I have this fantasy that im i like, i live out my life on a desert island somewhere with within er net, just in solitude. What would you be? I would you imagine? I don't know. So, no, iill think about it. Linga, oh my god, that's alarris. You want to go alone on a desert Island with your computer so you don't o no. Sa, thy have tractor beams? We don't have tractor beams to day. They had tractor bems back then. Well, ok, they were cloaking devices. Cloaking means you'd make yourself invisible and all it means is that the light you're using to
The Star Trek TV and movie series imagine a bright future for humans in space, one in which we explore alien worlds with the aid of advanced technology. Because the writers tried to include as much realistic science as possible within the fictional framework, the stories have been an inspiration for students, scientists, inventors; and anyone interested in pondering our destiny on Earth and beyond. In this show, Brandon Fibbs reviews the latest Star Trek movie now in theaters, and Lawrence Krauss talks about how Star Trek uses science to explore what is possible in our universe.
NOTE: All-Access subscribers can listen to this entire episode commercial-free here: https://www.startalkradio.net/all-access/science-star-trek/
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