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Relatively Human: Fundamental Laws of Biology and Physics
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science

Relatively Human: Fundamental Laws of Biology and Physics

Hosted by Finglas Media | Physics and Biology · 🇺🇸 US · EN · 19 episodes

Where this show ranks

Episodes
19
Last ep.
16 days ago
Avg length
42m
Booking Probability™
29
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Estimated audience
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Listen Score
18
Niche reach.
Virality (30d)
45
Steady cadence.

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Required Pod Score
80/ 100
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About this podcast

Explore the vast intersection where the fundamental laws of physics meet the messy reality of being alive. Discover why our perception of time and space is entirely relative to the biology that defines us. This is a Prototype Podcast Endeavor, I acknowledge the use of AI to produce the audio but I am singularly responsible for the synthesis and contents of this podcast, Please rate and review! If you can get past the AI voices and listen to the contents I know you will find real science and eye opening stories You can also reach out to me directly at iand25@gmail.com if you have questions or want to collaborate!

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About the host

Finglas Media | Physics and Biology hosts Relatively Human: Fundamental Laws of Biology and Physics, a science show with 19 episodes published.

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Recent episodes

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Your Genome Is Not A Blueprint

Mar 9, 202637mEp. 6S2

Relatively Human | Season 2, Episode 6: The Cell That Decides Every cell in your body carries the exact same genome, so if the blueprint is the identical, why aren’t all cells the same? In this episode of Relatively Huma

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The Precise Symmetry of Natural Chaos

Mar 7, 202650mEp. 5S2

Relatively Human — Season 2, Episode 5: The Precise Symmetry of Natural Chaos What looks like chaos is order you haven't zoomed out far enough to see. A coastline from an airplane. A lightning bolt. A bare winter tree. N

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The Map That Makes the Territory

Mar 6, 202644mEp. 4S2

Relatively Human, Season 2 Episode 4: The Map That Makes the Territory John Snow built a correct theory of cholera transmission without knowing what a bacterium was. Charles Darwin formulated natural selection while acti

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Why Your Heart Isn't a Clock and Why a Healthy Heart Needs Chaos

Mar 4, 202655mEp. 3S2

Episode Description Season Two, Episode Three of Relatively Human explores a profound medical paradox: a healthy heartbeat is irregular, fractal, and complex, while a dying heartbeat is regular, a pattern observed in ove

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The City That Thinks: How do millions of selfish decisions produce urban intelligence?

Mar 3, 202640mEp. 2S2

Relatively Human — Season 2, Episode 2: "The City That Thinks" How do millions of selfish decisions produce urban intelligence? Episode Description A single-celled organism with no brain, no neurons, and no nervous syste

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More Than the Sum: Broken Symmetry, Cascades, and the Structures Nobody Designed

Mar 3, 202655mEp. 1S2

Relatively Human — Season 2, Episode 1: More Than the Sum Subtitle: Broken Symmetry, Cascades, and the Structures Nobody Designed Episode Description: Hold a leaf to the light to see two patterns: branching veins (a casc

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Sufficient Allegory: How Science Knows When a Pattern Is Real

Mar 1, 202649mEp. 13S1

Relatively Human — Season 1, Episode 13 Season Finale "Sufficient Allegory: How to Know When a Pattern Is Real" All season, we've shown you mathematical patterns that appear across fields with no historical connection —

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The Bridge: Shannon, Khinchin, Jaynes, and the Proof That Forgetting Costs Energy

Feb 28, 202645mEp. 12S1

Relatively Human — S1E12: The Bridge Episode 11 asked if shared mathematics implies physical identity. Episode 12 proves information has physical weight through three discoveries over 64 years. First, Claude Shannon's 19

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The Invention of Disorder Carnot, Clausius, Boltzmann, and the Quantity Nobody Understood

Feb 28, 202656mEp. 11S1

Relatively Human — Season 1, Episode 11: The Invention of Disorder Carnot, Clausius, Boltzmann, and the Quantity Nobody Understood Episode Summary: In 1824, a young French engineer named Sadi Carnot tried to find the abs

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Chaos Is a Vital Sign? Why Your Heart Needs Chaos to Survive

Feb 26, 202636mEp. 10S1

What if everything we think we know about biological order is completely backward? Three hundred thousand times a year, emergency room defibrillators hit dying human hearts with 200 joules of electricity—a brute-force "s

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The Shape of Chaos

Feb 25, 202640mEp. 9S1

If the universe is deterministic, why can’t we predict the future? And if the future is genuinely unpredictable, how does anything as fragile as a heartbeat or a thought persist from one moment to the next? In the popula

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Mathematics is the art of giving the same name to different things

Feb 25, 202630mEp. 8S1

What do a devastating summer heatwave, the dynamic stripes of a growing zebrafish, the power brick charging your laptop, and the fault-tolerant core of a quantum computer all have in common? For decades, science has file

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When Weather Gets Stuck

Feb 24, 202643mEp. 7S1

RELATIVELY HUMAN — S1E7: "When Weather Gets Stuck" Episode Description Why does weather get "stuck" in relentless heat domes or catastrophic floods? We discard the outdated idea of the jet stream as a stable "river" of a

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The Cell That Remembers

Feb 23, 202646mEp. 6S1

Relatively Human | Season 1, Episode 6: The Cell That Remembers You started as a single fertilized egg holding roughly 750 megabytes of genetic data. Today, you are a staggering constellation of 37 trillion cells. How do

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The Mathematical Architecture of Autocratic Collapse: Why some Autocratic regimes persist while other collapse

Feb 23, 202631mEp. 5S1

This episode explores the provocative thesis that the difference between a state’s total collapse and its long-term survival is not found in its ideology, but in its underlying information architecture. By contrasting th

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The Quantum Computer Inside Your Cells

Feb 16, 202636mEp. 4S1

In January 2025, the engineers at PsiQuantum achieved a milestone that had eluded the field for decades: a manufacturable, fault-tolerant photonic quantum computing chipset. But buried in their breakthrough was a fundame

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Fisher's Ghost: How a Statistics Formula Became a Law of Physics

Feb 12, 202630mEp. 3S1

In 1925, Ronald Fisher created a formula to estimate parameters from noisy data. Today, Fisher information has escaped statistics to become a fundamental quantity in quantum mechanics, evolutionary biology, and thermodyn

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Why Stock Markets Crash like Magnets

Feb 12, 202637mEp. 2S1

In July 2023, Atlantic ocean currents exhibited a terrifying "wobble" resembling the S&P 500 before the 2008 crash. This episode of Relatively Human investigates why ice sheets, markets, and magnets all break in the exac

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Mitochondria: The Powerhouse of the Cell and Maybe the Time Lord of Your Life?

Feb 5, 202630mEp. 1S1

Podcast Title: Relatively Human Episode 01: Mitochondria: The Powerhouse of the Cell and Maybe the Time Lord of Your Life? Description: Your mitochondria aren't just biological batteries; they are the "Time Lords" of you

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Audience demographics

Age
25-54
Consumer type
Lifelong learners

Topics covered

science

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Who is the host of Relatively Human: Fundamental Laws of Biology and Physics?

Relatively Human: Fundamental Laws of Biology and Physics is hosted by Finglas Media | Physics and Biology. The show is categorised under science and has published 19 episodes.

How many episodes does Relatively Human: Fundamental Laws of Biology and Physics have?

Relatively Human: Fundamental Laws of Biology and Physics has published 19 episodes.

What topics does Relatively Human: Fundamental Laws of Biology and Physics cover?

Relatively Human: Fundamental Laws of Biology and Physics regularly covers science. It sits in the science category.

Is it hard to get booked on Relatively Human: Fundamental Laws of Biology and Physics?

Relatively Human: Fundamental Laws of Biology and Physics is accessible for guests with genuine science expertise. A personalised, episode-aware pitch will still outperform a generic one every time.

Is Relatively Human: Fundamental Laws of Biology and Physics currently accepting guest pitches?

Relatively Human: Fundamental Laws of Biology and Physics hasn't explicitly signalled guest openness in recent episodes. That doesn't rule out pitching. your hook just needs to be especially compelling and relevant to their recent content.

How long are Relatively Human: Fundamental Laws of Biology and Physics episodes?

Episodes of Relatively Human: Fundamental Laws of Biology and Physics average 42 minutes. a focused format where a clear narrative arc and tight preparation matter most.

What guest credentials does Relatively Human: Fundamental Laws of Biology and Physics typically look for?

Our data rates Relatively Human: Fundamental Laws of Biology and Physics's guest bar at 80/100 (Premium tier). Established thought leaders with verified media credentials. Sign in to PitchCentric to see how your own Pod Score compares against this show.

Methodology. Booking Probability™ blends Listen Score, 30-day Virality, open-to-guests detection, and Apple ratings. Data refreshed every 60 minutes. Listen Score and Booking Probability are calculated by PitchCentric. Last enriched 10 days ago.

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