You realize that it wasn‘t NDT all on his own who reclassified Pluto? I think the scientific (astronomical) community is pretty much United on that front.
Most =/= "united."
Of course I know it wasn't his decision. But one of the reasons given was stupid. It went something like this: "If we continue to call Pluto a planet, we'd have to also call the other Kuiper Belt Objects planets, as well as objects like Ceres, and it would be too hard to expect people to remember that many names."
There are people who can rattle off immense amounts of useless sports trivia, people on this forum who can argue for hundreds or thousands of posts over the exact number of inches in length the different Romulan or Klingon ships are, but they can't remember a few more planetary names?
I'll admit that I haven't learned all the names of the moons in the solar system, but I've made a good dent on the Kuiper Belt Objects. It's not that hard.
Pluto wasn’t demoted. We got a better definition of what a planet is and Pluto didn’t fit anymore.
My favorite astrophysicist (no, not NDT) put it like this: Pluto is not the least of the planets anymore, he is the King among dwarve planets... He is King of the Dwarves!
What if they find a bigger one out there?
I never saw the original Cosmos, but I enjoyed 2.0.
It‘s a good show and NDT is a good fit for it.
You should try the original. The second (1990) version is on YouTube. The real original version probably exists only in archival form or in my old VHS tapes when PBS re-ran it before the 1990 updated version came along.
Sagan re-narrated some of the portions in 1990 to account for new information received from the Voyager probes. Sadly the updated version didn't include some of the wonderful music the original did. It had the effect of making those parts of the episode feel much flatter and less exciting than they were before. Copyright issues, I guess.
I guess copyright issues are also partly to blame for some of the 2.0 episodes using the SAME music as the
Contact movie. The music is fine in the movie, but ridiculous in what is supposed to be a science documentary.
Sagan's version used real human actors, not doe-eyed Disneyish cartoon characters.
That all said, I jumped off the NDT bandwagon a while ago.
Yes, he is a good scientist, but he isn’t a very good science communicator.
He too often frames science as infallible and untouchable.
One of his most famous quotes: „science is true, wether you believe in it or not.“ is problematic.
I know what he means, but phrased poorly for the sake of sounding catchy.
I can see where some people might be confused. The anti-science people I've had the misfortune to interact with mock it because they don't understand the scientific method and why it's a good thing to toss the incorrect information in favor of the correct - or at least more-correct - information that is discovered. But it's a fact that things like gravity are true whether you believe in it or not, and so is the covid virus.
Anyway, I could rant about NDT awhile, but rather recommend other science communicators to check out instead who make much better ambassadors for science imo:
Dr Becky Smethurst
Scott Manley
Kyle Hill
Matt O‘Dowd
Every single one of them runs circles around NDT in terms of being in sync with their audience and not sitting in some sort of ivory tower.
Check them out of you can.
I'll check them out (haven't heard of any of them).
I was very disappointed by NDT's version of Cosmos. Just because Sagan was his mentor doesn't mean I give the series a pass when it failed to inspire me or even entertain me.
If you haven't seen
any of the original Cosmos... there should be clips of some of the most interesting parts - like Sagan informing us that if you want to make a Dutch apple pie from scratch, you first have to invent the universe, and his "extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence" quote (this was in the episode about UFOs, but it can be applied to anything that requires scientific evidence to verify).