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William shatner:
Magnificent temples,
monumental dams...
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And lofty spires
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that reach out
and touch the sky.
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Why do we build?
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Huh? Is it just because
we need roofs over our heads?
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Or is there another,
even more profound reason
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why we create
massive stone monuments...
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Soaring cathedrals...
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And towering skyscrapers?
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Are we trying
to prove something?
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Or perhaps even...
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Play god?
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Well...
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That is
what we'll try and find out.
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♪ ♪
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shatner:
Experts working
in the acoustics research centre
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at the university of salford,
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publish the results
of a groundbreaking study
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on one of the most iconic
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ancient monuments
in the world...
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Stonehenge.
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In their experiment,
the scientists constructed
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a scale model
1/12 the actual size
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of stonehenge...
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Used speakers to shoot sound
waves throughout the model...
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And measured
how sounds reverberated
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through the miniature structure.
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Their conclusion?
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The massive blocks of stonehenge
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were designed...
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To amplify sound.
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Andrew collins:
Everybody knows
about stonehenge.
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This is the most famous
megalithic monument
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anywhere in the world.
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But who created this?
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Why would they have done it?
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What research is now
beginning to suggest is that
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one of the possibilities
is to enhance
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the generation of sound
used in ritual.
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Shatner:
The idea that stonehenge
was used to amplify sounds
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made during rituals
is intriguing.
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But it is just the latest
in a long line of theories
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about this mysterious structure.
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After centuries
of study and speculation,
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stonehenge continues
to inspire both fascination
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and intense debate as to how
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and why it was built.
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Hugh newman:
Stonehenge is the most
magnificent stone circle
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in the british isles.
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It's unique,
it's unlike any stone circle
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anywhere on the planet.
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It has lintels above it,
it's perfectly circular.
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And it really stands out
as the kind
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of symbol of ancient britain.
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People are kind of obsessed
by it because it's the only way
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they can get back to have some
contact with their ancestors.
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Shatner:
Believed to be constructed
in 3000 bc,
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stonehenge has stood on the
plains of wiltshire, England
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for at least 5,000 years.
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With an outer ring
of 30 four-ton stones
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surrounding five huge arches
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whose massive blocks
weigh 25 tons each,
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stonehenge's construction
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defies explanation.
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Such a project could not have
been achieved haphazardly.
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Lynn picknett:
We know that some of the stones
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were actually imported
from south wales,
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which was something
like 120 miles away.
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A bit tricky when you don't have
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flatbed trucks or decent roads.
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Newman:
Some of the stones at stonehenge
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weigh between 50 and 70 tons.
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So how could you have
moved them from wales
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to construct stonehenge?
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These are answers that have
not been properly dealt with.
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Picknett:
For part of the journey,
it's been worked out
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that they would've
floated them on boats.
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But then there would be
quite a bit of land
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to drag them across
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and presumably
they used greased rollers
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and an awful lot of manpower.
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But, again, we don't know.
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Once people have actually
got the stones
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to the site at stonehenge,
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the next major problem is
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how do you lift them
up in the air?
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And the only way I can think
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that you would do that
is that you would make
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a ramp and you would
drag them up the ramp,
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and then tip them off the end.
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That's a massive undertaking,
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so we're talking
about thousands of people
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involved creating stonehenge.
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And these people are working
150 miles apart.
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Just imagine how complex
those logistics are.
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We may never really know
how they did it.
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Shatner:
As if transporting, hoisting,
and precisely balancing
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those giant stones wasn't
incredible enough,
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scholars have observed
that stonehenge's entrance
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aligns perfectly
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with the rising sun
on the summer solstice.
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The longest day of the year.
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Collins:
It was almost like a marriage
of heaven and earth together
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to get closer to heaven.
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And it seemed to be
bringing down the influence
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of the sky world
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on earth itself.
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Newman:
It does seem
that they wanted to influence
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and integrate the natural
energies of the earth.
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And these massive
megalithic boulders
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with cosmic energies from above
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to create this enchanted space
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where people
could have ceremony.
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Shatner:
Were stonehenge's megalithic
boulders intended
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to be energetically linked
to the power of the sun
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in some way?
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It's certainly
a thought-provoking question.
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And it might help to explain
yet another mystery.
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The burial sites that are
all around stonehenge.
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You can see hundreds
of burial mounds.
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The kind of people
that are buried there
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come from all over europe.
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In other words,
they were visitors there.
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It was a site
that people were coming to
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from all over europe.
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Now, why were they coming there?
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What's strange is
that the archaeology suggests
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that many of these people had
some long-term illness
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or disability, suggesting that
they were going to stonehenge
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in the hope of a cure.
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Shatner:
Stonehenge, a healing sanctuary?
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But why would people
struggling with illness
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think that this stone circle
could cure them?
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Phillips:
Some of the stones at stonehenge
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are called bluestones.
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There's only one place
that bluestone
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can be got in the british isles,
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and that's the preseli hills
in south wales.
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We know that they moved
those stones
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all the way
from south wales to stonehenge,
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but why would they do this?
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Why would they need
those very specific
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kind of stones?
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Newman:
In ancient traditions of
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the preseli mountains
where the bluestones
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of stonehenge
originally came from,
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it states that if you poured
water over the stones,
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and then you drank the water,
it would have healing effects.
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And the idea was people
would come from all over europe
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and actually come
to stonehenge to be healed,
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not just using the energy
of the stones,
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but also the water
that was poured
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over the stones and then drunk.
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Shatner:
Is it possible that
the bluestones
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that make up stonehenge
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actually have
healing properties?
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For some, that sounds rather
fantastical and hard to believe.
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But for others, it's one
of the many intriguing theories
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that makes stonehenge
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so fascinating.
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Phillips:
We may never know
why they brought the bluestones
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from 150 miles away.
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We may never know why they
built stonehenge
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because they left
no writing behind.
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But we do know
that stonehenge attracts
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over a million visitors
every year.
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It attracts new-age travelers.
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It attracts occultists.
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It attracts ordinary,
everyday people.
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There's something
about stonehenge
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that seems to act as a magnet.
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Shatner:
Stonehenge is evidence
of humanity's desire to build
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a structure that was more
than just a place of shelter.
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It is an early example
of a primal urge within us
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to create something
greater than ourselves.
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But what motivates this ambition
in the first place?
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Well, perhaps a clue can be
found a little later in history
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by examining the engineering
of the ancient greeks
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and the strange perfection
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of the parthenon.
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Shatner: High atop
the acropolis in athens, greece
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stands one
of the most magnificent
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and most aesthetically pleasing
structures in the world.
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The parthenon.
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This 23,000-square-foot temple
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was constructed using 100,000
tons of radiant white marble.
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The exterior of the parthenon
is lined
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with 46 colossal columns...
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Which strikingly
appear to be laid out
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in the shape
of an exact rectangle.
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And what's more astonishing
is that the more than
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13,000 stone blocks used
to assemble the parthenon
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were precisely fitted together,
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without the use of mortar.
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Which begs the question...
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How were the ancient greeks able
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to build something
that looks so...
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Perfect?
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Jonathan young:
The parthenon is an amazingly
beautiful structure.
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The design,
the spacing of each stone
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is so perfect that it inspires
just to look at.
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The proportions are so exact.
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For a large building,
it is an amazing thing.
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And it lifts the spirit upward.
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Shatner:
Built beginning in 447 bc
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on the orders of the famed
statesman and general pericles,
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the parthenon celebrates
the athenians' victory
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over persian invaders...
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Who had tried to conquer
the city for 50 years.
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Doran:
Athens during the time of the
building of the parthenon
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is an incredible, cosmopolitan,
vibrant city.
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It's producing art, literature,
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00:10:48,482 --> 00:10:52,442
sculpture, architecture.
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It's the manhattan
of the fifth century bc.
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And I think if you're
an athenian citizen,
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walking, doing your
everyday work,
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and then you see the acropolis
in the center of the city,
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this incredible shining hill,
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00:11:09,211 --> 00:11:12,462
and then you see the parthenon--
the gleaming marble,
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the biggest and most beautiful
greek temple that existed,
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00:11:16,718 --> 00:11:19,678
at least in mainland greece
at this point--
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00:11:19,763 --> 00:11:21,930
you'd be filled with
a sense of wonder.
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Shatner:
Although most of the interior
of the parthenon has decayed
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due to the ravages of time,
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the rectangular symmetry
of its exterior
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looks flawless to this day.
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But strangely, for a temple
that was clearly built
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with perfection in mind,
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what makes the parthenon
so fascinating
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is actually its imperfections.
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Not only were the greeks
masters of geometry,
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they were also masters
of optical illusions.
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They knew the fact that your eye
plays tricks on you.
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Therefore, they built
the parthenon
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00:12:02,013 --> 00:12:04,472
"slightly incorrectly,"
quote, unquote,
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00:12:04,558 --> 00:12:06,015
to compensate for this
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00:12:06,101 --> 00:12:09,144
so that the net result
is perfection.
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Doran:
The parthenon is a rectangle,
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00:12:13,108 --> 00:12:16,443
but there are no right angles
in the entire building.
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Everything is slightly off.
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The columns look straight
from below,
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but they are slightly
tilted toward each other.
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So if you were standing at
the base of the parthenon,
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00:12:31,251 --> 00:12:35,795
and if the columns didn't stop
after a certain number of feet,
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but they kept on going
all the way up into the sky,
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you would see the columns
meeting
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00:12:42,304 --> 00:12:46,347
if they were long enough
to actually meet.
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This is a very curious thing
that the builders did.
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Kaku:
It turns out that the parthenon
does not have
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straight parallel lines at all.
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The columns are not vertically
cylindrical at all.
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They bulge by about an inch
at the center of the cylinder.
253
00:13:03,992 --> 00:13:07,619
So, for example, the human
brain, looking at a column,
254
00:13:07,662 --> 00:13:10,914
will actually think
that the waist is pinched.
255
00:13:10,999 --> 00:13:13,583
Your eye thinks that
the center of the cylinder
256
00:13:13,668 --> 00:13:15,502
is shrunk.
257
00:13:15,587 --> 00:13:17,045
To compensate for that,
258
00:13:17,130 --> 00:13:19,923
the columns of the parthenon
bulge.
259
00:13:20,008 --> 00:13:22,717
There's no way this could
have been an accident.
260
00:13:22,803 --> 00:13:26,763
Shatner:
But is that all the greeks
were trying to achieve--
261
00:13:26,848 --> 00:13:29,432
an optical illusion?
262
00:13:29,518 --> 00:13:32,435
Or could they have had
another purpose in mind
263
00:13:32,479 --> 00:13:34,896
when they built the parthenon?
264
00:13:34,981 --> 00:13:37,982
Collins:
Why do we create monuments
like the parthenon?
265
00:13:39,361 --> 00:13:41,110
And the answer is,
266
00:13:41,196 --> 00:13:45,573
we want to try and imitate
the divine.
267
00:13:45,659 --> 00:13:48,451
The divine was seen
as perfection.
268
00:13:48,495 --> 00:13:51,496
The gods are seen as perfection.
269
00:13:51,581 --> 00:13:54,207
And so sacred geometry
270
00:13:54,292 --> 00:13:57,335
has been incorporated
into the parthenon
271
00:13:57,420 --> 00:13:59,504
in the belief
that it was now endowed
272
00:13:59,548 --> 00:14:01,840
with some kind of divine power.
273
00:14:02,843 --> 00:14:05,802
And this was done
very specifically
274
00:14:05,887 --> 00:14:10,306
to connect the mundane
with the divine
275
00:14:10,392 --> 00:14:14,686
to create the connection
between this world and the next.
276
00:14:16,231 --> 00:14:18,606
Shatner:
Is the unique design
of the parthenon
277
00:14:18,692 --> 00:14:21,818
some kind of attempt
to connect to a higher power?
278
00:14:21,903 --> 00:14:25,363
According to some researchers,
the answer is yes.
279
00:14:25,407 --> 00:14:29,284
And they claim that the fact
that the parthenon still stands,
280
00:14:29,369 --> 00:14:32,704
and that it still looks perfect
and pleasing to the eye,
281
00:14:32,747 --> 00:14:34,873
is a testament
to what its architects
282
00:14:34,916 --> 00:14:39,460
were striving to build:
Something eternal, everlasting
283
00:14:39,546 --> 00:14:43,006
and, perhaps, divine.
284
00:14:43,091 --> 00:14:45,508
Just like
another extraordinary structure
285
00:14:45,594 --> 00:14:48,511
that was constructed more
than a thousand years later,
286
00:14:48,597 --> 00:14:52,390
one that was built not just
to represent the divine,
287
00:14:52,434 --> 00:14:53,683
but to make you feel
288
00:14:53,727 --> 00:14:57,478
like you were actually
in the presence of god.
289
00:15:06,865 --> 00:15:08,907
Shatner:
For centuries,
290
00:15:08,950 --> 00:15:12,535
many have remarked on the
strange power that notre-dame--
291
00:15:12,621 --> 00:15:15,830
the historic cathedral that sits
at the center of paris--
292
00:15:15,916 --> 00:15:17,957
has on people.
293
00:15:18,752 --> 00:15:21,085
But what exactly is this power?
294
00:15:21,171 --> 00:15:24,964
And could it actually be
the presence of...
295
00:15:25,050 --> 00:15:27,258
God?
296
00:15:27,344 --> 00:15:29,427
Dell upton:
What's extraordinary to me
297
00:15:29,512 --> 00:15:31,596
is that you've got a building
298
00:15:31,640 --> 00:15:33,848
that has been there
for almost a thousand years,
299
00:15:33,934 --> 00:15:35,808
in one form or another,
300
00:15:35,894 --> 00:15:38,603
and even though it's important
301
00:15:38,647 --> 00:15:40,647
from an architectural
historian's point of view
302
00:15:40,732 --> 00:15:44,108
in various ways, it also has
this life in popular culture,
303
00:15:44,152 --> 00:15:46,486
which many buildings don't.
304
00:15:46,571 --> 00:15:49,113
Its role in the public view
305
00:15:49,199 --> 00:15:52,450
has to do
with its subsequent reputation.
306
00:15:53,411 --> 00:15:55,662
Amir hussain:
You walk into notre-dame,
307
00:15:55,747 --> 00:15:57,246
and all of a sudden you realize
308
00:15:57,290 --> 00:15:58,915
the one human being is
very small,
309
00:15:59,000 --> 00:16:00,750
and you're literally humbled
by this,
310
00:16:00,835 --> 00:16:02,168
and almost falling
to the ground,
311
00:16:02,253 --> 00:16:05,797
because it's such an impressive
sort of structure there.
312
00:16:05,840 --> 00:16:08,466
Young: The light coming
through the windows,
313
00:16:08,510 --> 00:16:10,802
especially the rose windows,
314
00:16:10,845 --> 00:16:12,804
has an effect
on our consciousness.
315
00:16:12,847 --> 00:16:14,973
This is something beyond words.
316
00:16:15,016 --> 00:16:18,643
This is the power of ritual
and aesthetics to touch us
317
00:16:18,728 --> 00:16:20,603
on a spiritual level.
318
00:16:20,689 --> 00:16:23,314
It can't entirely be explained.
319
00:16:25,276 --> 00:16:27,652
Picknett:
It's like there is
a presence there.
320
00:16:28,655 --> 00:16:30,446
People go silent.
321
00:16:30,490 --> 00:16:32,448
You know, talking in whispers.
322
00:16:32,534 --> 00:16:34,492
And you say, "well,
of course they would be,
323
00:16:34,536 --> 00:16:36,494
it's a christian cathedral."
324
00:16:36,538 --> 00:16:38,579
so that's what christians take
from it.
325
00:16:38,665 --> 00:16:40,415
It reinforces...
326
00:16:40,500 --> 00:16:41,791
Their belief.
327
00:16:41,876 --> 00:16:44,836
But millions upon millions
of visitors have felt it,
328
00:16:44,879 --> 00:16:46,796
whether they have
any religion or not.
329
00:16:48,341 --> 00:16:50,591
Shatner:
In 1163 ad,
330
00:16:50,677 --> 00:16:53,678
bishop maurice de sully
authorized the construction
331
00:16:53,763 --> 00:16:56,055
of notre-dame cathedral.
332
00:16:56,141 --> 00:17:00,810
The bishop wanted the majesty
and splendor of notre-dame
333
00:17:00,895 --> 00:17:05,356
to show France's devotion
to god.
334
00:17:05,400 --> 00:17:09,318
The massive building took
over 180 years to complete,
335
00:17:09,404 --> 00:17:12,822
and features
a 115-foot-high roof
336
00:17:12,907 --> 00:17:17,827
and two towers
that stand 223 feet tall.
337
00:17:19,330 --> 00:17:21,289
The value system of a collective
338
00:17:21,374 --> 00:17:26,085
is reflected in the shrines
and monuments they build.
339
00:17:27,088 --> 00:17:29,380
Notre-dame was
the tallest building in paris
340
00:17:29,466 --> 00:17:31,299
for a very long time.
341
00:17:31,384 --> 00:17:33,342
The common people on the street
would look up
342
00:17:33,428 --> 00:17:38,014
and see the cathedral towering
above all other human activity.
343
00:17:38,058 --> 00:17:40,850
That was the message.
344
00:17:40,935 --> 00:17:43,061
A thousand years ago,
when architects were building
345
00:17:43,104 --> 00:17:45,396
bigger and bigger
stone cathedrals,
346
00:17:45,482 --> 00:17:48,566
the problem was,
sometimes they would collapse.
347
00:17:50,236 --> 00:17:52,153
So before they had steel,
348
00:17:52,238 --> 00:17:56,074
they had to use stone
with weight on the outside,
349
00:17:56,159 --> 00:18:00,036
called the flying buttress,
to support the roof.
350
00:18:00,121 --> 00:18:02,080
That's the reason
why notre-dame,
351
00:18:02,123 --> 00:18:04,082
built a thousand years ago,
352
00:18:04,125 --> 00:18:06,751
can have thin walls
and stained glass.
353
00:18:07,670 --> 00:18:10,922
Burrows:
Notre-dame's builders
wanted to inspire awe
354
00:18:10,965 --> 00:18:13,549
when people came
and looked at the cathedral.
355
00:18:13,635 --> 00:18:15,259
So, how did they do that?
356
00:18:15,345 --> 00:18:19,013
One of the main tricks is
to allow light into the space
357
00:18:19,099 --> 00:18:22,266
so that you get
this huge sense of height.
358
00:18:22,352 --> 00:18:24,018
You don't see the massive walls,
359
00:18:24,104 --> 00:18:27,188
and the building seems
to be floating on air.
360
00:18:28,024 --> 00:18:30,316
Shatner:
Historians and architects
361
00:18:30,401 --> 00:18:34,112
have also suggested that the
power of notre-dame may come,
362
00:18:34,155 --> 00:18:37,073
not just from how it looks,
363
00:18:37,158 --> 00:18:39,992
but also how it sounds.
364
00:18:40,078 --> 00:18:42,495
Hussain:
So, one of the amazing things
about notre-dame cathedral
365
00:18:42,580 --> 00:18:45,123
is the sound,
the acoustical properties.
366
00:18:45,166 --> 00:18:47,959
And the acoustics in there
are just marvelous.
367
00:18:48,044 --> 00:18:51,087
(men's choir singing gently
in latin)
368
00:18:57,846 --> 00:18:59,804
and that affects us.
369
00:18:59,848 --> 00:19:02,056
It physically,
literally affects us.
370
00:19:02,142 --> 00:19:03,933
Our heart beats
in a different kind of way.
371
00:19:03,977 --> 00:19:06,269
You know, we can feel it
in our bodies.
372
00:19:09,482 --> 00:19:12,066
Burrows:
The great acoustics
of notre-dame cathedral came
373
00:19:12,152 --> 00:19:14,986
from practice
and understanding geometry.
374
00:19:15,029 --> 00:19:16,988
So the people who did that,
they understood
375
00:19:17,031 --> 00:19:20,825
that if you emit noise,
a singing, at one location,
376
00:19:20,910 --> 00:19:23,244
through the shape of the ceiling
you can bounce that noise
377
00:19:23,329 --> 00:19:25,872
down to another location,
378
00:19:25,957 --> 00:19:28,291
like a congregation
inside the cathedral.
379
00:19:29,169 --> 00:19:31,836
Shatner:
Did the builders of notre-dame
380
00:19:31,880 --> 00:19:35,256
use clever engineering
to create a sense of holiness
381
00:19:35,341 --> 00:19:38,342
and spirituality
in the cathedral?
382
00:19:38,386 --> 00:19:39,677
Definitely.
383
00:19:40,555 --> 00:19:42,680
But there are some who argue
384
00:19:42,765 --> 00:19:45,099
that the site
at which notre-dame stands
385
00:19:45,185 --> 00:19:48,019
already possessed
a special power
386
00:19:48,062 --> 00:19:51,272
before the cathedral was built.
387
00:19:51,357 --> 00:19:55,026
The location of notre-dame
is significant.
388
00:19:55,111 --> 00:19:59,197
Like many other cathedrals,
it is a "temenos."
389
00:19:59,282 --> 00:20:02,116
that means sacred place,
sacred ground.
390
00:20:02,202 --> 00:20:06,329
A place where we can be in touch
with the transcendent energies.
391
00:20:08,082 --> 00:20:10,291
Collins:
One of the little-known facts
392
00:20:10,376 --> 00:20:13,002
about the cathedral
of notre-dame
393
00:20:13,046 --> 00:20:16,172
is that if you go outside of it,
394
00:20:16,216 --> 00:20:19,133
there is a star on the ground
395
00:20:19,219 --> 00:20:24,347
that points
towards every point in France.
396
00:20:24,432 --> 00:20:28,142
And it is from here
that all of the measures
397
00:20:28,228 --> 00:20:30,770
for cartography are made.
398
00:20:30,855 --> 00:20:33,064
Which tells us that notre-dame
399
00:20:33,149 --> 00:20:36,025
was considered to be
the absolute center,
400
00:20:36,069 --> 00:20:40,905
not just of France,
but also of paris itself.
401
00:20:40,949 --> 00:20:42,823
Hussain:
There's a symbolism
402
00:20:42,909 --> 00:20:45,576
to the physical location
of notre-dame.
403
00:20:47,997 --> 00:20:51,207
This idea
that notre-dame radiates out,
404
00:20:51,292 --> 00:20:54,835
not just from the center
of paris to France,
405
00:20:54,921 --> 00:20:57,922
but from the center of paris
to the world.
406
00:21:06,266 --> 00:21:09,225
Shatner:
A fire breaks out at notre-dame.
407
00:21:09,310 --> 00:21:13,271
400 firefighters launch
a valiant effort
408
00:21:13,314 --> 00:21:15,189
to fight the blaze,
409
00:21:15,275 --> 00:21:18,776
using water pumped directly
from the seine river.
410
00:21:18,820 --> 00:21:20,236
(indistinct chatter)
411
00:21:20,321 --> 00:21:22,947
parisians watch in horror
412
00:21:22,991 --> 00:21:24,740
as the flames and smoke envelop
413
00:21:24,826 --> 00:21:26,325
the upper reaches
of the cathedral
414
00:21:26,411 --> 00:21:30,413
and its 315-foot-tall spire...
415
00:21:32,333 --> 00:21:34,166
...Collapses.
416
00:21:34,252 --> 00:21:37,128
(panicked screaming)
417
00:21:37,171 --> 00:21:40,464
collins:
A fire began in its timber roof
418
00:21:40,508 --> 00:21:46,053
that spread quickly, causing
the collapse of its spire
419
00:21:46,139 --> 00:21:51,767
and hundreds of tons of lead
melted and poured down
420
00:21:51,853 --> 00:21:53,394
into the interior
421
00:21:53,479 --> 00:21:55,229
of the structure.
422
00:21:55,315 --> 00:21:59,817
And as much as a tragedy
as this actually was,
423
00:21:59,902 --> 00:22:04,655
the response to it across
the globe was remarkable.
424
00:22:08,244 --> 00:22:10,703
Shatner:
The reaction to
the disastrous fire
425
00:22:10,788 --> 00:22:14,123
transcended national
borders and faiths.
426
00:22:14,208 --> 00:22:16,792
In only two days, people
around the world contributed
427
00:22:16,836 --> 00:22:18,836
nearly a billion dollars
428
00:22:18,880 --> 00:22:23,007
to rebuild and restore
this beloved landmark.
429
00:22:24,260 --> 00:22:27,345
Young:
The outpouring of donations
from within France
430
00:22:27,388 --> 00:22:31,682
and from all over the world
tells us what a cathedral means.
431
00:22:31,768 --> 00:22:33,517
It's not just a tourist spot.
432
00:22:33,603 --> 00:22:37,688
If you enter a cathedral,
something happens to you.
433
00:22:37,774 --> 00:22:39,648
People know they felt something.
434
00:22:39,734 --> 00:22:41,233
They are attached
to that building.
435
00:22:42,236 --> 00:22:45,237
Hussain:
So, when you had the fire
in notre-dame cathedral
436
00:22:45,323 --> 00:22:47,448
and the rebuilding of that,
437
00:22:47,533 --> 00:22:49,825
that was extraordinary.
438
00:22:49,869 --> 00:22:53,287
The rebuilding of notre-dame
cathedral shows the attachment
439
00:22:53,373 --> 00:22:55,831
that people have to the divine
is infinite,
440
00:22:55,875 --> 00:22:58,876
and I think there's
a power there.
441
00:23:02,924 --> 00:23:04,423
Can you explain it?
442
00:23:05,510 --> 00:23:11,013
That sensation you feel entering
a historic cathedral.
443
00:23:11,057 --> 00:23:15,893
Ah. Do these cathedrals actually
connect us to higher powers--
444
00:23:15,978 --> 00:23:19,188
powers we might not
fully understand?
445
00:23:20,024 --> 00:23:22,108
Perhaps the answer can be found
446
00:23:22,193 --> 00:23:26,570
by examining another
vast man-made structure.
447
00:23:26,656 --> 00:23:30,741
One that was designed with
another kind of power in mind.
448
00:23:31,828 --> 00:23:34,745
Power over mother nature.
449
00:23:45,299 --> 00:23:48,551
Shatner:
With the country in the grips
of the great depression,
450
00:23:48,636 --> 00:23:50,261
president franklin d. Roosevelt
451
00:23:50,346 --> 00:23:52,388
presides over
the dedication ceremony
452
00:23:52,473 --> 00:23:56,016
of one of the most extraordinary
engineering projects
453
00:23:56,102 --> 00:23:58,394
in united states history--
454
00:23:58,479 --> 00:24:00,855
the hoover dam.
455
00:24:02,692 --> 00:24:04,859
Mcbride:
There were thousands of people.
456
00:24:04,944 --> 00:24:10,948
And at that time, the people who
came to listen to the president
457
00:24:11,033 --> 00:24:15,494
dedicate it understood that
it was more than just a dam.
458
00:24:16,330 --> 00:24:19,123
They were standing
on a structure
459
00:24:19,167 --> 00:24:23,669
that they had built with their
own blood and sweat and tears.
460
00:24:24,630 --> 00:24:27,673
We are here to celebrate
the completion
461
00:24:27,758 --> 00:24:31,594
of the greatest dam
in the world.
462
00:24:31,679 --> 00:24:34,388
Shatner:
Named for
president herbert hoover--
463
00:24:34,474 --> 00:24:38,392
who was in office when
construction began in 1931--
464
00:24:38,478 --> 00:24:40,436
the hoover dam is located
465
00:24:40,521 --> 00:24:43,898
in the black canyon region
of the colorado river.
466
00:24:43,983 --> 00:24:46,650
Officials believed that
a dam in this area
467
00:24:46,736 --> 00:24:49,445
could help manage flooding
of the colorado river,
468
00:24:49,530 --> 00:24:52,656
provide a much-needed reservoir
of fresh water,
469
00:24:52,700 --> 00:24:56,285
and be a source
of hydroelectric power.
470
00:24:56,370 --> 00:24:57,786
There was just one problem.
471
00:24:57,872 --> 00:25:01,749
In order to tame
the colorado river,
472
00:25:01,834 --> 00:25:05,377
the engineers would have to
construct a more ambitious dam
473
00:25:05,463 --> 00:25:08,964
than had ever been created
before.
474
00:25:09,050 --> 00:25:11,342
Mcbride:
Here you have
the colorado river--
475
00:25:11,385 --> 00:25:15,763
one of the wildest and most
untamed waterways in the world--
476
00:25:15,848 --> 00:25:17,932
and you want to tame it.
477
00:25:18,017 --> 00:25:19,266
You want to control it
478
00:25:19,310 --> 00:25:23,604
so that you can provide
dependable water storage,
479
00:25:23,689 --> 00:25:26,649
hydroelectric power, irrigation.
480
00:25:27,693 --> 00:25:29,151
Michael dennin:
Well, when I think of
the hoover dam,
481
00:25:29,237 --> 00:25:31,612
I'm impressed that
we actually moved the river
482
00:25:31,697 --> 00:25:33,155
to build the dam.
483
00:25:33,241 --> 00:25:35,157
And they had to divert the river
through tunnels,
484
00:25:35,243 --> 00:25:37,409
through the mountainsides
on either side,
485
00:25:37,495 --> 00:25:39,995
so you have a dry bed
that you can build the dam on.
486
00:25:40,081 --> 00:25:42,414
And then bringing the river back
just amazes me.
487
00:25:43,292 --> 00:25:45,793
Shatner:
Built in just five years--
488
00:25:45,878 --> 00:25:48,504
two years ahead of schedule--
489
00:25:48,589 --> 00:25:53,634
the hoover dam is
a staggering 726 feet tall.
490
00:25:53,719 --> 00:25:55,636
At the time of its construction,
491
00:25:55,721 --> 00:25:58,514
it was the tallest dam
ever built,
492
00:25:58,599 --> 00:26:01,725
the costliest water project
ever undertaken,
493
00:26:01,769 --> 00:26:05,980
and home to the largest
hydroelectric power plant
494
00:26:06,065 --> 00:26:07,356
in the world.
495
00:26:10,653 --> 00:26:13,529
Mcbride:
Never before, ever in history,
had there been
496
00:26:13,614 --> 00:26:18,242
that much concrete placed
and poured in one spot.
497
00:26:18,327 --> 00:26:23,330
And enough concrete went into
the construction of the dam,
498
00:26:23,416 --> 00:26:25,374
you could build
a two-lane highway
499
00:26:25,459 --> 00:26:27,751
from san francisco to new york.
500
00:26:29,046 --> 00:26:31,297
Shatner:
The hoover dam changed
the face of the nation,
501
00:26:31,382 --> 00:26:34,717
allowing for the explosive
growth of cities
502
00:26:34,802 --> 00:26:37,177
like las vegas and los angeles,
503
00:26:37,263 --> 00:26:40,014
and fueling
the country's recovery
504
00:26:40,099 --> 00:26:42,057
from the great depression.
505
00:26:43,019 --> 00:26:45,936
But some have suggested that
the hoover dam represents
506
00:26:46,022 --> 00:26:49,064
not just an engineering
success story
507
00:26:49,150 --> 00:26:52,818
but also humanity's desire
508
00:26:52,903 --> 00:26:57,114
to bend the forces of nature
to our will.
509
00:26:58,117 --> 00:27:00,618
Mcbride:
The construction engineer,
walker young,
510
00:27:00,661 --> 00:27:03,537
was widely quoted at one time
as saying,
511
00:27:03,623 --> 00:27:10,085
"the lord put that canyon there,
all we had to do was find it."
512
00:27:10,171 --> 00:27:15,549
that speaks to a very kind of
judeo-christian philosophy
513
00:27:15,635 --> 00:27:22,139
that human beings were
the paramount creatures,
514
00:27:22,224 --> 00:27:24,892
and so we're going to impose
our needs on nature,
515
00:27:24,977 --> 00:27:26,727
and we're going
to control nature.
516
00:27:29,940 --> 00:27:31,732
Lynne mcneill:
The flooding power of rivers
517
00:27:31,817 --> 00:27:34,443
is something that humankind
has been contending with
518
00:27:34,528 --> 00:27:36,737
since there has been humankind.
519
00:27:36,822 --> 00:27:39,865
And in a lot of ways,
520
00:27:39,950 --> 00:27:44,828
the more we're able to restrain
what have often been understood
521
00:27:44,914 --> 00:27:47,206
as the unrestrainable forces
of nature,
522
00:27:47,291 --> 00:27:51,919
the more we suspect that
maybe something superhuman
523
00:27:52,004 --> 00:27:54,421
is taking place there.
524
00:27:54,507 --> 00:27:56,924
Shatner:
Was the construction
of the hoover dam
525
00:27:57,009 --> 00:28:00,761
motivated by our need
to harness, control,
526
00:28:00,846 --> 00:28:04,515
and ultimately have power
over mother nature?
527
00:28:04,558 --> 00:28:08,310
There are many who believe that
to be the case.
528
00:28:08,396 --> 00:28:11,855
And as evidence,
they point to a curious memorial
529
00:28:11,941 --> 00:28:14,483
that was placed next to the dam.
530
00:28:14,527 --> 00:28:18,195
An intricate celestial star map,
531
00:28:18,280 --> 00:28:22,032
intended to send a message
to future generations.
532
00:28:22,076 --> 00:28:26,745
Mcbride:
The celestial star map
is an amazing piece of art deco,
533
00:28:26,831 --> 00:28:30,207
where laid into the ground,
534
00:28:30,251 --> 00:28:35,754
is a star map with brass discs
named after certain stars.
535
00:28:35,840 --> 00:28:37,297
And the purpose of that
536
00:28:37,383 --> 00:28:39,466
was really just one thing:
537
00:28:39,552 --> 00:28:40,801
It was to fix,
538
00:28:40,886 --> 00:28:43,303
in astrological time,
539
00:28:43,389 --> 00:28:45,097
the very moment--
540
00:28:45,182 --> 00:28:47,641
the month, the day,
the minute, the second--
541
00:28:47,727 --> 00:28:50,894
that hoover dam
was-was dedicated.
542
00:28:51,897 --> 00:28:54,314
Shatner:
The builders of the hoover dam
certainly believed
543
00:28:54,400 --> 00:28:57,359
that their creation would be
an everlasting testament
544
00:28:57,445 --> 00:29:00,696
to their triumph
over the colorado river.
545
00:29:00,781 --> 00:29:05,117
But what happens when
the forces of nature defy
546
00:29:05,202 --> 00:29:08,078
our attempts to control them
547
00:29:08,164 --> 00:29:10,748
in ways that we can't foresee?
548
00:29:11,667 --> 00:29:15,753
Mcneill:
Lake mead is the man-made body
of water
549
00:29:15,838 --> 00:29:18,505
created by the hoover dam.
550
00:29:18,591 --> 00:29:21,800
And what's interesting is
that lake mead is actually
551
00:29:21,886 --> 00:29:25,512
one of the most deadly
recreational areas
552
00:29:25,598 --> 00:29:27,222
that we have in this country.
553
00:29:27,308 --> 00:29:30,225
People drowned mysteriously.
554
00:29:30,269 --> 00:29:33,604
So many people
end up dying there.
555
00:29:35,816 --> 00:29:37,524
One of the fascinating things
about lake mead
556
00:29:37,610 --> 00:29:40,068
are these methane or gas pits.
557
00:29:40,154 --> 00:29:43,822
And methane basically comes
when vegetation decomposes.
558
00:29:43,908 --> 00:29:46,575
Now, one of the things
that lake mead did
559
00:29:46,619 --> 00:29:48,994
is cover up a lot of vegetation,
'cause you make a lake
560
00:29:49,079 --> 00:29:50,871
where there wasn't
a lake before,
561
00:29:50,956 --> 00:29:52,456
and what you had before
was stuff growing.
562
00:29:52,541 --> 00:29:55,250
So you can get
these periodic releases
563
00:29:55,336 --> 00:29:56,960
of the methane gas
564
00:29:57,046 --> 00:29:59,087
that's been generated
under the water
565
00:29:59,131 --> 00:30:01,465
from the vegetation decomposing.
566
00:30:01,550 --> 00:30:03,717
Bara: When the methane bubbles
up to the surface,
567
00:30:03,803 --> 00:30:06,678
what can happen is, if a boat
is over that methane bubble,
568
00:30:06,764 --> 00:30:08,889
it basically will lose
all buoyancy
569
00:30:08,974 --> 00:30:12,017
and just sink like a rock
to the bottom of the lake.
570
00:30:12,102 --> 00:30:15,646
So by building the lake
over this land,
571
00:30:15,689 --> 00:30:19,233
we may in fact have created
a very dangerous situation,
572
00:30:19,318 --> 00:30:20,901
and sort of set up
the lake itself
573
00:30:20,986 --> 00:30:23,070
to basically be a death trap.
574
00:30:23,155 --> 00:30:25,572
I think if you reflect back
to when the engineers
575
00:30:25,658 --> 00:30:27,241
were making the hoover dam...
576
00:30:28,452 --> 00:30:31,411
...It's often portrayed
as trying to control nature.
577
00:30:31,497 --> 00:30:33,455
The focus was on the dam,
578
00:30:33,541 --> 00:30:35,457
and we probably weren't even
asking questions
579
00:30:35,501 --> 00:30:37,251
about the larger impact
on nature,
580
00:30:37,336 --> 00:30:38,627
'cause it would have been
too hard
581
00:30:38,712 --> 00:30:40,587
to calculate or worry about.
582
00:30:40,673 --> 00:30:42,339
The challenge with
engineering and science
583
00:30:42,424 --> 00:30:45,092
is always
the unintended consequences.
584
00:30:45,177 --> 00:30:48,303
For the most part,
people are driven
585
00:30:48,389 --> 00:30:51,682
by this desire
to make things better.
586
00:30:55,563 --> 00:31:00,315
Are the tragic deaths
at lake mead a warning?
587
00:31:00,401 --> 00:31:03,485
That our relentless drive
to build bigger, better,
588
00:31:03,529 --> 00:31:06,738
and grander has gone too far?
589
00:31:06,824 --> 00:31:09,783
If so, it's a warning
that isn't being heeded.
590
00:31:09,869 --> 00:31:13,662
If anything, mankind's
determination to build bigger,
591
00:31:13,747 --> 00:31:17,332
better, bolder is more evident
than ever before.
592
00:31:17,418 --> 00:31:22,713
It seems not even the sky
is the limit.
593
00:31:33,934 --> 00:31:37,895
Shatner:
After five years
of construction, burj khalifa,
594
00:31:37,938 --> 00:31:41,732
the tallest building in the
world, is officially completed.
595
00:31:41,817 --> 00:31:44,234
To celebrate this
record-breaking achievement,
596
00:31:44,320 --> 00:31:46,236
the united arab emirates
597
00:31:46,280 --> 00:31:49,698
throws an extravagant
opening ceremony
598
00:31:49,742 --> 00:31:53,243
which features
a massive fireworks display
599
00:31:53,329 --> 00:31:55,370
and an elaborate light show
600
00:31:55,414 --> 00:31:57,080
projected onto
the gleaming tower.
601
00:32:02,463 --> 00:32:05,172
Kaku:
It's an incredible
engineering feat.
602
00:32:05,257 --> 00:32:06,798
The tallest building
on the earth.
603
00:32:06,884 --> 00:32:08,634
It sticks out like a needle.
604
00:32:09,595 --> 00:32:11,637
Everything else
is pretty much flat,
605
00:32:11,722 --> 00:32:13,388
and you have this needle
606
00:32:13,474 --> 00:32:16,934
sticking right out
of the desert.
607
00:32:17,019 --> 00:32:18,560
Scott johnson:
The burj khalifa
608
00:32:18,604 --> 00:32:20,812
is an exceptional building
on many levels.
609
00:32:20,898 --> 00:32:22,856
Most obvious is its height.
610
00:32:22,942 --> 00:32:25,442
It's taller than any building
in the world,
611
00:32:25,486 --> 00:32:27,486
and it's taller by a whole lot.
612
00:32:27,571 --> 00:32:30,405
Shatner:
At over a half a mile high,
613
00:32:30,491 --> 00:32:34,409
burj khalifa bests the second
tallest building in the world,
614
00:32:34,495 --> 00:32:36,870
china's shanghai tower,
615
00:32:36,956 --> 00:32:41,500
by a whopping 644 feet,
616
00:32:41,585 --> 00:32:45,754
and is a masterpiece
of contemporary engineering
617
00:32:45,839 --> 00:32:48,298
and architectural prowess.
618
00:32:50,302 --> 00:32:52,427
Hussain: The fact
that the largest building
619
00:32:52,513 --> 00:32:54,554
is now in the arab world,
in dubai,
620
00:32:54,640 --> 00:32:57,557
is a great source of pride
to people there.
621
00:32:57,643 --> 00:33:00,602
So, there's really
interesting connections
622
00:33:00,646 --> 00:33:03,105
with the burj khalifa and islam,
623
00:33:03,148 --> 00:33:05,315
not just simply
because you've got
624
00:33:05,401 --> 00:33:07,818
the building built
in a muslim-majority country,
625
00:33:07,903 --> 00:33:10,237
but also, you have
an ancient connection
626
00:33:10,322 --> 00:33:15,325
that the largest mosque
in the world used to be in iraq,
627
00:33:15,411 --> 00:33:20,414
a ninth-century mosque built
by the caliph al-mutawakkil,
628
00:33:20,499 --> 00:33:22,916
the great mosque of samarra,
from the ninth century.
629
00:33:23,002 --> 00:33:25,669
And what was really impressive
about it was
630
00:33:25,754 --> 00:33:29,256
the sort of winding staircase
kind of minaret,
631
00:33:29,341 --> 00:33:33,677
and that's what they've
duplicated in the burj khalifa.
632
00:33:35,347 --> 00:33:37,931
And so, I think for people
in the arab world,
633
00:33:38,017 --> 00:33:40,517
it's almost
a nationalistic competition--
634
00:33:40,561 --> 00:33:43,770
who can build the tallest
building in the world?
635
00:33:43,856 --> 00:33:47,024
Johnson:
Nation states have discovered
that a tall building
636
00:33:47,109 --> 00:33:49,317
can become a cultural symbol.
637
00:33:50,362 --> 00:33:52,362
A symbol of pride,
638
00:33:52,406 --> 00:33:55,115
a symbol
of an ascendant economy,
639
00:33:55,200 --> 00:33:58,452
a place in global states,
640
00:33:58,537 --> 00:34:02,414
and a tall building seems
to resonate with that.
641
00:34:03,250 --> 00:34:04,875
Burrows:
We're currently in a race
642
00:34:04,960 --> 00:34:07,544
to build the tallest structures
on earth.
643
00:34:08,422 --> 00:34:10,047
And the question for me is,
644
00:34:10,132 --> 00:34:13,633
what is the limit
to how high these things can go?
645
00:34:13,719 --> 00:34:16,553
Mcneill: Human beings
have always strived
646
00:34:16,597 --> 00:34:19,222
to break their own records,
647
00:34:19,308 --> 00:34:24,644
and when we can achieve
an architectural feat
648
00:34:24,730 --> 00:34:27,105
that is breaking
all of the records
649
00:34:27,191 --> 00:34:29,191
of any previous
architectural feat,
650
00:34:29,276 --> 00:34:31,902
we are saying something
651
00:34:31,945 --> 00:34:34,905
about our ability
to overcome limitations.
652
00:34:36,241 --> 00:34:38,575
Shatner:
At 481 feet,
653
00:34:38,660 --> 00:34:41,578
the great pyramid of giza
stood as the tallest structure
654
00:34:41,622 --> 00:34:44,748
in the world
for over 4,000 years...
655
00:34:47,002 --> 00:34:50,295
...Until it was surpassed by
the old st. Paul's cathedral
656
00:34:50,380 --> 00:34:53,715
in london in the 13th century.
657
00:34:53,759 --> 00:34:58,261
But it wasn't until steel
was invented
658
00:34:58,305 --> 00:35:03,266
that the first skyscraper
was erected in chicago in 1885,
659
00:35:03,310 --> 00:35:06,770
and a new kind
of building boom began.
660
00:35:06,814 --> 00:35:09,940
One that saw the completion
of the empire state building
661
00:35:10,025 --> 00:35:15,070
in 1931, and shows
no sign of slowing down.
662
00:35:15,155 --> 00:35:18,031
Hussain:
For human beings to go up
663
00:35:18,117 --> 00:35:21,451
isn't just to go up and be able
to see commanding views.
664
00:35:22,246 --> 00:35:23,954
Why do we build these buildings?
665
00:35:23,997 --> 00:35:26,706
Because we want to get up
into the heavens
666
00:35:26,792 --> 00:35:29,251
because the heavens
are the divine realm.
667
00:35:29,294 --> 00:35:30,919
It's being able to go up and see
668
00:35:31,004 --> 00:35:34,422
what would god's-eye view
look like?
669
00:35:35,300 --> 00:35:40,262
Shatner:
To see things as god does?
670
00:35:40,305 --> 00:35:42,139
But is that a good idea?
671
00:35:42,182 --> 00:35:45,267
After all, there's a famous
story from the bible
672
00:35:45,352 --> 00:35:52,065
that serves as a cautionary tale
against doing just that.
673
00:35:52,151 --> 00:35:54,776
In genesis, chapter 11,
you have the story
674
00:35:54,820 --> 00:35:56,820
of the tower of babel.
675
00:35:58,031 --> 00:36:01,741
Human beings are united,
they speak the same language,
676
00:36:01,827 --> 00:36:06,955
and they build this tower
to go up into the heavens,
677
00:36:07,040 --> 00:36:09,666
and you have god saying,
"wait a minute,
678
00:36:09,751 --> 00:36:10,917
"what are these people doing?
679
00:36:11,003 --> 00:36:12,335
"they're gonna build this
680
00:36:12,421 --> 00:36:14,588
and they're gonna come up
to where I am."
681
00:36:14,673 --> 00:36:17,799
and so, god basically
confounds these people
682
00:36:17,885 --> 00:36:20,427
by having them speak
different languages,
683
00:36:20,512 --> 00:36:22,721
so they're not able
to understand each other.
684
00:36:22,806 --> 00:36:24,347
So they're not able
to build this thing
685
00:36:24,391 --> 00:36:25,807
because now all of a sudden,
686
00:36:25,851 --> 00:36:28,518
they don't speak
the same language.
687
00:36:28,562 --> 00:36:30,896
Mcneill:
The tower of babel is a story
688
00:36:30,981 --> 00:36:34,399
of trying too hard
to go too far,
689
00:36:34,484 --> 00:36:37,277
and paying the price for that.
690
00:36:37,362 --> 00:36:40,155
And it's interesting for us
to look at our modern
691
00:36:40,199 --> 00:36:42,240
architectural marvels,
692
00:36:42,326 --> 00:36:46,995
as potentially containing
that warning, or that threat.
693
00:36:47,039 --> 00:36:48,997
So many people
have made a likeness
694
00:36:49,082 --> 00:36:51,875
between the burj khalifa
and its shape...
695
00:36:53,879 --> 00:36:55,670
...And the tower of babel.
696
00:36:55,714 --> 00:36:58,006
The tower of babel
as we remember it
697
00:36:58,050 --> 00:37:00,050
was supposed to be
a spiraled tower
698
00:37:00,093 --> 00:37:01,509
that was going to reach
to the heavens
699
00:37:01,553 --> 00:37:03,678
so that people could see god.
700
00:37:03,722 --> 00:37:05,597
That was considered
inappropriate
701
00:37:05,682 --> 00:37:08,391
and too much hubris.
702
00:37:08,435 --> 00:37:10,644
I think we're operating
within the constraints
703
00:37:10,729 --> 00:37:12,395
of engineering science,
704
00:37:12,481 --> 00:37:15,065
but somewhere out there
is a limitation,
705
00:37:15,108 --> 00:37:17,859
and I think we're
approaching a limit.
706
00:37:17,945 --> 00:37:21,279
Shatner:
As we seek to build ever higher,
707
00:37:21,365 --> 00:37:24,574
is there a danger that
what we think of as ambition...
708
00:37:25,577 --> 00:37:28,078
...May in fact be hubris?
709
00:37:28,121 --> 00:37:31,831
Or is it simply an attempt
to reach for the sky,
710
00:37:31,917 --> 00:37:37,921
to see how high we can climb
and how far we can go?
711
00:37:37,965 --> 00:37:42,592
Perhaps even to the stars?
712
00:37:59,027 --> 00:38:02,237
Shatner:
The first module of
the international space station
713
00:38:02,322 --> 00:38:05,407
is launched into orbit
on a russian rocket...
714
00:38:07,995 --> 00:38:10,954
...Beginning arguably
the most groundbreaking
715
00:38:11,039 --> 00:38:14,541
engineering project
in human history.
716
00:38:15,335 --> 00:38:17,544
The international space station
717
00:38:17,629 --> 00:38:19,796
is really a marvel
of engineering.
718
00:38:19,881 --> 00:38:24,217
It took 42 flights to build
this thing over ten years...
719
00:38:25,887 --> 00:38:28,305
...And it was sent up
module by module,
720
00:38:28,348 --> 00:38:31,141
with astronauts and cosmonauts
living on board
721
00:38:31,226 --> 00:38:35,312
and adding to it as it became
a larger and larger space.
722
00:38:35,397 --> 00:38:38,231
Tom spilker:
It has a set of solar arrays,
723
00:38:38,317 --> 00:38:43,528
and from tip to tip, each one of
those eight wings is 239 feet.
724
00:38:43,613 --> 00:38:47,949
So it is 357 feet long.
725
00:38:48,035 --> 00:38:50,744
Nasa likes to say
it's one yard short
726
00:38:50,829 --> 00:38:53,163
of being an american
football field
727
00:38:53,248 --> 00:38:55,332
including the end zones.
728
00:38:57,502 --> 00:38:59,461
Teitel:
The international space station
729
00:38:59,546 --> 00:39:02,380
is the symbol of how incredible
730
00:39:02,466 --> 00:39:05,842
human ingenuity
and engineering really is.
731
00:39:05,927 --> 00:39:07,635
That we've been able to not only
732
00:39:07,721 --> 00:39:09,179
build the international
space station
733
00:39:09,264 --> 00:39:11,014
but keep it alive for 20 years
734
00:39:11,058 --> 00:39:13,391
and learn so much
in the process,
735
00:39:13,477 --> 00:39:17,812
is really an incredible outlet
of what humans can do.
736
00:39:18,732 --> 00:39:20,815
Shatner:
The idea of a space station
737
00:39:20,859 --> 00:39:22,484
suitable for human habitation
738
00:39:22,569 --> 00:39:25,278
started with the vision
of one man,
739
00:39:25,364 --> 00:39:27,238
dr. Wernher von braun,
740
00:39:27,324 --> 00:39:29,949
the german-born
aerospace engineer
741
00:39:30,035 --> 00:39:34,704
who designed the saturn v rocket
that took americans to the moon.
742
00:39:37,417 --> 00:39:41,628
In 1952, nearly a decade before
the first manned spaceflight,
743
00:39:41,713 --> 00:39:46,091
von braun's concept for
a 250-foot wheel-shaped station
744
00:39:46,176 --> 00:39:49,177
captured the world's
imagination.
745
00:39:49,262 --> 00:39:51,012
Spilker:
Von braun envisioned
746
00:39:51,098 --> 00:39:54,391
this rotating space station
to provide
747
00:39:54,434 --> 00:39:56,684
a certain amount
of artificial gravity.
748
00:39:56,770 --> 00:39:58,686
It could be used
for monitoring earth,
749
00:39:58,772 --> 00:40:01,272
weather, for military purposes.
750
00:40:01,358 --> 00:40:05,026
Also as a way station
for docking a spacecraft
751
00:40:05,112 --> 00:40:06,736
that would be going somewhere
else in space,
752
00:40:06,780 --> 00:40:09,030
to the moon or to mars.
753
00:40:10,117 --> 00:40:11,825
Teitel:
So the international
space station
754
00:40:11,910 --> 00:40:13,243
isn't quite that.
755
00:40:13,328 --> 00:40:15,537
But it's the proof of concept,
756
00:40:15,622 --> 00:40:18,164
and starting to help us
understand the technology
757
00:40:18,250 --> 00:40:20,917
such that maybe down the line,
the next generation
758
00:40:21,002 --> 00:40:23,628
or the generation
after the next,
759
00:40:23,713 --> 00:40:26,923
we will eventually get
that giant city in orbit.
760
00:40:28,635 --> 00:40:32,220
Shatner:
A giant city in space?
761
00:40:32,305 --> 00:40:34,556
It's a marvelous
and inspiring idea,
762
00:40:34,641 --> 00:40:37,225
one that raises
a profound question:
763
00:40:37,310 --> 00:40:41,729
Have we achieved all
that we can on our home planet?
764
00:40:41,815 --> 00:40:44,566
And are we destined
to leave our mark
765
00:40:44,609 --> 00:40:48,820
not just on earth
but far beyond it?
766
00:40:48,905 --> 00:40:52,740
So many of our iconic structures
on this planet
767
00:40:52,826 --> 00:40:56,202
are reaching beyond,
stretching up from the surface,
768
00:40:56,288 --> 00:40:58,621
trying to get us somewhere else.
769
00:40:59,666 --> 00:41:01,291
Once we're in space,
770
00:41:01,376 --> 00:41:03,209
what form
will our structures have
771
00:41:03,295 --> 00:41:04,669
and what role will they play?
772
00:41:04,754 --> 00:41:07,714
Not just pragmatically
as shelter for us,
773
00:41:07,799 --> 00:41:09,549
but as symbols for us?
774
00:41:09,634 --> 00:41:12,135
And what will we reach for
775
00:41:12,179 --> 00:41:15,263
if we're already off
of this planet?
776
00:41:17,017 --> 00:41:23,146
Whether it's the giant stone
monuments of the ancient world
777
00:41:23,231 --> 00:41:27,817
or the awe-inspiring cathedrals
of the middle ages
778
00:41:27,903 --> 00:41:31,321
or modern feats of engineering
that are all around us,
779
00:41:31,406 --> 00:41:35,950
humans possess
an incredible ability and desire
780
00:41:36,036 --> 00:41:38,745
to build and to make us wonder.
781
00:41:38,830 --> 00:41:41,915
So, where do we go from here?
782
00:41:42,000 --> 00:41:44,334
What are we going to build next?
783
00:41:44,377 --> 00:41:45,960
Well, that, my friends,
is something
784
00:41:46,046 --> 00:41:48,588
that is only limited
by our imagination
785
00:41:48,673 --> 00:41:53,134
and our determination to impose
order on mother nature.
786
00:41:53,220 --> 00:41:56,012
And our desire to explain...
787
00:41:57,224 --> 00:41:59,599
...The unexplained.
788
00:41:59,684 --> 00:42:05,607
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