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tv   Imena nelegalnoi razvedki  1TV  December 20, 2023 12:40am-1:50am MSK

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two black mercedes, on the edges, motorcyclists, are driving along the central street of the city of nikolaev, and music is heard from the windows of one of the houses, from an apartment on the top floor. someone played wagner, hitler's favorite composer, on the piano. surprised, goffman ordered the car to be stopped. the german officers rose. to the apartment, who lives here, and here are russian germans, oh, interesting, the widow of a famous neurologist in nikolaev, emilia dukart, and her daughter magda lived in the apartment. it was she who played wagner at the royal, next to her stood a young tall man, he introduced himself in german, introducing himself as viktor kornev, an engineer sent to nikolaev. with the beginning of the war, he decided to stay
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in the city and wait for the victorious german army, showed his documents, passport and travel orders. from the passport it followed that his name was viktor aleksandrovich kornev. he was born in 1908, lived in moscow, and came to nikolaev on a business trip shortly before the start of the war. kornev also presented his travel certificate, issued at the moscow automobile plant named after starin.
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none of the germans understood that the documents were a high-quality fake, a fake, and the head of the nkvd reconnaissance and sabotage residency, state security captain, viktor lyagin, took the first step to infiltrate the invaders. he was the engineer kornev. by sending him behind the front line, moscow took a great risk. at first, the people's commissar of internal affairs himself was against his transfer to nikolaev. professional engineer. nikolaev shipbuilding. was one of the largest centers of the soviet before the occupation of the city, the nikolaev shipyards were not managed to break it down. the germans were going to make full use of them for the repair and construction of their ships and submarines . the task was, of course, to undermine,
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to undermine the power of this potential of the military in the field of shipbuilding and ship repair. september 1941. on the recommendation of commandant nikolaev hoffmann, viktor lyagin’s wife, magda dukart, was hired by rear admiral karl von bodecker. he was the head of shipbuilding factories in the black sea region. and later ober werv as director of the eastern territories. in his submission included all naval shipbuilding facilities in the occupied territory of the ussr. magda ivanovna knew german well. the one who headed the entire shipbuilding industry on the black sea needed a secretary. and she becomes a secretary.
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i have complained more than once that there are not enough engineers for the shipyard to operate normally. having received a convenient moment, magda, at the request of viktor lyagin, asked the boss to hire her husband, a professional engineer. he agreed. however, first german engineers carried out several serious interviews with colleague viktor kornev. and lyagin had to undergo very serious tests to prove his engineering competence. this is a test for viktor lyagin too.
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at the same time, he noted that the germans in this city feel like they are at a resort. rosenberg clearly embellished reality. there was real terror in the city. the new order in nikolaev was supported only by the most severe repressions. during the occupation, more than 100,000 residents died, but despite everything, the local population did not let the invaders feel feel like you're at a resort. on november 22, 1941, in... in the center of nikolaev, a german garage warehouse with tires suddenly caught fire, 30 cars were destroyed, and up to 40 german soldiers died. on december 16, another warehouse with warm uniforms for verbakht burned down. for some reason, three trains on the railway derailed. in
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january 1942, a fire broke out again in a military garage. german losses, 20 cars, five motorcycles, 30 tons of fuel and 4,000 tires. it seems like, well, a tire is a tire, but excuse me, these are a thousand cars that are left without tires. in march 1942 in the same year , a floating dock with a displacement of 6.00 tons sank at the nikolaev shipyards, and in the summer of the same year the boiler of a romanian steamer that was being repaired exploded. the main fact is that not a single ship was built, nothing was repaired like that, because it went like that.
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and nikolai uleska, but what is also important to note is that the nikolaev underground fighters also took a direct active part in the operations. a unified control center for the underground movement was created in nikolaev and headed by viktor lyagin. thanks to my position, viktor lyagin had access to information about the repair and construction of german submarines and their combat characteristics.
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dialects that were of undoubted interest to intelligence officer lyagin and contained information extremely important for the center. receiving information is one thing, but it also needs to be delivered. but the route drivers had certain problems with this. viktor lyagin sent several messages to moscow by radio. some texts he wrote. have survived to this day. they have the same signature underneath them. ken. this is his operational pseudonym he invariably asked for stable communication for the group. provide communication through neighbors. communication is absolutely essential. password.
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and soon the group’s radio completely malfunctioned. he tried to reconnect in other ways. in december 1941, victor. lyagin came to odessa officially on a business trip to the odessa shipyard, but in fact in search of connections with moscow. he hoped that there he could get help in this matter, but unfortunately, his hopes were not realized. in 1942 he made several more attempts. yagin i sent my contacts to moscow several times. and what’s interesting is that all his contacts to moscow were practically... known, but reliable connections with the center were never established . the minibuses worked autonomously; they
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themselves had to select targets for sabotage and plan operations. the activities of the nikolaev underground seriously worried the nazis. by the fall of 1942, the nazis already knew that a large underground center was operating in the city. according to them, it was headed by a state security major who used the pseudonym ken, ken. or khent. the germans attracted particular attention to those who appeared in nikolaev shortly before the start of the occupation, so engineer kornev, despite his good relations with the local authorities, probably came to the attention of the sd. if lyagin had maintained his social circle for his underground activities within his autonomous group of eight people, perhaps, so to speak. he would have waited for the arrival of the red army and the residency would have
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been safely completed until the liberation of the city. pushkin ethiopian, block, german, lermontov, scotsman, internet networks there is a list circulating with the names of russian writers, poets, composers who allegedly were not ethnic russians. did you find elements in pushkin in the ebiopian language? the list once again emphasizes, of course, the illiteracy of the one who threw it in, one of them. new characters write: napoleon left russia in an orderly manner, without losing a single soldier, invited the russian cossacks to paris so that they wouldn’t come up with a bestro, out of an army of six hundred thousand in six months there were no more than 3000 left, anti-fake, premiere, tomorrow on the first, cognac old barrel, a product of the stellar group. what is
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figure skating, beauty, struggle, passion, harmony, creativity. work, emotions, flight, dream, love, victory, this is life, the main tournament of the year, the russian championship, live broadcasts from chelyabinsk, on the first. figure skating at the first will be very
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interesting. in the summer of 1929, regular entrance exams began at the leningrad polytechnic institute. among the applicants was twenty-year-old viktor lyagin. there is a purple folder in front of us. personal file of a student at the leningrad polytechnic institute, admission 1929.
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in 1934, viktor lyagin defended his diploma as a mechanical engineer with a specialty in the design of tractor vehicles. allowed him to understand aviation, shipbuilding, and tanks. we are looking at the diploma, the future said, the amount of knowledge gained that viktor aleksandrovich lyagin received, and some disciplines, let me read it to you right from here, analytical mechanics, methods of processing parts, thermodynamics, assembly and installation of car engines. i did not
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read the upper part, where, according to tradition , there is mathematics, physics, history, and so on. only special disciplines. soon after graduating from the institute, a real disaster occurred in the life of viktor lyagin. in 1935 , his wife olga died from typhoid fever. he was crushed by grief and tried to drown it out with work. in november 1936. lyagin got a job at the leningrad machine tool plant. he probably had this gift, almost at the agency level, of persuasion, the gift of a leader, after all, is probably innate in putting on airs, he is always in public, in plain sight. viktor lyagin was valued not only as a good specialist, his colleagues at the factories were surprised
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the breadth of his interests. he drove cars and motorcycles, jumped with a parachute, and took photographs. he was involved in sailing and weightlifting, and finally studied german and english. the nkvd drew attention to the active and capable erudite engineers. but when did this happen? in june 1938, engineer lyagin was unexpectedly summoned to the factory portcom, and there he was offered to go to work for the nkvd. people like him were very much needed by the soviet intelligence services back then.
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losses, more than half of the personnel. intelligence suffered perhaps the most serious the repressions led to an acute shortage of personnel in the soviet intelligence services. then the central committee of the party decided to recruit about a thousand communists and komsomol members to work in the organs. among them was viktor lyagin. he was sent to a special purpose school that trained personnel for foreign intelligence. there he met another cadet, his name was pavel fittin. in just a few months, fittin will make a dizzying career in intelligence. already in may 1939, pavel mikhailovich fitin became the head of the fifth department of the main directorate of state security nkvd of the ussr. that's what foreign
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intelligence was called back then. he became lyagin's boss. who in 1938 came to intelligence at the same time as him. viktor lyagin’s first position was deputy head of the fifth department of the main directorate of state security. a completely new stage began in his life. july 18, 1941 at the door of emilia dukart’s apartment in nikolaev.
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almost freely to move around the occupied territory. by the beginning of august forty-one , other members were already in nikolaev and its environs reconnaissance and sabotage residency number 4.467 marshrutniks. details of their transfer to nikolaev are contained in the file of the route workers, which is today stored in the fsb archives. they moved to nikolaev separately. viktor lyagin ordered the group to disperse throughout the city, lie low and not conduct any active activity for at least 2 months, but lyagin himself, also known as
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engineer kornev, was obliged to remain in sight of the germans. he had to attract the attention of the occupiers as much as possible. it was an extremely dangerous and risky game. if the nazis found out who they were. he was 31 years old, filming location: usa. the footage shows a seemingly carefree, beautiful life. in fact, since july 1939, viktor
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lyagin carried out a soviet intelligence mission in the united states. after joining the nkvd in 1938, viktor lyagin began working in a unit that was engaged in scientific and technical intelligence. this is quite the direction. in the summer of '39, he came to leningrad to say goodbye to his relatives and daughter. he did not yet know that he would never see her again. grandson of viktor lyagin,
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alexey esipov, studied every place in st. petersburg associated with his famous grandfather. mom told him everything that he remembered about his father, so that alexey would love him as she loved. the last time she saw him was when he came in 1939 to say goodbye to his family, got into the car, mom ran up to him, daddy was there, daddy, so he came out, hugged her, that was the last meeting, viktor lyagin had a long foreign business trip to the usa . in july, he and his wife went overseas. in this house, in apartment number one, viktor lyagin lived with with his family from 1934 to 1939, it was
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during this period that he went to work in intelligence, it was from here that his family saw him off in 1939 to work in the usa, he never returned here. this is how the rite of passage into the most influential american secret sorority begins. prepares you to lead anything and anyone angelina jolie's daughter, what's your name? zahara, marley, jolie, when you show.
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check behind the wheel, new life of roman kostomarov, terrible, what i was and what i became, i am not i will now say that no, but this is nonsense, life has changed dramatically, our exclusive today is the whole family of the olympic champion, of course there were fights, well, more often they were friends, denis supported me in the hospital, he will put a cradle in my plan, yes, you are a hero , you defeated death, this is my man, throughout my life we ​​have passed such the most difficult test, this is true love, my love, just don’t cry, i don’t cry, why would he watch my mother cry, it’s a shame, the main thing is that he's right here
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next to me...
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with his education in cars tractor he turned into karabel issues of demagnetization, which is very important, because magnetic mines came into use then, they were very effective, he was engaged in the construction of aircraft carriers and so on, everything related to the fleet.
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he managed to recruit a man in san francisco who gave the ussr a description of devices intended to protect ships from magnetic mines. but in general, information about his activities in the united states is still classified. at the beginning of 1941, viktor lyagin was transferred to new york to the armtorg representative office. he showed.
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a real intelligence talent, quickly fitting into an unfamiliar environment. unlike many intelligence officers who avoid cameras, lyagin had to create the image of a social reveler, which means constantly appearing in front of photographers’ lenses. and the family of viktor alexandrovich has a lot of photographs. the image is the image of a person who fit into that life.
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“on your birthday, we will gather in our small company and drink to your health, to the health of your grandmother and aunt annie. i will remember our dear mother and wish you to be as good as she was. mommy helped me study, so everything you have now comes not only from me and zinna, but also from mom. from america ." viktor lyagin returned to the soviet union on june 15, the whole family was planning to go on vacation, but on june 22 the war began. already on july 5
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, under the people's commissar of internal affairs lavrinta and beria , a special group was created to conduct special operations behind enemy lines. headed this group. state security major pavel anatolyevich sudaplatov. it was created primarily from foreign intelligence officers, employees of other nkvd bodies who had experience of foreign work, as well as sabotage and intelligence activities during the war in spain. it should be noted that many intelligence officers submitted reports about their enrollment in this group. in the very first days of the war, the creation of special groups began . had to remain in the territories occupied by the germans and launch a fight against them there. when the question arose about who to send behind the front line as - illegal residents, then here again,
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so to speak, the emphasis was placed precisely on foreign intelligence officers, that is , initially a special group took the path of creating large reconnaissance sabotage units. presidential offices in large cities, in the occupied territory, one of the first insisted on involving him in illegal work behind the front line was viktor lyagin. pavel sudoplatov recalled. he was eager to distinguish himself in the war. he was driven by fearlessness. he left his family and all his executive privileges, but we categorically opposed this. sudaplatov refused him because he didn’t.
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he asked to be sent to nikolaev. in his opinion, only a professional engineer could head the station of the city of porta with large shipyards. he had excellent knowledge acquired at the polytechnic, acquired during subsequent work, he was able to pose as a shipwright. it was as a shipbuilder that he had to gain the trust of the germans and enter into cooperation with them. exact content.
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he was appointed head of the nikolaevskaya marshrutnik residencies. on july 14, 1941, viktor lyagin left moscow for nikolaev. one of his last letters to his wife zinaida was on the twenty-ninth. it was sent to her by sakazia with the help of nkvd officers. we need to legalize ourselves before the germans arrive. much has been done for their meetings. but even more needs to be done, i hope that if they come, they will find a good reception, and if they don’t come , i won’t regret that the work was wasted, that’s all, it seems, write, my dear, while you still have the opportunity, in
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a little over 2 weeks the city was occupied germans, spring 1942, viktor lyagin’s group decided to strike a military airfield, which was located near nikolaev on the river bank. and ingul, the guards at the checkpoints at the airfield were already accustomed to the fact that the waitress from the german canteen, ethnic german galina kellem, brought lunch to her husband. he worked at the kochigar airfield in kotelnaya. the germans no longer paid attention to the baskets of food. in fact, there was an explosive underneath the food. one of the aviation units of the fourth air force was based at the airfield.
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worked in the airfield boiler room with woodsman kochigar. he calculated the mining scheme and gradually carried mines into the base, according to one version in firewood for the boiler room. she helped him. he went to the hospital, then having prepared everything , naturally, he got out of there at night, committed arson, returned to the hospital, no one knew that he did it, from the explosion that occurred at noon on march 10...
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on time, but rosenberg escaped fair retribution, and literally 10 minutes before the start of lunch it was decided to move him to the mansion of the german commandant, but still a smaller group of route workers chalked up about ten more german officers. after sabotage at the airfield, alexander sidorchuk managed to remain above suspicion and settled down. we are guards at fuel depots at the port. for viktor lyagin and his group, they represented an important goal. on the night of november 5, 1942, alexander sedarchuk was supposed to blow them up, but died in the process. sidorchuk died tragically while committing another act of sabotage right at the port, when an explosive device detonated in his hands. united nikolaevsky
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an underground center led by viktor lyagin was created at the end of 1941, several groups united in it. on the other hand, it was the emergence of this center that threatened the work of the entire underground, the route station and the resident himself. his own safety, because... knew even before the war, a phthisiatrician, maria
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lyubchenko, was left in nikolaev for the underground work of the local party organization. in the summer of 1942, the group in which she worked was defeated by the germans. she is under threat of execution recruited counterintelligence of the occupiers. she was released and still worked as a doctor. when other underground fighters turned to her for help, she handed them over to the germans. lyubchenko claimed that
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in january 1943, raids began in nikolaev on young people who were being driven away by the germans to work in the reich, and a lieutenant was also subject to mobilization... viktor lyagin’s state security liaison officer grigory gavrilenko. he worked as a driver in the fire department. lyagin asked lyubchenko to make him a false certificate stating that for health reasons gavrilenko could not go to germany. he agreed that grigory would approach her for this certificate. and
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when he came to the hospital, they were already waiting for him there. he was arrested. season premiere. it is he? yes. and who cares, but he’s in the hospital , unfortunately, no, i want to know everything about these athletes, their coach, there are a lot of girls among his contacts, yeah, that’s how it is, for every taste, they’re all pretty, tell me, and yours - there is some decent bloodhound swimming suit, new series, tomorrow after the program time, in my opinion, completely not my style, you know, do you want this one? will go much more, ladies and gentlemen, let me invite the most shocking comedian of all time, lazy bruce, to the stage. mick, i do n’t know what to do with leni, he was so nostalgic, you know what he asked, the girls would enjoy the scene, but then you’ll have
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to stand at the bar alone. one day, when the stripper was finishing his performance, suddenly the stage. lenny bruce appeared, what the mother gave birth to, i figured out how to absolutely get the girl into bed, you tell her, let’s just date without a bed. deliberate presentation of material with the aim of causing lustful interests. for example, if you say, bring me a cheap prostitute, they might bring a writer with a beard. hey leni, i'm taking you under arrest. such words are prohibited from being spoken. in public places, i will be forced to find you guilty if i utter what words? motador, ladies and gentlemen, leni bruss is on friday at first. this time the nazis decided not to wait, by this time they already had information about
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the underground members and the connections between them, they understood that engineer kornev played a leading role in the underground, although they did not know who he was such. in a few. torture of the histapo, he held on with courage and steadfastness, they could not get a single grain of information from him, not to mention the names and surnames of the underground fighters or members of the group of route workers. moreover, the fascists were unable
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to bring any charges against lyagin’s inner circle, emilia and magda dukart. victor.
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a fragment of a razor was hidden near the furashka, and he tried to commit suicide, because the mocks were apparently terrible, he cut his veins on his left hand, when in the morning the guard saw him covered in blood, he was immediately they took him away, he was not in the general cell for 8 days, after 8 days he was brought back, they revived him in order to... torture him further, the deceivers tried to arrange his escape, but at first he himself refused it, because he did not want to abandon his wounded comrade, the second attempt, scheduled ... for april 17 , 1943, failed, at one time they were taken to work outside the prison, they even gave him
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two revolvers in order to use them during the escape, but on the day of the escape, unfortunately, such a coincidence happens circumstances, in on the day of the prison escape, a criminal escapes in the morning, and as a result, they are all transferred back to the prison premises, and it’s time to get out of there. it was impossible, but the efforts of the nazi researchers did not lead to anything, the real name of engineer viktor kornev, his assignments and many other valuable information that the soviet intelligence officer knew remained unknown to the germans, he remained unbroken until the very end. viktor lyagin and grigory gavrilenko were shot on july 17, 1943. detailed circumstances. "wait for me 2 years, if in
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i won’t be back for 2 years, then there’s an ellipsis. turned 2 years old on july 17, 1943. on march 28 , 1944, nikolaev was liberated by the red army, by order of the leadership of the nkvd , a task force arrived in the city, it was to investigate the circumstances of the death of the marshrutnik station and find the surviving witnesses of its work. four people from lyagin’s group survived: pyotr lutsenko, nikolai ulesko, demyan svidorsky and... ivan kanavalenko. they were awarded the order of the red banner. as for magda and emilia ducourt, their fate
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was more sad. in 1943 they were taken to germany, and at the end of the great patriotic war they returned to the soviet union. but as ethnic german women who had visited the territory of nazi germany, they were deported to the city of tobolsk. justice was restored to viktor lyagin’s assistants only in 1967, when they were awarded medals for military merit. magda ducart is posthumous. she died in 1952 . the posthumous fate of grigory gavrilenko was also dramatic. for some time after the war, it was he who was suspected of he handed over viktor lyagin and his group to the germans. in the early sixties, gavrilenko was finally cleared of these charges, he was posthumously awarded the order of the patriotic
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war of the second degree, but the real traitor maria lyubchenko tried to hide. when the germans retreated, she tried to leave with them, but she was arrested in lviv. there was a trial and she was sentenced to capital punishment. the traitor must be punished. after... the center learned about the heroic death of viktor lyagin, pavel sudaplatov wrote a postcard to his daughter tatyana. is yours dad died a heroic death in the fight for our homeland. be proud of him and remember him constantly. on november 5, 1944, viktor aleksandrovich lyagin was awarded the title of hero. soviet union. posthumously. he became one of the first soviet foreign
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intelligence officers to receive the highest state award. and with his courage, his readiness for self-sacrifice, he proved that loyalty to duty, devotion to the homeland, is sometimes more valuable.
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the most truthful podcast about medicine baden baden is on air and i am its host konstantin severinov. today we will talk with vyacheslav dubynin. about the brain and problems of neurophysiology, you know everything about the brain, right? well, of course, no one knows everything about the brain , well, we’re trying, in fact, the brain is different levels, molecular, cellular, structural, the level of such system processes, like memory or emotions, well, at each level we know 20, 30 percent, 40, that's about it, but most people are interested in how the brain
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works, that is , its final exhaust, let's say how... we think, well, we think mainly in words for simplicity, but if so, although of course, figurative thinking also exists, words are what pavlov, pavlov in his time called the second signal system, words we designate some real events, sometimes words are something... then they generalize, well, in the end, as a person goes through his life , he accumulates vocabulary there in non- networks, well, apparently, the main zone where... all this accumulates is the so-called parietotemporal-occipital region, there are more and more words there , and we begin to think with them, can i do this very thing, because i i feel like you’re just going through the motions when we accumulate words, well, let’s start with the fact that with age, it seems like the opposite happens, we don’t save as much as we lose, that is, we have places in our heads for each word, this is a dictionary, and we take these words out from there, and what is
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the material carrier, the place, of course, should be, but this place is not... a molecule or even a cell, but a certain fragment of a neural network , that is, some neurons that, well, for example , are associated with sensory centers, different, some signs are collected in them, well, i don’t know, there’s an orange, for example, yes , an orange, we know what kind of picture, picture , mental picture of an orange, yes, yes, there’s not only not only a picture, because an orange is also a visual image, gustatory, tactile, and also the word orange.
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apparently, for each person, for example, the same word is written in different places, approximately the same as on a computer’s hard drive, that is, you have the same file for different computers will be written in different places on the disk, because it was free space, there were some extra prerequisites, which is why it is so difficult to catch it during experiments. well, in general, when we talk about science, the question always arises, how can you look at it? i approach it from this point of view, yes, we actually have a person, because you can’t catch speech activity on a white rat, much less on a worm, and this means we have an fmri tomogram, a functional magnetic resonance tomogram, we have an electroencephalogram, very rare stories when we manage to get directly from the microelectrodes
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into the human brain, naturally during neurosurgical operations. in these situations we can see something, in particular, if a person concentrates there on some word, on some association, then we can see the activation of local zones, but this is just a rare, rare pleasure, you see that it’s different for different people, and different people do it differently, yes, but we’re talking about the same thing, that is , the mental image in the head should be the same, and does this mean that the structure, well morphological structure, a set of neurons that touch each other. somehow it is the same - specific morphology, specific coordinates in the brain, most likely different for different people, but connections, information channels must be the same, because we see the same thing, yes, but although the same orange, i think that in the mind of a person living in the south, in the mind of a man living there, i don’t know in murmansk, it will be a different image, because
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well, certainly for a person who saw how this is all growing, by the way... orange is added for the exact image of flowering trees, these smells are in murmansk, you can only add a box of cheburashka, we have a rezka here. and as we remember it then, it lies there later and lies until required, when oranges were brought to murmansk, suddenly i remember their existence, i remember that they once took me, for example, to sukhumi or somewhere else, i was the mediterranean sea, and there i saw how these oranges were growing, well , it turns out that as soon as we throw some additional activation there, due to, well, for example, the same sensory inputs, then the whole system is capable of being excited, and let’s say they show you an orange ball and you say: oh, it looks like an orange. do poets have different brains then? after all, they are , these are associations, but you’re talking about how one thing leads to another, one system, whatever that means, or a program,
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for some reason pulls up some new things. for poets, and, in fact, for us too, each word is associated with other words, and at some point we begin, well, psychologists, developmental psychologists, they say at three years old, yes. the child already has so many words in his head that he can begin to drive excitement along certain contours, and this is the basis of thinking, in fact, to invent some beautiful phrase, and even rhymed, is to find the correct trajectory in this complex of speech centers, that is , what pavlov called the second signaling system, this is it, and we really see on artificial neural networks, well, in gpt chat, for example, yes, that they gain their vocabulary in approximately the same way, and then they can draw out associations and sometimes it’s quite funny, but i can come up with a new word that didn’t exist at all, i can come up with, well, not me, but people can come up with
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worlds, but these are science fiction, they’re quite real, yes, it’s amazing the ability of our brain to create some new generalization within itself, and as a rule, new words are an additional generalization, well, at least such meaningful words, although... of course, you can just see an unknown animal and give it a name, like a kangaroo , yes or something else like that, kuzdra, glokoe kuzdra, for example, but generalizing words that collect several specific words together are especially valued, by the way, in poetry this is exactly what touches a lot of people, sometimes the same poem, the poet uses very generalizing terms, in the end everyone reads the quatrain as they wish. and in fact we are talking about the fact that this text
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causes in you, in me, in the viewer, something starts running there, that’s how you see it, the current actually flows along the rails like in an electric one, well, in some kind of then here it is electrical circuit, and the lights are on, and the lights are on , and it spreads throughout the whole brain. the centers of emotions are necessarily destroyed, because blocks of memory formed in some situation begin to emerge; the situation, as a rule, means either a flow of negative emotions or a flow of positive emotions, and all this begins to live and vibrate. you are actually saying that the brain works, because that’s how it works, but in a sense, this is descriptive of some kind of activity going on now, you are describing that we know that the brain works, we know what we can imagine. orange we can learn several languages, then we simply say that it works this way because the brain has the corresponding programs, they run, that is, our brain is actually made for all this, indeed one of the most important tasks of the brain, a complex brain, according to
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in the course of life, create inside, form a cast of the surrounding reality inside, and this, of course, in the course of evolution arises not in order to write poetry, but in order to model situations and choose the most appropriate...
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we also call this intuition, in difficult situations you really need to sit down to think, but you have it all lined up in your head, in your inner brain there is a picture of what you are telling, it is consistent with you.
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without brains, unicellular organisms reproduce very well, and well, they also don’t need a special brain to eat, they reproduce without brains, but they also eat nothing, well, that’s where evolution begins, then it turns out that it’s more profitable to be multicellular, because you’re big already like you you eat single-celled organisms, you can’t be eaten so easily, but as soon as multicellularity appears, you need to somehow... put everything together, a nervous system arises, and we look at very simple worms or coelenterates, and we see there are already neurons, there are neural networks, similar mechanisms work, the same synapses, neurotransmitters, receptors, and then at the initial levels of evolution, basically the networks already seem to have innately given properties, that is, from the very beginning there is already a plan, a drawing, where everything is written, what kind of grid...
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the whole life of alexander mikhailovich korotkov passed as required by the motto of illegal intelligence, without the right to glory, for the glory of the state. premiere. names of illegal intelligence. alexander korodkov. tomorrow on the first. we continue the badon podcast, i am its host konstantin severinov, our podcast about evidence-based medicine, about how.
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and distinguish neurons from glial cells, she does excellent work, just phylogenetic, it takes a very long time to count up to 90 billion, you need to count it very quickly in order to make it in time for your life, she works already.
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he was born, for example , some kind of sucking reflex was working, yes, they touched the lips and that means sucking movements began, saliva is released and so on, and for this reason, there are children without such a reflex, which just doesn’t happen, it happens just , that is, this is an excellent object of study for you, probably the trick
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is that evolution, these mechanisms, it has been debugging for hundreds of millions of years, so everything that worked directly unsuccessfully has been weeded out a long time ago, and there is... me this just when they wanted to offend, or i wanted to offend, they said, remember about the convolutions are not enough, here the convolutions, they will be like fingerprints, this is, for example, in newborn people, this is a unique thing, only inherent to them, yes, it would already say that the brains are different from the very beginning, but the largest convolutions are
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the same, but the smaller they are, the more unique the convolutional grooves are, and you really get a unique imprint, well, at some point, probably. really bad, right? well, yes, because our cerebral cortex - these are superficial neurons, and the larger the surface, the higher the computing resources, so that is , folding is needed simply to put something into this head that generally speaking does not fit there, well, just like folds in mitochondria, but why do you need cristae, in order to plant more of these same enzymes so that oxidative phosphorylation occurs, approximately in general the idea of ​​folding is very often, it is used by nature, but folding does not develop. this is how it is, after all, if you are born, when we are born we are naive in a sense, yes, i don't know if there is already...

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