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فسيلة - transplant
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00:00Brothers, reconsider your actions.
00:02The most detestable of permissible things in the sight of God
00:04divorce
00:05What's up, Lord?
00:06There were three shots
00:08The two most truthful warnings
00:09red card
00:10What are you saying, Your Honor?
00:12Na ya, the president of the referees' union
00:14And the pampered child of the Football Association
00:15Good boys
00:17Don't you have children?
00:19We have
00:19Lena and Colina
00:21Collina
00:22yeah
00:22Lina is normal
00:23And Collina
00:25Z Co Director
00:26or Co-founder
00:28Or Co Amerishan
00:29natural name means
00:31You're a liar, my lord.
00:32This is named after the Kora referee.
00:33to imagine
00:34A girl named after the judge Kora
00:36I swear to you by the honor of the rulers
00:38It has nothing to do with Colina
00:39The brilliant star
00:40In the world of arbitration
00:41Okay, look for Rain
00:42I swear, I see
00:43It's better to go back to the divorce proceedings.
00:45Heh, you're looking
00:45Don't look for me, I'm scared
00:46Just let it spin, my lord
00:48And you see
00:48I think, young man, that's healthy.
00:49De Colina
00:51The greatest Italian ruler
00:53Every breath he takes
00:54It is life for me
00:56See the obsession
00:57I think the result is already decided, Your Excellency.
00:59I think I'll be upset
01:00I'm going to invite you now.
01:02All my shots will be free kicks
01:03As for the three months of waiting period
01:05And then you hear the new change
01:06People, please calm down and seek guidance from God.
01:08We don't want to be honored again
01:10Let's take extra time
01:11By God, our master
01:12Every minute I counted together
01:14It was a wasted time
01:15entire
01:15That means there wasn't a single confirmed goal.
01:17Maybe at the beginning of the first shot
01:19But where are we and where is the first shot?
01:22We're still in it
01:23There's still a chance for a draw
01:25And from the knowledge
01:26Is there still a chance to win?
01:28If we get back together
01:29You'll be a normal human being
01:31And this invalidates the work of the rulers.
01:33This is a decision made without thinking.
01:35naturally
01:37After I return to the mouse
01:40No, Ba
01:40We see Lana as the rulers of Sin
01:42I'm saying we should finalize the divorce proceedings.
01:45And we conclude this marriage
01:47Can I please tolerate them?
01:49With God's blessing
01:54You are divorced
02:05Dear viewers, peace and blessings be upon you. Welcome to a new episode of Al-Daheeh program.
02:08If I were to ask you, my dear, what are the most important factors?
02:10Which societies tried to develop into civilized societies
02:13You could tell him about agriculture, industry, or writing.
02:15But let me surprise you, in his book
02:17The world has given us the German meeting
02:19Norbert Elias
02:20A completely different answer is sports.
02:23O Abu Ahmad
02:24Meaning neither farms nor factories nor books
02:26She is the one who attended us
02:27The blessing of youth is what brought us
02:28According to Norbert
02:29Sports provided what is called control.
02:31De Controlling Space
02:33Instead of the Qubay'a tribes fighting each other at the beginning
02:35And the whole country will be destroyed to prevent the causes
02:37No, we define the battle by the size of a playing field.
02:40Time to play, during which the players unwind
02:42Violent fighting ensues, and the crowd releases its energy through cheering.
02:45At the same time, the players control their gears.
02:47Those who might lean towards killing or conquering
02:50Sports will then become a space with simpler rules.
02:53It has limits
02:54Victory in it will not come at the expense of other things.
02:57In sports, instead of killing the country, Adam will score a corner kick.
02:59Instead of getting into a major war, you could bring in a peace agreement.
03:02Here, victory is not achieved at the cost of corpses.
03:05But at the expense of points
03:06Therefore, we still have a space here where we can safely express our instincts.
03:11This made us decline
03:12According to Dorbert, when humans found a way to play with violence
03:15He treats me in a civilized manner
03:17This is what began the birth of modern states.
03:19Especially since sports began to produce something from the Roman gladiatorial game and bloody duels.
03:24Which started like football, basketball, tennis, and ping pong
03:26The game directs its energy towards a round inanimate object.
03:29Everyone is running after her
03:31According to the sources
03:32Football, for example, has appeared in more than one form.
03:33And in different civilizations as well
03:35And indeed, it was aimed at reducing violence.
03:37The Greeks had a game called Episkairos, which was based on the principle of playing the ball with both feet.
03:41Meanwhile, in China, the soldiers played Suzhou, in which each team tried to put the ball in a net.
03:46Meanwhile, the team playing against him is trying to disrupt him like a rugby player.
03:49In Japan, Kamari emerged and relied more on cooperation among team members.
03:52So the ball doesn't touch the ground like an airplane.
03:54But while football in its various forms is a sport
03:57I was able to disperse the violence peacefully
03:59It doesn't rely on punches or wrestling; it's governed by rules.
04:02But of course, we know that the game often forgets itself.
04:05And it reverts to a state of war, and this of course turns many battles into bloody conflicts.
04:09The first observation regarding this matter is found in the English educator.
04:12Richard Malcaste, 1581
04:14Except for the students in the schools he heads
04:16She plays football for her under her name and they cut each other off
04:19And then he told you this game is something like that
04:21Something you raise, someone who's touching yellow and black from a single word
04:26This guy realized that we might need someone to be a ruler
04:29Jedsh prohibits violence during gameplay.
04:31At first, the ruler was playing games, and no one agreed with the ruler's idea.
04:33The game, he said, "We're from the same place and we know the rules."
04:36With us, if you let there be a ruler, if you don't harm us
04:39We don't need anyone to enforce the laws here.
04:41The remnants of the modern state
04:42That's why, my dear, we'll learn about the first appearance of the game's ruler today.
04:44It will be delayed until 1842
04:47The day he appeared, he was just someone calculating the time remaining until the end of the match.
04:51This is your friend who stands outside, who says "Taim" and then goes downstairs.
04:54And then, when a disagreement arises, each team has what is called an "ampere".
04:58A referee from each team discusses with the other
05:00If they can't reach a solution, they go to the owner of the Taim store to settle the matter between them.
05:03What's this, Abu Ahmeib?
05:04What took us to court?
05:05But my dear, this idea did not solve the violence.
05:08When the Prophet Amber makes peace, each team fights with its counterpart.
05:10The matter is being further investigated
05:12And that's why no one who's making peace with the Prophet Amber would say anything against his team.
05:14Time remains, and he is being shot in the chest in the penalty area.
05:16He tells him, "By God, it's a legal matter."
05:18This statement was made in the period up to 1891
05:20When the English Football Association made a decision in the Sowny case
05:23The game has one referee with all authorities
05:26While each team had a line of players remaining, Ampere was still part of it.
05:29Their job is to alert the referee if the ball goes out of bounds.
05:32So, my dear, the rules of the past are different from the rules of today.
05:34The judge is your judge between Bascarvata and Breh, as if he were a policeman.
05:36This is something you can take into your hand; it will come to you and honor you.
05:38This was to confirm that he was the highest authority on the field.
05:41And I regret, my dear, that he is very important in the game.
05:44However, it left him humiliated by the game and the audience.
05:47According to Professor Thomas Webb
05:50The moment the referee appears in the ball, the name of the game and the audience.
05:52What's the south?
05:53While the ruling or the South is repeated by all parties
05:56The audience in the stadium has two types of energy.
05:58Positive energy and negative energy
05:59The positive aspect comes out in encouraging the game.
06:01The negativity manifests itself in the competitor and the referee.
06:03And the same applies to the Republican case.
06:05This intense football, my friend, puts the referee somewhat in a vulnerable position.
06:09That's why some people say football is constantly evolving, evolving, evolving
06:12To give the rulers more powers
06:14Which can prevent violence
06:15For example, the penalty kicks that started in the 91st round
06:18I said violence against the attackers
06:20Is it true, my dear, that any striker who was harming in any area didn't have this?
06:22And of course, when I get closer to the area, I won't see any legs.
06:24Also, the idea of ​​the modala, which the plates took in their current form in 1958
06:27Before that, my dear, there was no modalaha
06:29Those who work hard get a pension
06:30The art is tired of a normal deficiency
06:31During the game, he was forced to continue even if he was injured.
06:34This, of course, reinforced the idea of ​​targeting the game aggressively in order to get it out.
06:37And all I remember is talking about football, that it has fueled the violence of sports.
06:41A new event is emerging; think about sports as it is still.
06:44Man still knows how to get rid of the violence inside him
06:47And sports are still a space for releasing this violence.
06:50Let me tell you about the Battle of San Diego, my friend.
06:53Before the Chile vs. Italy match in the 2060 World Cup, which was hosted by Chile
06:56The Philadelphia earthquake struck and destroyed half of its stadium.
06:59The country is in a humanitarian catastrophe.
07:01He said, "Oh Abu Hamid, oh Abu Kass Al-Alam!"
07:03Uncle, I'm telling you, it's a humanitarian catastrophe, Abu Hamid.
07:05So that violence doesn't make him think
07:07Oh Abu Hamid, I'm happy to give you a headache
07:08But thank God, with time Chile recovers.
07:11The tournament is being hosted
07:12To break Europe's monopoly on hosting
07:14But before her match against Italy
07:16Instead of the Italian press talking about Chile
07:18The one who succeeded in recovering
07:20After the state had collapsed
07:21Chile will describe it as a form of racism.
07:23It's like it's shackled by poverty, crime, and prostitution.
07:26At that point, the match between the two teams turned into a war.
07:2912 seconds after it started
07:30When English referee Ken Aston found himself
07:32It's a bit difficult to differentiate between the players
07:35When the Italian player was sent off
07:36Georgi and Verini Foggi, the player
07:38The Englishman didn't understand and refused to leave the game.
07:40Unless they had to bring in a whole shorts squad
07:43At the end of the match
07:44The judge discovers that he was likely in a military battle
07:46Not a game
07:46This match, when they turned up the BBC television, was described as a "big deal."
07:54One match will remind Ken Aston that the problem was that he was a British guy trying to communicate with an angry game in a different language.
08:00There's also no way a player can be warned that if he plays aggressively he'll be sent off
08:04One of them, Aston, was standing by his car in front of the traffic light. Where is Bu Hamad?
08:09The one who will give him a very great idea
08:11Yellow, get ready, because red will leave
08:13He'll come up with a brilliant idea, my dear.
08:15It is simply the yellow card and the red card.
08:18Visual symbols that don't require any language and are also capable of achieving a gradual increase in punishment.
08:22To alert the team to its roughness, and based on his suggestion, cards were introduced into the game in 1970.
08:27The truth, my dear, is that the ruler wasn't always the mature party who managed the violence on the field.
08:31Sometimes he was the one who ruined the game with unbelievable mistakes.
08:35We all remember the quarter-final of the 1986 World Cup
08:37Between England and Argentina
08:39When the Tunisian ruler Ali Ben Nasser decided the famous goal for the club with his hand
08:43And whoever hears Hand Off, a goal that will change the course of the tournament and hand it to Argentina, will make Maladonna a legend.
08:49But over time, the game and the audience began to mature a little and understand that the ruler's mistakes do not weaken his authority.
08:54Rather, it is part of the game's bitterness and allure, because a referee's mistake against a team is a lifeline that saves the opposing team.
09:00The world is a cycle, and this is resolved through play; today it's your fault, tomorrow it's yours.
09:04But my dear friend, football is about to undergo a radical change that will alter its entire balance.
09:10In his research article, Evolution of Referees in the English Premier League
09:15Professor Thomas Webb would say that football changed in the late twentieth century from being a sport to a global product
09:20This resulted in a market with profits in the billions.
09:23Thomas usually takes as an example the emergence of the Premier League in its current form in 1992.
09:28Which some consider the strongest football tournament in the world
09:31Suddenly, English clubs will know about sponsorships and multi-million dollar sponsorship deals.
09:35Television contracts will allow a local tournament to be broadcast on 80 networks in 222 countries.
09:414.7 billion viewers in 643 million homes
09:46This gave the rights to wear the jersey worldwide for seasons from 2019 to 2022.
09:50Exceeding 4.3 billion euros
09:53And there was a surge in player prices and salaries from one club to another
09:57Mohammad, you're still having trouble with the summer transfer window.
09:59And you're not going to tell me what this has to do with the rulers?
10:01I was telling you, my dear, that a championship with this level of profitability and scale...
10:04Especially with geosynthetic interventions
10:06Each club's victory is no longer just a sporting triumph.
10:09This is life, or rather, the human creation has begun to narrow.
10:13I can't tolerate the referees' mistakes.
10:15Part of the fun of football and human action is that people make mistakes.
10:17Ah, but now it's all about customer business.
10:20What we had in the past is no longer useful.
10:22Especially since I haven't been able to access the TV password.
10:24As a key element in sports
10:26And here the referees' mistakes were being broadcast in audio and video.
10:30Frames, speed, and everything else
10:33Back when you were a fan, you needed to sit in the stands.
10:36So you can watch the match
10:37If you get distracted, you'll miss half the match.
10:38Now that you're an audience sitting at home, you're filling your position
10:42And Professor Muhammad Nass Amali, what he preferred for you was a camera, Yamnoush Mal
10:45Open the frame, you half-wit! Come in, you half-wit!
10:47Give me a different angle than this one.
10:48And so the fan kept seeing a lot of mistakes by the referees.
10:52He couldn't stand himself anymore
10:53So one mistake no longer counts, it's become a petard.
10:55The game is constantly evolving and its value increasing.
10:57But suddenly she became a prisoner of human rule.
10:59Everything in the game has evolved.
11:01Everything about shoes has evolved
11:02Football has evolved
11:03But the refereeing didn't improve.
11:05A referee could make a mistake and ruin all of this in a moment
11:07And the PGMOL entered
11:08Which includes the English Football Association and Premier League officials
11:11Urgent measures are being taken to raise the standard of referees.
11:13One of the first countries will close down
11:15Which makes all the first-class referees
11:17Valtime only has two referees.
11:18No one finishes the match and then goes to work on an Uber
11:20Two drawings of BGMOL
11:22It will increase approximately fourfold.
11:24If you compare 2003 to 2019
11:25Efforts will be directed towards raising the level of referees.
11:28From the world of fitness and psychology
11:30And the federations here decided that the referee who woke up suddenly
11:32In an era where every mistake is solved
11:34More than a thousand times
11:35This is a needy person
11:36That's why this ruling needed psychiatrists.
11:39You're making the same mistake as the public.
11:41The guy from the other team is messing with you over her
11:43As long as you're going back and forth, they'll insult you and chase after you.
11:46You need someone to treat you
11:47Okay Abu Hamid, no problem, Shani
11:49After spending on the referee's mentality
11:51And he wore it and the dinafils
11:52The best referees remained
11:54Assuming that of course they make mistakes
11:55And sometimes their mistakes are disastrous.
11:57It's almost the same size as Maradona's goal.
11:59For example, in the World Cup qualifiers
12:01Between France and Ireland in 2010
12:02France are complacency after Thierry Henry's goal
12:05A disastrous goal by his own hand
12:06And it is called Hindf, the man
12:08Of course, this goal will be insane.
12:10Irish Quarries Union
12:11They will demand a rematch.
12:13They will hold a one hundred days of mourning.
12:15But that's it, my dear. Let me tell you that
12:17The president of this federation, John Delaney, will decide
12:19Strike for 89 days
12:21FIFA has filed a claim for compensation.
12:23But of course, let me tell you that all of this happened
12:25Without any benefit, the same thing happened to the beginning as well.
12:27In the Germany vs. England match
12:29When Frank Lampard scored the equalizer for England
12:31The ball was a line, yet
12:33The judge refused to side with her so that she would collapse.
12:35The English national team suffered a defeat, losing four to one.
12:38Abu Ahmad, what else is there for God but one?
12:39Let these people pray and supplicate.
12:41Of course, every match
12:42If the ruling is that your glute is a splint
12:43The problem, my dear Khalil, is that studies prove that many of the mistakes of rulers are not predestined.
12:48But
12:50Deeply rooted cognitive bias
12:52O protector, O Lord, this bias is not relevant
12:55The referee either didn't see well or he was just not up to par.
12:57This means that this possession will continue.
12:59For example, in the study in 2002
13:01The referees were divided into two groups and fouls were shown to them.
13:04The referees were subjected to fouls
13:06With the voice of the home team fans
13:07The home team's fans' voice and the second half without
13:09The sample that the audience listened to was decided
13:11I'm afraid they didn't impose a penalty on the home team.
13:14By 15%
13:15While in the second study, work in 2010
13:17I followed the referees' decisions after the Italian league penalties
13:20Which prevented some clubs from hosting fans
13:22They found that the rulers remained braver
13:24And more penalties in the absence of the public
13:26This, my dear, is called sign-cover.
13:27That's why when you play on your home turf
13:30She plays better, simply because of the referee
13:32It is affected by the surrounding circumstances.
13:33You will be penalized for fewer fouls.
13:35Seventy thousand people were put under pressure
13:38It is very difficult for him to make decisions.
13:40They don't like it, and this is often done to appease her.
13:42The author describes all these controls.
13:44Angela Kavina, in the name of
13:47This is the majority opinion among people.
13:48They side with the majority.
13:50This might reassure a person in the normal way.
13:51But of course, it conceals the foot coat.
13:53This has led to clubs and national teams no longer
13:55Waiting for the referee to make a mistake
13:56I'm not sure he'll make a mistake.
13:58This made him even more hated than before.
14:00No matter how much the instrument of governance evolves, it will not satisfy them.
14:02Crab Ahmed, they want a robot, that is.
14:04So people wanted a robot
14:06If I asked you, my dear
14:08Who is the most famous and best referee in the history of the game?
14:10You'll say the Italian referee
14:12Collina is the only one in the game of football
14:14FIFA is mourning him
14:16Best ruling of the year
14:17This guy didn't take it for a year, or two, or three
14:20This took six years, and I see after
14:21Collina will apply his experience in military recruitment to arbitration.
14:24His study of economics at the University of Bologna
14:26His experience, discipline, and precision
14:28No end before a World Cup match
14:30One year and two, the British government says.
14:32Graham Poll and Collina gathered the referees
14:34They all had a match and listed all the possibilities for them
14:36Which match is the most nerve-wracking game?
14:38When will the tension increase? The referees need to focus.
14:40What for? And why? It's like the computer tried everything.
14:42He's thinking of possibilities and is saying hello.
14:43What's terrifying, according to Graham, is that everything he said
14:46Collina checked like a computer
14:48Collina will lose her hair.
14:50And his eyebrows, when he was young, were injured
14:52With alopecia or alopecia, this will make him
14:54He is vulnerable to bullying and will be called a "Kojak".
14:56Named after a bald television detective.
14:58But my dear friend, the difference we find here
15:00His illness was the cause
15:02Because people bully him, it will become a point
15:04His strength on the field is evident in his features.
15:06It will be neutral and terrifying for the players.
15:08It's like it's going to be a machine without any problems.
15:10They call him man with the iron mass
15:12This gives him authority many times greater than that of a police officer.
15:14What rulers used to wear in the past
15:16Collina's stardom will make him the sole referee
15:18The one that appears on the cover of the PS3 game
15:20Pro Evolution Saker
15:21He's considered a star because he breaks all taboos.
15:24Hatred of the rulers while
15:26There are big players who will swap shirts with Maat.
15:28As an honor for them, like David Beckham
15:30Collina says the most important thing is that the game is successful.
15:32He won't make a mistake even if he does.
15:33My dear, the result is something no human can achieve.
15:35Except in his dealings with the machine
15:37Collina will always try to deny being described as a robot.
15:40He says, "I am a human being."
15:41Sometimes I make mistakes, but I always try to do my best.
15:44It was very difficult for those in charge of football.
15:46They find a way to turn all the referees into Collina
15:48A humanoid robot that is accurate and honest.
15:50Impartial and equidistant from all
15:52That's how they started to move towards a real robot.
15:54Or for technology
15:55According to the Secretary of the International Federation of Association Football Council
15:59IFAB
16:00This man is the secretary, Lucas Brod.
16:02This man is telling him that football is the most conservative sport in dealing with changes and technology.
16:07For example, in tennis and cricket, in technology it's called the hook eye.
16:10High-resolution, high-speed cameras track the ball's movement and monitor the results.
16:14In the NBA, there's a technology called instant replay.
16:17For example, the referee might want to make sure the ball was kicked before time runs out.
16:21Or not? In football, unlike these other games, this happens less often.
16:24It is possible that this issue is explained by the fact that football goals are more difficult and fewer in number.
16:28Unlike sports that have many points and need technology to review them
16:31Let me tell you that the scarcity of Leguans might be one of the reasons for the success of football.
16:35And it remains the most popular game in the world and the most requested greenhouse product.
16:38When the score remains high, it means the match must end in favor of the stronger team.
16:44In any game where you need to score a lot of goals, the strongest and best team usually wins.
16:49But in football, because the Ligue 1 is small, it's easy to leave the nuggets behind, like Mourinho did.
16:53And they played on a set ball, a counter-attack, a penalty kick, a 1-0 win, and Real Madrid won an ordinary match.
16:58This is one of the reasons why many people consider football a game of fun: because it has few goals.
17:01Initially, many federations will stand against the intervention of the Tectonics, such as Michel Platini, for example.
17:05This is the UEFA president who believed that the introduction of Goal Lime or Eye technology was a mistake.
17:10The one that reveals if the ball crossed the line, which cost Liverpool the 2-millimeter mark.
17:13This technique will be a gateway for tectonic intervention in offside and penalty kicks.
17:17This will open a door that can't be closed and will ruin the game.
17:20But according to Professor Juan Simon
17:23On the other hand, club owners, fans, and the media will exert pressure to ensure greater accuracy and fairness.
17:28Not for the sake of the eyes, accuracy and justice
17:30But this is a multi-billion dollar industry, and if there's a chance a team could win and they don't because of a mistake, everything will be decided.
17:36From Mahmoud El Khatib to Amh El Dawly
17:38Ultimately, the issue will be decided in favor of the introduction of technologies like Goal Lime Technology.
17:42The one that was implemented by Primavera Plige in the 2013-2014 season and executed by Talk Eye.
17:46The technology that implements tennis refereeing techniques was later released as VAR.
17:49The video is Assistant Ravery, which started in the 2017-2020 season.
17:52Lucas Brad said that it was implemented in 2010
17:55It was a crazy suggestion, but it would prevent scandals like the one Henori scored.
18:00Brood strongly defended VAR, especially against opinions that it disrupts the flow of the game.
18:05Especially during crucial moments like goals
18:07John comes in the 90th minute and the players celebrate, and the players take off their shirts and that's it.
18:12The fans were voting in the stadium, and we had some coffee together.
18:15That was the moment when John, who was completely unexpected, arrived and we celebrated, and the match was over for us.
18:20Now, don't watch the goal coming in the 90th minute and find everyone standing there cold, just waving their hand like that.
18:24No, right now we need to sit and wait.
18:25When the referee sees if there was a foul, a foul for the attack.
18:29And the audience sat on a band
18:30Brod was saying that this technique wouldn't disrupt the rhythm of the match because it's designed for catastrophic errors, not every mistake.
18:38The match
18:38Because, according to him, the referee in the forge era is the last one to see the game accurately; he sees the game after the viewers at home.
18:45Bkteer
18:46It's perfectly normal for the referee to be out of the match; I don't know why he's being insulted.
18:49When VAR was implemented in the World Cup
18:51Two people said that this technology has a correct decision rate of up to 95%.
18:57According to Professor Thomas Wab
18:59Many people consider the introduction of technology to be a way to enhance the viewing experience at the stadium.
19:03Which is the same as the experience of ruling
19:04As someone who attends the match, you only watch the game once, so you're focused and follow along because nothing will be repeated.
19:10While the experience of watching the game on screens has become completely different
19:14We sit and wait for boring experts crammed into a room in front of a monitor to come up with the court's decision.
19:20Like what happened in a match in 2020 between Sheffield and Aso Bella
19:22Sheffield's goal was disallowed simply because goal-line technology and the referee were malfunctioning.
19:27As for the referees, many researchers considered these tools to be unhelpful to the referee.
19:31But over time, it will be the way to replace it completely.
19:35It means there's no one to rule, Abu Hamad.
19:36God, who will whistle?
19:38According to Aldo Comi, CEO of Sugar Mint, a company specializing in sweeteners for the region.
19:43The AI ​​models we have today are constantly evolving in their analysis of match data.
19:48To reach decisions that are much more effective than the referee's decisions
19:50According to him, the first thing we'll see is the disappearance of the linesmen.
19:54Captain D'Astakram's career is in danger
19:55After that, these models will begin to assist the referee in the arena.
19:58In 20-30 years at most
20:01And with the pressure from club and federation owners in a business whose size is increasing insanely
20:05We'll start one step at a time, moving on to the automated system that will give us extreme accuracy.
20:10And it will be the responsibility of the clubs and federations.
20:12It helps the public accept and trust technological innovations.
20:15Hey Abu Hamid, I have a point to make about what you're saying.
20:18This whole thing is just a game, first and foremost.
20:20It means the robots have fixed it, but our situation won't improve.
20:22If you're saying "Bu Hamid," what does that mean?
20:24Let me tell you that the world of Norbert Arias
20:26What we started our episode with in his book
20:28This man said that sports are a simulation of society and how it manages itself.
20:33And how is this society moving towards civilization and perfection?
20:36This is the same link that scientists have currently discovered, but in a different form.
20:39In a meeting with Italian referee Pierluigi Collina
20:42When asked about the ideal referee's transportation, he said that any referee could memorize the rules automatically.
20:47But the genius of the referee comes from his attempt to communicate with the players.
20:51He empathizes with them and understands how they think.
20:53According to Collina, this human connection is what made the players listen to him and feel that he understood their anger and frustration.
20:59This made him a wise ruler, many times more so than his rural expertise.
21:02Collina said that this is something he learns from Eastern philosophy, which replaces the pursuit of perfection with the acceptance of imperfection.
21:06And the imperfect person ultimately deals with imperfect people who are perfection.
21:10Communication is more important than accuracy here.
21:12It's not important what we say, what's important is how we say it.
21:14This is what created his legend, and these are things that even a robot, no matter how distinguished, precise, and 100% fair, cannot do.
21:20Sometimes, my dear, we don't even want health.
21:22Sometimes we don't want space time.
21:24Sometimes all we want is to be understood.
21:26My dear, it doesn't have to be perfect, it's enough that it's real.
21:29Humans aren't the best people, you old wives' tale!
21:32But it is human nature itself that reassures us that, ultimately, there are still attempts at communication.
21:36And it is far more important than our attempts to create ideal entities beyond mere descent.
21:40She is innocent of people's faults, but she is also unable to deal with our privacy as human beings.
21:44Before the 2022 World Cup
21:45Alan Turing Instout has been running for 100,000 years on a giant simulation.
21:49Brazil is the closest team to winning the World Cup
21:51Then Belgium and finally Argentina
21:53However, the institute confirmed that there is data that cannot be measured accurately.
21:56This reflects the atmosphere, the individual performance of the players, and their mood.
21:59Player decisions, success or failure
22:01So you can find Lionel Messi winning the World Cup in front of his father when he was 35 years old
22:06Someone who is 23 years old and won the World Cup 4 years ago
22:08Many people believe that the reason for Messi's victory specifically is that he defied all human limitations.
22:13The fact that he won't win might be due to the machine's capabilities helping us improve our decisions.
22:17Or it reflects one aspect of the imperfection in our humanity.
22:19But it is very difficult for her to play the role of a human being in the drama of existence.
22:23Because sometimes a large part of our competence lies in our shortcomings.
22:26That's it, my dear, finally, but not lastly.
22:28We'll look at the previous cases, see the upcoming cases, and check the sources.
22:30And we're on YouTube, subscribe to the channel
22:32And I, my dear, hope this episode makes you feel some awe towards the rulers.
22:37Don't take it personally, they're not against you, they're not always corrupt
22:40You're the one who sometimes makes a garbage team
22:42Let's not discuss this topic; I want the judges to be involved.
22:45Huh? Shameful.

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