|
AlGore_2009-0001304-0002346 last year i showed these two slides so that demonstrate that the arctic ice cap which for most of the last three million years has been the size of the lower forty eight states has shrunk by forty percent |
|
AlGore_2009-0002346-0004004 but this understates the seriousness of this particular problem because it doesn |
|
AlGore_2009-0004004-0005268 a rapid fast forward of what |
|
AlGore_2009-0005268-0006029 and the so called permanent ice five years old or older you can see is almost like blood spilling out of the body here |
|
AlGore_2009-0006260-0006905 in twenty five years it |
|
AlGore_2009-0006905-0008633 heats up the frozen ground around the arctic ocean where there is a massive amount of frozen carbon which when it thaws is turned into methane by microbes compared to the total amount of global warming pollution in the atmosphere that amount could double if we cross this tipping point |
|
AlGore_2009-0008633-0009790 already in some shallow lakes in alaska methane is actively bubbling up out of the water professor katey walter from the university of alaska went out with another team to another shallow lake last winter |
|
AlGore_2009-0011068-0011830 she |
|
AlGore_2009-0011830-0012659 this is an annual melting river but the volumes are much larger than ever this is the kangerlussuaq river in southwest |
|
AlGore_2009-0012659-0013511 greenland if you want to know how sea level rises from land base ice melting this is where it reaches the sea these flows are increasing very rapidly |
|
AlGore_2009-0013511-0014534 at the other end of the planet antarctica the largest mass of ice on the planet last month scientists reported the entire continent is now in negative ice balance and west antarctica |
|
AlGore_2009-0014534-0015409 cropped up on top some under sea islands is particularly rapid in its melting that |
|
AlGore_2009-0015409-0016856 in the himalayas the third largest mass of ice at the top you see new lakes which a few years ago were glaciers forty percent of all the people in the world get half of their drinking water from that melting flow in the andes this glacier is the source of drinking water for this city |
|
AlGore_2009-0016856-0018678 the flows have increased but when they go away so does much of the drinking water in california there has been a forty percent decline in the sierra snowpack this is hitting the reservoirs and the predictions as you |
|
AlGore_2009-0018678-0020516 and the disasters around the world have been increasing at an absolutely extraordinary and unprecedented rate four times as many in the last thirty years as in the previous seventy five this is a completely unsustainable pattern if you look at in the context of history you can see |
|
AlGore_2009-0020516-0020955 what this is doing |
|
AlGore_2009-0020955-0021791 in the last five years we |
|
AlGore_2009-0021791-0022916 look carefully at the area of the eastern pacific from the americas extending westward and on either side of the indian subcontinent where there is a radical depletion of oxygen in the oceans |
|
AlGore_2009-0022916-0023668 the biggest single cause of global warming along with deforestation which is twenty percent of it is the burning of fossil fuels oil is a problem |
|
AlGore_2009-0023668-0025415 and coal is the most serious problem the united states is one of the two largest emitters along with china and the proposal has been to build a lot more coal plants but we |
|
AlGore_2009-0025415-0027030 however there is a political battle in our country and the coal industries and the oil industries spent a quarter of a billion dollars in the last calendar year promoting clean coal which is an oxymoron that image reminded me of something |
|
AlGore_2009-0027370-0028949 around christmas in my home in tennessee a billion gallons of coal sludge was spilled you probably saw it on the news this all over the country is the second largest waste stream in america this happened around christmas one of the coal industry |
|
AlGore_2009-0030430-0031168 this is the source of much of the coal in west virginia the largest mountaintop miner is the head of massey coal |
|
AlGore_2009-0031304-0031979 let me be clear about it al gore nancy pelosi harry reid they don |
|
AlGore_2009-0031979-0032607 so the alliance for climate protection has launched two campaigns this is one of them part of one of them |
|
AlGore_2009-0032607-0033881 coalergy we view climate change as a very serious threat to our business that |
|
AlGore_2009-0033881-0034242 the fact is coal isn |
|
AlGore_2009-0034336-0034477 smells good too |
|
AlGore_2009-0034538-0035003 so don |
|
AlGore_2009-0035176-0035680 clean coal you |
|
AlGore_2009-0035977-0036537 amazing the machinery is kind of loud but that |
|
AlGore_2009-0036643-0037401 and while burning coal is one of the leading causes of global warming the remarkable clean coal technology you see here changes everything |
|
AlGore_2009-0037401-0037909 take a good long look this is today |
|
AlGore_2009-0037909-0038534 finally the positive alternative meshes with our economic challenge and our national security challenge |
|
AlGore_2009-0038534-0039066 america is in crisis the economy national security the climate crisis |
|
AlGore_2009-0039066-0039615 the thread that links them all our addiction to carbon based fuels like dirty coal and foreign oil |
|
AlGore_2009-0039615-0040079 but now there is a bold new solution to get us out of this mess repower america |
|
AlGore_2009-0040079-0040921 with one hundred percent clean electricity within ten years a plan to put america back to work make us more secure and help stop global warming |
|
AlGore_2009-0040921-0041490 finally a solution that |
|
AlGore_2009-0041490-0041607 this is the last one |
|
AlGore_2009-0042315-0043056 it |
|
AlGore_2009-0043195-0043622 future |
|
AlGore_2009-0043770-0044092 new investments to create high paying jobs |
|
AlGore_2009-0044281-0044591 repower america it |
|
AlGore_2009-0044591-0045669 there is an old african proverb that says if you want to go quickly go alone if you want to go far go together we need to go far quickly |
|
AlGore_2009-0045669-0045797 thank you very much |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0001224-0001955 i |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0001955-0002689 make some connections myself in case you miss them i want to start with what i call the official dogma |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0002689-0003874 the official dogma of what the official dogma of all western industrial societies and the official dogma runs like this if we are interested in maximizing the welfare of our citizens |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0003874-0004912 the way to do that is to maximize individual freedom the reason for this is both that freedom is in and of itself good |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0004912-0006224 valuable worthwhile essential to being human and because if people have freedom then each of us can act on our own to do the things that will maximize our welfare and no one has to decide on our behalf |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0006224-0007545 the way to maximize freedom is to maximize choice the more choice people have the more freedom they have and the more freedom they have the more welfare they have |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0007545-0008962 this i think is so deeply embedded in the water supply that it wouldn |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0008962-0009855 i |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0009855-0010532 i want to say just a word about salad dressing a hundred and seventy five salad dressings in my supermarket if you don |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0010532-0011842 the ten extra virgin olive oils and twelve balsamic vinegars you could buy to make a very large number of your own salad dressings in the off chance that none of the hundred seventy five the store has on offer suit you |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0011842-0012947 so this is what the supermarket is like and then you go to the consumer electronics store to set up a stereo system speakers cd player tape player tuner amplifier and in this one |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0012947-0013956 single consumer electronics store there are that many stereo systems we can construct six and a half million |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0013956-0015043 different stereo systems out of the components that are on offer in one store you |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0015043-0016393 there was a time when i was a boy when you could get any kind of telephone service you wanted as long as it came from ma bell you rented your phone you didn |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0016393-0017265 those days are gone we now have an almost unlimited variety of phones especially in the world of cell phones these are cell phones of the future |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0017265-0017960 my favorite is the middle one the mp three player nose hair trimmer and creme brulee torch and if |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0018189-0019251 if by some chance you haven |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0019251-0020164 and do you know what the answer to this question now is the answer is no it is not possible to buy a cell phone that doesn |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0020164-0021506 in other aspects of life that are much more significant than buying things the same explosion of choice is true health care it is no longer the case in the united states that you |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0021506-0022404 go to the doctor and the doctor tells you what to do instead you go to the doctor and the doctor tells you well we could do a or we could do b a has these benefits |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0022404-0023325 and these risks b has these benefits and these risks what do you want to do and you say doc what should i do and the doc says |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0023325-0024559 a has these benefits and risks and b has these benefits and risks what do you want to do and you say if you were me doc what would you do and the doc says but i |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0024559-0026795 and the result is we call it patient autonomy which makes it sound like a good thing but what it really is is a shifting of the burden and the responsibility for decision making from somebody who knows something namely the doctor to somebody who knows nothing and is almost certainly sick and thus not in the best shape to be making decisions namely the patient there |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0026795-0028208 to people like you and me which if you think about it makes no sense at all since we can |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0028208-0029108 something as dramatic as our identity has now become a matter of choice as this slide |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0029108-0030333 is meant to indicate we get to we don |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0030333-0030923 you want to be in with respect to marriage and family |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0030923-0032176 there was a time when the default assumption that almost everyone had is that you got married as soon as you could and then you started having kids as soon as you could the only real choice was who |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0032176-0033102 not when and not what you did after nowadays everything is very much up for grabs i teach wonderfully intelligent students |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0033102-0034166 and i assign twenty percent less work than i used to and it |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0034166-0034940 asking themselves should i get married or not should i get married now should i get married later should i have kids first or a career first |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0034940-0036185 all of these are consuming questions and they |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0036404-0036516 work |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0036516-0037766 we are blessed as carl was pointing out with the technology that enables us to work every minute of every day from any place on the planet except the randolph hotel |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0038294-0039241 there is one corner by the way that i |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0039241-0040156 so what this means this incredible freedom of choice we have with respect to work is that we have to make a decision again and again and again about whether |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0040156-0041465 we should or shouldn |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0041465-0042097 every minute that we |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0042097-0043255 cell phone call should i respond to this email should i draft this letter and even if the answer to the question is no it |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0043255-0044538 so everywhere we look big things and small things material things and lifestyle things life is a matter of choice and the world we used to live in looked like this |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0044742-0045623 that is to say there were some choices but not everything was a matter of choice and the world we now live in looks like this and the question is |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0045623-0046263 is this good news or bad news and the answer is yes |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0046554-0047602 we all know what |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0047602-0048920 one effect paradoxically is that it produces paralysis rather than liberation with so many options to choose from people find it very difficult to choose at all |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0048920-0050062 i |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0050177-0051115 investment records from vanguard the gigantic mutual fund company of about a million employees and about two thousand different workplaces and what she found is that |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0051115-0051894 for every ten mutual funds the employer offered rate of participation went down two percent |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0051894-0054066 you offer fifty funds ten percent fewer employees participate than if you only offer five why because with fifty funds to choose from it |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0054066-0055420 understand that not only does this mean that people are gonna have to eat dog food when they retire because they don |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0055420-0056869 by not participating they are passing up as much as five thousand dollars a year from the employer who would happily match their contribution so paralysis is a consequence of having too many choices and i think it makes the world look like this |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0057498-0058253 you really want to get the decision right if it |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0058253-0059016 so that |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0059016-0060008 we end up less satisfied with the result of the choice than we would be if we had fewer options to choose from and there are several reasons for this |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0060008-0061247 one of them is that with a lot of different salad dressings to choose from if you buy one and it |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0061247-0062516 and what happens is this imagined alternative induces you to regret the decision you made and this regret subtracts from the satisfaction you get out of the decision you made even if it was a good decision |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0062516-0063239 the more options there are the easier it is to regret anything at all that is disappointing about the option that you chose |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0063239-0064442 second what economists call opportunity costs dan gilbert made a big point this morning of talking about how how much the the way in which we value things depends on what we compare them to |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0064442-0065375 well when there are lots of alternatives to consider it is easy to imagine the attractive features of alternatives that you reject |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0065517-0066069 that make you less satisfied with the alternative that you |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0066069-0066421 for those of you who aren |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0066421-0067741 but here |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0067741-0068445 everybody in my manhattan neighborhood is away i could be parking right in front of my building |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0068445-0069441 and he spends two weeks nagged by the idea that he is missing the opportunity day after day to have a great parking space |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0069441-0070466 opportunity costs subtract from the satisfaction we get out of what we choose even when what we choose is terrific and the more options there are to consider |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0070466-0071150 the more attractive features of these options are going to be reflected by us as opportunity costs here |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0071609-0072731 now now this cartoon makes a lot of points it makes points about living in the moment as well and probably about doing things slowly but one point it makes is that whenever you |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0072731-0073478 choosing not to do other things and those other things may have lots of attractive features and it |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0073478-0074419 escalation of expectations this hit me when i went to replace my jeans i wear jeans almost all the time and there was a time when jeans came in one flavor |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0074419-0075648 and you bought them and they fit like crap and they were incredibly uncomfortable and if you wore them long enough and washed them enough times they started to feel feel ok so i went to replace my jeans after years and years of wearing these old ones and i said i |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0075648-0077665 you know i want a pair of jeans here |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0078109-0078372 he had no idea what that was |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0078372-0079678 so i spent an hour trying on all these damn jeans and i walked out of the store truth with the best fitting jeans i had ever had i did better all this choice made it possible for me to do better |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0079678-0080552 but i felt worse why i wrote a whole book to try and explain this to myself the reason is |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0080992-0082076 the reason i felt worse is that with all of these options available my expectations about how good a pair of jeans should be went up |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0082076-0083475 i had very low exp i had no particular expectations when they only came in one flavor when they came in a hundred flavors damn it one of them should |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0083475-0084041 and what i got was disappointing in comparison to what i expected adding options to people |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0084041-0085502 can |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0085502-0085781 cause if they did |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0085781-0086326 you wouldn |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0086674-0087775 the reason that everything was better back when everything was worse is that when everything was worse it was actually possible for people to have experiences that were a pleasant surprise |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0087775-0088887 nowadays the world we live in we affluent industrialized citizens with perfection the expectation the best you can ever hope for is that this stuff is as good as you expect it to be |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0088887-0090231 you will never be pleasantly surprised because your expectations my expectations have gone through the roof the secret to happiness this is what you all came for the secret to happiness is low expectations |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0091167-0092769 i want to say just a little autobiographical moment that i i actually am married to a wife and and she |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0092769-0094116 one consequence of buying a bad fitting pair of jeans when there is only one kind to buy is that when you are dissatisfied and you ask why who |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0094116-0095401 when there are hundreds of different styles of jeans available and you buy one that is disappointing and you ask why who |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0095401-0096794 you could have done better with a thous with a hundred different kinds of jeans on display there is no excuse for failure and so when people make decisions and even though though the results of the decisions are good they feel disappointed |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0096794-0099151 about them they blame themselves clinical depression has exploded in the industrial world in the last generation i believe a significant not the only but a significant contributor to this explosion of depression and also suicide is that people have experiences that are disappointing because their standards are so high and then when they have to explain these experiences to themselves they think they |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0099151-0099870 and so the net result is that we do better and in general objectively and we feel worse |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0099870-0100615 so let me remind you this is the official dogma the one that we all take to be true |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0100615-0101431 and it |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0101431-0102631 but it doesn |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0102631-0103651 our welfare now as a policy matter i |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0103651-0104500 in industrial societies is material affluence there are lots of places in the world and we have heard about several of them |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0104500-0105476 where the their problem is not that they have too much choice their problem is that they have too little so the stuff i |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0105483-0106567 affluent western societies and what is so frustrating and infuriating is this steve levitt talked to you yesterday about how these expensive and difficult to install |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0106690-0107078 infants child seats don |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0107078-0108308 it |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0108308-0109445 off if some of what enables people in our societies to make all of the choices we make were shifted to societies in which people have too few options |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0109445-0110503 not only would those people |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0110503-0111279 better off not just poor people because of how all this excess choice plagues us so to conclude |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0111279-0112192 you |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0112295-0113151 impoverished imagination a myopic view of the world and that |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0113151-0114308 fish knows something because the truth of the matter is that if you shatter the fishbowl so that everything is possible you don |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0114308-0115008 if you shatter this fishbowl so that everything is possible you decrease satisfaction |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0115008-0115842 you increase paralysis and you decrease satisfaction everybody needs a fishbowl this one is almost certainly too limited |
|
BarrySchwartz_2005G-0115842-0116905 perhaps even for the fish certainly for us but the absence of some metaphorical fishbowl is a recipe for misery and i suspect disaster thank you very much |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0001220-0001572 what i |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0001572-0002425 is some some foundational work some some new technology that we brought to microsoft as part of an acquisition almost exactly a year ago this is seadragon |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0002425-0004061 and it |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0004061-0005460 it doesn |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0005460-0006285 it doesn |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0006285-0007452 it |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0007452-0008335 and to prove to you that it |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0008335-0009847 maybe this is a kind of an artificial way to read an e book i wouldn |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0009847-0010886 of a magazine or a newspaper which is an inherently multi scale kind of medium we |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0010886-0012134 that |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0012134-0013412 and and this this really this really gets at some of these ideas about really doing away with with those limits on on screen real estate we hope that this means no more no more pop ups and other kind of rubbish like that shouldn |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0013412-0014299 of course mapping is one of those really obvious applications for a technology like this and and this one i really won |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0014429-0014840 but those are all the roads in the in the u s superimposed on top of a nasa |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0014984-0017141 geospatial image so let |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0017141-0018272 a very nice collaboration and so this is this live on the web it |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0018272-0019697 but but the spatial arrangement of the images here is actually meaningful the computer vision algorithms have registered these images together so that they correspond to the real space in which these these shots all taken near grassi lakes in the canadian rockies |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0019703-0020623 all these shots were taken so you see elements here of of stabilized slide show or panoramic panoramic imaging |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0020623-0022084 and these things have all been related related spatially i |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0022084-0023357 to show you what i think is really the the punchline behind this this technology the photosynth technology and it |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0023363-0024109 this is a reconstruction of notre dame cathedral that was done entirely computationally from images scraped from flickr you just type notre dame into flickr |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0024109-0025195 and you get some pictures of guys in t shirts and of the campus and so on and each of these orange cones represents an image that was that was discovered to belong to this model |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0025330-0025999 and so these are all these are all flickr images and they |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0027083-0027692 you know i never i never thought that i |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0028063-0029457 so so this is i guess you can see this is very this is lots of different types of cameras it |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0029457-0029856 so many of them are occluded by faces and and so on |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0029961-0031256 there |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0031256-0031456 of this of this environment |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0031857-0032996 what what the point here really is is that we can do things with the social environment this is this is now taking data from everybody from the entire collective memory of of visually what the earth looks like |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0032996-0034175 and link all of that together all of those photos become linked together and they make something emergent that |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0034175-0035353 virtual earth work and this is something that grows in complexity as people use it and whose benefits become greater to the users as they as they use it their own photos are getting tagged with meta data that somebody else entered |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0035353-0035982 if if somebody bothered to to tag all of these saints and say who they all are then then my photo of |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0035982-0037008 notre dame cathedral suddenly gets enriched with all of that data and i can use it as an entry point to dive into that space into that meta verse using everybody else |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0037008-0038065 and and and cross user social experience that way and of course a by product of all of that is immensely rich virtual models of of every interesting part of the earth |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0038071-0038867 collected not just from from overhead flights and from satellite images and so on but from the collective memory thank you so much |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0040016-0040812 do i do i understand this do i understand this right that what what your software is going to allow is that at some point really within the next few years |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0040812-0040989 all the pictures |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0040996-0041419 that are shared by anyone across the world are going to basically link together |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0041420-0041924 yes what this is really doing is discovering it |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0041924-0042868 and it |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0042868-0044222 you type in phrases and the text on the web page is is carrying a lot of information about what that picture is of now what if that picture links to all of your pictures then the amount of semantic interconnection and the amount of richness that comes out of that is really huge it |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0044222-0044442 blaise that is truly incredible congratulations |
|
BlaiseAguerayArcas_2007-0044442-0044489 thanks so much |
|
BrianCox_2009U-0001316-0002336 last year at ted i gave an introduction to the lhc and i promised to come back and give you an update on how that machine works so this is it and for those of you who weren |
|
BrianCox_2009U-0002336-0003911 the largest scientific experiment ever attempted twenty seven kilometers in circumference its job is to recreate the conditions that were present less than a billionth of a second after the universe began up to six hundred million times a second it |
|
BrianCox_2009U-0003911-0004814 we take the pictures of those mini big bangs inside detectors this is the one i work on it |
|
BrianCox_2009U-0004814-0005684 spectacular picture here of atlas under construction so you can see the scale on the tenth of september last year we turned the machine on for the first time |
|
BrianCox_2009U-0005684-0006645 and this picture was taken by atlas it caused immense celebration in the control room it |
|
BrianCox_2009U-0006645-0007714 colliding with a piece of the lhc deliberately and showering particles into the detector in other words when we saw that picture on september tenth we knew the machine worked which is a great triumph |
|
BrianCox_2009U-0007714-0009054 i don |
|
BrianCox_2009U-0009054-0010347 related actually to these bits of wire here these gold wires those wires carry thirteen thousand amps when the machine is working in full power now the engineers amongst you will look at them and say no they don |
|
BrianCox_2009U-0010347-0011428 they can do that because when they are very cold they are what |
|
BrianCox_2009U-0011428-0012916 in one of the joints between over nine thousand magnets in lhc there was a manufacturing defect so the wire heated up slightly and its thirteen thousand amps suddenly encountered electrical resistance this was the result |
|
BrianCox_2009U-0012916-0013725 now that |
|
BrianCox_2009U-0013725-0015255 fifty of the magnets we had to take them out which we did we reconditioned them all fixed them they |
|
BrianCox_2009U-0015255-0016691 and continue with our quest to find out what the building blocks of the universe are now of course in a way those accidents reignite the debate about the value of science and engineering at the edge |
|
BrianCox_2009U-0016691-0017422 it |
|
BrianCox_2009U-0017422-0019378 i will leave the final word to an english scientist humphrey davy who i suspect when defending his protege |
|
BrianCox_2009U-0019378-0020061 that there are no mysteries in nature that our triumphs are complete and that there are no new worlds to conquer |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0001566-0003143 you know i |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0003143-0003524 and now we |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0003542-0004346 into a new phase of biology with designing and synthesizing life so we |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0004472-0005374 what is life is something that i think many biologists have been trying to understand at various levels we |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0005374-0006856 paring it down to minimal components we |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0006856-0007334 now we |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0007334-0008894 or can we create new life out of this digital universe this is the map of a small organism mycoplasma genitalium that has the smallest genome for a species that can self replicate in the laboratory |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0008894-0009425 and we |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0009425-0010453 we |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0010453-0011745 compared to ours trust me this is simple but when we look at all the genes that we can knock out one at a time it |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0011745-0012615 so we decided the only way forward was to actually synthesize this chromosome so we could vary the components |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0012615-0013419 to ask some of these most fundamental questions and so we started down the road of can we synthesize |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0013419-0014905 a chromosome can chemistry permit making these really large molecules where we |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0014905-0015526 so our pace of digitizing life has been increasing at an exponential pace |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0015526-0016702 our ability to write the genetic code has been moving pretty slowly but has been increasing and our latest point would put it on now an exponential curve |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0016702-0017742 we started this over fifteen years ago it took several stages in fact starting with a bioethical review before we did the first experiments |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0017742-0018916 but it turns out synthesizing dna is very difficult there |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0018916-0019962 and it |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0019962-0021692 and this was our first attempt starting with the digital information of the genome of phi x one seventy four it |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0021692-0022326 the exciting phase came when we took this piece of inert chemical and put it in the bacteria |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0022326-0024115 and the bacteria started to read this genetic code made the viral particles the viral particles then were released from the cells then came back and killed the e coli i was talking to the oil industry recently and i said they clearly understood that model |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0024253-0024532 they laughed more than you guys are it |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0024736-0025927 and so we think this is a situation where the software can actually build its own hardware in a biological system but we wanted to go much larger we wanted to build the entire bacterial chromosome |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0025927-0027295 it |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0027295-0028277 design is critical and if you |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0028277-0029729 when we first sequenced this genome in nineteen ninety five the standard of accuracy was one error per ten thousand base pairs we actually found on resequencing it thirty errors had we used that original sequence it never would have been able to be booted up |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0029729-0030779 part of the design is designing pieces that are fifty letters long that have to overlap with all the other fifty letter pieces to build smaller sub units |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0030779-0032739 we have to design so they can go together we design unique elements into this you may have read that we put watermarks in think of this we have a four letter genetic code a c g and t triplets of that letter of those letters code for roughly twenty amino acids that there |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0032739-0034167 designation for each of the amino acids so we can use the genetic code to write out words sentences thoughts initially all we did was autograph it some people were disappointed there was not poetry |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0034167-0035697 we designed these pieces so we can just chew back with enzymes there |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0035697-0037646 fit those together to make twenty four thousand letter pieces then put sets of those going up to seventy two thousand at each stage we grew up these pieces in abundance so we could sequence them because we |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0037646-0038514 so this looks like a basketball playoff when we get into these really large pieces over a hundred thousand base pairs |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0038515-0039162 they won |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0039119-0040400 and so we turned to other mechanisms we knew there |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0040400-0041508 here is an example of it there |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0041508-0042736 twelve to twenty four hours later it put it back together exactly as it was before we have thousands of organisms that can do this these organisms can be totally desiccated they can live in a vacuum |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0042736-0044886 i am absolutely certain that life can exist in outer space move around find a new aqueous environment in fact nasa has shown a lot of this is out there here |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0044886-0046477 yeast puts them together automatically this is not an electron micrograph this is just a regular photomicrograph it |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0046477-0047922 so this is the publication we had just a short while ago this is over five hundred and eighty thousand letters of genetic code it |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0047922-0049731 if we print printed out at a ten font with no spacing it takes a hundred and forty two pages just to print this genetic code well how do we boot up a chromosome how how do we activate this obviously with a virus it |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0049731-0051264 it |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0051264-0052819 but we recently showed that we can do a complete transplant of a chromosome from one cell to another and activate it we purified a chromosome from one microbial species roughly these two are as distant as human and mice |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0052819-0054403 we added a few extra genes so we could select for this chromosome we digested it with enzymes to kill all the proteins and it was pretty stunning when we put this in the cell and you |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0054403-0055214 the new chromosome went into the cell in fact we thought this might be as far as it went but we tried to design the process a little bit further |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0055214-0057184 this is a major mechanism of evolution right here we find all kinds of species that have taken up a second chromosome or a third one from somewhere adding thousands of new traits in a second to that species so people who think of evolution as just one gene changing at a time have missed much of biology |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0057184-0059600 there |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0059600-0060769 and with a very short period of time all the characteristics of one species were lost and it converted totally into the new species based on the new software that we put in the cell |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0060769-0061446 all the proteins changed the membranes changed when we read the genetic code it |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0061446-0062453 so this may sound like genomic alchemy but we can by moving the software dna around change things quite |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0062453-0063267 dramatically now i |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0063267-0064454 and i |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0064466-0064890 why do this i think this is pretty obvious in terms of some of the needs |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0064890-0066325 we |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0066325-0067970 within forty years there |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0067978-0068259 thirty billion plus barrels of oil |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0068260-0069935 that |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0069935-0071011 we now from our discovery around the world have a database with about twenty million genes and i like to think of these as the design components of the future |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0071011-0072298 the electronics industry only had a dozen or so components and look at the diversity that came out of that we |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0072298-0073312 we now have techniques because of these rapid methods of synthesis to do what we |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0073312-0073952 we have the ability now to build a large robot that can make a million chromosomes a day |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0073952-0076087 when you think of processing these twenty million different genes or trying to optimize processes to produce octane or to produce pharmaceuticals new vaccines we can change just with a small team do more molecular biology than the last twenty years of all science and it |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0076087-0076708 we can select for viability chemical or fuel production vaccine production et cetera |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0076708-0077996 this is a screen snapshot of some true design software that we |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0077996-0079101 you know we don |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0079101-0080720 you |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0080720-0082900 but the only way we think that biology can have a major impact without further increasing the cost of food and limiting its availability is if we start with co two as its feedstock and so we |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0082900-0083182 sunlight and co two is one method |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0083636-0085328 but in our discovery around the world we have all kinds of other methods this is an organism we described in nineteen ninety six it lives in the deep ocean about a mile and a half deep almost at boiling water temperatures it takes co two to methane |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0085328-0086913 using molecular hydrogen as its energy source we |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0086913-0087460 in a short period of time we think that we might be able to increase |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0087472-0088361 what the basic question is of what is life we |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0088800-0089132 yeah if you can |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0089132-0090710 become a major source of energy but also we |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0090711-0091286 i think that can be changed by building combinatorial vaccines in advance |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0091286-0091950 here |
|
CraigVenter_2008-0091950-0093714 speeding up evolution with synthetic bacteria archea and eventually eukaryotes we |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0001148-0002562 i want to start out by asking you to think back to when you were a kid playing with blocks as you figured out how to reach out and grasp pick them up and move them around you were actually learning how to think and solve problems by understanding and manipulating spatial relationships |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0002562-0003181 spatial reasoning is deeply connected to how we understand a lot of the world around us so |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0003181-0004111 as a computer scientist inspired by this utility of our interactions with physical objects along with my adviser pattie and my collaborator jeevan kalanithi i started to wonder |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0004111-0005361 what if when we used a computer instead of having this one mouse cursor that was a like a digital fingertip moving around a flat desktop what if we could reach in with both hands and grasp information physically arranging it the way we wanted |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0005361-0005899 this question was so compelling that we decided to explore the answer by building siftables |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0005899-0007051 in a nutshell a siftable is an interactive computer the size of a cookie they |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0007051-0008151 most importantly they |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0008151-0009981 and as these tools become more physical more aware of their motion aware of each other and aware of the nuance of how we move them we can start to explore some new and fun interaction styles so i |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0009981-0010729 it rolls it backwards and these interactive portraits are aware of each other so if i put them next to each other they get interested |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0010729-0011659 if they get surrounded they notice that too they might get a little flustered and they can also sense their motion and tilt |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0011659-0012424 so one of the interesting implications on interaction we started to realize was that we could use everyday gestures on data |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0012424-0013732 like pouring a color the way we might pour a liquid so in this case we |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0013953-0015053 there are also some neat possibilities for education like language math and logic games where we want to give people the ability to try things quickly and view the results immediately so here i |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0015322-0016598 this is a fibonacci sequence that i |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0016598-0017440 and as you try to make words it checks against a dictionary then after about thirty seconds it reshuffles and you have a new set of letters and new possibilities to try |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0017632-0017721 thank you |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0017865-0018576 so these are some kids that came on a field trip to the media lab and i managed to get them to try it out and shoot a video |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0019193-0020185 they really loved it and one of the interesting things about this kind of application is that you don |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0020249-0020487 so here |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0021216-0021563 that |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0021701-0022565 turns out all he wanted to do was to stack the siftables up so to him they were just blocks |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0022565-0023716 now this is an interactive cartoon application and we wanted to build a learning tool for language learners and this is felix actually |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0023716-0024646 and he can bring new characters into the scene just by lifting the siftables off the table that have that character shown on them here he |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0024646-0024867 the sun is rising |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0024981-0025159 now he |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0025417-0025571 the orange tractor |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0025590-0025876 good job yeah |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0025876-0026358 so by shaking the siftables and putting them next to each other he can make the characters interact |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0026427-0026573 inventing his own narrative |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0026573-0026782 hello |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0026782-0027150 it |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0027592-0027720 fly away cat |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0028164-0029464 so the last example i have time to show you today is a music sequencing and live performance tool that we |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0029483-0030464 each of these has four different variations you get to choose which one you want to use and you can inject these sounds into a sequence that you can assemble into the pattern that you want |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0030464-0031572 and you inject it by just bumping up the sound siftable against a sequence siftable there are effects that you can control live like reverb and filter you attach it to a particular sound and then tilt to adjust it |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0031573-0032260 and then overall effects like tempo and volume that apply to the entire sequence so let |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0032476-0032712 we |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0032712-0033181 into two sequence siftables arrange them into a series |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0033181-0033683 extend it add a little more lead now i put a bassline in |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0034206-0034399 now i |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0034865-0035249 and now i |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0035419-0036006 i can speed up the whole sequence by tilting the tempo to one one way or the other |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0036006-0036377 and now i |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0036867-0037617 i can rearrange the sequence while it plays i don |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0037617-0038222 and now finally i can fade the whole sequence out using the volume siftable tilted to the left |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0038812-0038987 thank you so |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0039099-0040108 as you can see my passion is for making new human computer interfaces that are a better match to the way our brains and bodies work and today i had time to show you |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0040108-0040650 one point in this new design space and a few of the possibilities that we |
|
DavidMerrill_2009-0040650-0042082 so the thought i want to leave you with is that we |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0001280-0002715 i am a writer writing books is my profession but it |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0002715-0003715 something kind of peculiar has happened recently in my life and in my career which has caused me to have to sort of recalibrate my whole relationship with this work |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0003722-0005907 and the peculiar thing is that i recently wrote this book this memoir called eat pray love which decidedly unlike any of my previous books went out in the world for some reason and became this big mega sensation international bestseller thing the result of which is that everywhere i go now people treat me like i |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0005908-0007914 seriously doomed doomed like they come up to me now all worried and they say aren |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0007914-0009442 so that |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0009442-0011118 aren |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0011233-0011564 like that you know and a a the answer |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0011565-0012800 the short answer to all those questions is yes yes i |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0012800-0014813 seaweed and and other things that are scary but when it comes to writing the the thing that i |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0014813-0016155 specifically about creative ventures that seems to make us really nervous about each other |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0016155-0017728 and i don |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0017687-0018700 to be fair right chemical engineers as a group you know haven |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0018718-0020202 we writers you know we kind of do have that reputation and not not just writers but creative people across all genres it seems have this reputation for being enormously mentally unstable and you know all you have to do is look at the very grim |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0020202-0021446 death count in the twentieth century alone of of really magnificent creative minds who died young and often at their own hands you know and even the ones who didn |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0021447-0022280 by their gifts you know norman mailer just before he died last interview he said every one of my books has killed me a little more |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0022300-0023143 an extraordinary statement to make about your life |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0023143-0025109 for so long and somehow we |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0025109-0026962 like are you comfortable with that because you look at it even from an inch away and you know i |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0026962-0028749 you know and i and i i definitely know that in in my case in my situation it would be very dangerous for me to start sort of leaking down that dark path of assumption you know particularly given the circumstance that i |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0028749-0030567 like check it out i |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0030567-0031230 i i should just put it bluntly because we |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0031230-0032130 you know so jesus what a thought you know like that |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0032130-0033455 you know i don |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0033455-0034762 work now in order to continue writing is that i have to create some sort of protective psychological construct right i have to sort of find some way to have a a safe distance you know between me as i am writing and my |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0034762-0036273 very natural anxiety about what the reaction to that writing is gonna be from now on and and as i |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0036273-0037578 better and saner ideas than we have about how to help creative people sort of manage the inherent emotional risks of of creativity and that search has led me to ancient greece and ancient rome |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0037578-0040203 so stay with me cause it does circle around and back but ancient greece and ancient rome people did not happen to believe that creativity came from human beings back then ok people believed that creativity was this divine attendant spirit that came to human beings from some distant and unknowable source for distant and unknowable reasons the greeks famously called these divine attendant spirits of creativity daemons |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0040203-0041314 socrates famously believed that he had a daemon who spoke wisdom to him from afar the romans had the same idea but they called that sort of disembodied creative spirit a genius |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0041314-0041841 which is great cause the romans did not actually think that a genius was a particularly clever |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0041841-0042732 individual they believed that a genius was this sort of magical divine entity who was believed to literally live in the walls |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0042733-0044882 of an artist |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0044882-0045575 right so the ancient artist was protected from certain things like for example too much narcissism right if your work was brilliant |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0045575-0046816 you couldn |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0046816-0047304 this is how people thought about creativity in the west for a really long time |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0047092-0049584 and then the renaissance came and everything changed and we had this big idea and the big idea was let |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0049584-0050475 you start to hear people referring to this or that artist as being a genius rather than having a genius and i got to tell you i think that was a huge |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0050475-0052775 error you know i think that allowing somebody like one mere person to believe that he or she is like the vessel you know like the font and the essence and the source of all divine creative unknowable eternal mystery is just like a smidge too much responsibility to put on one fragile human psyche it |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0052775-0053605 you know it just completely warps and distorts egos and it creates all these unmanageable expectations about performance and i think the pressure of that |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0053607-0054348 has been killing off our artists for the last five hundred years and if this is true and i i think it is true |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0054348-0055633 the question becomes you know what now you know can we do this differently maybe go back to some more ancient understanding about the relationship between humans and the creative mystery |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0055633-0057516 maybe not you know like maybe we can |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0057516-0059332 rubbing fairy juice on their projects and stuff like i i |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0059332-0060274 in terms of explaining the utter maddening capriciousness of the creative process a process which as anybody who has ever tried to make something which is to say as |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0060274-0061061 basically everyone here knows does not always behave rationally and in fact can sometimes feel downright |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0061061-0062915 paranormal i had this encounter recently where i met the extraordinary american poet ruth stone who |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0062915-0064630 from over the landscape and she said it was like a thunderous train of air and it would come barreling down at her over the landscape and when she felt it coming because it would shake the earth under her feet she knew that she had only one thing to do at that point and that was to in her words run like hell and she would run like hell to the house |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0064630-0066904 and she would be getting chased by this poem and the whole deal was that she had to get to a piece of paper and a pencil fast enough so that when it thundered through her she could collect it and grab it on the page and other times she wouldn |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0066905-0068848 and and then there were these times this is the piece i never forgot she said that there were moments where she would almost miss it right so she |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0068848-0070362 she would catch the poem by its tail and she would pull it backwards into her body as she was transcribing on the page and in these instances the poem would come up on the page perfect and intact but backwards from the last word to the first |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0070522-0071278 so when i heard that i was like that |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0071604-0073114 it |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0073114-0075177 you know at times and i would imagine that a lot of you have too you know like even i have had work or ideas come through me from a source that i honestly cannot identify and what is that thing and how are we to relate to it in a way that will not make us lose our minds but in fact might actually keep us sane and for me the best contemporary example |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0075177-0076796 that i have of how to do that is the musician tom waits who i got to interview several years ago on a on a magazine assignment and we were talking about this and you know you you know tom i mean for most of his life he was pretty much the embodiment of the tormented contemporary modern artist you know like trying to |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0076796-0078352 control and manage and dominate these sort of uncontrollable creative impulses you know that were totally internalized but then he got older and he got calmer and one day he was driving down the freeway in los angeles he told me and this is when it all changed for him and and he |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0078352-0079779 this little fragment of melody you know that comes into his head as inspiration often comes elusive and tantalizing and he wants it you know it |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0079779-0081176 so he starts to feel all of that old anxiety start to rise in him like i |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0081176-0081847 completely novel he just looked up at the sky and he said excuse me can you not see that i |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0082189-0083664 do i look like i can write down a song right now you know if you really want to exist come back at a more opportune moment when i can take care of you otherwise go bother somebody else today go bother leonard cohen you know |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0083664-0084142 and and his whole work process changed after that not the work the work was still |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0084143-0085316 oftentimes as dark as ever you know but the process and the heavy anxiety around it was released when he took the genie the genius out of him where it was causing nothing but trouble and released it kind of back where it came from |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0085316-0086595 and realized that this didn |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0086595-0088499 so when i heard that story it started to shift a little bit the way that i worked too and it already saved me once this idea it saved me when i was in the middle of writing eat pray love and i fell into one of those sort of pits of despair that we all fall into when we |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0088499-0090524 not just bad but the worst book ever written and and i started to think i should just dump this project you know but then i remembered tom talking to the open air and i i i tried it so i just lifted my face up from the manuscript and i directed my comments to an empty corner of the room and i i said aloud listen you thing |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0090524-0092038 you and i both know that if this book isn |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0092038-0092867 you know what the hell with it i |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0093256-0094319 because in the end it |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0094319-0096005 moonlight dances of sacred dance and music that would go on for hours and hours until dawn and they were always magnificent because the dancers were professionals and they were terrific right but every once in a while very rarely something would happen and one of these performers would actually become transcendent |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0096005-0097660 and i know you know what i |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0097660-0099526 and all of a sudden he would no longer appear to be merely human you know he would be like lit from within and lit from below and all like lit up on fire with divinity and when this happened back then people knew it for what it was you know they called it by it |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0099527-0100240 allah allah allah god god god that |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0100241-0100874 curious historical footnote when the moors invaded southern spain they took this |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0100874-0102756 custom with them and the pronunciation changed over the centuries from allah allah allah to ole ole ole which you still hear in bullfights and in flamenco dances in spain when a performer has done something impossible and magic allah ole ole allah magnificent bravo incomprehensible there it is a glimpse of god |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0102756-0103586 which is great because we need that but the tricky bit comes the next morning right for the dancer himself |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0103588-0105046 when he wakes up and discovers that it |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0105046-0106099 chant god |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0106099-0108280 you know but maybe it doesn |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0108280-0109652 and you know if we think about it this way it starts to change everything you know this is how i |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0109652-0111240 dangerously frighteningly overanticipated follow up to my freakish success and and and what i have to sort of keep telling myself when i get really psyched out about that is don |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0111240-0112572 continue to show up for your piece of it whatever that might be if your job is to dance do your dance if the divine cockeyed genius assigned to your case decides to let some sort of wonderment be glimpsed |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0112573-0113291 for just one moment through your efforts then ole and if not do your dance anyhow |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0113291-0114314 and ole to you nonetheless i believe this and i feel that we must teach it ole to you nonetheless just for having the sheer human love and stubbornness to keep showing up |
|
ElizabethGilbert_2009-0114332-0114442 thank you |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0001251-0003452 you know one of the intense pleasures of travel and one of the delights of ethnographic research is the opportunity to live amongst those who have not forgotten the old ways who still feel their past in the wind touch it in stones polished by rain taste it in the bitter leaves of plants just to know that jaguar shamans still journey beyond the milky way or the |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0003452-0004094 the myths of the inuit elders still resonate with meaning or that in the himalaya the |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0004094-0006252 buddhists still pursue the breath of the dharma is to really remember the central revelation of anthropology and that is the idea that the world in which we live in does not exist in some absolute sense but is just one model of reality the consequence of one particular set of adaptive choices that our lineage made albeit successfully many generations ago |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0006252-0007542 and of course we all share the same adaptive imperatives we |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0007542-0009022 we all dance we all have art but what |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0009022-0009881 or the warriors in the kaisut desert of northern kenya the curandero in the mountains of the andes |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0009881-0010764 or a ca caravanserai in the middle of the sahara this is incidentally the fellow that i travelled into the desert with a month ago |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0010765-0012331 or indeed a yak herder in the slopes of qomolangma everest the goddess mother of the world all of these peoples teach us that there are other ways of being other ways of thinking other ways of orienting yourself in the earth and this is an idea if you think about it can only fill you with hope |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0012331-0016322 now together the myriad cultures of the world make up a a web of spiritual life and cultural life that envelops the planet and is as important to the well being of the planet as indeed is the biological web of life that you know as a biosphere and you might think of this cultural web of life as being an ethnosphere and you might define the ethnosphere as being the sum total of all thoughts and dreams myths ideas inspirations intuitions brought into being by the human human imagination since the dawn of consciousness the ethnosphere is humanity |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0016322-0018004 biosphere has been severely eroded so too is the ethnosphere and if anything at a far greater rate no biologists for example would dare suggest that fifty percent of all species or more have been or are on the brink of extinction because it simply is not true and yet that the most apocalyptic scenario in the realm of |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0018004-0019241 biological diversity scarcely approaches what we know to be the most optimistic scenario in the realm of cultural diversity and the great indicator of that of course is language loss when each of you in this room were born |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0019241-0021422 there were six thousand languages spoken on the planet now a language is not just a body of vocabulary or a set of grammatical rules a language is a flash of the human spirit it |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0021422-0023847 and of those six thousand languages as we sit here today in monterey fully half are no longer being whispered into the ears of children they |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0023847-0024877 children and yet that dreadful fate is indeed the plight of somebody somewhere on earth roughly every two weeks because every two weeks some elder dies and carries with him into the grave the last syllables |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0024877-0026029 of an ancient tongue and i know there |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0026029-0027025 kogi and you |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0027025-0027860 on a journey through the ethnosphere a brief journey through the ethnosphere to try to begin to give you a sense of what in fact is being lost |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0027861-0028558 now there are many of us who sort of |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0028560-0029562 forget that when i say different ways of being i really do mean different ways of being take for example this child of barasana in northwest amazon the |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0029562-0030516 people of the anaconda who believe that mythologically they came up the milk river from the east in the belly of sacred snakes now this is a people who cognitively |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0030516-0032712 do not distinguish the color blue from the color green because the canopy of the heavens is equated to the canopy of the forest upon which the people depend they have a curious language and marriage rule which is called linguistic exogamy you must marry someone who speaks a different language and this is all rooted in the mythological past yet the curious thing is in these long houses where there are six or seven languages spoken |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0032712-0033422 because of intermarriage you never hear anyone practicing a language they simply listen and then begin to speak |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0033422-0036073 or one of the most fascinating tribes i ever lived with the waorani of northeastern ecuador an astonishing people first contacted peacefully in nineteen fifty eight in nineteen fifty seven five missionaries attempted contact and made a critical mistake they dropped from the air eight by ten glossy photographs of themselves in what we would say to be friendly gestures forgetting that these people of the rainforest had never seen anything two dimensional in their lives they picked up these photographs from the forest floor |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0036073-0038778 tried to look behind the face to find the form or the figure found nothing and concluded that these were calling cards from the devil so they speared the five missionaries to death but the waorani didn |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0038778-0041342 but at the same time they had a perspicacious knowledge of the forest that was astonishing their hunters could smell animal urine at forty paces and tell you what species left it behind in the early eighties i had a really astonishing assignment when i was asked by my professor at harvard if i was interested in going down to haiti infiltrating the secret societies which were the foundation of duvalier |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0041342-0043370 in order to make sense out of sensation of course i had to understand something about this remarkable faith of vodoun and voodoo is not a black magic cult on the contrary it |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0043370-0044038 assumption being that sub saharan africa had no religious beliefs well of course they did and voodoo is simply the distillation of these very |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0044038-0046337 profound religious ideas that came over during the tragic diaspora of the slavery era but what makes voodoo so interesting is that it |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0046338-0047422 you white people go to church and speak about god we dance in the temple and become god and because you are possessed you are taken by the spirit how can you be harmed so you see these astonishing |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0047422-0048269 demonstrations voodoo acolytes in a state of trance handling burning embers with impunity a rather astonishing example of the ability of the |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0048269-0049241 mind to affect the body that bears it when catalyzed in the state of extreme excitation now of all the peoples that i |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0049241-0050811 of the sierra nevada de santa marta in northern colombia descendants of the ancient tairona civilization which once carpeted the caribbean coastal plain of colombia in the wake of the conquest these people retreated into an isolated volcanic massif that soars above the caribbean coastal plain |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0050811-0052698 in a bloodstained continent these people alone were never conquered by the spanish to this day they remain ruled by a ritual priesthood but the training for the priesthood is rather extraordinary the young acolytes are taken away from their families at the age of three and four sequestered in a shadowy world of darkness in stone huts at the base of glaciers |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0052698-0053944 for eighteen years two nine year periods deliberately chosen to mimic the nine months of gestation they spend in their natural mother |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0053944-0056945 are inculturated into the values of their society values that maintain the proposition that their prayers and their prayers alone maintain the cosmic or we might say the ecological balance and at the end of this amazing initiation one day they |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0056945-0057875 and the priest steps back and says you see it |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0057875-0059258 we who are the younger brothers are the ones responsible for destroying the world now this level of intuition becomes very important whenever we think of indigenous people and landscape we either invoke rousseau and the old canard of the no no the |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0059258-0062802 noble savage which is an idea racist in its simplicity or alternatively we invi invoke thoreau and say these people are closer to the earth than we are well indigenous people are neither sentimental nor weakened by nostalgia there |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0062802-0063917 it means that a young kid from the andes who |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0063917-0065973 resource or that place than a young kid from montana raised to believe that a mountain is a pile of rock ready to be mined whether it |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0065973-0067336 that made me a different human being than my friends among the kwagiulth who believe that those forests were the abode of huxwhukw and the crooked beak of heaven and the cannibal spirits that dwelled at the north end of the world spirits they would have to engage during their hamatsa initiation |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0067336-0069126 now if you begin to look at the idea that these cultures could create different realities you could begin to understand some of their extraordinary discoveries take this plant here it |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0069126-0070420 the shaman |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0070420-0071736 on the one hand this woody liana which has in it a series of beta carbolines harmine harmaline mildly hallucinogenic to take the vine alone is rather to have sort of blue hazy smoke drift across your consciousness but it |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0071736-0073158 leaves of a shrub in the coffee family called psychotria viridis this plant has in it some very powerful tryptamines very close to brain serotonin dimethyltryptamine five methoxydimethyltryptamine if you |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0073158-0074978 blowing that snuff up their noses that that substance they make from a different set of species is also contains five methoxydimethyltryptamine to have that powder blown up your nose is rather like being shot out of a rifle barrel lined with baroque paintings and landing on a sea of electricity |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0074978-0075379 it doesn |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0075379-0077430 distortion of reality it creates the dissolution of reality in fact i used to argue with my professor richard evan shultes who is a man who sparked the psychedelic era with his discovery of the magic mushrooms in mexico in the nineteen thirties i used to argue that you couldn |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0077430-0079232 but the thing about tryptamines is they cannot be taken orally because they |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0079232-0080643 that liana are mao inhibitors of the precise sort necessary to potentiate the tryptamine so you ask yourself a question how in a flora of eighty thousand species of vascular plants do these people find these two |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0080643-0083271 morphologically unrelated plants that when combined in this way created a kind of biochemical version of the whole being greater than the sum of the parts well we use that great euphemism trial and error which is exposed to be meaningless but you ask the indians and they say the plants talk to us well what does that mean this tribe the cofan has seventeen varieties of ayahuasca all of which they distinguish a great distance in the forest all of which are referable to our eye |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0083271-0084077 as one species and then you ask them how they establish their taxonomy and they say did i thought you knew something about plants i mean don |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0084077-0085205 and i said no well it turns out you take each of the seventeen varieties in the night of a full moon and it sings to you in a different key now that |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0085372-0086743 now the problem the problem is that even those of us sympathetic with the plight of indigenous people view them as quaint and colorful but somehow reduced to the margins of history as the real world meaning our world moves on |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0086744-0087786 well the truth is the twentieth century three hundred years from now is not going to be remembered for its wars or its technological innovations but rather as the era in which we stood by and either actively endorsed or |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0087786-0088524 passively accepted the massive destruction of both biological and cultural diversity on the planet now the problem isn |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0088524-0090661 all cultures through all time have constantly been engaged in a in a dance with new possibilities of life and the problem is not technology itself the sioux indians did not stop being sioux when they gave up the bow and arrow any more than an american stopped being an american when he gave up the horse and buggy it |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0090661-0092631 the crude face of domination and whenever you look around the world you discover that these are not cultures destined to fade away these are dynamic living peoples being driven out of existence by identifiable forces that are beyond their capacity to adapt to whether it |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0092631-0094068 from southeast asia from sarawak a people who lived free in the forest until a generation ago and now have all been reduced to servitude and prostitution on the banks of the rivers where you can see the river itself is soiled with the |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0094068-0094780 silt that seems to be carrying half of borneo away to the south china sea where the japanese freighters hang light in the horizon ready to fill their |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0094780-0095657 holds with raw logs ripped from the forest or in the case of the yanomami it |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0095657-0098613 into the mountains of tibet where i |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0098613-0099166 land through southeastern tibet to lhasa with a young colleague and it was only when i got to |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0099166-0100058 lhasa that i understood the face behind the statistics you hear about six thousand sacred monuments torn apart to dust and ashes |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0100058-0101544 one point two million people killed by the cadres during the cultural revolution this young man |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0101544-0103866 nepal his mother was incarcerated for the price of for the crime of being wealthy he was smuggled into the jail at the ti at the age of two to hide beneath her skirt tails because she couldn |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0103866-0104571 the pain of tibet can be impossible to bear but the redemptive spirit of the people is something to behold |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0104571-0105433 and in the end then it really comes down to a choice do we want to live in a monochromatic world of monotony or do we want to embrace a polychromatic world of diversity |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0105433-0106921 margaret mead the great anthropologist said before she died that her greatest fear that was was as we drifted towards this blandly amorphous generic world view not only would we see the entire range of the human imagination reduced to a more narrow and |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0106921-0108682 more narrow modality of thought but that we would wake from a dream one day having forgotten that there were even other possibilities and it |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0108682-0110559 the poetry of the shaman was displaced by the prose of the priesthood we created hierarchy specialization surplus is only ten thousand years ago the modern industrial world as we know it is barely three hundred years old now that shallow history doesn |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0110559-0111419 when these myriad cultures of the world are asked the meaning of being human they respond with ten thousand different voices and it |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0111419-0112021 song that we will all rediscover the possibility of being what we are a fully |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0112021-0112972 conscious species fully aware of ensuring that all peoples and all gardens find a way to flourish and there are great moments of optimism |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0112972-0114978 this is a photograph i took at the northern tip of baffin island when i went narwhal hunting with some inuit people and this man olayuk told me a marvelous story of his grandfather the canadian government has not always been kind to the inuit people and during the nineteen fifties to establish our sovereignty we forced them into settlements this old man |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0114978-0115664 grandfather refused to go the family fearful for his life took away all of his weapons all of his tools |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0115664-0116582 now you must understand that the inuit did not fear the cold they took advantage of it the runners of their sleds were originally made of fish wrapped in caribou hide so |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0116582-0117895 this man |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0117895-0118960 he shaped it into the form of a blade he put a spray of saliva on the edge of the shit knife and as it finally froze solid he butchered a dog with it he skinned the dog and improvised a harness |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0118960-0120116 took the ribcage of the dog and improvised a sled harnessed up an adjacent dog and disappeared over the ice floes shit knife in belt talk about getting by with nothing |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0120116-0120243 and |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0120243-0123088 this in many ways is a symbol of the resilience of the inuit people and of all indigenous people around the world the canadian government in april of nineteen ninety nine gave back to total control of the inuit an area of land larger than california and texas put together it |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0123088-0124224 and finally in the end i think it |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0124224-0125288 they represent branches of the human imagination that go back to the dawn of time and for all of us the dreams of these children like the dreams of our own children become part of |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0125288-0126243 the naked geography of hope so what we |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0126243-0126654 we think that polemics we think that polemics |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0126654-0127480 are not persuasive but we think that storytelling can change the world and so we are probably the best storytelling institution in the world we get thirty five million |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0127480-0128274 hits on our website every month hundred and fifty six nations carry our television channel our magazines are read by millions |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0128274-0129633 and what we |
|
WadeDavis_2003-0129633-0131309 one by one the central revelation of anthropology that this world deserves to exist in a diverse way that we can find a way to live in a truly multicultural pluralistic world where all of the wisdom of all peoples can contribute to our collective well being thank you very much |
|
|