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The Art of Science & the Science of Art with Neil deGrasse Tyson

2021-08-26 Science & Technology
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Description

Can you hear colors? On this episode, Neil deGrasse Tyson and comic co-host Chuck Nice explore science through art in Van Gogh’s Starry Night with art historian Roberta Olson, astronomer Jay Pasachoff, and neuroscientist Heather Berlin. How do artists reflect on our universe? How do artists depict celestial objects? Discover how artists have interpreted the cosmos over the ages and how science and art collide. Was the star of Bethlehem a comet? We discuss the drawings of astronomers and how illustration aided in the sciences. Was Isaac Newton an artist? Find out about the history of comets through the Nuremberg Chronicle. When did artists start putting their subjective pawprint on their work? Was the night sky like television in earlier times? How are the cosmos used symbolically? We discuss the Enlightenment and the meaning of comets, meteor showers, and other celestial events historically. Find out about Van Gogh’s nocturnes. Did he really paint what he was seeing? Or did Van Gogh bend the truth? Did he have synesthesia (seeing colors with sound)? We break down the accuracy of the moon and the stars in Starry Night. Is the gibbous moon really the worst moon to paint? To finish, Heather Berlin brings us the neurosciences of what happens in the mind of an artist. Does creativity come from the right side of the brain and logic from the left? Heather debunks some creativity myths for us and helps us understand the default mode network versus the salience network. Is there a neurological cost to being more creative? Could you make a person more creative artificially? Is it possible for AI to be more creative than human beings? How do synesthesia and chromesthesia work in the brain? Was the jump from traditional art to impressionist art a creative leap or just plain lazy? All that, plus, we break down how we would inject a joke into Chuck’s head! Thanks to our Patrons Rob Carter, Will, Matthew Power, David Born, CARLOS A HERNANDEZ, jon delanoy, and Trisha Donadio for supporting us this week. NOTE: StarTalk+ Patrons can watch or listen to this entire episode commercial-free. Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/startalkradio FOLLOW or SUBSCRIBE to StarTalk: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/startalkradio?sub_confirmation=1 Twitter: http://twitter.com/startalkradio Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/StarTalk Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/startalk About StarTalk: Science meets pop culture on StarTalk! Astrophysicist & Hayden Planetarium director Neil deGrasse Tyson, his comic co-hosts, guest celebrities & scientists discuss astronomy, physics, and everything else about life in the universe. Keep Looking Up! #StarTalk #NeildeGrasseTyson

Top Comments (10)

@StarTalk 2021-08-26

Drop your favorite color and describe what it would sound like! Outrageous answers only! 👇

50 86 replies
@davidt3956 2021-08-26

"Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears!" "No, Van Gogh. Not that way!"

50 3 replies
@Anti-HyperLinkLPs 2021-08-26

Almost a whole hour of Neil and Chuck. Today is a fantastic day.

22 2 replies
@dunderwood4444 2021-08-27

"This is STAR TALK" , another outstanding episode, Bless up from Brooklyn

11
@CarlSAGAN. 2021-08-26

Greetings from Turkey to science lovers

7
@MrKasa1989 2021-08-26

I'm here, I can't miss this. Actually I can't miss any episodes.

5
@MikeJamesMedia 2022-06-23

t's such a pleasure to (virtually) be in the company of such great scientists and thinkers. I sincerely appreciate all of it. Thank you!

2
@bruceb6529 2021-08-26

i hear colors and taste sounds too

2
@rowankilduff 2021-10-06

yoko ono already did the whole invisible exhibition in NY. and good to remember that japanese landscape mountain-and-rivers paintings, and ukiyo-e were a big inspiration for impressionists, they had access to those prints which were not abstract per se, but in a different mode of understanding how the world looks / is. there are a lot of things like that going way back. i love this point Heather made about removing the limitations on conscious experience, its not about being high and trippin' :) but again, with reference to zen, or native worldviews etc., reality is way bigger than what we are wired to experience normally, however, as Neil knows well I guess, the info is coming at us (eg. wavelengths of light) if we could only see it.

2
@lisdexia1 2024-04-22

For some reason, when I hear notes, I can see colors in my head. I see different color spectrums when I hear notes. It is not something I trained to happen; it is always happened to me and has never stopped. When notes are out of tune with each other is the only caviaot. It looks like a Polac picture to me. It was like an epiphany when I learned about color shift in astronomy. And I love how color, time, gravity, and light are all connected and a part of everything we know. The universe seems to go on forever. It is great that you can always find new things.

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