's regarding the temperature. Let me tell you, the absence of sunlight will cause a disaster.
03:33Crops that rely on sunlight to produce our food will be completely destroyed.
03:38And there will start to be more groups in Europe and Africa.
03:41Asia is now facing a series of epidemic diseases that will not be contained.
03:46For example, new strains of cholera might emerge and kill millions in India.
03:50My dear workers, we won't reach the summer of 1816.
03:53The world will see for the first time a summer without heat or sun
03:57A year, my dear, will be called the year of the river and the summer has faded.
04:00And during these amoeolyptic conditions, the world ended in the same year.
04:05You got something important, my dear, but not in the stratosphere above.
04:08Especially, my dear, in Geneva, Switzerland
04:10There, my dear, is a gathering place for the poet Percy Shelley, his lover Mary Godwin, and the poet Lord Byron.
04:15And come, my dear Lord Byron, he will announce a wager that will shake the foundations of pessimism.
04:19The three of us will hold a competition
04:21Who among us is the best at writing a scary story?
04:23The story has to be scarier than a summer without sunshine.
04:26My dear, you should be trying to climb and get out of this foggy state of terror.
04:30Since reality is a very terrifying atmosphere
04:32So we'll create a scare that will frighten us even more than the atmosphere, so we'll feel like the atmosphere is normal.
04:35Thank God we're not like the people in the story we imagined.
04:38No, my dear, that bet could have passed.
04:40But removing the bet will turn into one of the most important bets in Adam's history.
04:45Mali says at the time that she is the opposite of Byron and Shelley
04:47I didn't think about the easy thing.
04:48My dear, she won't decide to take the easy way out and think about the wrath of nature and the universe.
04:53Linma thought she was writing a story about human nature.
04:56Nature, whose evils are coming, is more terrifying than volcanoes, storms, and this kind of weather.
05:01And my dear, the thought of something terrifying, financially speaking, will come to her like a terrifying mouse.
05:06And I'm amazed to see a young man kneeling next to a hideous body, stitched together from pieces, each piece from the other.
05:12Behind this scene is a camera.
05:15As soon as this motor starts working and the body begins to move and its limbs begin to move.
05:20My dear, you'll wake up terrified and start writing what literature calls Frankenstein.
05:25The story of Al-Azizi, in short, revolves around Victor Frankenstein.
05:29A young man interested in science, after the death of his mother, will think of a way to bring bodies back to life.
05:34Frankenstein, my dear, this doctor will steal bodies from cemeteries and execution grounds.
05:39And my dear, he starts gathering the members and the gangs, as if he's making a gaming case and then he electrifies them.
05:45This electric shock causes the body to regain life.
05:49Frankenstein was convinced that taking this electricity would create a perfect creature.
05:52But what actually happened was that the result was a terrifying monster, something tall, about eight times the height of a human, with yellow skin.
06:01Double
06:01Stitches and threads were present all over his body.
06:04That's why, dear Dr. Frankenstein, you'll be terrified of this creature.
06:08He's so hot, I don't know him.
06:09Isn't that right, my dear? This is the most disgusting thing that ever happened to this creature, and he's going to decide to banish it forever.
06:15Dr. Frankenstein had no embraces or patrons; they traveled the world only to leave him alone and ostracized.
06:19This story, my dear, I don't need to tell you that it will become one of the masterpieces of world literature.
06:23Before, my dear, there were Frankenstein's stories, there were horror stories and there were scientific experiments.
06:27This was the first time someone had taken scientific experiments and combined them with horror stories.
06:31He's bringing an experience into a literary work that's never been done before.
06:35That's why, after this text, you'll name Mary Shelley, who ruined this story, as...
06:38The mother of science fiction
06:40The author of the first science fiction novel in history
06:42The novel that Mary printed, barely 500 copies, without even putting her name on it.
06:47The novel will tour all of Europe and within 200 years it will become an icon
06:52More than 90 dramatic adaptations will be made from it, my dear.
06:55It will be featured in more than 70 films.
06:57Starting with Frankenstein 1910, which was produced by Thomas Adelson's film company
07:01And the distance, my dear, is considered the first truly American horror film.
07:04Is what you're saying strange, Abu Hamad?
07:06What's so strange about that, my dear?
07:07If Say is a woman who writes a great literary work
07:09That's what you're saying, my dear.
07:10You need an ideation process
07:12You need to undergo mental sterilization.
07:14Buhamad, asking questions isn't a bad thing.
07:15No, the questions you're asking are inappropriate.
07:17Okay, I'm sorry, Abu Hamad.
07:18The important thing, my dear, is that after I made you regret your mistake and made you apologize for a mistake you didn't even make.
07:22I'll talk to you about Mary Shelley, just like you asked.
07:24Now, my dear, let's talk about the person behind this terrifying story.
07:28Who is Mary Shelley?
07:29Is her life really that terrifying?
07:32Mary Shelley was a delicate, romantic 19-year-old girl.
07:35It's only natural, my dear, that you'd ask how a girl could be so beautiful.
07:37She decided she was writing a novel this brutal.
07:40Especially the book "The Women" at that time was for Layla
07:42Most of his novels were romances or social novels.
07:46For example, Jane Austen
07:47It's different, my dear, in Mary; she's the daughter of the philosopher William Godwin.
07:50And also the diary of Mary Wollstonecraft
07:53Play, my dear philosopher, and call for freedom, and please the government.
07:56And he wrote about the English resistance after the French Revolution.
07:59And mother, my dear, some people call her the founder of feminism.
08:02Feminist Foundation
08:04And her book is still being written about by people to this day.
08:07The mother was brave and bold, and she had readers throughout Europe.
08:10But my dear, let me tell you, it was before she surpassed Godwin
08:13The world was captivated by each one individually.
08:14This is my dear lady in Qarara 18
08:15So, before a little while, there was a founder of the organization.
08:18I got tired of eating.
08:18In circumstances like these, it's natural for a daughter to be rebellious and independent.
08:22Come on, dear, she was also a shepherd.
08:23Her father named her Mercury
08:25The girl from Zaqbaqiya, that's how she is, she has no grip
08:27Blessings have been bestowed
08:28Come on, dear, you might assume that these traits come from her mother.
08:31Come on, let's be surprised that Mary has never seen her mother.
08:34Because the nation will die just 16 days after Mary's birth
08:37She is affected by complications of childbirth.
08:39This is my dear, Heamel, the turf at Mary's
08:43She feels that she killed her mother
08:44She was the cause of this great woman's death
08:47If Mary Shelley hadn't come into the world, her mother would never have died.
08:50And this is possible, my dear, as you say.
08:51The first similarity between it and Chased Victor
08:53Victor Frankenstein
08:54The one who was his motive in the story
08:56The catalyst for these events was the death of his mother.
08:58Mary, my dear, doesn't know how to bring her mother back to life.
09:00But she'll know how to live her life.
09:01A life of independence and freedom
09:03Independence, my dear
09:04It will turn into a sink
09:05When Mary falls in love with the poet Percy Shelley
09:08And she ran away with her from her father's house
09:10Her father, whose anger towards her will be insane
09:13And when Mary finds out with her boyfriend
09:14Her father will be furious over the religion.
09:16Why? Because his daughter is still a child.
09:18She is 16 years old
09:18And Percy is also a married man.
09:20But my dear Mary, she will stick to her choice.
09:22Mary behind the scenes
09:23To write Frankenstein
09:24You will take nine full jobs
09:25It's exactly like a childbirth.
09:27Birth, my dear Mary, of Frankenstein
09:29It will be a successful birth
09:30This is in contrast to her life as a mother.
09:31She lives with Percy
09:32Because let me tell you
09:33It is from 1915 to 19
09:35The period during which Frankenstein was written
09:38During this period, my dear
09:38Mary will try to conceive four times
09:40You will lose three
09:41Most of them are in a very captive period of birth
09:43That's why
09:44The idea of pregnancy and childbirth will turn into a nightmare for her.
09:46Instead of being a life cycle
09:48It will be a death cycle
09:49Instead of witnessing new generations
09:50You will live longer than her.
09:51And she will rise for a group of the dead
09:53Mary will say, after Clara's death, that she is her daughter
09:55He who lived through eight months, but
09:56She dreamt that her daughter came back to life.
09:58But when she stood up
09:59I found nothing but a near-coldness
10:00Not available
10:01Now, my dear
10:02When you find out about this writer's background
10:04You can understand the character of Victor Frankenstein
10:07Now you can understand
10:08Why Victor
10:08I think he will be able to create from the cycle of life
10:11A beautiful and cute creature, like a baby
10:12But Enza Process created a cycle of death and a terrifying monster
10:16Closer to the world of satiation
10:17From the world of life and humans
10:18Mary, my dear
10:19I now call her Mary Shelley
10:20Percy the Chilean is trying to trick her
10:22She will revise her novel over the course of 15 years.
10:25And every modification, my dear
10:27It will make the events more exciting.
10:28But this, my dear, wasn't the most important adjustment that happens every time.
10:31Like I'm telling you, every copy of the novel
10:33The personality of this monster changes
10:35The beast with the modifications
10:37It transforms from a Hamji entity
10:39To a being despite its form
10:40His evil lies in his desire for revenge and his desire to do all of this.
10:43To an entity you sympathize with
10:45An entity that doesn't shout and roar and wants to prey
10:47As it appears later in the films
10:48But, my dear, we will see it.
10:50He is a being who can express his suffering with tenderness and philosophy
10:53And he summarizes this suffering in a line where he says
10:55I am alone and miserable
10:56Tell me someone as ugly as I am
10:58Could love me
10:59I am lonely and miserable
11:00No one in the world will love me.
11:02Except for an ugly person like me
11:03Many books, my dear, they thought for years
11:05Why did Mary make her monster such a target of sympathy?
11:07Although the monster in this novel
11:09The beloved Victor's body, which he created
11:11To take revenge on them
11:12But what's amazing about this story
11:14This monster
11:15He sees him doing this evil.
11:16But you sympathize with his suffering.
11:18The poet in Yuna Samson
11:19In her book
11:20In search of Barry Shelley
11:21You would say that Mary was similar to Victor
11:23The one after his mother's death
11:24He decided he was trying to bring the dead back to life.
11:26But, my dear,
11:27And the surprise is that Mary will look much more like the monster.
11:30any?
11:30It means Abu Hamida will resemble the monster.
11:32I'll tell you something, my dear, and then go back to university.
11:33So I know you can't sleep without this information
11:36In the year 1816
11:38It is the same year
11:39The one where Frankenstein's dream began
11:40The poet's first wife
11:42So, what was he doing, leaving her and running away?
11:43What are you going to do, my dear?
11:44She will kill herself
11:45She committed suicide because her husband ran away from her.
11:48And I loved him
11:48Mary
11:49What happened at the same time that Mary's sister Fanny was
11:51She is Mary's half-sister
11:53She also committed suicide
11:54for him?
11:55Because she felt she had lived her life in the shadows
11:57Because it is the fruit of an illegitimate relationship
12:00Between Big Mother Mary and another American man
12:02We can say, my dear, that Mary ran away from her father.
12:05I committed suicide because there was no future.
12:06Also, my dear
12:07There is a woman named Shaad who says that Fanny had a crush on the poet.
12:10Percy Shelley
12:11Who is this?
12:11Her sister's lover
12:12Mary
12:13With us, my dear, Mary has escaped from life.
12:15The one who is dying, you dream of her
12:16And also, Na'im is with her lover.
12:17Sanson will say that Mary's description of the monster
12:19The work of Victor Wachstein
12:21He described him as lonely, ugly, and unable to find anyone to love him.
12:23It is exactly the same as Mary's description.
12:25And her vision of her sister Fanny's insults
12:27Just as the monster and their hearts
12:29The monster had no part in their suffering.
12:30This was because of Victor
12:31The doctor who built
12:32The sister's loneliness and loss of love and care
12:35Mary was one of their reasons
12:36Mary, who saw that from the moment of her birth
12:38She was a source of pain and suffering to those around her.
12:40And it contains both
12:41It contains Victor, the doctor.
12:43And in it is a beast
12:44The paradox will be reinforced by the general culture.
12:47Towards the novel
12:47People, my dear, by the way
12:48You'll name the monster Frankenstein
12:50While that was the name of the science he created
12:52Not the monster's name
12:52You see the monster
12:53Frankenstein's fashion
12:54No, that's a Frankenstein monster.
12:56And that, my dear, was the same
12:57Mary Shelley's Feeling
12:58The one who saw that all people
12:59You will read the monster
13:00And it will monopolize
13:01Although, my dear, the monster's sway in the story
13:03He is Victor
13:03Victor Frankenstein
13:04The story of Frankenstein, my dear
13:06It will truly terrify people.
13:07And this guy is screaming, my dear, in her very first theatrical performance.
13:091823
13:11In English, Oberhaus
13:12Why, my dear, will warnings be put up?
13:13No women or children allowed
13:15What's up, my dear? Are you going to the show?
13:16And you will be surprised by terrified men
13:18And the women faint
13:19Perhaps, my dear
13:20The value of people at that time
13:20I hadn't seen anything like fairy tales.
13:22But it's a very, very, very protective story.
13:23Jaya will easily get it in their time
13:25Let me tell you how
13:25If you opened the novel Frankenstein, my dear
13:27You'll find a clip that says in Victor
13:28If a lecturer attends on electricity
13:30It made him abandon all other sciences
13:32A lecture discussing what is called galvanism
13:34And while, my dear, this is a fictional scene
13:36In a fictional novel
13:37Galvanism was a real and existing concept.
13:40This was a concept that worked for all of Europe.
13:41In the 18th and 19th centuries
13:43At the end of the 18th century
13:44The Enlightenment was in its corner
13:46My dear, this is not a scientific era like today.
13:48But he was very receptive to the idea of scientific experimentation.
13:51An era in which we learned more about anatomy
13:53And that the human body is generally like a machine
13:55Every part of it has a presence
13:56Electricity was trendy back then
13:58Any scientific experiment that is stuck in it
13:59Adding electricity doesn't work, it's not a problem.
14:01He was dressed like a pistachio, my dear.
14:02This charged one is sweet
14:05At that time the Italian world
14:06Luigi Galvani
14:07He will conduct an experiment in which he will use
14:09This trending discovery
14:10He'll get up, my dear, and go to the frog.
14:11He passes electricity through his body.
14:13And here he will be surprised
14:14The frog's limbs are twitching
14:16Of course, my dear, the view
14:18At that time he was shaking
14:19But that's easy to explain now.
14:21What happened simply
14:22It is a muscle contraction
14:24As a result of electrical activity in the nerves
14:26Just as the corpse is crushed, it becomes bruised.
14:27The body is lifeless
14:29The body was damaged, but electricity passed through it.
14:31Just like you saw in the movies
14:32Cardiac resuscitation attempts
14:33It might succeed
14:34It might fail
14:35normal
14:35But its duchess, Galvani
14:37He will deduce a completely different theory.
14:38This theory will be a pioneering work in chemistry and biology.
14:41Theory of Electricity
14:43This theory says that the creatures inside
14:44Internezek Electricity
14:46This is what makes the muscle move.
14:48Why would a theory create frightening ambitions among scientists?
14:50If humans had bodies powered by electricity
14:52But with that, by the Prophet's goodness
14:54If the machine stops, we won't be able to start it again.
14:56And that's how the aunts can return.
14:57And Ahmed, be careful, the words are getting bigger than you.
14:59My dear, what's this? I want to tell you that there are scholars who perform Hajj.
15:02Alessandro Volta
15:03The one whose name is Volt
15:05Please, a man who's good with electricity, that is.
15:06Senior pilot source
15:07This man says, "Hey everyone!"
15:08Stop being silly
15:09Our bodies don't emit electricity
15:10The news might pass through it, pilot
15:12So, meet
15:13That's all there is to it.
15:14any?
15:15Sorry, my dear, Volta was a little hesitant.
15:17In the middle of it there was some resistance
15:18Hahaha
15:19But despite Volta's words
15:20The theory will become very widespread.
15:22We'll try waking people up with electricity.
15:23Galvani will find his experience
15:25In the courtyards of the larts and the akhnin
15:27In the squares and in the clocks of London
15:28It will be a global trend
15:29They bring in a big media figure
15:30If she had been there at the time, she would have honestly taken a picture with the man.
15:32The man is clearly suggesting death by electrocution.
15:34Does he tell you, my dear, that another idea will lead you to something new?
15:36When Giovanni Aldini's son, Jogalvani
15:38He will apply his uncle's theory to humans.
15:40On January 18, 1983
15:42Giovanni will take the executioner's share.
15:45George Folster
15:46And the electric pilot passes through it, my dear.
15:48Come on, Muhammad, the man will get up, I swear!
15:50Well, who said no, Muhammad? The man is using electricity.
15:52My dear, if the experiment had been successful, no one would have known.
15:54Back in our day, we all walked around with a type C in our navels.
15:56You'll get a little tired
15:57Mahi fi al-Mahi
15:58Okay
15:58Of course, my dear, the experiment will fail.
16:00But the people of Akila did not let go of the body while he was trembling.
16:03Bert's trembling
16:03His eyes open and his hands move from the force of the electricity.
16:06And that's exactly the story of Frankenstein.
16:08People thought the body had returned to life, when in fact it was a certainty.
16:11That's why people saw Frankenstein's horror as a frightening extension
16:15A terrifying prediction of a need that could actually happen
16:17The idea seemed normal at the time.
16:19Not only that
16:20Fawakhir decided 18
16:21The Walaba will face difficulty in diagnosing loyalty to the dead.
16:24Lynn? Are you feeling very well?
16:25Especially those who drowned, after my dear friend announced their death in Lyon, he was so overwhelmed.
16:28The Sudanese are preparing the coffee, and the sheikh is reciting.
16:31The deceased met his father and took his honor.
16:32Thank you to the one who made you, how many men!
16:33He told them, "Isn't this the one I dreamt about and mourned?"
16:34Based on these incidents
16:36Let me establish what is known as the England Roya Human Society
16:40This Muhammad was founded because people who appeared to have died and were born again
16:42My dear
16:43He will also learn about the Society of Coward Persons
16:46Abiran Kidron
16:47Here, dear reader, this organization will provide tips for resuscitation after drowning.
16:51Tips for confirming the death of a drowned person
16:53Their slogan will be a Latin word that translates to
16:55A spark of life can be lost
16:57This country in front of you, my dear
16:59It was published under the title "Risks of Paying Before the First"
17:01It will become widespread in 1816
17:03This, my dear, if you recall, was the same year as the poets' meeting.
17:06And the strange bet between them
17:07And the dream is like Frankenstein
17:09That's why the idea of coffins will become widespread at that time.
17:11The one designed in a way
17:12So that if the buried person turned out to be alive, he wouldn't have died.
17:15He can cry for help
17:16They put a canister in it so he can blow into it.
17:18People are scooping up information from above that he's still alive.
17:20Or they might break a bell from the door
17:21Or he crosses Morse code
17:23And my dear, the people were terrified.
17:25We as a global community
17:26We don't know when a dead person is considered dead.
17:29Is he dead, or is he seeing the truth, or what's the story?
17:31The line between death and life is not clear.
17:34So when the world from these countries comes and tells you that we can, guys
17:36We bring back the dead with an electric charge
17:38It's easy if you believe.
17:40In his article
17:43Biologist Stephen G. will say
17:45Victor Frankenstein was not evil.
17:47He was satisfied with the scientists of his time in their experiment.
17:49He shares their ambitions, beliefs, and ideas.
17:52But his problem was that he didn't accept the result he received.
17:54Don't accept the creature that he created
17:56He did not take responsibility for his experience.
17:57And this, my dear, was because Mary Shelley wrote the characters' lives in a way
18:01To express all her feelings of longing
18:03Her feelings of obligation towards her mother, her feelings of obligation towards her sister, and her feelings of obligation towards the wife of the man who committed suicide.
18:09But my dear, setting aside Mary's personal complex
18:12This novel will create a negative feeling towards the advancement of science.
18:15One imagination mocks the first science fiction novel
18:18To tell people that all scientific attempts
18:20It's very time for a scary monster to swallow us up.
18:22Academic Richard Holmes in his 2016 article in the prestigious journal Nature
18:26Frankenstein is described as one of the greatest novels ever written, but at the same time one of the most subversive attacks ever written.
18:35Modern science
18:36It's literaryally superior to what we have to offer, but the scientific content of it is questionable.
18:39My dear friend, people these days, whenever they see a new invention or a slightly unsettling scientific idea, they describe it with a single term.
18:45Frankenscience is working for me, so AI will come and feel lonely, feel ugly, be unable to shrink, be unable to get married, be unable
18:53It is related
18:53What's wrong with our societies? Oh, this is Frankenscience, something like AI has appeared, I don't understand it well
18:59He might turn evil later on; I feel like that way we won't see his benefits and will only be thinking about how he might harm us in the future.
19:04I won't burden you, Abu Ahmed, at all. I've planned this day very carefully; he'll never take up your work.
19:08Why, my dear? Because I don't understand why I work; I work, but in life, I don't work.
19:12I don't drink anything, just
19:12According to Holmes in Frankenstein, a literary novel from 200 years ago
19:16She remained present in any new refresher about AI, genomics, or nuclear technology
19:20In 1977, the mayor of Timridge, Massachusetts, was sent
19:25Alfred Velucci's remarkable speech to the president of the National Academy of Sciences
19:29Speak, my dear, with the words of the world's mayor
19:31He says, my dear, that he is now saying that he heard talk about a strange creature.
19:35It means that people appeared in the street.
19:37And people again say that there was a man who was walking with his children when he met a hairy monster nine feet tall
19:41He will conclude with the phrase, "Please ensure the safety of the nuclear program, especially in the New Hampshire area."
19:46And may they last forever, my dear world.
19:47Her dear, she has a part in the mayor's ascents with Harvard University.
19:50The one in the seventies was doing a lab using recumbent technology, that's what we call a new
19:54This, my dear, is a technique for treating nuclear kernels.
19:56Genes combine with other genes
19:58Its design and its letters, my dear
19:59The mayor, my dear, will try to pressure them to stop this kind of experimentation.
20:02We don't know what kind of monsters might appear before us.
20:04And he will bring her to them fasting in the brothel
20:06The zesza element
20:06Oof Dr. Frankenstein's Dream
20:08Frankenstein's dreams come true
20:09Hanna began in Samen the monster
20:10okay
20:11Okay, say
20:11A thousand times, the mayor will be famous for his hatred of academia and Harvard University.
20:15But, my dear, to be fair
20:16His fears were not at one
20:181974
20:19The scientist Paul Berg and the two scientists who won the Nobel Prize in Physicians.
20:22James Watson and David Piltibor
20:24They will write a letter to the scientific community.
20:26To stop the voluntary testing of the religion.
20:29This is because a tower participated in modified experiments on a bacterium called E. coli.
20:33It led to the production of genes
20:35It is possible, according to what they believed at the time
20:37What is she doing?
20:38It causes tumors
20:39The fear here is that there is a need like this
20:41If you leave the lab, you could cause disasters.
20:43This speech will make Cambridge the first city
20:46Look out for 1977
20:47A law regulating the manipulation of the Hamd al-Nawi
20:49And the one in Al-Bawazna, my dear, is still in use today.
20:52But my dear, Alfeld the mayor's fears will continue.
20:55Come, my dear, let's jump forward in time 40 years and go to Noah 2015
20:59The tower that's moving away is Baltimore; a new speech and a new warning.
21:03So, my dear, a new technology known as CRISPR-Cas9 is emerging.
21:06The speeches, my dear, call for transparency and caution when using this technology.
21:12The credit goes to you, Muhammad, in your field. Explain to us.
21:14Or for 4 years you used to go to the potato sandwich shop
21:16I'm not saying it's from my dear
21:17Perhaps, my dear, technology remains a Western necessity that has led us to what Victor Frankenstein did.
21:22Here, my dear, we don't need surgeons' scalpels or electric motors.
21:25But you need two things: an R&A molecule and an enzyme.
21:27Why did this warning happen, my dear?
21:29The story begins 3 years ago and is strange
21:30Is this 2012 year showing up, or is it just scientific nonsense, guys?
21:33We found Gene Editing Tool
21:35Performance for gene editing and modification
21:38Like Kreta Player when you do it in the game
21:40Look, the player you're making is tall and has the name of a winger, striker, defender, anything.
21:45This performance will make the researchers who discovered it deserve a drum prize.
21:48One, my dear, is famous; her name is Gene Fardoudna.
21:50Emmanuel Charpin Ter
21:51He means by the process of counting the gardens
21:52Explain to me
21:53My dear, it seems you have a gene causing problems with the DNA.
21:56We'll start, my dear, by addressing these problems.
21:58We work on the problems, my dear, using the Cas9 enzyme.
22:01This guy, my dear, has a penalty scissors.
22:03My dear, we have a very small pair of scissors that can cut any part of the DNA we want.
22:07You'll ask me how I'll find out.
22:09Here's where a piece we call guide RNA comes in.
22:12This, my dear, is an RNA sequence.
22:13Designed so that it completes the sequence of the nuclear part
22:17The night I was supposed to beg for
22:18And the first thing my dear friend says when he arrives and gets fed up is, "From this cup, nine."
22:28He doesn't need to look around and see which parts are usable.
22:31He doesn't need to go to morgues or cemeteries to find limbs.
22:34It can search inside the body for suitable defects
22:37And he changes what he doesn't know about it
22:38A revolutionary technology that can target any part of the virus's nucleus.
22:42And his mother was destroyed
22:43Not only that, my dear
22:44You can use it to improve agricultural and animal breeds.
22:47Well, Abu Emad, this is just great talk, absolutely brilliant!
22:50And congratulations to those who did it and deserved the Nobel Prize.
22:52Why is that?
22:53Warning letters followed, like those of Professor Biltmore and his friend.
22:56Countries that impose on cemeteries are located
22:58Those who are standing in the way of progress
22:59And don't let this be unscientific like the non-Finnish ones.
23:01No, my dear, my good friend
23:02Oh, just take it, little one
23:03My dear, just two years after Burgess's speech in 2015
23:06You will arrive at something extremely dangerous.
23:08He will be stunned thanks to this technology.
23:09Dr. Victor Frankenstein
23:11the truth
23:122018
23:13The medical community will be surprised
23:15Why the Chinese world
23:17Hey Jankyo
23:18He will appear at the Hong Kong conference
23:19He announces that it is thanks to Chris Parkas Nine's technology
23:21Gene editing
23:23Two newborns
23:24Human malfeasance
23:25Lulu and Nana
23:26These two newborns, my dear
23:28They will have lifelong immunity
23:30HIV
23:32The one who causes AIDS
23:33An idea, my dear
23:34This man studied and solved
23:35I am aware that some people have genetic variations.
23:37It prevents them from contracting HIV.
23:39He told you
23:40So why don't we make this genetic mutation?
23:42Two newborns
23:43And this is in a different form
23:44It makes me able to protect them
23:46If they ever get a visit like that
23:47And that's how you become the first gene.
23:49In history
23:51The man, my dear, will be finished here.
23:52It will be described in medical communities
23:54In His name is one
23:55The
23:56And the Chinese government will take action against him.
23:58He was sentenced to three years in prison.
24:00A fine of 3 million yuan
24:02They don't lose a yuan
24:03And the government's director, Hazizi, will describe him as someone who violated medical regulations.
24:06Rather, he is a person driven by a desire for glory and wealth.
24:09He does not have sufficient qualifications to practice these sciences.
24:11And this is on the occasion of, my dear
24:12The same description as Victor Frankenstein
24:14A person obsessed with knowledge and glory
24:16But he doesn't have prestigious degrees.
24:17Netrifeva
24:18To him
24:18Just a second, Dad
24:19So this is our reward for the man's ear?
24:21The one who tried to accomplish a very great feat
24:24And He protects these girls
24:25Because they get diseases
24:26By God, my dear
24:27To begin with, some opinions
24:28I doubt his scientific achievement.
24:30This
24:30Because he didn't do a study, Akram
24:31And also because he concealed the mother's identity
24:33Doctor of Humanities at Columbia University
24:35Rachel Adams
24:36And the child's mother also had a genie
24:38You'll say that he hid the mother's identity from the scene.
24:40Ah, it's very important for medical ethics.
24:42But let us, as scientists
24:43We cannot verify the accuracy of this experiment.
24:45And here she appears as a new Frankenstein
24:47A person who seems to have created embryos and creatures
24:50Through a scientific experiment in a laboratory
24:51Not through a mother and natural birth
24:54But my dear, the fundamental mistake
24:55This will make the medical community focus on this world.
24:58He broke all the rules that scientists had established.
25:01Scientists were afraid of an idea called
25:03We have decorated babies
25:04Everyone will now be designing me for the children
25:06Something terrifying and frightening
25:07What's frightening, my dear, about this idea
25:09This might take us back to the idea of eugenics.
25:11Eugenia supposedly ended
25:13Nazi era
25:14Now you can use this technology effectively.
25:16To create sweat
25:18This, my dear, will be the new eugenics.
25:20We won't be bothered by the hard work, my friend.
25:22We will do it
25:22And this, my dear, is if our religion is not on the straight path.
25:24This will lead to a constitution
25:25Dreaming of people who are capable of changing their children's lives
25:28So that they are stronger, or smarter, or more beautiful
25:30This is a second thing you can't do because you don't have the money.
25:32Of course, my dear, you can imagine what this could do to opportunities.
25:34Which doesn't even suit you
25:35This idea, my dear, has created limitations on this scenario.
25:38For example, the call for genetic modification
25:40This only happens in cases of severe illness.
25:42Or what is called Somatic Shin Therapy
25:44We fear we might fix a defective gene.
25:46So that it is not passed on to the children
25:47But there's no such thing as going in and inventing and making modifications.
25:50And needs increase while needs decrease
25:52We're not at Sultan's, we'll make you a pie to your liking.
25:54Your uncle, my dear, is
25:55This man is the Frankenstein of China, defying all of that.
25:57Let's assume that this achievement was accomplished.
25:59So he gave an advantage to children who are not blind.
26:01They are immune to the virus.
26:02superpower
26:02And if that happens, they might pass these traits on to their offspring.
26:05And this creates this group of people
26:07They have machines that give them an edge.
26:09In the novel Frankenstein, whose boundaries are endless
26:11With Victor's death and the disappearance of the monster
26:12In reference to the fact that part of justice is a right
26:14Mad Doctor Man
26:15And also part of the narrative for the reader is that the monster continues
26:18Mumtish
26:18Actually, my dear
26:19The doctor didn't disappear or die like Frankenstein.
26:21But he will be removed from the record in 2022
26:23He will say that Janua has testimonials from more than 200 patients.
26:26A disease called Dusan muscular dystrophy
26:29This, my dear, is a genetic disease that affects the muscles.
26:31The two deceased patients were begging the doctor.
26:33He's going back to complete his research to help them.
26:35Because they have a genetic disease
26:36And my dear, he confirms that he will continue with the Sparks 9 book technology.
26:39But he will try harder to follow the rules.
26:42Between Chile, my dear, when she came to write Frankenstein
26:45You will add a subtitle to the novel.
26:46The Modern Prometheus
26:48In reference to the famous story of Prometheus
26:50The human who stole fire from the gods and gave it to humans
26:52The fire is here, my dear, symbol of knowledge.
26:53But my dear, the consequences of this action
26:55He will be punished by Zeus
26:56By way of a bird coming every day and pecking at his liver
26:59Mary tells us that Frankenstein is a revival of the same myth.
27:02Prometheus was punished because this was a supernatural ability known only to humans.
27:06Those who are an inferior gender
27:07A gender that wouldn't be able to deal wisely with a superpower of this magnitude
27:11With important knowledge
27:12Prometheus' fire will teach humans cooking and guarding.
27:15But at the same time, it will cause wars forever.
27:17And science, my dear, is always capable of serving two purposes.
27:18Good and evil
27:19Mary was dividing her time, which was about 200 years ago.
27:22It is a terrifying scientific advancement; it is the depths of humanity.
27:24If only, my dear, you would reflect and see
27:26You'll find that the irony is that the most famous book after that takes the name Prometheus.
27:30He is American Prometheus
27:31The famous book about the life of Whom?
27:33Bennheimer
27:33And Benheimer, who is very similar to Victor Frankenstein
27:37Benheimer says that you only see something beautiful from an artistic point of view.
27:40You go ahead and do it.
27:42You can argue about what can be done about it.
27:45And Benheimer, my dear, will say that when you see something beautiful
27:47Go ahead and do it while you're still on the back
27:49When you succeed, then you can argue and discuss.
27:51Do you know what to do with it?
27:52The important thing is that you downloaded it
27:53And Benheimer, my dear, is exactly like Frankenstein.
27:56Fascinated by a terrifying invention
27:57He says the important thing is that he achieved it, as long as it's beautiful.
27:59I just want to know what he does.
28:00I swear, when I do it, we'll think about it.
28:02What are its implications?
28:03Will it have negative effects?
28:04No taxes or levies?
28:05We'll think about that next.
28:06According to the philosophy professor, the names are numerous.
28:08Perhaps the time of Chile 200 years ago
28:09Or the time of Benheimer from 70 years ago
28:11Very similar to Frankenstein
28:12But the present time is the greatest time for Frankenstein
28:15My dear, the current generation has many times the arrogance and vanity of Frankenstein.
28:18Because he has tools that are much more precise than Frankenstein's.
28:21Tools that capture the gene in the nuclear nucleus
28:23This is how humans are perceived when they see humans as machines.
28:25They were under the impression that they had turned it into electricity.
28:27The danger, my dear, is not in the emergence of a genetically modified monster.
28:30Nor is there any artificial intelligence that could kill humans.
28:32We really haven't reached that point yet.
28:33But we arrived at a philosophical conclusion
28:35When you make us see humans as machines
28:37We use them as tools
28:38Just like Frankenstein envisioned his project
28:40And this, my dear, in another way makes us victims
28:42Victims of science instead of science serving us
28:45We are the Frankenstein generation at the peak of our progress and the peak of our arrogance.
28:48But the difference is that we're real, not in control.
28:50And we might end up being the victim tied to Dr. Victor's table.
28:53That's why, my dear, the story of Frankenstein isn't about a scary monster who's 200 years old.
28:57It's a story about our own internal evils.
28:59Our evils that we are afraid to admit are within us
29:01Or, as the poet says in Yuna Samson
29:03We are fascinated by the way we sometimes identify with Frankenstein.
29:06They sold us out of fear and we passed by the pebbles with arrogance
29:08This story, dear, isn't about a monster that looks strange to us.
29:11This story is about aspects of a monster that exists and resides within us.
29:14We are living in Frankenstein's time, experiencing its most glorious era.
29:18My dear, we live in a time filled with arrogance and advanced technology.
29:21And capital burns all of this
29:23Trump
29:23That's it, my dear, good or not last
29:25Let's see the next ones.
29:26Just look at the links and we'll subscribe to the YouTube channel.
29:28I know, my dear, that Frankenstein's favorite script is the monstrous script.
29:31By God, Abu Hamel, there is no one more monstrous in the world than you and your nonsense.
29:34Your words are like the wax of a beast, not like the rustling of a human being.