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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
00:04Goodbye, brother.
00:07He said goodbye to Glenda
00:09Oh God, what about us? Let's fight
00:11Your dinner, one
00:11You were still weighing in at the fishermen's this morning
00:13Your weight, Jimit Care
00:14She's reached the Buddy Shaming, Dahshan
00:16Not especially Buddy Shaming
00:17But the government will put a lot of pressure on us.
00:19There's no time
00:20Yes
00:21There's no time for this.
00:22Well, we waited for you for half an hour.
00:23Before we go on a chase
00:25Because your watch is going down in squares
00:26What is D
00:27This was before the dramatic events escalated.
00:30There was time then
00:30Nestormite
00:31It's time, Dahshan
00:33Time is merely an unreal human concept.
00:37But it will control our lives.
00:40Don't you have a little time?
00:41To your brother who raised and taught you
00:43You taught me how, and you are my mother
00:45I had forgotten about this.
00:46but
00:47In situations like these
00:48Usually, the person who is dying
00:50He says to the other
00:51He finished and walked away without
00:52D
00:52If a person has lost hope in life
00:54But I have time
00:56And many things are revealed about it
00:57What kind of tailor are you?
00:58Looking forward to a better future
01:00We draw from you, and you from these despicable works.
01:02Let's take a plot of land
01:03And we will marry her
01:05And we build it
01:05And your mother
01:06Tusken in D
01:07What I do not smell
01:08We'll find her another neighborhood in Al-Miyaqaza and put her there.
01:11You're going out, Dahshan
01:12I wake up in the morning
01:13I smell the aroma of the small pancake
01:15And the tenth morning
01:16yeah
01:16I smell the trees of the mine
01:18And fresh mint
01:19I hear a line of poetry
01:20And the gentle breezes of the morning
01:23caressing two grandmothers
01:25Oh Dahshan
01:27Don't try to question the logic of the sketch.
01:29We remain normal for a quarter of an hour
01:30The police must be fair and just.
01:32Don't forget
01:34And it wasn't
01:37Change it
01:37And take the boy
01:38I named her Marhousni after my grandfather.
01:40All of it is a millstone
01:41Thanks
01:50Dear viewers, peace and blessings be upon you.
01:52Welcome, there will be a new episode.
01:53From the Al-Daheeh program
01:55And I said, "Be careful, my dear."
01:56Information that you don't know
01:57Today in 24 hours
01:58but
01:59All of this has changed due to research and updates.
02:03I actually have a suggestion.
02:04It will comfort me and put my mind at ease.
02:05Let's see each other
02:06Just the way we want
02:07My dear, I suggest
02:08Let's make the day 50 hours instead of 24 hours.
02:1024 hours, countries, not huh?
02:12Not good countries
02:12Countries that are not safe
02:13Fruit Clock
02:13Fruita Salic
02:1450 hours left
02:15I sleep comfortably
02:16I hate episodes at my ease
02:17I want to work
02:18A revelation tells me
02:18How?
02:19No, Abu Hamid
02:19How can I make a day feel like 50 hours?
02:21Who should we talk to?
02:22So that the day will have 50 hours
02:23Who is the chairman of the board of directors of Time?
02:25And you, my dear
02:25Because he walks in it
02:28We need
02:28Let's go back in time
02:29A little further
02:30Early 18th century America
02:32Why were trains relied upon?
02:34Which are the frames
02:35As a basic method
02:37For transporting goods and passengers
02:38Among the American modals
02:39At that time, my dear
02:40The train could have cut across America from east to west
02:42And America is very big
02:43Time difference
02:44Between two major cities
02:46New York and Los Angeles costumes
02:47It could take up to three hours
02:48This is a crisis
02:49Because every city
02:50The diameter will be on it
02:51It has its own timing.
02:52The problem almost
02:53The diameter will be unified
02:54Okay, so what's the timing?
02:55But I, the producer, stay here.
02:568 o'clock
02:57And there is 11 o'clock
02:58So when do we go to the station?
03:00Here we needed to settle down
03:02Ali is one city
03:03We all follow its timing.
03:05And what they settled on at that time
03:06The youth who are wasting time
03:07The train keeps moving
03:09City time
03:10The one who got out of it
03:10Qatar is outside of New York, for example.
03:12He'll walk on New York time.
03:13Which country is infected in?
03:14And the one who left Los Angeles
03:16He walks on Los Angeles time.
03:17Of course
03:18He called for every country
03:19The train passes through it
03:20She still has a watch that runs on the time of the country she left Qatar.
03:24Of course, my dear, you can imagine that watch companies made a fortune from watches.
03:30You're at the station with the city clock.
03:32And you have an hour for every train, brought from everywhere.
03:36Imagine a country where one unit remains operational and multiple time zones operate simultaneously.
03:40Of course, this will not be a practical solution.
03:42Sorry, I mean, I won't be carrying a heavy suitcase and traveling to another city.
03:45And I have a clock with me in every city I'll pass through
03:48The owners of the motor companies decided that in November 1883
03:52They are dividing America into time zones.
03:55There are specific time differences between them.
03:57And Qatar remains on the rise, known for its movement in which time zone.
04:00What is the time difference between each city, measured in fingers?
04:03The cities where these developments occur also begin to follow these time zones.
04:07And that remains her local time.
04:09A year later, the time zone we all hear about was adopted: Greenwich Mean Time.
04:14The Standard Time in the world
04:16And all cities calculate their time according to it.
04:19So, not every train stays on the time of the country it departs from.
04:22All developments are now operating on Greenwich Mean Time.
04:24One of them says to Abu Hamad, "Thank God, we've solved the Greenwich Mean Time problem."
04:28Okay, Abu Hamad, goodbye. Wait, my dear, not now.
04:30There was another problem
04:32How do we set the time? Sorry.
04:34You could be in the same city and someone might tell me, "No, sorry, it's 12 o'clock here."
04:38No, I'm 12 and five.
04:40No, guys, I was 12 last night.
04:41Or everyone just did as they pleased.
04:43Who is the reference for the timing?
04:45The solution, my dear, is for those who have reached the point where it's due.
04:47Any jewels that come or watches that are sold every day, wait for what exactly this afternoon.
04:51When the sun remains at its highest point in the sky
04:53He sets his clocks to 12 noon
04:56Everyone sets their watch to his.
04:58And that's it, everyone in the city will be fine then.
05:01Of course, my dear, that's a good idea, but it's completely impractical.
05:05The jewels were displayed, and the title came out a little late.
05:08Or if someone forgot to set their watch to the jewels
05:10We need to find a more precise method than this.
05:12Anyway, my dear, it was one of the inventions that flourished in France.
05:16Which was influenced by the spirit of the French Revolution
05:18Like French cheese, Bouhmine
05:20I don't think the French will like him; he's linked their revolution to cheese.
05:24France, my dear, has established a standard kilogram.
05:27Standard meter, but standard cheese.
05:29The solution was one of the inventions that emerged in France.
05:32France, my dear, is the country that established the kilogram standard.
05:35And anyone at that time could have told me
05:37No, it's not a kilo, but it's 800 grams, right?
05:41So France did what you did, which is
05:42There is one specific one, guys
05:44This is the kilogram and this is the meter
05:46After all that, a hundred years later, I downloaded the first timekeeping system in Paris.
05:50The first timekeeping system using a master clock in the text of Paris
05:55This clock is connected by pipes to other clocks in the streets and stations.
05:59And every minute the arena pumps compressed air for every other hour
06:03So that they would keep going with her, but it worked out.
06:05If this system had continued until today
06:07Water, gas, and pressurized air pipes would enter the house
06:10But thankfully, one of those who worked on this system was the French philosopher and mathematician.
06:14Henri Pionecari
06:15Pionecari will work on developing this system so that it works with telegraph advertisements.
06:19So we won't need pipes anymore
06:21This system spread in Britain and France, and consequently in America.
06:24And the delegation continued for years
06:25But thank God, with the advent of the internet
06:27All our devices automatically adjust themselves according to the time difference between your location and Greenwich Mean Time.
06:34Someone told me, "Thank God, Abu Hamad, we now know the solution. Thank God, congratulations!"
06:36Who decided on Greenwich Mean Time? We should talk to them and say, instead of a day being 24 hours, make it 50.
06:41But unfortunately, my dear, I will encounter two problems.
06:44The first problem is that we don't know Greenwich Mean Time from a clock; we can access it, manipulate it, and make it 50 hours.
06:51Greenwich Mean Time is calculated using the atomic clock. This clock uses elements like the cesian and monitors the movement and transmission of electrons.
06:59From orbit to second
07:00This movement, my dear, occurs in a fixed manner and for a fixed duration, and after a certain number of these transitions we calculate a second.
07:06So, my dear, let's leave the timing as it is, depending on what a jeweler is saying, looking at the sky and seeing the sun.
07:12No, we've adjusted it to the electron, to the electron jump, my dear, it's the second standard, the stationary one.
07:20So, my dear, between you and me, we could count you in a second, or even longer than a second.
07:25But there's still someone who can bring you that exact second one; the second one itself is dazzling, my dear.
07:29The essence of time is that it feels like something uncontrollable, so you need to find something that repeats itself with regular, consistent movements.
07:37Very, very
07:38So you were able to simulate time, and honestly, my dear, that's truly amazing.
07:42And it also remains a very serious matter because this is the real obstacle to our influence on time.
07:47In order to manipulate time and make it longer, you need to make these electrons lag behind in their jumps.
07:54If electrons didn't exist, we wouldn't be able to change time. The idea, my friend, is that if you want to hack the Atom Club...
08:00This makes the day have fifty hours.
08:02You need to go to her and tell her, "Señor Atom Club Porfavor"
08:06I want you to jump two-tenths of a second instead of one-tenth, so instead of giving it 60 seconds, it will be 120 seconds according to our old system.
08:13So instead of the day being 24 hours, it's 48, sir! We're swimming in two hours!
08:17Okay, we don't want fifty hours, give us 48 dreams.
08:20Of course, my dear, that's scientifically impossible. I assure you, unfortunately, my dear, no. I can hack the Atom Club.
08:25The second problem we will face when trying to play in Greenwich Mean Time
08:28Because not everyone in the world is online every hour, someone told me, "Abu Hamid, it's okay, but there's something about your issue."
08:33Does our clock work with an Atom Club?
08:34No, my dear, our watch uses a quartz crystal.
08:37A vibrating crystal controls the passage of a stream of electrons through it and makes it adjust to a constant frequency.
08:44Ah, the hesitation is the idea.
08:45I am the one who tells time, even the clock is hesitant, Abu Hamid, aha
08:47From this frequency you can calculate how many seconds
08:50The same applies when you look at old clocks that run by pendulum.
08:53Do you know it? Tick-tock-tick-tick-tick
08:56Same idea, fixed frequency
09:07My mobile phone's clock is running slowly, but my wristwatch is running normally.
09:09Unfortunately, we need another solution so we can save time.
09:12Fant 1891 Field Marshal Helmus von Moltke
09:16The man shook his head and stood in front of the German parliamentarian.
09:19He told them, "We've been touring."
09:20Why are you making us wander?
09:22Because of France, Britain, and America
09:24They still have precise systems for calculating the monastery.
09:28I'm working on the time zones and I'm getting pressurized air.
09:30This will make their efficiency much more dependent.
09:32We are ironically and literally behind them.
09:35We need to catch these people.
09:36And what's new, my dear, is that the Franco-German War hadn't even ended yet.
09:41Franco-Bergan War
09:42So then people started to get jealous of the French.
09:45And we want our youth to invent a way to save time.
09:47German method
09:48Anyone who invented a method had to obtain a patent from an office in Berlin.
09:53One of the workers there
09:54Research means
09:57List of inventions
09:58What hair and what a mess!
10:01Of course, my dear, you know Einstein.
10:03But they knew that Krishos was just talking to them normally.
10:05I'm always talking to you right now
10:06You know, my dear, one will come after a hundred years.
10:08He asks you, laughing, he talks to you like that normally.
10:10And you'll say yes to him
10:11No, my dear, don't worry, my dear, I've made an AI version of you.
10:14You work in metaverse, but it lets you go, one cap.
10:16The important thing is that Einstein is a fool to see all these inventions based on the idea of symmetry.
10:21Which is Simultane, coming from Simultanes
10:23The one who is suffering at the same time that he is simultaneous
10:26Which is the concept of synchronization in Arabic
10:27Einstein would be foolish to see this.
10:29He also begins to think
10:31In the simultaneity
10:33He thinks and says
10:34What does it mean to say about two events?
10:36They got it at the same moment
10:38You're exaggerating, my dear, after how many years?
10:40When Einstein arrived at the concept of special relativity
10:42The whole point is that he used to get it
10:44Many inventions for the idea
10:46Timekeeping for the two pens is different
10:48He was French, and that's what inspired him.
10:50My dear, jealousy is a disaster in the world.
10:52The important thing is that the sack is one of the most important
10:54The results of special relativity are an idea
10:56Time dilation means time moves at different speeds.
10:58Depending on your speed relative to those around you
11:00This Time Dictionary Concept is different
11:02The world's concept of the idea
11:04Two events occurring simultaneously
11:07For someone who doesn't mean anything at all
11:09They happen together
11:10For another person
11:11Two stories that happen together
11:14At the same time, it does not mean at all
11:17They are the second limit
11:18They happen together
11:20What are you saying? I heard it the first time.
11:21What are you saying, Abu Hamid? Wait!
11:24This, my dear, is not our topic.
11:26I promise you there will be
11:28A detailed episode about relativity
11:31Special and general relativity. And then you say that time and space are no longer two separate entities. And if one has a gravitational force acting in such a way...
11:38Time will pass for him in such a way. And if someone is under such a certain gravitational force, time will pass for him at such a rate. And if someone is walking at such a speed...
11:43Time will tell, "He'll do this." We won't do it now. We'll do it later. What we'll take is the idea that time is possible.
11:49It works faster for one person than another under different circumstances. And this guy tells me, "You're delusional. It's not because that's what happens."
11:58Laz
11:59We'll talk about physical essence. Or we won't talk about what essence is, my dear. It's none of your business. No, my dear, it's not your business, of course.
12:05We'll talk about the physiological nature. From this point, my dear, I'm trying to move forward and tell you that just as there are differences between people
12:12In different places or at different speeds. There are also differences in physiology. For example, a 2014 study (12 years old) states that some hematological processes...
12:21You feel time much faster than with other things. I mean, the second one is at the villa and the zalouma.
12:25It could be five seconds for the mouse. So how did we know that? We asked the Filab and the Zallouma. And we say the Filab and the Zallouma. The second one is yours.
12:31How much? What do you mean, "I swear, she'll only get five seconds of that rat stuff"? No, my dear, of course I didn't do that. Why? When
12:36They don't know how to speak Egyptian Arabic. The elephant speaks "Fili" and the mouse speaks "Rani." What happened? That the scientists were showing these animals to the Duke.
12:42Benor and Yedfi at a high frequency. If this frequency is very high, the animal is supposed to...
12:47He'll see it as a steady light. But if the frequency is reduced sufficiently, the animal will see it as glowing and warming. He knows when he gets a drawing, he gets a notebook.
12:56It's like this, with the graphics on it, and it keeps moving like this. You feel like, "What is this? It's going smoothly. It's like a video."
13:01You might notice that there are papers moving around like that. The idea is that everyone is looking at what this is.
13:06This film is working perfectly, the picture keeps looking at the picture, looking at the picture, looking at the picture at lightning speed. And the second one...
13:12What is this? This is a picture, then another picture, then another picture, and another picture. Do you understand? This means differentiating in how we look at things.
13:21There are animals whose nervous systems are fast enough to detect light, while other animals have nervous systems that are cut off, so they feel
13:30The light is constant. You told him, "Oh, praise be to God," and they asked the animals, "What do you see?" No, my dear, do as they say.
13:34How is that possible? The scientists learned this because they had implanted electrodes in their brains. Animal brains, I mean. And they were monitoring.
13:40What they see. So they know. If they see it and it's bright and warm, or a steady light. This experiment tells us that there are animals that can
13:47They interact with the world more quickly than other animals. Therefore, time is slower for these animals than for other animals.
13:54Tell me, Hamad. Isn't that what you said in the Messi and the dog episode about Messi seeing the world in a slower way?
14:00He can dance and move around as if he has no problem at all. My dear, that's not what I'm saying. That's what some sources are saying.
14:07I'm not asking for anything. I'm just as good as you, my friend. But I have the sources. Please, my dear friend, accept this.
14:12In what I said, regarding the mouse and the elephant, the mouse is about five times the elephant's length. The mouse, in relation to him...
14:21Today is slower. The world, for the mouse, is moving backwards. But the thing is, the world has always moved this way for him. So there's no change. That's it.
14:28I'm also wondering, my dear, if the world works the same way for a fly as it does for us. I mean, I don't know how to bother flies.
14:34Therefore, time is slower for these animals than for other animals. This means they can do more things in the same amount of time. So, if
14:41Our day is 24 hours long. So it's not far-fetched to think that one of these animals might be aware of them for 50 hours straight. And live a normal, everyday life. The point is...
14:47It's not like that anymore. Scientists also found that animals for whom time moves more slowly are small animals, like mice. Because
14:53So, my dear, nobody knows who you are. It's him and the fly. Because the mouse and the fly...
14:57We see you, Saloum Hoshan. For example, you, my dear, are a worker, and the speed is limited to things that are considered microscopic. And you find the fly sitting there.
15:05So she's busy making tea. And she's busy discussing things with her fly friends. And they're saying, "Hey guys, today, after a few hours, there will be her hand."
15:11It descends upon us. What do you think of this? And then the fly. And then the fly. And then the fly, you'll be all over her.
15:30Okay, let's go then, guys. There's a banana there. The fly was gone. She was telling me, "Mohammed." I mean, the little flies.
15:43Time seems to pass more slowly for her than for older people. Well, it's okay. What if I lost weight and became younger? Wouldn't that be how time feels to me?
15:50That's slower, my dear. It's unrelated. You're supplying water through one nervous system. It's unrelated.
15:54Smoking and smoking are not the only factors that can influence you. For example, what you're doing is new and important to you.
16:01For example, if something attractive happens in front of you, and all your focus is on it, your brain will try to remember it as much as possible.
16:08And it will record the largest amount of detail about it, moment by moment. That's why, when you're young, you feel time passes slowly, because you've explored.
16:16New things. What's this? A computer. What's this? A television. What's this?
16:20Hey, airplane! What's that, an electrical switch? I put a seven in it. But the older you get, the more predictable things become for you. You're done.
16:28I know you gave your lions electricity. So now you're not saying anything. This will pass for you, go away. There's nothing new to see. Of course, ya
16:34My dear, you're getting annoyed right now. There's no clear way to tell me how to make the day fifty hours long. No messing around with the clocks and the timekeeping system.
16:40Useful. Neither physics nor playing with our sense of time is useful. And good money we make...
16:44Actually, my dear, and contrary to everything we saw in the episode, time—whether it's long or short—doesn't depend on anything.
16:50It's not about the hours you measure it, nor about how fast you feel it's passing. Time is, first and foremost, a social contract.
16:56Between us. I'll hand you the finished work at six. I'll finish the assignment before ten. I'll air the episode at eight.
17:02All these sentences refer to time as something fixed and distant from us. He saw, in the beginning and the end, a contract between us and each other.
17:09I promise you that I will
17:11I finished work at six. And now it's six to ten. I feel like time is flying by because I haven't had time to finish what I wanted to.
17:17So I can deliver it at six. But what you forgot is that this work might need to be done after six. The contract
17:23What you did was not appropriate. The work you promised to finish by a certain time needed more time than that.
17:29So, you started by wanting to make the day fifty hours long to finish the work. The first thing you should have done was not put yourself under pressure from the beginning.
17:34You, Ren, should finish what you have to do first.
17:36Otherwise, don't make a promise to yourself at an inappropriate time.
17:39Someone told me, "Abu Ahmed, I didn't make any promises or anything."
17:41But it's equivalent to a fixed fingerprint at work.
17:42You're right, my dear, the capitalist world we live in
17:45He puts a lot of pressure on us
17:46He clarified that the problem is not time.
17:48But there is a problem in the capitalist world.
17:50Sorry, Zar3
17:51I'm sorry, O plant
17:52The problem isn't with me.
17:53The problem is with my capital.
17:54And my dear friend, it remains that neither Marx nor Lenin nor Mao nor Stalin
17:59And all the Soviet Union's puff of ideas couldn't solve capitalism.
18:03Heyi Mohammed Oli, the capitalist solution
18:05My dear, I haven't solved anything that puts food on my table.
18:08Keep it running, what's the problem?
18:09God, you don't keep your promises, my dear.
18:11I am not committed to my enemy
18:12I'll come to you at eight o'clock, I'll tell you the time, I won't come to you at eight o'clock
18:14They learned now
18:15Daoudi attacks capitalism
18:16Ashi Hamsh Aref says goodbye at six o'clock or seven o'clock
18:19What's wrong?
18:19What was delivered
18:20No, my dear, I'll keep bothering you, take your time.
18:21Take your time, take your time
18:22peace
18:22God
18:22I delivered many episodes in his life at eight o'clock
18:25And I will release the next episodes, God willing, at eight o'clock as well.
18:28And the sources are listed with each episode.
18:29And your work is two complaints, you forgot the sources.
18:31When it happens
18:31But I'll commit
18:32I'll post it later.
18:33Each episode tells you to subscribe to YouTube.
18:35Each episode
18:36I'm committed to you
18:37But what?
18:38Oh, he doesn't want to say hello.
18:39What is capitalism?
18:40What's wrong?
18:40What does it have to do with capital?
18:42Go on, see what
18:42Go ahead and look at the sources.
18:46Oh