Recently, I saw the "Cosmic Time and Space Journey" by pyq. It was very shocking. Seeing that the age of the universe at the end counts as a year. Many human processes take only a second or a minute. People are very small, the earth is very small. But if you think about the universe from the end to the beginning. The whole documentary is like an upward fountain⛲️. More planets, nebulae, galaxies. The universe is expanding and new matter is constantly spewing. So what about the underside of this fountain? It's exciting to think that Mars might have life. Extragalactic, or. Under the fountain? To the mites, we may be the room where the earth lives and the universe. It's hard not to think about how short the life of the cells in our body is to us. But for cells, their whole life can be an interesting idea: maybe the universe is a cell. We are a small part of that mitochondria. What we've done above is to convert a small fraction of glucose. Our job is to convert oxygen into carbon dioxide. Then there are many similar particles like lions and elephants. The animals in the sea are responsible for converting the oxygen in the water. And we do our job all the time — consuming oxygen and absorbing nutrients for the sake of the lineage. This mitochondria and thus the cell can survive. Maybe a cell in your body is mourning its own smallness with even a ribosome. who knows?♂️
View more about Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey reviews