Cosmologist Brian Keating takes Huberman on the most zoomed-out tour of the podcast: telescopes, time, the Big Bang, and a lost Nobel Prize.

Dr. Brian Keating — Professor of cosmology at UC San Diego who built telescopes at the South Pole to study the cosmic microwave background. He led the BICEP experiment, made a headline 2014 'discovery' of the universe's origin that was later retracted, and wrote 'Losing the Nobel Prize.'
Huberman and Keating trace humanity's oldest science, astronomy, from cave-painted star charts used to track seasons through Galileo's perfecting of the refracting telescope and the slow proof that Earth orbits the Sun. Keating explains why looking up connects us to deep time, debunks astrology, and ties optics to biology via the eye as a built-in telescope. He recounts the personal saga behind his South Pole BICEP experiment, the retracted Big Bang discovery (the signal was cosmic dust), and the suicide of his mentor Andrew Lange. They close on adaptive optics, the Moon illusion, the green flash, and the probability of extraterrestrial life, which Keating argues is surprisingly low.
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Brian Keating
“spoiler alert my first book is called losing the Nobel Prize because we had a retracted discovery that we made at Harvard” — Brian Keating 01:32:35Find it on Amazon
Brian Keating
“Barry barish he wrote the forward to my my second book um detecting gravitational waves the accelerating expansion of the universe” — Brian Keating 01:19:32Find it on Amazon
Dava Sobel
“an important book for anyone to read who's interested in basically why we're still here um in my opinion is the book longitude” — Andrew Huberman 02:34:57Find it on Amazon
Ryan Holiday
“the barrier becomes the portal... shout out Ryan holid never yeah never met him but I like that book very much” — Brian Keating 02:38:05Find it on Amazon
Andrew Huberman
“I have a new book coming out it's my very first book it's entitled protocols an operating manual for the human body” — Andrew Huberman 03:06:00Find it on Amazon
Robert Zemeckis (inferred)
“this movie contact is a really wonderful movie uh it's not cheesy science fiction it was the first to like use a wormhole” — Brian Keating 02:49:56Find it on Amazon