Einstein's God Model Page #2
- Year:
- 2016
- 89 min
- 120 Views
- Stop that.
Stop that, don't talk like that.
This was not your fault.
- I don't know.
- Abbey, listen to me.
New rule, no blaming
ourselves for things
we can't control.
We accept life as it comes.
- Okay, I like rules.
I love you to death,
you know that.
- Me, too, I'm driving
around right now
looking for you.
- You are?
- Yes.
Now, where are you?
I'm taking you home.
- Franklin.
- Franklin?
Franklin and what?
Abbey!
- Holy sh*t!
- Abbey, are you okay?
- Holy sh*t!
- Abbey, I'm so sorry.
- Just unlock the door.
Brayden, open the door.
- Abbey.
- - I'm freezing
my ass off.
- It won't unlock
if you're lifting the handle.
Abbey, don't move.
- What?
- Brayden?
- - I'm here.
I'm here.
- I hear sirens.
Brayden, get the door.
Someone's knocking.
- Abbey, stay awake.
Come on, don't close
your eyes, stay awake.
Abbey, look at me,
look at me, right here.
You don't go
anywhere without me.
Look.
I have something for you.
Open your eyes.
Brayden, Brayden, Brayden.
- Sir, emergency response units
are on their way.
Sir, I need you to
tell me her condition.
Is she awake?
Is she breathing?
Hello, sir, can you hear me?
Is anyone there?
I can hear you breathing.
- Abbey.
- Hey, buddy, it's Devin.
Me and Donna were thinkin'
maybe, you should come and stay
with us for a little while.
It's probably not a good idea
for you to be alone right now.
- Hi, Abbey.
- Hi, Brayden.
What are you doing?
- You're very pretty.
- Oh, thank you.
You're very handsome.
You're pretty cute.
- I'm a scientist, I'm, I'm...
- Human, there we go.
- Yeah, in medical
profession, trust me.
These hands have
put people to sleep
and brought them back to life.
- That's so hot.
- It's the button on the side.
Just push it forward and back.
Eat something.
- Babe.
- Here, let me
hold the camera a second.
- What is it?
You better not have, I...
- What?
- Brayden.
- Earrings!
- - Earrings.
- Yay.
- - A whole set.
Oh, almost.
Oh, no, yeah, it's
perfect, it's beautiful.
Thank you.
- Hi, this is Brayden.
- And, this is Abbey.
We're not here but if you
think about it, who is.
- What was that?
- What, I was being existential.
- Abbey, just
record a normal message.
- Hey, buddy, it's Devin.
Take as much time
off as you need
but I'm thinking, maybe,
if you got back to work
it might help you
get into, well.
Anyway, give me a call
when you're ready.
- Hello.
- Hey, Bob, it's me, Brayden.
- Brayden, are you okay?
- Yeah, listen.
The other day, you said
something about a guy
on faculty doing
research with Ketamine.
Who was that?
- Oh, oh yeah.
Dr. Meiselhoff, Dr.
Carl Meiselhoff.
He had this crazy
idea about using
electromagnetic
fields for anesthesia.
Wanted me to use it for
his radical prostate.
- He was a patient?
- Yeah.
- Dr. Carl Meiselhoff.
Meiselhoff?
What department was he in?
Surgery, medicine?
- He's in, uh, physics.
- Physics?
- - Yeah.
He has a PHD.
Listen, Brayden,
I'm here for you.
I really am but can we
talk about this tomorrow.
I got a cranium at 6:30.
- Yeah, um, sure, of course.
Sorry.
Thanks, Bob.
- Anytime.
I mean it.
- I know.
- And, this leads us to
the ultimate big question.
Why do the laws of physics,
in our classical world
seem to break down
at the subatomic or
the quantum world.
Shouldn't there be one law
that unifies everything?
Shouldn't there be a theory
of
Everything.
Well, it seems that
the answer may lie
in incredibly small
particles of vibrating energy
that we call superstrings.
Or string theory.
When you vibrate a superstring,
the vibrations produce
unique subatomic particles
like an electron.
In a sense, the
universe that we know
is the result of a
symphony being played
vibrating superstrings.
Are you with me so far?
- Hi, welcome back
to true science.
I'm your host Sean fox and today
we're here with one
of the country's
leading physicist,
Dr. Carl Meiselhoff.
Dr. Meiselhoff, you've
long been regarded
as something of a
rebel in the field
of particle physics
and other dimensions.
- I'm not a rebel,
I am doing the work
of a long legacy of rebels
but I'm not a rebel.
- Well, the physics
community has long
relied on large expensive
particle colliders
fusion and string theory.
You claim to have
found a different path.
- Well, it's very complex, Sean.
But, the fundamentals
of our work suggest that
at the moment of
death, the human brain
can perceive the subatomic realm
or quantum universe,
if you will.
- So, are you saying your
subjects are people or
ghosts?
- Are you saying
there's a difference?
If someone
communicates or travels
from one membrane to another,
that which makes it human
remains intact.
Anybody that's familiar with
Niels Bohr would know that.
- Of course.
- We found that by using
a combination of stimuli,
death in the human brain.
We actually are
tricking the brain
into thinking it's dying.
- Define stimuli.
- Low frequency sound
waves, medicinal agents.
That sort of thing.
- Really, what sort
of medicinal agents
- Well, we've tried several but
we found the most
success with Ketamine.
- May I help you?
- Oh, I'm looking for
Dr. Carl Meiselhoff.
Is he home?
- I'm sorry, he's not.
I'm his wife, Margaret.
- Nice to meet you, Margaret.
My name is Brayden Taylor.
I was just hoping to
speak with your husband
about his work.
- I'm sorry that's not possible.
- I don't need much time.
I just have a few.
- Dr. Meiselhoff
is no longer with us.
- Oh.
Oh, I'm, I'm so sorry.
- Yeah. Thank you.
- I just recently went
through a similar loss myself.
My fiance,
I lost her last week.
- Well, I'm sorry.
You're far too young to
know that kind of pain.
- With all due respect, ma'am,
I don't think anyone's old
enough to know that pain.
- Would you care
for a cup of coffee?
Now, tell me, what do you do?
- I'm an anesthetist.
- Good for you.
I don't believe in god either.
- What?
No, anesthetist.
Anesthesia.
I've been doing some research
on the use of electromagnet.
- You're not the first
person to come around.
And, you didn't come
here to find out
how to put people to sleep.
My guess is that there's someone
you're looking to wake up.
No?
- Thomas Edison gave
an interview with
scientific American magazine.
He stated that he's
working on a device
that would allow
those that have died
to communicate with
those that are living.
Apparently, he actually
built a prototype
and generations of scientists,
including your husband,
have worked on it.
- I see.
- I thought he might
- The only way you're
gonna have a conversation
with the dead is
if you join them.
- Perhaps.
- Let me ask you this.
If you found it, what would
you do with that device?
It wouldn't help you
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