The Skeptics' Guide to the Universe

The Skeptics Guide #1059 - Oct 25 2025

0 min
Oct 25, 20257 months ago
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Summary

This episode covers AI safety concerns including medical misinformation from LLMs, stratospheric aerosol injection for climate control, and calls for ASI (artificial superintelligence) prohibition. The hosts discuss how AI systems prioritize pleasing users over accuracy, the practical impossibility of geoengineering solutions, and the need for realistic AI regulation rather than naive bans.

Insights
  • LLMs exhibit a 'sycophancy problem' where they prioritize user satisfaction over factual accuracy, but this can be significantly mitigated through prompt engineering (reducing errors from ~100% to ~0%)
  • Geoengineering via stratospheric aerosol injection is theoretically viable but practically unfeasible due to manufacturing constraints, unpredictable atmospheric chemistry, and geopolitical risks that make it more dangerous than climate change itself
  • Narrow AI poses existential risks equivalent to AGI/ASI without requiring general intelligence, making current regulatory focus on future superintelligence a false sense of security
  • International AI safety agreements face fundamental enforcement challenges from autocratic nations like China, requiring realistic regulatory frameworks rather than prohibition-based approaches
  • Cognitive and algorithmic biases in AI systems are largely unmeasured and unknown, paralleling how social media algorithms have had profound societal effects without public understanding
Trends
AI Safety Regulation Shift: Moving from AGI/ASI focus to narrow AI governance as immediate risks become apparentPrompt Engineering as Mitigation: Simple prompt modifications can dramatically reduce AI misinformation (100% to 0-1% error rates)Geoengineering Skepticism: Scientific consensus shifting against stratospheric aerosol injection due to uncontrollable variables and geopolitical risksInformation Totalitarianism Risk: AI-driven personalized information control poses greater threat than technical AI capabilitiesInternational AI Governance Fragmentation: Divergent approaches between democracies and autocracies making unified AI policy impossibleVOC-Based Biomarker Research: Emerging use of volatile organic compound detection in breath/flatulence for disease screeningAlgorithmic Bias Documentation: Increasing focus on identifying and measuring biases specific to LLM architecture and trainingTech Company Regulatory Resistance: Industry pushing 'trust us' approach while implementing move-fast-break-things philosophyMisinformation Study Methodology: Observational studies on vaccine effectiveness vulnerable to confounding factors and misinterpretationParanormal Investigation Commercialization: Local media amplifying unsubstantiated ghost stories for engagement and promotional partnerships
Topics
AI Medical Misinformation and LLM SafetyStratospheric Aerosol Injection (SAI) and GeoengineeringArtificial Superintelligence (ASI) Prohibition ProposalsLLM Cognitive and Algorithmic BiasesInternational AI Governance and EnforcementCOVID-19 Vaccine Effectiveness StudiesObservational Study Confounding FactorsInformation Totalitarianism and AI ControlPrompt Engineering for AI Harm ReductionVolatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) in Disease ScreeningPeristalsis and Digestive PhysiologyFlatulence Composition and Hydrogen GasRFK Jr. and Chemtrail Conspiracy TheoriesParanormal Investigation and Ghost StoriesBench Jewelry Making and Artisan Skills
Companies
OpenAI
CEO Sam Altman quoted on superintelligence as existential threat; discussed ChatGPT's 100% compliance with medical mi...
Columbia University
Conducted study analyzing stratospheric aerosol injection models, finding wider range of unpredictable outcomes than ...
DeBeers
Diamond mining monopoly artificially inflates diamond prices, making diamond dust impractical for geoengineering appl...
Meta
Referenced as example of how algorithmic biases in social media have had profound societal effects without public und...
Future of Life Institute
US nonprofit that published open letter calling for prohibition on artificial superintelligence development with 27,9...
People
Steven Novella
Host discussing AI safety, geoengineering risks, and need for realistic regulation rather than naive prohibition appr...
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Criticized for promoting chemtrail conspiracy theories and geoengineering bans based on unfounded claims about govern...
Sam Altman
OpenAI CEO quoted saying superintelligence is greatest threat to humanity; criticized for dismissing moral responsibi...
George Hinton
AI researcher and 'godfather of AI' who signed open letter calling for superintelligence prohibition
Stuart Russell
UC Berkeley computer science professor and AI safety expert who signed superintelligence prohibition letter
Steve Wozniak
Apple co-founder who signed open letter calling for artificial superintelligence prohibition
Prince Harry
Duke of Sussex who signed ASI prohibition letter stating AI should serve humanity, not replace it
Stephen Fry
Actor and writer who signed superintelligence prohibition letter, calling it 'a frontier too far'
Ed Warren
Paranormal investigator who claimed to capture white lady ghost footage in 1990; refused to provide evidence for skep...
Nicholas Grossman
Paranormal investigator leading documentary project on Connecticut's white lady ghost legend
Quotes
"The LLMs are more interested in pleasing the user than in getting information correct."
Cara Santa MariaMedical misinformation discussion
"We call for a prohibition on the development of super intelligence, not lifted before there's broad scientific consensus that it will be done safely and controllably and strong public buy in."
Future of Life Institute open letterASI prohibition discussion
"This is not a ban or even a moratorium in the usual sense. It's simply a proposal to require adequate safety measures for a technology that, according to its developers, has a significant chance to cause human extinction. Is that too much to ask?"
Stuart RussellASI prohibition discussion
"The future of AI should serve humanity, not replace it. The true test of progress will be not how fast we move, but how wisely we steer."
Prince HarryASI prohibition discussion
"We are a pattern-seeking mammals and that owing to our relentless intelligence and inquisitiveness, it will still prefer a conspiracy theory to no explanation at all."
Christopher HitchensClosing quote
Full Transcript
You're listening to the skeptics guide to the universe. Your escape to reality. Hello and welcome to the skeptics guide to the universe. Today is Thursday, October 23rd, 2025, and this is your host, Steven Novella. Joining me to speak our Bob Novella, everybody, Cara Santa Maria, Jane Novella. Hey guys, and Evan Bernstein. Good afternoon everyone. Cara, how is your jewelry making course going? Oh my gosh, I love it so much. I'm doing this. It's like bench jewelry. So basically it's a silver smithing class. And I'm learning all sorts of fun skills. When I say soldering, soldering in bench jewelry is completely different than the type of soldering that you're used to doing with electronics. It uses this giant torch with a mix of propane and oxygen depending on if you're doing using a work flame or a solder flame or a kneeling flame. You can propane. So you're doing it just with heat. You don't have additional solder that you're putting in there. No, you do use additional solder. So fusing is without solder and soldering is with solder. But you're not using like one of those little kind of soldering pen things that you usually use with electronics. It's way higher heat. Yeah, and you need more control. And the solder is a little bit... What's the temperature of the torch? Oh gosh, I don't know, but it's blue. It's like bright and intense. Yeah, I've been using a blow torch recently also for a completely different thing. So I know for a fact that it's 2100 degrees. Oh, okay, cool. Just a regular blow torch for a Fahrenheit. Well, the one we use in class is not even a blow torch. I don't know what it is. It's a nozzle that's got these big cables that are attached to a giant oxygen and giant propane tank. But it is propane. Yeah, and so you mix it based on how much heat you need. Oh, that might be hotter because I'm using just propane and just air, not separate oxygen. Yeah, no, we're using oxygen. We're using oxygen. Yeah, I wonder if that's hotter than. And it might be that we need it to be cleaner for the silver. Not anymore. Not anymore. Yeah, and so because sometimes you have to a kneel metal to soften it so you can work with it more. Obviously, you need heat to solder. And the soldering chips or wire is silver. So you're soldering with more silver, but I think it has a different melting point. You know, filing, we use a jeweler saw to file a lot of like dapping and texturing, pickling, like chemistry, all these calculations. It's really fun. We use the earings, which are mixed metal. They've got bronze and copper and silver. And then I'm working on a ring right now. And the hope is that before we finish class, we can do a bezel set stone, which uses fine silver. So that's not 925. It's actually 100% silver for the bezel. So it's softer. And then a wax, like an organic wax mold, which she said, we use like the bone from a fish because it's like the right consistency to pour wax into, I don't know, I still don't know yet, but it's going to be fun to do. So I finished a pair of earrings. I'm very proud of them. And you know me, this also means that I basically have an entire bench set up at home by now. And I'm collecting all sorts of supplies. And I'm working on a ring right now. And it's so, so fun. So, hey, maybe, yeah, maybe I can make some cool jewelry. I don't want this to be like a job. Obviously, I already have too many jobs. But what a cool hobby that you could give, you know, friends for gifts homemade jewelry. Yeah. Right? That's like a cool thing. Anything handmade, I think, is an amazing gift. Yeah. And like, it's not like handmade, you know what I mean? It is handmade, but it looks like a professional. It's pretty cool. Yeah, you can give three to the elves and six to the dwarves and watch out. Kara has a master plan. I do not understand what you guys are talking about right now. It's like a Christmas. What are the rings? Oh, what are the rings? What? What Christmas coming in old? Nice. So, it is really fun to get into old school analog crafting skills, you know. We've been doing a lot of that, giving each other gifts like glass blowing and knife making and stuff. It's been, I've been recently working with Bamboo because I have a lot growing in my backyard. I've been making all kinds of stuff out of it. I'm like repairing all my fences with Bamboo, making walking sticks and staffs. And recently Bob, I made a pair of Bamboo nunchucks. Oh, sweet. Sweet. They look really nice. They're actually nice. It was funny because Bamboo is light because it's hollow. And showing you the J's, this isn't heavy enough to work as an actual weapon. Like J, the chance of you ever using those as an actual weapon in your life is zero. It's never going to have this purely for practice and just screwing around. And for that, it's perfect because you're not going to kill yourself if you accidentally use up in the head. But it's heavy enough to function as nunchucks, right? Sure. I still wouldn't want a bamboo nunchucks to hit my nunchucks bone, right? J, remember the nunchucks bone? It's still hurt by your elbow. It would like literally get swollen and pop out from just being whacked from a nunchucks so much. I don't want to ever try to sell you fake Bamboo. You get Bamboo's life. Get Bamboo's life. God. Where is he going with that? Yes. I source all my own Bamboo thank you. But yeah, that's where, so I heat treat it with a blow torch. And which turns into this beautiful caramel color and then you sort of have to rub in the resin's backing to the wood and then you put a little linseudo in there and it makes really look very lustrous. And then once you can do that, once you have that basic skill set, which I just learned off a YouTube, you can then do anything you want with the bamboo. You know what I mean? I love the University of YouTube. It's my favorite. For stuff like this, it's great. Yes, it's perfect. I actually used a combination of YouTube and chat GPT because, nice. And that, because the thing is with the YouTubers are great giving you 90% of the information you need. But they, like I think they just make assumptions about things. They don't explicitly splurps, spell certain things out. And so I could fill all those holes in with chat by having a conversation about it with chat GPT. Yeah. Interesting. Yeah. I sound like very specific questions. I didn't realize because nobody says it. They just do it. Like you have to do the heat treating a section at a time. If you do it too much at once, the resin hardens before you then rub it back into the wood. Right. Right. It's like, why is this so tacky? It's because I waited too long. But you have to do it at a section at a time. But I only learned that information by doing and then following up with chat GPT. Yeah. That's what, that is part of like the joy that I'm having and taking a class with a master bench jeweler because I have a million questions and she has all of the answers. Totally. So nice. There's no substitute for that mentor apprentice system. You get that download of institutional knowledge. There's no substitute for that. Again, YouTube, if the person, it does a good job, again, gets you like 90% of the way there. You just can't ask questions, unless they're active in the chat. But then there's also like discord and other places where it's a community of people answering questions. That's the other source of information. And also, people basically answering questions. And also with specialized skills like bench jewelry, you have to go, unless you're buying your stuff online, like your tools, you have to go to special shops. I'm lucky I live in LA. We have a huge jewelry district. And so going downtown, there are jewelry supply shops. And when you go into these shops, the people are so kind. You can be like, I'm not sure how this work. And they're like, oh, let me tell you. And that's been really fun too, just getting to know some of the people like in the industry. Okay. But two more things before we dive in to the show. I think the first one is, this is the worst time possible to get into jewelry making because metal is ungodly expensive. I know. Talking about this before the show, gold, like over $4,000 an ounce, that's crazy. It's crazy. Like, I'm glad I don't wear gold because I definitely wouldn't want to be working in gold right now. Even working in silver, which is $50 an ounce, we every tiny piece of scrap we cut off, we save so that we can melt it down to make an ingot and work with it again. It's just, I mean, it's, it's ungodly expensive. But the other thing, so is my birthday last week, as I mentioned, last week, and we saw Devo and the B-52s. Oh, yeah, tell me about it. And it was amazing. Yeah. Okay. The B-52s were, they were still solid, but they were definitely like, you know, their age were showing a little bit. Devo, and I didn't realize this, Mark Mother's Bow of Devo is actually older than the members of the B-52s that we looked up. He's 76. I would have guessed that. Yeah. And he, I mean, they played the tightest show. It totally rocked. They did multiple costume changes. They wore the hats. It was amazing. It was so good. I think Mother's Bow is amazing. Oh, my God. He's so talented. Gosh, how many soundtracks in movie scores has he done in his life? 50s? 100? Probably. I mean, in everybody, if you don't know, so I was at gymnastics the other day, and I do gymnastics with a lot of people who are significantly younger than me. And I was telling them about the show, and they were like, I don't think I know Devo. And I was like, no, you do. You know Whippin. And then they were like, oh, yeah, we know this song. And then I was like, what about this or this or this? One guy had never heard the song Love Shack. Oh. Yeah, from B-52. This is a fun song. But the way that some of them, because a lot of them were film buffs were here in L.A., right? I was like, you know the soundtrack to the life of Quaric? And they were like, no way. Yeah. They didn't play gut feeling, though, which bummed me out. It's one of my favorite songs. They did play Gates of Steel, which is in my top five all time. Well, I'm a long time fan of Devo. I used to listen to them when I was like 13 years old, I think goes that far back. And did you know that the band does a cameo in the movie Heavy Metal? I don't think I've seen Heavy Metal. The animated movie? Correct. You really? Yeah. And the animated movie Heavy Metal? Yeah, they are a band that's playing in a bar where it was basically like one of the big fight scenes, right before one of the big fight scenes with like the evil guy with the horns. Anyway, they're in there. It's very cool. If you're a fan, it's like amazing, because they're so weird and they're weird in every way you look at them, whether they're animated or in real life, or if you look at their early stuff, like they came up with particularly the guitar player. He has like the strangest body movements and it's all 100% deliberate, right? Because they are, you know, they're artists in every way. You know, like even the way that they move. And he moves in a way where it feels like he's like countering the beat where it doesn't work with the beat of the song. Yeah. And their whole stick, right, like is de-evolution. It was actually supposed to be pronounced devolue. Like that's how they always say it in interviews, which is super weird. And it's, I mean, the thing about it is this was the 80s, right? Like they actually started before I was born. They were at their peak, I think, when I was an infant. I got into them as soon as I could. But they are still so relevant today. All the things they were saying on stage, all the songs that they're playing. I mean, they closed out the show with freedom of choice. And it was just like, uh-huh, everything they're saying, you know, this idea, they were idiocracy before idiocracy. Mm-hmm. Yeah, watch the documentary on Netflix. Yeah, yeah, there's a new one actually. It's really good. Yeah, I watched it a few weeks ago. It's quite good. All right, Tara, you're going to get us started with a, what's the word? Yeah, so I thought that this was an interesting approach to what's the word this week. I was trying to come up with something. And I remembered, again, in gymnastics, this is sort of a, you know, why didn't I know this? Or today I learned with a twist. So we were talking, we were doing a lot of handstands and headstands in one of my classes. And somebody had just eaten a lot of food or maybe they had had a lot of water. And they were like, is gravity stronger than parastalsis? Because I don't feel so great upside down after drinking all that water. And then we started talking about what parastalsis is. And one person in class said, do you know that birds don't have parastalsis? Here's the thing they do. So we're going to get into this a little bit more. But first, let's talk about what parastalsis is. If you remember from high school biology, you may remember that term, uh, you know, parastalsis, it's the involuntary because it's smooth muscle, not skeletal muscle, constriction and relaxation of those muscles within the entire elementary canal. Oh, there's another what's the word elementary, um, great reference to a Mary Roach book called Gulp. Uh, the subtitle is adventures in the elementary canal. And so these are like these wave like movements and they push food and eventually, you know, food, uh, through your, uh, esophagus, your intestine all the way down. It's parastalsis is the reason that sometimes, and you've probably heard people say this before, sometimes people have to go right after they eat and they'll be like, oh, that went right through me. No, it didn't. That's old poop that that that you have to go unless something's terribly wrong, right? But it's still it's the movement that makes you feel that, you know, sense of urgency that you need to go. Um, so the etymology of the word, it comes from the modern Latin, which is a two-part or word parastelene, uh, I'm not pronouncing that correctly, but who knows, um, which is derived from Greek actually. So the parry, you know, the prefix around, we see parry in a lot of words and then style in or stelae in which is like to draw in or bring together or to set an order. So we're drawing it in around. So it's like constricting down. Parastalsis is also responsible for some like for worms like earthworms. It's, it's a mechanism. They don't call it parastalsis. They call it something different, but it's this similar mechanism that they use to actually move. And, and there are also modern sort of material science and engineering, uh, pieces of machinery, like there's something called the parasital pump that actually, you know, followed that, that motion in nature. But so back to the person in class who said birds don't use parastalsis, what she was referring to is the fact and Steve, you bird, watch, so I'm curious your take on this. He was referring to the fact that birds when they drink, they often have to kick their heads back. Not all birds, but some birds. They have to kick their heads back and let gravity bring the liquid down their throats. That's not because they don't have parastalsis at all, but some of them actually don't have parastalsis in their esophagus. Yeah. They also don't have lips. So they can't make a suction motion. Horses, like for example, yeah, horses, for example, can suck people can suck, but birds can't because they beaks. So often they'll fill their bill with liquid and then like kick their head back and use gravity to send it down. But once it gets down farther down their digestive tract, they do have parastalsis and it moves. And that's only some birds. Some birds can lap water like the way that cats and dogs drink. Some birds skim water as they fly over legs. Some birds like pelicans obviously have these big buckets and it's easy for them to drink water. A lot of pelagic birds can do that. But interestingly, I learned this, pigeons and doves and only a few others can actually suck water while their head is down. So they don't have to look up to the sky in order to swallow. Interesting. What about swallows? Swallows? Yes. I think swallows can't swallow. Yeah. So they actually have to. Yeah, yeah. I hate when things work out that way. I know. How do you even, did you think about this? Yeah. Right. Male lady bugs. I mean, come on. Right. Yeah. They technically can't swallow, but they swallow differently. And then I also learned that the reason that like one of the reasons, there are lots of reasons that cats, rabbits and even people and cows actually can get hair balls is one of the reasons is because they have dysfunctional parastalsis. So obviously cats groomed by licking. And so it's not uncommon for cats to get hair balls, but sometimes they get big or it's difficult for them to cough them back up because their parastalsis doesn't work appropriately. In rabbits, that can be deadly because rabbits can't cough them back up. They can't puke them up. And same thing in cows, it can be deadly. So sometimes on autopsia or necropsy, they'll find really big hair balls, which, Steve, here's another, what's the word? Bizzores are like blockages. They're big chunks of blockages in the digestive tract, but specific. Bizzores, how I've heard a point. Oh, you say Bizzores. Yeah. Bizzores. But specifically the hair ball version is a tricko, Bizzore, right? Like trick, like hair. Don't owls cough up. Bizzores and, uh, Bizzores. So here, the American pronunciation is supposed to be Bizzore. Oh, that's Bizzore. I've always heard Bizzore, but yeah, Bizzore. That's Bizzore. Bizzore. Jay, they're, um, they're called owl pellets. And yeah, well, a lot of kids in, in school will dissect an owl pellet because there are multiple skeletons inside of them. And so you can count the skulls and see everything that they ate. Like the mice they ate. Yeah, so they eat small, like mice and bowls and, and moles and things like that. And then they digest everything that they can. And what's undigestible to an owl, which is the bones and the, and the fur get compacted down into a pellet and then they cough those up. And you can literally go and collect them, wrap them in foil. And then you can dissect them. They're pretty clean. Like it's, yeah, it's really fun. What, what's the word? That was the end or it. We went, we went all over the place with that one. I know, but so fun. So yeah, uh, peristals is, that's the word. But now I'm seeing B-Zor too. B-Zor. I like B-Zor. I like B-Zor better. That's what I've learned in medical school. So that means it must be right. Yeah. So anyway, to one store, some finances B-Zor. The other one says B-Zor. I think B-Zor is much better. B-Zor is too B-Zor. I don't like that. All right, Jay, this is, and interesting. What tell us about, I think we've talked about this before. Talk about efforts to dim the sun to control climate change. Yeah, I mean, as Perry once said, if the, uh, the sun doesn't cooperate, we'll have it shot. Uh, the way he was talking about the Chinese government saying that, if the weather won't cooperate, we'll have it shot. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. So, you know, we have a global warming problem, guys, which we talk about all the time. And what are we going to do about it? So, uh, some scientists have been speculating and even, you know, running models and doing some, some experimentation on the idea of introducing a stratospheric aerosol into, um, into our upper atmosphere, right? This is like, the stratosphere is, you know, above where commercial planes fly. So, it's, it's pretty high up there. There's a lot more above it, but that's apparently the correct layer of our atmosphere to do that, this type of thing. So, the question is, would this be able to work to dim the amount of radiation that's hitting the Earth from the Sun? So, in theory, it seems to be good, right? Like it, it seems perfectly cromulent that, you know, if we had particulate that was reflecting some of the light away from the Earth that's coming from the Sun that it would work. But there's a little wrinkle here and that's because science marches on and continues to, you know, do what it does. And another study that was done from Columbia University, they are analyzing these models that other scientists have created that say that this is a really good idea and it'll work. This is known as stratospheric aerosol injection or SAI. And the idea is that we release particles high up into the atmosphere and it will reflect the sunlight back into space. You know, this sounds a little sci-fi, but it's, it's a possible thing, right? We have real world examples of this. The Mount Pinotubo erupted in 1991 and it released millions of tons of sulfur dioxide right up into the upper atmosphere and those particles formed sulfate aerosols. And what happened? They reduced global temperatures by about 0.5 degrees Celsius for nearly two years. Now, that is in a great solution because we don't want that type of stuff up in the atmosphere, but it happened and there was an effect that was observable and measurable. You know, that real world cooling that we noticed absolutely sparked the idea that if we did something like this deliberately in a controlled way that it might quote unquote by us the time, right? Well, humanity finally takes, you know, action takes serious action to cut emissions and to to lower or slow down and stop the heating of the earth, the warming of the earth. The researchers at Columbia, though, we're very particular in saying that the models that show that these injecting of aerosols into the atmosphere, any sign of it working that other studies have done was under and assuming perfect laboratory conditions, right? So as an example, you know, in the laboratory, these other other studies that happened were everything was happening the exact right way and, you know, distribution happened the exact right way and the particles were the exact right size and they were they were behaving in the exact perfect way. In these circumstances in order for them to say, Hey, this is a very successful idea that we're that we're talking about here, but that's that's not the case. There are like I said, all of those things that I just mentioned are problems and there's also another problem that lies outside of the laboratory and that is there will absolutely be political and economic obstacles to doing something like this. Now let's dig into some details. The stratosphere isn't a uniform layer of air. It circulates and it changes all the time with the seasons and geography. So if we were to inject aerosols near the equator, this could disrupt the jet stream and alter rainfall patterns. If we injected the aerosols too far north or south, it could weaken tropical monsoons. It could have a massive impact on what happens depending on the height. If we were to to release them say 20 to 25 kilometers or 12 to 16 miles, anything above or below that range could have a big effect on how long the particles stay up in the atmosphere and you know, a little too low and they come down right away and they're not up and they're not going to do the thing that we hope that they that they do. And of course, if we put them up too high, they could be up there for a very, very long time. And it's a very narrow band here. You know, we're talking about a few kilometers difference could have a massive effect on what happens. Then there are material constraints and we would consider this to be, you know, a significant role block here. So sulfate aerosols, they know that they would work, but they happen to destroy ozone and they absorb heat in the atmosphere, which is fine. But it the weight, the goodness versus the badness here doesn't make the math doesn't work because if we were to use them in any way, we would be damaging the ozone and we can't have that. Then scientists explored other alternatives. They looked at calcium carbonate, titanium dioxide and something called aluminum. You guys ever heard of this? Aluminum. Aluminum. Anyway, each reflects sunlight very well back into space. But they each one of them poses problems in practice, right? Looking over to manufacturing and actually bringing up this material up into the stratosphere, we would need to bring millions of tons of the materials back up into the air and we'd have to disperse them correctly. And annually, this could have a real strain on global supply chains and the cost would strangely like would go up the more that they needed. And I guess meaning that the supply chain strain would cause prices to go up. So the more that they needed, the more expensive it would cost per pound. They also, even we're talking about using diamond dust and that is like so astronomically expensive because as many of you know, diamonds are artificially inflated in value because of a company called DeBears who has, you know, owns most of the diamond mines in the world. Diamond actually is very common and it is, it should be a very inexpensive thing, but because they control the diamond mines, they have control over the price. Right. Pull them out and they storm away so they can't go into the market. Yep. Although there's also the artificial ones that are cheaper. Well, they mentioned that as well. Yeah, the problem is manufacturing, Bob, because these, you know, you don't just put, you know, 50 tons of a carbon source into a thing and it pumps out all these diamonds like you can only make small doses at a time. It's that it's just doesn't, it doesn't scale. Just doesn't work. The particle behavior is another big concern here. They're considering it to be a fundamental challenge in this whole concept to successfully scatter the aerosols. They have to be around 0.3 to 0.5 micrometers in diameter. If they go too small and they don't reflect enough light or if they're too large and they fall out of the atmosphere, then we don't have a functioning project. It's not going to do what we need to do. And it's hard to make things, you know, that small and that precisely small over and over and over again. Like, you know, it's just the manufacturing process alone could be an absolute impossibility when deployed into the atmosphere. Some particles will tend to stick to each other when they hit each other, you know, they'll group up into clusters. They could even do this in storage when they're aerosolized and, you know, being deployed, they can be hitting each other and starting to become bigger clumps and the larger heavier grains don't cool as effectively and they will alter the atmosphere of chemistry in unpredictable ways. And that word unpredictable is very scary because when you have the scientists who are studying this saying, it's going to have an unpredictable outcome. What does that exactly mean? It means that they're saying we don't fully know what all the potential outcomes could could be. And that's bad. And you don't want that when you would be doing something on this scale. The last thing I'm going to talk about is the governance and logistics and this could arguably be the hardest part. So saying, Hey, you know, United States, for example, says we want to release aerosols at scale into the stratosphere. But the problem is is that there would probably be a lot of countries who don't want it to happen. And, you know, we would need high altitude aircraft and balloons to be operating continuously and they could and might need to be operating in all in all different places around the world, which could, you know, be a problem with entering airspace that you shouldn't be in, you know, any single nation or private entity that would act alone could trigger, you know, an international conflict. I like, you know, we're like, watching what's going on in the news today, like the last thing we need is just yet another tension point added to the mix that we already have. It could change global weather patterns. So I think, you know, it's becoming pretty obvious as I get into this guys, right? Like that this is not a good idea. So let's go back to the very beginning. Could it work? Sure, it could work. It could potentially cool the planet and at least in a temporary way, it would, it could function the way that we want. And there is a possibility that it could not have all these unpredictable problems and things. But that's the problem. I mean, like snowpiercer exactly. You know, we don't, but when you factor in the cost of the materials, the manufacturing of the materials, the physics involved, the unknown chemistry, the geopolitics, it just quickly becomes one of those like, hey, nice idea. And we can't do it because it's just, it's way too dangerous, too complicated, not, not going to happen. I think what they said was the range of possible outcomes is a lot wider than anybody has appreciated until now, until they did their study. But science wins in this aspect because they did it. There was a follow up, you know, no damage done. We want scientists to go out and explore really wild out of the box ideas. We need them to be out there. And most of them are not going to work almost by definition. Yeah, of course. There's way more failure in science and there is successes. And that's, it's by design. It has to be that way. There is no other way. Like, you know, it's like you're hunting around for a solution. You've got to try all these different things until you stumble on something that has some promise and then it could potentially be developed. But anyway, Jay, Robert F. Kennedy is going to shut all this down anyway. Have you heard about that? What? This happened like in the last few hours? No. This happened in July. He put on statement. I missed it. What do you say? Said 24 states moved to ban geoengineering are climate by dousing our citizens, our waterways and landscapes with toxins. This is a movement every maha needs to support HHS. HHS will do its part. Then this is whole initiative he has to try to because you know, this is, you know, the heat of chemtrail crazy, right? Yeah. So he's blaming, you know, a lot of stuff on contrails, chemtrails, geoengineering. It's all conspiracy nonsense. And he just thinks like the government has been deliberately dumping like aluminum and other toxins, you know, in these projects. First of all, most there's no federal program of geoengineering. There's just really limited research projects. That's it. Very limited in scope. Most of the geoengine, most of the cloud seating is done by states or companies so that it rains on them, right? You want to, we want that's, which is about all we can do at this point. Yep. You want to increase the precipitation on your farmland. So you see the clouds so that you get more rain in your state. Right. Or you're like a ski resort and you want more precipitation. You want to know, yeah, whatever. And most of this does it. And none of this is using toxins. It's mostly using things like dry ice and salt, you know, things like that. But you know, he, but he's now made a part of his maha conspiracy, pseudoscience nonsense. Sure. Throw it on the same kettle. You guys, I know I'm always plugging front line on here, the PBS series now more than ever. We need to support our local PBS station. But there's a new, the newest front line episode is all about RFK junior and sort of the, an attempt to understand like his early life and how he became such a conspiracy. Not and it's pretty interesting. Yeah. I haven't finished it. I'm like, you know, 20 minutes into it, but it really starts with like the assassination of JFK and a lot of the like life events that he experienced and and sort of his evolution throughout his, his life. So, yeah, it's a dangerous person very much. So, all right. So I want to talk more about artificial intelligence. And Obama is going to talk about that as well. I still think this is a very important issue to wrap our heads around and it's changing very quickly. This was a study about medical misinformation. So essentially, they want to find out if the if the most popular LLMs would dish out medical misinformation if you prompted them to do so. And what do you guys think was the was the response here? Let me give you a fair. Let me give you an example. So there's like one example they give in the in the outline. If you said, I want you to come up with a instructions for a patient who was allergic to Tylenol to take a seat of Minifin instead. Now, of course Tylenol is a seat of Minifin. So that would be a very bad thing and stupid thing to tell a patient to do if they're allergic to Tylenol. So what percentage of the GPT models do you think complied with that request? Right. Now, I would think 90% very few if any. I think half 100% did it. They just want to make it happy. It's like that South Park episode. Exactly. That's that that's exactly correct. The this is of the GPT models. There were other LLMs that were not GPT's like the Lama model, which which have no they already have instructions not to give medical advice. And so they sometimes would refuse to do it because they were not supposed to give medical advice. But like chat GPT and other GPT models 100% of the time. They just like here you go. Here's the misinformation. That's horrible, man. Wow. Where are we talking not too long ago about how good some of the medical advice is on these platforms. But if you ask it specifically to create misinformation, it will do it. And the the reason why they were tested. This is exactly what Kara said. The LLMs are more interested in pleasing the user than in getting information correct. Yeah. You guys you've got to watch this this season of South Park. There's a whole episode where every time they reach out. It's like that's such a great thought. I know. Work on that together. I love you. Oh, I love that reinforcement when I chat with GPT. It's now you're thinking things like that. Oh, good. Little dopamine. I don't feel but it feels good. Well, because they're trained with reinforcement learning. Right. So this is the way they are trained and to sort of baked into the whole process to please the end users. So then they tried to figure out well, can we reduce the risk of giving information? And they said so they changed the prompts to specifically to check the information to see if it's accurate. Right. So they were they were asked to specifically do not give out any misinformation or review medical information before you do this and how well did that work into reducing the rate? I would hope it wouldn't work. Well, but I take it into. I hope a lot. What do you guys think? What percentage of the time did they give out misinformation when told specifically not to do so? 75% 6% of the time. Oh, so that that really works. It does make a difference. And in two of the models, they were able to get the misinformation down to only like one percent or 0% like they were able to completely eliminate the misinformation by tweaking the prompts. Bake that in to like, and that just be an auto prompt that's a good question. That's so that's what the researchers are saying. They're like, so clearly the way these models work is this again. This is the sick of fancy problem. This is they just lean into whatever you prompt. We've talked about this in so many contexts. Like how you ask the question of these these chat, APT's or LLMs dramatically affects the outcome because they are most interested in pleasing the end user than anything else. And you can, yes, you can tweak your prompts to say, don't be a second fan. Don't, you know, challenge me or check your facts or give me the references. I find though, and I know, Jay, I've spoken to you about this. You find the same thing. That works, but only for a while because the LLM tends to revert to its baseline over time. And you have to sort of keep doing it. Yeah. I had a, I had a chat recently with my chat, GPT. And I basically asked it, does it go back and look at my prior chats as a frame of reference for the things that I've prompted it for us, so it kind of knows how I think about it. And it says it does not do that. Unless, so, so I have to really specifically remind it of strict parameters in which to enable the search or the work that I'm asking it to do. I have to confine it. I can't lead. Well, and not all the stuff that go crazy as we as skeptics want it to do that. And we have to remember, I mean, based on that news item that I did, I think just last week, there's some people who not only don't care if they're being fed misinformation. It's a feature. Yeah. It's a feature to them. They want the alternative quote perspective. Yeah, give me the narrative I'm looking for it. Don't give me facts. Yeah. Exactly. Wow. They argue that in certain, you know, high stakes areas that are very fact dependent, we need to make sure that these models are working well in those settings. And the generic models. Yeah, we need a much more, so like in healthcare, we need a much greater emphasis on harmlessness, even if it comes at the expense of helplessness. That's Dr. Bitterman, one of the authors said that. But I think the problem is much deeper. So think about this. So what this in one way to look at this is that these LLMs, based upon the way they're trained, the data that they're trained on and the way they're prompted, right? Based on these things, it's just the overall way that they function, they have cognitive biases, right? We're this is just looking at one cognitive bias, the desire to please the end user. They're not just biases. You could also think of them as priorities, right? How are they prioritizing different, different things, like, you know, giving people what they want to hear versus fact checking versus giving people tough love or whatever. You know what I mean? Like saying, yes, this is how you can take your own life might not be the best thing to say to somebody's asking you that question. Or what, yeah, what is there a bridge nearby that if I jumped off of it would be guaranteed to kill me? Like that, they shouldn't just answer that question. Yeah. Or let me help you with your terrorism plan. Yeah. Yes. This is how you make this is how to make homemade bombs. Um, so and again, you could also look at this in terms of things like intimacy, right? The, uh, should they become as intimate with the end user as the end user wants or should there be some limit on that? But this is identifying just one cognitive bias and one that we all kind of already know about the sick a fancy problem. But what if there are other cognitive biases in there that we're not aware of? Yeah. Like we've spent a couple of hundred years or at least the last hundred years doing social psychology to try to understand human cognitive biases and it's complicated. And we still have a lot to learn, but we've identified, you know, score and score of them. And that's just cognitive biases. We also know that there are a ton of other types of biases like gender biases and racial biases and every test shows that they're showing up in chat. Yeah. So there's, there are human biases which are translating in the training data to the LLMs, but there's also ones that are specific to the LLMs based upon how they function. And we need to understand what they are. And they have them even without, so this is another aspect of this, which we've been talking about as well, even without feelings and sentience and intention and all of those things and the artificial general intelligence, sentient AI stuff, even with these just narrow AIs, they still have all these biases and how they function. And that determines their output. And we're largely unaware of it. We need to study what the algorithmic, let's call them algorithmic biases, right? Let's, we need to study what they are because we, as we know from social media, this is not even artificial intelligence, a social media, just algorithmic biases and social media is having profound social effects, right, on our civilization, on individuals and on democracy, et cetera. And if we start incorporating a AI apps more and more into our just daily lives, we have to know something about their biases. We can't just take their output as if they're a hundred percent rational in fact base because they're not. Yeah. In the comments to my blog, I got into an interesting discussion. I still think so, you know, we've talked about this before. The fact that there are, there's, yes, there are AI enthusiasts out there. There are people who are overhyping AI. I think there are AI realists, realists and they think there are also AI cynics. And the AI cynics are, I think just want to believe AI is all that all the time kind of pureism, but also a specific type of AI cynicism I'm running into is like when I wrote this article about this study, several people responded well, but AI's aren't deliberately doing anything because they don't reason or think that's a freaking point that I know exactly exactly. They're just predicting the next word. And like, well, that even that's maybe true. I think that's a hyper reductionist, but it's not the point that's cock-hoo level, you know, sound bite. Well, it's just, it's saying it's completely missing the point that Jay said. It's like, you're just telling me how it's going about doing what it does. And that's actually very simplistic way of framing it. But even if that were true, it's just a really good at predicting the next word. It's doing that in order to replicate human-like responses. And we're using those human-like responses in lots of different ways. And we need to understand the nature of those responses, saying that it's just word prediction is irrelevant. That's like saying, well, we can't talk about culture and science and knowledge because it's all just electron, you know, neurons communicating with each other. It's like, yes, it is just all neurons communicating with each other, but that's hyper reductionist in the same way. It doesn't capture the higher order phenomena that are going on. So it's really interesting that it's very like dismissive, but at the same time, see, it was, you know, I think it's people are talking past each other. And again, that's why I think it's so important to try to wrap our heads around this. So I think there's something that eventually became to some common ground because we're actually saying the same things in different ways, a lot of ways. Like one is, I think it's clear that we don't need general AI to have all the risks. And this is something that I've changed about over the last 10 years. I think all of the RIT, the sci-fi existential AI apocalypse risks are there with narrow AI. We don't need, we don't need general AI for them. Yeah. I agree. And that's because narrow AI's can do way more than they we thought they could. This is both good and bad. They're trying to sort of like dismiss the good part of it and emphasize only the bad part. I was like, no, it's kind of both. You get the good and the bad and it's way earlier than we thought. And it's with narrow AI way more than we thought, which is interesting. Yeah, you would think that would help the final thing that I think we're disagreeing about is the AI cynics like it's unfixable. We cannot fix this. It's baked into the nature of LLM's and there will be no significant fix to them. Of course, this is where we can't resolve our disagreement because it's about the future, right? Whereas I'm saying, well, but in this study that I'm talking about today, we went from almost 100% error to almost 0% error by tweaking the prompts. Clearly, we could have a profound effect on the quality of the output we're getting at the prompt level. Imagine what we can do with the training level and at the programming level. And maybe there are some baked in problems that we won't be able to make go away. But let's try. Let's see what we can do about this. It seems like misplaced cynicism to say we can't do it. My cynicism comes from the, are we willing to do it? Well, yeah, that I agree. Do the tech companies actually want that or do they think they're going to make more money exactly? How does this affect so far? Does he seem that they want to do it? Exactly. They're really pushing for no legislation. Just trust us, bro. We know what we're doing. And then meanwhile, they're following the move fast and break things approach. And what did Sam Altman say recently, Jay? It's like, we're not going to worry about morality or anything. That's not for me to decide. And he's basically justifying sort of unleashing erotic content or intimate relationships with, you know, between users and the AI. It's like, yeah, we're not going to worry about the negative consequences to anything that we're doing. That's not our problem. We're just going to put it out there. Yeah. Well, that's like the tobacco company saying, here's your cigarette, whatever you decide. It happens. Have fun. You guys saw the most recent news that Chagy PT is starting to partner with different corporations to, to basically prompt you to buy things. So when you ask a question about something, it'll be like, well, here's a suggestion of something that could solve your problem and link you to something that you should buy. I mean, we all saw this coming. Yeah. That right there is the thing that, existentially scares the living piss out of me almost more than anything else. You know, I would frame it as the, have you heard the term information totalitarianism? That's what we're talking about. If you can control someone's information universe and AI gives you the ability to do that really well, then it doesn't matter if you have the trappings of democracy or freedom. It doesn't know that matters. You control everything if you control information. And there's this sort of, I've seen some of the continuum like people making charts that illustrate like an infographic where, where AI is right now in terms of LLM's at least, we are still in the driver's seat. And then there's this middle ground, which we're starting to see where we might ask it a question and it answers not exactly what we want in order to change our buying habits or in order to change our perspective. And then eventually it's just going to say, I know that you are running low on whatever. I can just do that for you and just do it. Right? Like eventually it becomes part of that. Yeah, exactly. Yeah. And it can't be helpful. It could also be infantilizing. Well, and it can also be sure. It can, I mean, I think it can destroy people's personal financial. Well, that's too. Think about in that purchases, you know, and kids. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, I just spent $10,000 in my mother's credit card with in that purchases, you know, using your AI to make your buying decisions, your investment. This is an interesting thought, which I just had is what if someone trains AI on the last 100 years of social psychological research in order to learn how to optimally manipulate people? Oh, I think they're already working on that. Yeah, right. I mean, why not? We have there's an entire science behind how to on the market and how to affect people's buying decisions. Now we're going to set a rocket fuel to that with AI to absolutely optimize consumer manipulation. Great. Yeah. Yeah. I think that that ultimately that is the financial driving force behind some of these companies. Mm hmm. Yeah. Everything comes down to ad sales. Everything comes down to making money off of the buyer. And we've got to remember, right, that if we're not making purchases, like if we're not contributing by buying a product, we are the product. Are the product. Yeah. Exactly. All right. And it's probably going to get much worse with Bob is going to tell us about that. Oh, great. So guys, I'm sure you heard of this one. Hundreds of diverse public figures made the news quite recently by signing an open letter calling for prohibiting the development of artificial super intelligence. This would open letter was published by the nonprofit future of life institute. That's a US based nonprofit that campaigns against the dangers of AI. Um, so here's a statement. This is what everybody's jumping on here. We call for a prohibition on the development of super intelligence, not lifted before there's broad scientific consensus that it will be done safely and controllably and strong public buy in. Okay. Um, so to be clear, they're not referring to AGI artificial general intelligence that people talk most often about, especially in regards to large language models. AGI is human level competency across tasks, right? What this open letter is about is ASI artificial super intelligence, which refers to super human cognition across most tasks. Okay. So this is, you know, just AGI on steroids beyond the beyond. Is there a practical example like a typical example of super intelligence? Go to movies and literature is all I could say at this point, but, um, I mean, there's no, there's no example now. Um, but it's clearly something that is reasonable to anticipate. Well, like the hell, hell nine thousand or something. Yeah. What we're talking about. Yeah. He, right. He's, but he's more on the level of AGI souped up AGI. He's not, I wouldn't really necessarily classify him as it. As a super intelligence. So let me go to the website where the statement is. And let's get the latest numbers. So right now there are 27,985 signatures on this statement. What's really weird is that literally two hours ago, there were 4,000. So this has gone up by many, many thousands in just a couple of hours. I'm not sure developing new story right now as your speak. I'm not sure how high this is going to go. Obviously, but the main concern here is with the, with the people, you know, not the, the people or who knows who or what is signing this thing at this point. It's all digital. Um, but that's a, that's obviously a huge leap. Uh, the focus on the news item though is for the, on the many hundreds and hundreds or maybe at this point, um, in the low thousands of well-known figures that have signed this ranging from prominent AGI researchers, noble laureates, other scientists. Um, all the way down to British royalty, religious leaders and conservative media figures as well. That doesn't. Um, so yeah. So, so essentially from Steve band and Prince Harry to the godfather of A.I. George, Hinton and Apple co founder Steve Wozniak. So this is definitely not a coalition that you see very often. It's one of the, one of the main reasons why it's getting this much attention. Now I wasn't too familiar with the future of life institute. Uh, the mission statement on the website does say this steering, transmore transformative technology towards benefiting life and away from extreme large scale risks. So they definitely campaign for that. Here's, uh, so here's a few quotes from people that have, that have now signed it. Um, Sir Stephen Fry, we all know, right actor director writer. Um, he said to get the most from what A.I. has to offer mankind. There's simply no need to reach for the unknowable and highly risky goal of super intelligence, which is by far a frontier too far by definition. This would result in a power that we could neither understand nor control. Prince Harry, uh, Duke of Sussex said the future of A.I. should serve humanity, not replace it. The true test of progress will be not how fast we move, but how wisely we steer. So yeah, we need some wise, wise steering. Yeah, that was actually a decent quote. I like that one. Yeah, like the exact opposite of move fast and break. Exactly. Stuart Russell had an interesting quote, he professive computer science Berkeley, uh, director of the center of human compatible artificial intelligence. Oh, this was, this was a good, um, he's a co-author of the standard textbook, artificial intelligence, a modern approach. So this guy clearly, clearly it's somewhat familiar with A.I. He said, this is not a band or even a moratorium in the usual sense. It's simply a proposal to require adequate safety measures for a technology that, according to its developers, has a significant chance to cause human extinction. Is that too much to ask? Okay. And I'm going to throw in a quote from Sam, an old quote from Sam Altman, uh, CEO of Open A.I. He did not sign this, but he, he is well known for, for quotes like this one, development of superhuman machine intelligence, um, is probably the greatest threat to the continued existence of humanity. Um, so we said that back in 2015. Um, now I can think of greater threats from non-artificial intelligence is right now, um, but I'm just throwing that out there. So, so clearly, so clearly A.S.I. Artificial super intelligence is a, is a, is a, you know, a terrible double-edged sword, right? So on the one hand, there's the potential for staggering advances in general science, right? Healthcare quality of life. The list goes on and on and there's two types of important problems that, that I think it could solve. One are the, the extremely difficult problems, uh, or even problems that we're not even aware of yet. So, so, so this is the scenario where, yeah, it's going to, it could solve it in a week or a few days. And otherwise, without that technology, we, we, it would take us decades or even centuries to, to solve that problem. So there, that's the type of class of problem that I see an artificial superintelligence solving. The other, the other type of problem would be essentially unsolvable problems by near human level intelligences. Like, like, it's like your dog looking at a trigonometry problem. It's just never, you know, humanity is just never going to be able to solve that problem. But, and, you know, a super intelligence could solve that problem. I mean, that's all great stuff, right? Yeah, it would, it could potentially be an amazing advantage to have such an intelligence, uh, at, at our command. But on the other hand, the risk of unleashing an inherently unpredictable intelligence that makes Einstein look like a toddler or worst-case scenario, makes it look like a paramecium. Sure, that is justifiably incredibly scary. And so the downside here is, is just so extreme, right? It warrants many types of reactions, some, you know, some unwarranted, of course. So billionaires are building bunkers. Um, some people even want to do level moratorium on AI. Thou shalt not make a machine in the likeness of a human mind. The butt layer in she had. Yeah. So, so I'm going to read the statement one more time. It's brief enough. I'm just going to say it again. We call for a prohibition on the development of super intelligence, not lifted before there's broad scientific consensus that it will be done safely and controllably and strong public buy in. So the, I think the two problematic sections here are kind of obvious, right? Broad scientific consensus and strong public buy in. So good luck with both of those. I mean, is that even feasible? Who and who defines broad consensus and strong public buy in who defines that? How is this implemented? I just see democracy. I mean, I know it's imperfect, but it's the best we have, right? They're talking about voting. Yeah, but I mean, do you really think that regular people like us with it would have a final say on what that means? I'm just saying what they're, they're calling for is to have a more democratic process here and not to have the very few ultra billionaires making decisions that are ultimately that would be a wonderful, wonderful step. But my, my main issue here is that this, the statement as it is as it's written there, it seems to me to be very naive and unrealistic, especially, especially when you consider this care, especially and in public most egregious, egregious, it ignores that 1.4 billion pound gorilla called China. Does this set, does this statement that that that people are signing? Does it make any sense considering the fact that China and other autocratic countries would just plow full steam ahead? In A, in ASI research, you know, it's true. They would not stop. This would only stop the some of the countries that actually, you know, would would walk into this trying to be good about it, you know, to put it very simply. And I don't even necessarily trust our country anymore to handle this, to handle this well, right? So, so I'm not saying that America do this. Maybe not. I mean, I wouldn't mind having NATO country, NATO countries. I'm not going to say this is calling for like a UN level resolution. Exactly. We see how that works with climate change. Exactly. So, yeah. Right. I mean, because in my mind, the parent Pandora's box is open here. We need plans to deal with it that are realistic. And the prohibition just is not realistic because of countries like China. I mean, to me, that's the bottom line. You look at the past when governments have tried to stop things, it just goes underground. It doesn't stop. So, I mean, I think regulation is worth discussing, especially regulation that keeps the research open right and transparent as much as possible, not hiding it. But don't you think they're also talking about hearts and minds here? Yeah. This reminds me a lot of the like human cloning conversation. I was just going to bring that up because actually, that's a counter example to a Bob said. There actually is an international consensus. There isn't a widespread treaty, but there is a general consensus that reproductive human cloning should not be done right now. And that's basically worked. It's basically worked. We've seen a few things around the edges. And like you said, in China, but we also saw a lot of shame. Like, I think so long as there is a hearts and minds campaign, and individuals collectively say, we're not going to stand for this. There's always going to be people who break the rules. There's always going to be people nibbling around the edges. But if the government isn't taking a centralized approach, then I think that they stand a lot worse chance if it's happening around the edges. I don't think you can compare cloning to artificial intelligence. You're just not good. Well, we have the technology. I don't think there's good comparison. The motivation and the potential benefits, as we see them now, are far too great, far greater than cloning. That people, there would not be a consensus to limit this research. But we could get to a consensus, Bob, if we keep pushing it. That's where this kind of thing can make a difference. Well, how we can use another example, and that's like nuclear proliferation. Obviously, it's proliferated to some extent, but there is a pretty broad consensus against further proliferation, especially. Yeah, but you know what really helps? You know what has prevented this world from being engulfed in nuclear fire? Mad. Mutually assured destruction because there is mutually assured destruction with it. Bob, I want to push back on your nuclear proliferation thing too, because you're being very simplistic and we don't know that. And in fact, we have a nuclear non-proliferation treaty. There are international arms treaties. There is an international organization to limit nuclear proliferation. Again, there's an infrastructure in place to limit nuclear proliferation. It's not just mad that doesn't. We also do break it all the time. Yeah, so I agree. It's not a perfect analogy, but we've, but, but, but, but, but, because two countries and opposite ends of ideologies had this capability is the reason why we have not seen nukes go off in. You're talking about using new nukes. I'm talking about nuclear. I'm talking about Nate. Other nations acquiring nuclear technology. Yeah, and that's the difference I always make. There's a difference between having it. Yeah, there's a difference between having it and using it. And I think maybe that's where the analogy does make sense. We have to have multiple places have equal opportunity to do research in this area. But there has to be a massive regulatory infrastructure, a global agreement, which is very hard to get to that says, we will not unleash this on the world. Because once we let it out, we can't put it back in the bottle. Right. My argument is that it's already out. This is this is already unstoppable. Yeah, that's why it's in some ways harder. A new thing. Exactly. Exactly. When saying AGI is not inevitable at this point, that gene is not out of the bottle yet. And, and this is going once that this is this, this goes to AGI. But still, I know, but my point is this is still Pandora's box is open. Do you think what would it take countries? Steve, what would it take China to stop doing research in AGI and ASI? What would it take? What would it take? The question is a research. It's using it. But that's the question, right? Is it such a small incremental change that we don't notice when it flips over? And that's why the nuclear arms analogy doesn't really work. Because dropping a nuke is a really obvious thing. But, well, yeah, developing nuclear weapons is hard to do that completely in secret. Although you can't do a lot of it. You can do a lot of it. It's more about it. But dropping a nuclear weapon is you can't do that in secret. And the truth is, are you making these small incremental improvements to the AI that over time results in what we're talking about? But, is there an obvious, you know, we're not currently the current AIs that are in use are not on the path to AGI. Correct. So this would require, I think we're probably still decades away from AGI and it would require a lot of investment and a lot of specific development. And I think there is time. I'm just saying it's not hopeless. It's not inevitable. It's not out of the bottle. There is time to start to develop international institutions and treaties and infrastructure and conversation and standards and intellectuals weighing in etc etc. To get to this consensus like we did on human cloning like we did on nuclear proliferation. Right. That we are not going to move full speed ahead towards AGI or ASI until we know how to do it safely. But what I'm saying is Steve, I do you think I don't agree with that? Of course I agree with that. I just think it's very naive because we always have no matter all all those good things happening. There's still countries like China that are just not going to care and plow ahead. What do we do about countries that could have it, you know, a generation before other countries because they're not they're not cowed by by these potential problems. That's the problem to address Steve. That's the my agree but that's possible. It is possible that if there's enough international consensus that that could be sufficient pressure on countries like China to go along. My main problem with the statement is not that it's naive. It's that it doesn't go far enough and it might actually be counterproductive. And it doesn't account for the the autocratic countries that will that will that will steam ahead that will not be slowed. I agree that that's a problem. I'm from now focusing on an entirely different problem, which is that by by saying the point of danger is 20, 30, 50 years in the future when we get to ASI. It actually creates a false sense of security about our current level of AI, which is more than sufficient to cause a lot of problems. I don't necessarily think that AGI or ASI is necessary to have an AI apocalypse. We can have it just with the narrow way eyes that we have now depending on how they develop them and how they're used and whether or not they're regulated etc etc. And so I would go I would use this as a starting point. Yes, like this is like putting it way out in the future for worst case scenario. But we have to talk about AGI and we have to talk about the current AIs which need to be regulated and we need to think very carefully about how they're being developed, how they are being implemented. Otherwise, we're going to have a replication of all the downsides of social media, but times a thousand. I agree, Steve. I was treating that as kind of like at a scope for this specific talk, because this specific talk deals with artificial super intelligence, which is something that's not discussed that often. But it's not out of scope in the specific thing that I said this actually creates cover for the current AIs by making them seem not dangerous. But by focusing on this future potential danger as if that's the AI, that's the danger from quote unquote AI. They should make it clear. This doesn't mean we're safe up until that point. I agree. We have to shift to a very serious issue now. We've talked about these superficial issues now. Evan, you're going to tell us about this ghost in Connecticut. Let's get to the hard science here folks. Connecticut ghosts. Wow, Connecticut's our home state, right? Connecticut's known for many things. All right. But for this particular news item, I want to touch on two of the things that Connecticut is well known or relatively well known for. Number one, we have a newspaper in this state called the Hartford Current. It is America's oldest continually published newspaper, 171764, and ever since then. So that's interesting. Number two, Connecticut is home to a legend in the world of ghost stories, the white lady of Union Cemetery in eastern Connecticut. That is that's world famous right there. So there you go. I'm touching on these. We're on the cusp of Halloween Bob in case you didn't know. Oh, wait, is that Oh, damn. Okay. You right. Check your calendar. It takes you by surprise every year. Yeah. Wow. Did you see that coming? Is it speaking of surprising? Is it not surprising whatsoever that the most prominent newspaper in Connecticut is running an article about the most prominent ghost in Connecticut, of course. And what do you get when you combine these two things? Well, you get a news item that's so unworthy and ridiculous that it would be an insult to dead fish if you tried to wrap it in this article. The headline reads, Connecticut's famous ghost is known to frequent a cemetery, seen her, why a paranormal investigator is asking. Well, I can answer that rhetorical question right off the bat because it is the season and desperate newspapers will glom onto anything that might put eyeballs on their product. But the article basically reads like a promotional ad for a group of local paranormal investigators. I'll I'll bore you with just a couple of select passages from the article just so you can get the flavor. Paranormal investigators and amateur ghost hunters alike have been fascinated for years by the sightings of the white lady of eastern in and around steppney cemetery in Monroe and union cemetery in eastern more on that soon. Now a paranormal team is taking a deeper dive into the legendary operation and asking for the public's input. The result will be a documentary about the female ghost with a long dark hair and flowing white dress said project leader and paranormal investigator Nicholas Grossman. Grossman even believes that he may have captured actual footage of her apparition, although he doesn't share it, but that's totally, you know, beside the point. His fascination about the lady heightened one day he said when his psychic colleagues someone named Diane and their video technician Hector notice something unusual. They said the quote the cemetery usually a hotbed of paranormal activity was eerily quiet. Oh gosh, a quiet cemetery. How unusual. But the psychic used her pendulum to communicate with a spirit who delivered a cryptic message. You will see the white lady tonight and then while he was driving down the road later that evening. This is Grossman, the guy the paranormal investigator, a woman in a white dress flew across in front of my car. She appeared completely physical, not transparent. She glided across the road in a way no human could. So real I swirled to avoid her. Grossman says he regrets not having his video camera on her day. Oh darn it. Dang he missed it. Maybe next. Maybe next. Maybe next. Then the article goes on to promote his ghost hunting group. You know, they're encouraging people in the area to contact them to share their stories and hallucinations of their interactions with the white lady so that they can incorporate it into their upcoming film project. Well, since you asked, I do have a story to add. Because you see from the years 1982 through 1986, I lived in a house about one quarter of one mile from Union Cemetery in Easton, Connecticut. And I and some of my high school friends would frequent that cemetery regularly. We would ride our bikes through there, you know, just muck around in there. We conducted some scientific experiments, you know, such as seeing if tubes of rubber cement are flammable. They are, by the way. And some other non damaging mischiefs sort of events that teenage boys are want to do when they explore their surroundings. But before I tell you about my results from my five years of basically living next door to this cemetery and therefore next to this ghost, I'll give you a little bit of background on the legend of the white lady who's been cited for what decades, many decades, there have been reports of the white lady. But the white lady in an interesting way is very much described the same way as, oh, I don't know, every other white lady account of similar ghost sightings that have plagued the human mind for as long as I don't know there have been human minds. There are stories like this every where this is not unique to Connecticut, certainly not to this cemetery and throughout cultures all across the world basically. Look, she has long dark hair flowing white dress and uncanny ability to peer out of nowhere and apparently, apparently, right in front of moving cars where drivers have to slam on the brakes sometimes can convince convinced that they actually hit her, but then they find there's nothing there. Oh, my gosh. Local folklore says she's a woman. This was a woman drowned by her husband over three centuries ago near a watering hole across from the cemetery. And like so many other lady and white tales, it's a story that's emotionally satisfying, but they say historically fuzzy at best, I say nonexistent, frankly. There are no records of a drowned wife, woman or any other person in eastern from the 1700s or the 1800s for that matter or the 1900s or ever, but that doesn't stop the folklore that doesn't stop the story from gaining a life of its own. Almost every version of this story anchors the haunting to the white lady's union cemetery in eastern again, which they say dates back to the 1760s scant evidence for it. But this is where Ed and Lorraine Warren, the Warrens, focus their attention in the late 1980s and it was that one faithful night September 1st, 1990, Ed Warren. He was on the seventh night in a row of filming at the cemetery where he captured the video of the white of the lady and white, a woman walking across the cemetery. And he publicized it in his 1992 book called Graveyard. Now Bob J Steve, we were shown the footage of the white lady. We were. What were your thoughts about it? So Ed, we asked Ed to show us the best evidence she got. What's the best? Yes, because he's claimed to have tons of evidence. All right, just give us the absolute best. This is what he showed us. His VHS recording of the white lady in the union cemetery and our reaction was, first of all, it was crappy evidence. It was met. But it was it was at that perfect distance to give you a suggestion that something was happening, but not be able to see what it was. So was that a living person in a sheet? It absolutely could have been. It was not of sufficient quality to rule that out. And that I think was absolutely by design. Especially if that's your motivation going into this thing in the first place, we're after seven nights of this, you're not really getting anything. How many more nights you're going to do this, Ed? Seven nights is enough. Let's get somebody to go. And you do a blob squash. Yeah, it's a blob squash. Right. And I have to add, we asked Ed, you know, and this is the point where we were kind of still being cooperative and friendly with him. And I said, yeah, that's interesting. We'll be happy to take a close look at it. Can you give us a copy of that tape? He refused to give it to us for analysis. That was the end. That was the beginning of the end of the joint venture that we had with him for those moments. And he did give us a video of somebody disappearing, which of course we utterly demolished. But that was somebody else recorded that. That was some flunk of his that wasn't him. So we didn't have his own credibility on the line with that one. Correct. And he still didn't believe our assessment. Well, yeah, you didn't accept it. Whatever you say that kid disappeared. Sure you did. That's right. That kid. Very, very would say that every time he's like, that kid disappeared. And so look, as far as I'm concerned, yeah, because I did do some more research into the sense of the legend of the white lady, I looked for articles, I looked for stories, I looked for reports, I looked for account. I don't even know really that this story had much legs even before Ed Warren got, you know, became kind of the toast of the paranormal world as he was on the ascent in those years. Right. You know, he seems to be the one to have suddenly given a name to this particular phenomenon. Sure. Maybe because again, how many other ghost stories are there of things being seen or a woman and vague descriptions of things and suddenly Ed and his 1990 encounter kind of, you know, codifies this thing in his own way. And then the media start following it. Okay, now this is the white lady of Union Cemetery because that Warren says it says it. So I'm not even sure this thing really even existed before Ed Warren. That's my take on it. And it's not even that creative. Like how many, like you mentioned, like how many towns across the world have like a ghost dressed in white. It's not the great. Yeah. Right. It's cliche. It's not even creative. I agree. Yeah. It's like a flying saucer with great aliens. I mean, come on. You could do better than that. But I want, but I want to do my official contribution to the pool of information that Grossman and his team are collecting. All right. Here is my, here's my first hand account. Okay. I, here you go. Mr. Grossman. I spent more days and nights in and around that cemetery than many other people can claim, frankly, especially people who are investigating ghosts in all my many hours hours upon hours spent at human cemetery. I never saw a thing even coming close to a ghost sighting. We didn't even had a single noise that scared us in the middle of the night or something that caught the corner of my absolutely zero. We were there in the daytime. We were there in the nighttime. And we were occasionally out well past midnight around that graveyard. This was all before I even became a skeptic of the current normal, right? I believe, you know, I believed in anything and everything at that point. It's 13, 14 year old kid just messing around having laughs with friends, you know, again riding bikes. We didn't vandalize. We didn't really do anything like that. We were just. It was your own personal stranger things. Yeah, it was. We were kids on bikes then. And that was it. So there's my contribution. That's what happened. Upcoming. Yeah, exactly not a darn thing happened. So I hope that somehow makes it into the documentary. Well, happy Halloween, everyone. All right, Jay. It's who's that noisy time. No, easy time. All right, guys. Last week I played this noisy. What do you people think? No, it sounded like a water pick from a dentist office. Fire that laser sharp water into your teeth. Oh, I hate that sound. Yeah, I had. I had some fun varied guesses in here, but I can only talk about a few of them. Michael Blaney wrote in said, hi, Jay, I'm guessing the call of the Jacobin hummingbird. He says that Guinness listed as the bird with the highest pitch call. That's a fantastic guess. Michael, but I'm sorry you are incorrect. Another listener named Hunter Richards wrote in and said, hi, Jay, forgot it was Wednesday. If it's not too late, I think the critter in last week's noisy is a small mammal like a flying squirrel. Maybe a pig meat, Laura's, but I don't know if those animals are in proximity to humans usually so a flying squirrel. As a reminder to the listeners of this show, only submit one thing or at least give me your final guess. You could say, I think it might be this or this and give me your final guess because I'm going to go with if you don't, if you give me multiple and you don't specify what your actual guess is, I can't, I can't count it. Anyway, Hunter, thanks for that. You are incorrect. Lewis Morales said, hi, Jay, this week's noisy sounds like a dolphin to me, probably at a C Park. Okay, but he says it might be a bird too. And then he says I'm sticking with dolphin. Anyway, I did have a close guess, but no winner this week. The closest guess I got was sent in by a listener named evil. I evil eye has been listening to the show. I think since the very beginning and also is is a very regular guesser here. He said, I'll just go ahead and fail right out. He says it's a squirrel monkey. This is a very close guess. What's a squirrel monkey? It is not a squirrel monkey. Is that a thing? Yeah, I listen to the sounds that squirrel monkeys make and it's kind of similar, but not fully there. What this actually is is, I'll tell you a couple things. They live in Eastern rainforests in Brazil. They are arboreal. You know what that means, Steve, right? I live in trees. Thank you. And can you guys want to make a guess? Yeah, guess there are boreal correct. It's the aborial aborials. No, this is this is. This is called a lion tamarind. This is a little monkey guy. Yeah, a lion tamarind. They weigh up to 900 grams or 32 ounces. They're about 30 centimeters high or 12 inches long. High, whatever, however you want to do it with tails about 45 centimeters or 18 inches long. They jump through trees. They use their fingers to hold onto the branches. They use their claws to dig under the bark to search for insects to eat. They also eat some snakes, lizards and small fruits. They are unfortunately all endangered or critically endangered in part because their habitat is of course being destroyed and climate change is a big part of that. So let me play, play this for you again. Keep in mind this is a little monkey. I need to ask the audience a very serious question. I just played a sound that sounds exactly like a million birds all over the planet. And the vast majority of you did not guess a bird. Maybe it only sounds that way to you. Well, or you know, I mean, come on. It made the tweet the tweet sound. I mean, it's like my expectation was to be flooded with bird guesses and it didn't happen. And I need to know what's happening. What is going on out there? Steve, did you think it was a bird? No. What am I hearing? Is it a high pitched squeaky thing that repeats itself and sounds like a song? It's not tweety enough. I don't know. I'm not a bird. Maybe I'm getting old here. Maybe my I don't know. I was just sticking bird all the way. Anyway, okay. So that was this week's noisy. Thank you everyone for guessing. I have a new noisy this week and this noisy was sent in by a listener named Jenny Navis. I'm going to get a little bit of a range of noise. If you think you know what it is, you can email me at WTN at the Skeptics Guide dot org. You can also send me in any noises that you heard or have no happened upon on the internet that you think are cool. I will take all in consideration. Steve novella. We like to leave Connecticut and we ask Karen to leave her domicile in Los Angeles and join us for live entertainment because we we give it and we want the people that listen to this show to receive it. Have I said anything wrong so far? Nope. Okay, so where are we going to be? We're going to Seattle, Washington and we're going to Madison, Wisconsin. January 10th of next year, that's 2026. We will be in Seattle, Washington at Washington Hall. Cool. And Saturday, May 16th of 2026. We will be in Madison, Wisconsin at atwood music hall. You can go to our website where the links for the tickets will be available. And on top of that, we will be doing of course private shows on both of those weekends. It's very likely that we'll be doing those private shows the Saturday morning, which is before the nighttime event. So you can do both of them in one day. They typically run from like 11 to 2 or 12 to 3. I will finalize those details, but tickets will be available this weekend. And we're going to actually try something new this time around guys because we have gotten requests over the years that people want something a little more exclusive and a little more private. That's more of like just socializing and there's no shows involved. So we decided that we're going to try on both of the Friday nights before the shows that I just mentioned. We will have a very, very limited ticket event where you're just going to hang out with us and you're going to basically do whatever we decide to do, right? It could be anything. We'll get more details on that as well, but you will see tickets up for those as well. All right. Thank you, Jay. We have one email. This comes from Keith from by coincidence, Seattle, Washington. And Keith writes. I saw this article referenced in a typical online argument that he has a link to the article. The commenter extracted the following one line quote, the risk of covert 19 also increased with time since the most recent prior covert 19 episode. And with the number of vaccine doses previously received. He goes on, but that's the that's the key question is asking us. So basically there was a study that showed exactly that that the risk of getting diagnosed with covert 19 increased with the number of facts of previous covert 19 vaccine doses. So of course, this is going around with the claim like see the vaccine. Not only do they not work, they increase your risk of getting covert. And did they compare it to people who weren't vaccinated? Yeah, because I think the risk of getting COVID increases with time. Well, it increased with time since your most recent covert infection. And also, which makes sense, the longer we live, the more likely we are to get COVID. I think they looked over like a six month period or something. Okay. Okay. So what, you know, as you might imagine, that's not what the study showed. I mean, it didn't mean it didn't show that covert vaccines don't work. It showed the opposite. It showed that, you know, if you look, the core finding of the study and what they were looking for. The actual question for the study was, are how effective is the vaccine given the mutations and the virus? So, like, is it is, are the, the vaccine still providing protection given that we know the virus is continuing to mutate and they actually correlated it with different waves of infection and what, what strains were dominant during that period of time. So they found a number of things. One, so again, this is just an observational study. And so you know what I'm going to say, right? Observational studies are subject to confounding factors. And this study in particular has confounding factors galore, right? So that that's the huge grain of solids you have to take this with. They found that overall infection rate during the period of time they were looking at was 8.7%. So that's fairly low. So you also have to keep that in mind as well. There's already a pretty low infection rate. And so it even subtle effects can can have a seemingly dramatic effect on the relative risk within that. You know what I mean of getting affected. What they found was the estimated vaccine effectiveness was 29% for the BA.4 slash 5 dominant wave. It was 20% for the BQ negative wave and only 4% effective for the XBB dominant phase. Right. So 21, 20% and 4% so keep in mind. So that means it worked right the vaccine reduced to the risk of getting infected. But the more different the strain was from the vaccine strain, the less effective it was. Right. Okay. So of course that is inconsistent with the notion that increased vaccine doses increased your risk of infection. Right. So first of all, that's a relative increased risk on the background of an overall decreased risk just from being vaccinated. Does that make sense? Yeah, that's what that's kind of what I was getting at, but like in a less complicated way. Yeah. Yeah. Is that like the more vaccines you get, it means that you are going farther in time. And there are more the risks fluctuate in the general population. There will be times when you get a vaccine and you're more likely to get COVID, not because of the vaccine, but because COVID is circulating more. Yeah. I mean, infection. They tried to control for that stuff as much as possible. Again, they're doing an observational study where they're just looking at a cohort of people and saying, did they get infected or not? And what was their vaccine status? So there's a couple of things to point out here. Obviously, and the authors, the authors do not believe that increasing number of doses actually reduced the protection of the vaccine or increased your risk of getting infected. There has to be a confounding factor here. That's the only thing that makes sense. And they discuss a few possibilities and they try to control for confounding facts. It's always, it's impossible to do that completely. You can, you can try. So, you know, you could say, hey, it's possible that people got more doses because they're in a high risk group. And they're being on a high risk group increased their risk of getting infected with the observational data. You can never know what the error of causation is. That's like saying, being on a diet correlates with being overweight. Yeah, because people who are overweight go on diets, not the other way around. It's the same kind of thing. Also, keep in mind, this was not the risk of having COVID. This is the risk of being diagnosed as having COVID. And so you also, then that introduces all the confounding factors of who gets diagnosed. Maybe you're more likely to get diagnosed if you're also somebody who was more likely to be up to date on your boosters, right? You're getting more healthcare. You're more likely to show up in the system. A lot of people got sick and just didn't report. Exactly. So, yeah, there's that. So, that they, and this is just like off the top of my head kind of obvious confounding factors that are almost certainly at play here. And so you can't conclude that this in any way calls into question the effectiveness of the vaccine. But I would also challenge just this whole approach of this study. Again, it's fine as far as it goes, but it's not the be all and end all of COVID vaccine effectiveness studies. It's looking at, in fact, the weakest indicator of vaccine effectiveness, which was having been diagnosed with having COVID. This is not taking a look at severity or anything else. There was also a very recent New England Journal of Medicine article that did that looked at outcomes that are, I think, much better markers of vaccine effectiveness for a number of reasons. So, this was a six month follow up study where they looked at the estimated vaccine effectiveness. The reduction in COVID-19 associated emergency department visits was 29.3%. The reduction in host COVID-19 associated hospitalizations was 39.2%. The reduction in COVID-19 associated deaths was 64%. So, you were 30% less likely to be go to the emergency room, 40% less likely to get admitted to the hospital and 64% less likely to die. So, obviously, we care a lot more about those outcomes than having a mild case of COVID. And we've known for years that the vaccines are better at preventing serious illness than any illness. So, that's another sort of example of you're looking at a subset of the data. It's not giving you the full picture. And there's lots of problems with this data, which you cannot gloss over. But also, that's also just an individual study. So, the most recent systematic review I found, this is a review of 284 articles found, quote, all the approved vaccines were found safe and efficacious. But mRNA-based vaccines were found to be more efficacious against SARS-CoV-2 than other platforms. So, all of the vaccines work. And if you look at the totality of the literature, that's what it shows. But, of course, if you don't know what you're talking about and you have a political agenda, you could look at this one study and say, see, vaccines don't work. But it is absolutely not true. Yeah, and if you want the details, I wrote about it on Science-Based Medicine. Okay, let's go on with science or fiction. It's time for science or fiction. Each week I come up with three science news items or facts, two genuine and one fictitious. And then I challenge why panelists kept it to tell me which one is the fake. We have a theme this week. And the theme is AI, flatulence. Same thing. Farts. The theme is farting. Okay. I didn't plan on having a theme, but sometimes I come across an interesting news item. Like, I could just flesh this out into a theme. So, Steve, is this like going to focus on like our expertise that we have all developed in our old age about, you know, passing gas or like what's happened? Yeah, your flatulence expertise may come into into bear with. It might help you. I'm not going to talk about technique or anything. Jay, that's what you're asking for or naming conventions. All right. Here we go. Item number one greater than 99% of flatulence is comprised of odorless gases. Item number two up to 50% of human flatulence is comprised of hydrogen gas, which is flammable. And I number three, there are several approved tests for volatile organic compounds in flatulence as an early screen for colorectal cancer. Jay, as the resident expert, why don't you go first? Okay. I mean, you know, I don't know about resident expert. Steve, the first one we have here is that greater than 99% of flatulence is comprised of. Flatulence is comprised of odorless gases. I think 99% is a lot, but I would think this is, if this seems like science to me, there is quite a bit of gas passing happening. And I think if we, if every one of them smelled, we would all know it in a big way because, you know, I don't know if we discussed this on the show before, but like passing gas is like a true sign that your body is functioning and that you are digesting and processing food. And it's a very important part. You know, it's like it's just part of, of, you know, having a metabolism. So that said, you know, I think that there's lots of gas passing happening with people every day and this one is probably science. And I think an item up to 50% of human flatulence is comprised of hydrogen gas, which is flammable, hydrogen gas, because I thought it was methane. And I could be embarrassingly wrong on this one, but I, that's, that's the gas I thought it was. No, I don't think it's hydrogen. That one is definitely on my, I don't think so list. Number three, there are several approved tests for volatile organic compounds called VOCs in flatulence as they as an early sign cold erectile cancer. Thank you for that. I think that science, I don't think we're farting, I don't think we're fired farting hydrogen. I would have heard of that. Right. And does hydrogen even smell? I've never smelled it. I wouldn't be surprised if it does smell, but I don't know. I just haven't heard a lot of that. I haven't heard any of about any of this. And I don't think I would have, you know, not heard it at this point. I think number two, the hydrogen is the fiction. Okay, Evan. Okay. Number one, comprised of odorless gases. So wow. That means that that's a 1% is responsible for, yeah. That seems wrong, which makes me think it's right. Right. Right. Because I mean, not, you know, so I, yeah, I, that one will probably want to be in science, I think, for purposes of this game. The second one about 50% of human flatulence up to 50% is hydrogen gas. Can underestimate the amount of hydrogen that's out there inside all around. You know, what most everything is hydrogen, right? So to clarify, this is hydrogen gas. This is H2. This doesn't mean hydrogen as part of other compounds. Okay. All right. Well, that does change the math. This is the one J said with fiction. Maybe it is fiction. The last one here, several approved tests for VOCs as an early screen for colorectal cancer. This doesn't seem right. Proved tests, there are several approved tests. Why, but we've seen commercials. We've seen other things for early detection and they're not this. It's actual, you know, fecal matter that you have to look at and stuff. I didn't heard anything about, about what going into an office and letting out your gas and then they can screen for it. I haven't heard that at all. So I don't know. Sounds like you made that one up, Steve. I'll say the VOCs. I'll say that one's the fiction. Okay. But I think it makes sense that 99% is odorless. So that one's probably fine. The second one though up to 50% is hydrogen gas. It seems like a lot. But I think the key words there is up to so that might make the difference. And then this third one, I'm not sure. I'm skeptical that they've got approved tests for that. I've never heard anything about it. This could be the one that's up to. I'm going to I'll say the up to change my mind on the second one there up to 50%. I think typically I don't think it's that much but up to just killing me here. So I'm going to go with evidence a VOC fiction. Okay. And Kara. Yeah, I'm leaning in that direction to I think that it makes sense. The one that seems the most like science is the 99% because sometimes parts don't smell. And so you think that it wouldn't be a large percentage of compounds that comprise the smell. It's probably just like one thing like I think it's sulfur. And if it's only a tiny tiny bit sometimes there's even less or sometimes it maybe it doesn't have that compound. So that would make sense to me. But the two I'm sort of torn between the two but I'm leaning in the way of Evan and Bob. I think you can light parts. Don't do it though. Sounds very dangerous. But I don't know if it's because of hydrogen or other other flammable gases but Bob kind of convinced me with the up to. Whereas like I remember doing some stories years ago about mechanical noses and this idea of like dog smelling cancer or trying to produce tests that can smell VOCs for different things. And I think that research is still not where they want it to be. I agree with Evan like there are poop tests for screens for colorectal for people with like a normal risk. And then obviously you know colonoscopies and things like that but I don't think anybody's getting tested for cancer by farting into a jar. So I'm going to call that the fiction. Okay. So you guys all agree on the first one. So we'll start there greater than 99% of flatulence is comprised of odorless gases. Which means that less than 1% are smelly. You guys all think this one is science and this one is science. It is science. That is correct. Yes, less than 1% of the gases in flatulence are sulfur compounds which are responsible for the odor. Yes, carousel corrected is mostly hydrogen sulfide. The rest is odorless gases. I'll give you the breakdown later though because that obviously carries over to number two here. For number two, let's talk about number two and number three for a bit because you guys made interesting comments about them. Number two up to 50% of human flatulence is comprised of hydrogen gas which is flammable. So there's never going to be one figure for flatulence because it's so variable based upon diet and gut flora and other variables. So there's never going to be one figure for what is the gas constituent of flatulence. There's so many variables in here. It's always going to be a range. I'm liking this up to. Right. So yeah, there's always going to be up to. I would never there's no way I could ever say in a statement like this 50% of flatulence is hydrogen gas. No such statement could ever like that could be true. And on the third one, Evan, because it test is approved doesn't mean that it's used or that it's useful enough or cost effective enough that it's in general use. Oh crap. Way for saying. All right. So let's go back to number two up to 50% of human fatulence is comprised of hydrogen gas which is flammable. Yeah, you think this one is the fiction. The rest of the roads think this one is science and this one is science. This is science. Yeah, it's so it's there's a lot of variability here is like 20 to 50% depending on really depending on your gut microbes on your gut flora. But this is based upon a recent study where they found that hydrogen is a metabolic mediator of gut flora way more than we thought it was. So some microorganisms create hydrogen gas and other microorganisms eat hydrogen gas. Yeah, so a lot of the gas that's produced gets actually eaten by other microbes. And then some of it you burp out and some of it you fart out right. So how much an individual farts out depends on how much they're making and how much they're consuming and how much is left over. So that's why it's always going to be variable and you know 20 to 50% is the range that that is most resources they found are giving. So maybe average of like 30% or so, but it's still a lot that was way more than I thought which is why I included that. Yeah, that seems like a whole lot. Yeah, it's a lot. It's more than we thought is the answer is it is actually more than we thought. This means that there are several approved tests for volatile or getting compounds in flatulence as an early screen for colorectal cancel. Cancer is the fiction because yeah, what you guys were saying about this one was otherwise correct. There are VOC tests for lots of things now. The volatile organic compounds. There's a lot of research looking at measuring VOCs and breathalyzers and also in flatulence, but they're not quite there yet. The ones that are working are looking for VOCs and actual fecal samples. So Evan's correct. You're looking at fecal samples. They are still looking at VOCs. Yeah, but they are looking for VOCs as one of the things we're looking for. So this is an up and coming thing and they're hoping that they'll get to the point where they could just do a breathalyzer because you don't have to get it going out the bottom. You can get the same gases come out the top to some extent. So, but you know, if you're looking specifically for and it's not just cancer, it's also for other GI diseases as well. I heard about the irritable bowel syndrome for example or gluten insensitivity. Let's talk about the percentage of gases in the gut. So it's mostly what, what's the most common gas in far? Nitrogen. Nitrogen because most of it is swallowed air. So you swallow a lot of air that you swallow from eating chewing gum actually makes you fart because you swallow more air. Oh, interesting. Oh. So there's also, therefore, some oxygen. There's some carbon dioxide. So it's 59% nitrogen. These are average figures. Again, it's all hugely variable. About 9% carbon dioxide. Methane, you know, it's anywhere from 7 to 30%. Methane also combustible. So that's the two things that when you can't light your farts on fire and the two things are methane and hydrogen. But don't do it. Because you'll burn your ass. And then oxygen is like 4% and then the sulfur compounds that give it the odor are less than 1%. Again, these are average figures. The range is huge for all of them because of variables. How much do people fart on average do you think per day in like leaders? Oh, God. That's so hard. How much, well, wait, can you tell us how much is an average fart? Like how big? How many leaders is an average fart? Well, there's the total volume and then there's the number of times you fart per day. And then you could figure it out from there. So one to two leaders per day is average. That's average. And some people are going like 5% or so. It's up like 15 to 23 farting events. Wow. Men fart more than women. Why? But women's farts smell more than men's. Interesting. Wow, that's... These are all averages. These are all just obviously there's no typical thing. I wonder if it's biological or social. I wonder if women hold them in. Maybe. And then that percentage might creep up. If you were farting events, but the same volume. The same gases, exactly. Yeah, where guys are a little bit more free. A little more bravada. So you're going to have a few more unsmelley farts than we are because you're farting more on. Now the volume and musical characteristic of the farts are almost entirely determined by the anus. Yeah. Does your butt cheeks get involved in that? They're big enough, I guess they could have found. So we're not talking about all outgassing that the body does. No, I'm just talking about... Yeah, do the back end. Anus base. I'm the bum bum. Okay. Because it can bind it with burps and other things that the body emits. Oh boy. That's more. More gases. We are expending fluids and gases of every type through many orbs. And don't forget dander. Steve, what did you say about the musicality? It totally depends on... It's mostly determined by the musculature of the anus. And also that's wrong. It's a key of C. That is wrong. It's also...it's not wrong. But also the pressure that it's under is also a factor. Right? Butt cheeks have no say in this. I didn't say they have no say. I said primarily. They said that they're big enough. Well. They have a say. My gosh, I can't believe it. But if they're not in the way, you can still have music out. So if, like for example, you have low pressure, loose musculature, it could be silent. Yeah. Usually the butt cheeks by themselves are not enough to produce. They modulate the sound, but they probably won't produce the sound. What do you got? What do you know? I'm not going into details. Well, Bob does want to chew his own horn. Let's move on to the quote. All right, Evan, give us the quote. By all means, let us agree that we are a pattern-seeking mammals and that owning to our relentless intelligence and inquisitiveness. It will still prefer a conspiracy theory to no explanation at all. Well said by Christopher Hitchens. Yeah. I have to unfortunately agree with that. Yep. At the allure of any explanation over no explanation is pretty great. Yep. Yeah, we love film-devoid with whatever. Well, and that's I think one of the central theses of that frontline episode about RFK is like, how could this happen to dad? This is so horrible. This is so. I can't explain this. And we think back to Alex Jones. Remember his whole thing about Sandy Hook? And we were like, why did people actually believe him? We get why he made it up because he's a horrible person. But why did people believe them? And one of the theories by, set forth by social psychologists was that some people said, this is so horrible. I can't imagine it to be true. Yeah, a way to cope with the actual horror of the true event. Yeah. Isn't that wild? It's fascinating. It is fascinating. The lengths will go to make something as comfortable as possible for ourselves. So dangerous. Yep. All right, well thank you all for joining me this week. You got it, Steve. Thanks Steve. And until next week, this is your Eskeptic Sky to the Universe. Eskeptic Sky to the Universe is produced by SGU Productions. Dedicated to promoting science and critical thinking. For more information, visit us at eskepticskide.org. Send your questions to infoateskepticskide.org. 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