Why the universe seems so strange | Richard Dawkins

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  • Опубліковано 15 січ 2007
  • www.ted.com Biologist Richard Dawkins makes a case for "thinking the improbable" by looking at how the human frame of reference limits our understanding of the universe.
    TEDTalks is a daily video podcast of the best talks and performances from the TED Conference, where the world's leading thinkers and doers give the talk of their lives in 18 minutes. TED stands for Technology, Entertainment, Design, and TEDTalks cover these topics as well as science, business, development and the arts. Closed captions and translated subtitles in a variety of languages are now available on TED.com, at www.ted.com/translate.
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  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 5 тис.

  • @StambeccoAllaFragola
    @StambeccoAllaFragola 6 років тому +51

    Almost everything he says is pretty obvious science, but the way he's able to put things in connection between them is amazing. All stuffed with smart and comic interludes that helps who's listening to really understand what he's communicating. In a word: a Teacher.

  • @K-A5
    @K-A5 10 років тому +175

    "I was only reading Play Boy because I, myself, had an article..in it."
    Oh, you!

    • @tennisbum3686
      @tennisbum3686 3 роки тому +4

      Richard, I too collected Playboys solely for the purpose of reading the articles!

    • @gwenjackson7458
      @gwenjackson7458 2 роки тому

      P

    • @infinatiAM
      @infinatiAM 2 роки тому +3

      Can someone send me the link of Dawkins' Playboy articles, please!

  • @erniehudson1
    @erniehudson1 10 років тому +443

    I just love the guy with the mega loud laughter in the audience

    • @FantastyckplastycK
      @FantastyckplastycK 10 років тому +14

      haha me too, nice one

    • @stratcorvette
      @stratcorvette 5 років тому

      Ernie Hudson It’s like he’s waving a flag....somethings going on there! Lol

    • @Ouch_It_hurts
      @Ouch_It_hurts 5 років тому +10

      His name was Michael Grey. He was a biologist too and him-selves was a quite funny man .

    • @PonteRyuurui
      @PonteRyuurui 4 роки тому +2

      @Jay Z probably a yank who does not know the true meaning of queer

    • @Mark.McLaren
      @Mark.McLaren 4 роки тому +1

      Ernie Hudson me too .. he is a circus freak who was born in 1896 his mother sold him for a goat, to feed her 32 offspring .. he lived till 111 and wrote 42 books on shoes..Ironically never wore any.

  • @williamfitzpatrick6369
    @williamfitzpatrick6369 4 роки тому +33

    I consider listening to Richard Dawkins one of the greatest pleasures life has to offer.

    • @williamfitzpatrick6369
      @williamfitzpatrick6369 4 роки тому +2

      @Zfast4you , on the contrary. I've had a ton of sexual partners, owned a stereo store. skied, programmed computers, had about 20 websites, was into photography when I was 12, play a mean game of pool, repaired electronics systems in B52s and have an IQ of 156 . . . shall I go on? I think you may be a moron. Have you ever been evaluated?

    • @afreenjamal4045
      @afreenjamal4045 4 роки тому

      Me too. Me too!!

    • @curtislacy579
      @curtislacy579 4 роки тому +1

      I quite agree. Others in his class might be Christopher Hitchens (requiescat in pace), Daniel Dennett, and Sam Harris, but Dawkins, with his beautiful, highly cultured English accent, rises to the top.

    • @boombox3819
      @boombox3819 4 роки тому +1

      @@williamfitzpatrick6369 did you really just try to prove some troll on the internet wrong?

  • @oscill8ocelot
    @oscill8ocelot 7 років тому +241

    I met Richard Dawkins at a talk he gave in Charleston SC a few years back. Truly an inspirational, intelligent, and friendly man.

    • @jackwarren1687
      @jackwarren1687 3 роки тому

      I met him once in CA years ago, when hitch was still with us...he was such a warm presence and took the time to talk with us and take some pics, he even kissed my mom on the cheek and she talks about it to this day:) love this man

    • @jackwarren1687
      @jackwarren1687 3 роки тому +2

      @Harry Orchard yea saying a nice guy is a nice guy is uber cultish...praying to an invisible man in the sky tho, that’s totally normal 🙄

    • @kylec8950
      @kylec8950 3 роки тому +1

      The guys a moronic fool

    • @jackwarren1687
      @jackwarren1687 3 роки тому

      @Harry Orchard it’s like watching simpletons practice using words...keep praying, bud, I’m sure one of these days he might answer you lmao

    • @jackwarren1687
      @jackwarren1687 3 роки тому

      @Harry Orchard I rest my case LMAO
      Gotta love the “nu uh, YOU are!” defense 🤣😂🤣😂🤣

  • @MarttiSuomivuori
    @MarttiSuomivuori 7 років тому +73

    I love this man. I owe him the realization that I know very little but also to the fact that quite a lot can be done about it.

    • @HighestRank
      @HighestRank 4 роки тому

      Dawkings!

    • @marklondon2008
      @marklondon2008 4 роки тому

      J Scotland perhaps you should have done it

    • @CaesarNeverSaidThat
      @CaesarNeverSaidThat 4 роки тому +1

      J Scotland What is the evidence suggesting that the reason for not participating in the debate was cowardice?

  • @willlee465
    @willlee465 10 років тому +175

    That guy who bursts out laughing at 8:02 made me spit salsa on my keyboard.

    • @dinakarsda4014
      @dinakarsda4014 4 роки тому +2

      unfortunately , its been 12 years from now ,,, and i replied to your comment after a five years

    • @ramesh.programming
      @ramesh.programming 4 роки тому +2

      @@dinakarsda4014 yeah and after 1 month i replied to your comment. This process gonna go forever

    • @staja_3579
      @staja_3579 4 роки тому +2

      @@arthurmorgan3761 ThE CiIiIiRcLe Of LiFe

    • @kaz287
      @kaz287 3 роки тому +2

      What meal were you eating?

    • @kaz287
      @kaz287 3 роки тому +1

      @Colin Griffin maybe with Doritos

  • @dragoncurveenthusiast
    @dragoncurveenthusiast 6 років тому +19

    I love the idea of the marble statue waving his hand.
    Not impossible, just extremely improbable

  • @ninjasensei9834
    @ninjasensei9834 9 років тому +55

    Was just thinking about how strange it is that I exist in the universe. Thanks for this video.

  • @catkeys6911
    @catkeys6911 7 років тому +56

    That was so incredibly comprehensive and coherent! That was a great way to do that; collect all thoughts and ideas and put them forth in a clear and naturally progressing fashion. This is something that Dawkins already does quite naturally in real time, but with the advantage of being able to compile, possibly reorganize, and clarify wherever he felt necessary, in advance, and then put it out to his audience fully refined, Dawkins hits a new plateau in the communication of impeccable reason.

    • @thomassby7139
      @thomassby7139 4 роки тому

      Spot on Cat Keys. Mr Dawkins is a fabulous teacher :)

    • @Indian12331
      @Indian12331 2 роки тому

      So very well put yourself

  • @tbrowniscool
    @tbrowniscool 10 років тому +176

    Such an amazing and eye opening TED. So what he read it off a screen. If it were in a book it would be just as compelling. If anything he understood that off the wall presentation wouldn't cut it. Hats off to him. A true man of reason and science. And throughly consistent.

    • @brostepisthebest
      @brostepisthebest 10 років тому +7

      i WATCH creepypasta videos that just have pictures with someone narrating and get to tears and i am glad ideas can have that effect on me because it fuels my curiosity.

    • @francf4840
      @francf4840 7 років тому +9

      If anyone complains that he's reading from a screen they need to realise he's probably reading his own speech notes.

    • @HighestRank
      @HighestRank 4 роки тому +1

      Frank A which additionally fuels the trolls homing in on his selfish gene because they cannot see those notes except once: the rest only from their shared venue.

  • @chrisberger6987
    @chrisberger6987 4 роки тому +45

    One of the great minds of our time. He is SO skilled at making lofty concepts understandable. He has also been a soldier of rational thought.

    • @islandsedition
      @islandsedition 4 роки тому +3

      Not really, he uses simplistic arguments and his own straw men to ridicule bronze age belief systems. He's not eloquent, none of his "ideas" are his own, at least concerning the likelihood of a God or the superiority of science. With the former, his certainty is fanatical and his basis no stronger than the claims of those more moderate believers of deities. With the latter he is only capable of preaching to the converted. He doesn't really spend any time trying to understand and convert those who don't appreciate the value of science. That's because he is an entertainer, with an obnoxious and arrogant ego.

    • @A-Milkdromeda-Laniakea-Hominid
      @A-Milkdromeda-Laniakea-Hominid 4 роки тому

      Oh ffs 🙄

    • @keithsolloway9544
      @keithsolloway9544 4 роки тому

      You got to be joking the man's a fraud can't even give a talk without looking at his computer 80% of the time.

    • @myalterego6994
      @myalterego6994 10 місяців тому

      @@keithsolloway9544can you do it the way he does with lookin on the computer screen?

  • @RAF33Strike
    @RAF33Strike 6 років тому +141

    Great and humble speech. A very terrifying thought, that most people inherently would want to throw away, is that our lives are insignificant. We strive to put purpose to our reality, our sheer existence. We use religion, social status, career, wealth, health, nationalities and all other kinds of social status to find meaning in life.
    Ever since I was a kid. I questioned everything. Why? How? What? Where? When? However, as I grew older people would tell me to not ask certain questions. What if there isn't a god? "Oh don't say that! That's a bad thing". Why is there a universe? "Someone created it!". Yeah but why? "That's up to someone to say, you will know when you die".
    I hope that in the future, humans will learn to embrace and encourage the children, teenagers and adults that dare ask these questions so that we will never stop wondering about the mystery of the cosmos.The moment we "settle" for some "possible explanation", then humanity ceases to evolve. Do you think we would have re-usable rockets if Musk listened to the critics? Heck, we may not even have had the special theory of relativity if Einstein didn't come along. We could have been content with Newton and remained at that.
    Dawkins makes a point that our reality is confined by the limit of our senses and our brains ability to interpret and make use of them. These brain patterns have been useful to us to ensure our survival, but now that we have the ability to sustain humanity through our technology, these senses limit our ability to grasp beyond the middle world. However, I like how he suggests some probable ways of breaking free of these ways of though. Perhaps through video games that replicate feats of quantum mechanics. Randomness. Unpredictable, illogical things. Our brains did evolve to find and appreciate patterns. What if they can be trained to interpret chaos and disorder?
    A really fun thought that keeps me up at night is that I so badly want to know how the universe works. How it exists, in simple terms. Yet, I am terrified to know that if I did learn this, it would be the most horrifying knowledge to have. Because, it would essentially be the universe telling you to stop asking questions, and settling for what it is. It would mean that, as a baby - the universe is at its most mysterious. As you grow older and learn about it, it becomes familiar. Once you learned everything there is to know about it, there is no mystery perhaps besides exploration of space. No reason to wonder, just wait for death - the end of our relatively brief window of reality.

    • @azuregriffin1116
      @azuregriffin1116 6 років тому +5

      Str|ke and the existential crisis begins. Thanks.

    • @RAF33Strike
      @RAF33Strike 6 років тому +17

      No problem man, got you covered. The best thing to think about is that science is a fantastic tool, and while it may not eliminate "afterlife" because it simply cannot be disproven, it makes some really strong cases that allow us to reasonably doubt it. I think the whole concept of "something rather than nothing" is absolutely mind-blowing. That our universe even exists. What is time? Why are we locked to a timeline, but can move in all other directions? To me, it's equally plausible that the whole universe is random, as it is intentionally there. For some reason. Its existence may not serve us a purpose, but maybe something else? Who knows. I finally, after years of grinding my thoughts on it, came to the conclusion that death is unknown to all living beings, and therefore nobody can share the experience with us. Therefore, I fear not death itself, but dying. Whatever happens when you die, you will actually have to "wait and see". Thinking about it in this way is comforting to me, that death is a new form, new experience, the unknown.
      In fact, if we KNEW what would happen. Life would become meaningless, as there was always something else to latch on to afterwards.
      Just live life to the fullest, enjoy it, learn to love, share and value things, people. The only guarantee is that it doesn't last forever and you have to make the most out of it :)

    • @sovietwombat8194
      @sovietwombat8194 6 років тому +2

      Str|ke The Universe is so perfect...it can’t be real right? That us humans and animals who live here on earth are part of the universe.How come our earth can support life? And how come I am here? Why not that other sperm cell that came behind me? Is he never going to be alive now because of me? Its all things I ask myself and drive me crazy.I just accepted that I am nothing more then a human on earth that doesn’t have the power to fly to space and explore it xd.

    • @dddux
      @dddux 5 років тому +3

      @Str|ke I wonder why you've gotten not so many likes. Your thoughts are very similar to mine about this Dawkins' talk, and really good.

    • @maruchannuudle657
      @maruchannuudle657 5 років тому +2

      What an awesome thought provoking post.

  • @Isaelcho
    @Isaelcho 4 роки тому +31

    Marvellous talk, always admired his eloquence. I think Dawkins shall remain an inspiration for many biologists and scientists or laymen alike, for several generations to come.

  • @theali8oras274
    @theali8oras274 4 роки тому +18

    Man , I love the biological perspective.
    I ve never studied biology in my life but I ve always found it immensely interesting. Its explanations are of the most satisfying amongst the sciences!

  • @bruceblake9942
    @bruceblake9942 4 роки тому +11

    I am impressed to see/hear dear Richard, a biologist/evolutionist, branch out into maths, physics, biology and anthropology. Thank you and well done. [Aussie in BC]

  • @vividhkothari1
    @vividhkothari1 6 років тому +5

    Man, that was trippy. One of the best talks on Ted. What I liked the most is ending it on a social note. And also in the end that sounded very much like a discussion on MORALITY without actually saying the word. That was awesome.

  • @72daystar
    @72daystar 9 років тому +340

    I've heard from naysayers that Dawkins doesn't communicate the limits of science well. Some go so far as to accuse him of scientism. I think this talk exposes the baselessness of that accusation.

    • @72daystar
      @72daystar 8 років тому +7

      ***** I partially agree with you. But good science should always be willing to reexamine itself.

    • @jeanpierreaumont53
      @jeanpierreaumont53 8 років тому +3

      +72daystar
      science has changed its concepts 5.000 times in the course of the XX century.

    • @72daystar
      @72daystar 8 років тому +24

      Jean Pierre Aumont Right, it's anti-dogmatic and progressive. Good point.

    • @smokestakz
      @smokestakz 8 років тому +6

      +72daystar its a litttttle dogmatic to the scientists that create/follow the theories...take qm for example. ask me if I BELIEVE that there are infinite possible universes based on the findings or theoretics of qm...im going to say no, I don't have FAITH in that information...but when you hear someone like Dawkins speak on qm and parallels etc he speaks as if he lives in one. and to the point of scientism. I think nowadays there is a ton of it going on. when there aren't even hypothesis' to give a scientist a single idea of what to expect from a experiment yet the scientists quote the results as fact I believe that would be scientism....theres nothing wrong with calling out unfounded garbage when its there......the atheists want to be militant about Christians having faith in yeshua and heaven but if anyone is skeptical about parallel universes or dark matter its "you don't understand the science"...but until proven its all faith in a theory.

    • @72daystar
      @72daystar 8 років тому +19

      Synapsis I disagree. I think i would require some well referenced quote (i.e. quotes that I could track down) that made assertions to the effect that Dawkins dogmatically "speaks as if he lives in one." I'm doing research myself and I've been reading science journals almost everyday for the last three. I do not get this dogmatism. Quite the contrary. I would concede that dawkins and others may appear aggressive when defending evolution for example, mainly because it IS under attack and it IS a fact.

  • @konstantinsverdlov84
    @konstantinsverdlov84 7 років тому +194

    I wish everyone were obligated to listen to this talk, especially our all-knowing politicians, preachers and teachers. Obligated to listen and understand and prove that they understood before returning to their job.

    • @vitriolicangst1621
      @vitriolicangst1621 6 років тому +3

      Konstantin Sverdlov too bad they're too busy to listen

    • @effingright3045
      @effingright3045 4 роки тому +3

      Most of the people you are referring to are highly educated people who understand this material far better than you do. You don't have an effing clue what politicians, preachers and teachers really do for a living. Nor how hard their jobs are and how incredibly stupid the people are they have to deal with on a daily basis. What a guy like Hawkins does for a living is trivial in comparison.

    • @MikeS-um1nm
      @MikeS-um1nm 4 роки тому +8

      Konstantin Sverdlov I agree with you, BUT the sad truth is that there would be a lot of people who would NOT be able to return to their jobs! Very sad and very true! It is absolutely ASTOUNDING to me, how many people there are out there, driving cars, working jobs, making things, doing things, etc., who are really and truly just plain stupid. I happen to know for a fact, that I work with and interact with people who could NEVER comprehend what Professor Dawkins said in this talk. How sad is that? Can you imagine NOT being able to understand THIS, and enjoy and appreciate it? Sad. I don't know if you read Dawkins' books, but if you liked this presentation, I'm sure you would love his books. Much of THIS talk is in: "The God Delusion". I've devoured that book, from cover to cover FOUR TIMES, and I'm sure I'll read it again!

    • @thomassby7139
      @thomassby7139 4 роки тому +8

      @@effingright3045 Why presume that OP has no clue? And calling Dawkins merits trivial is hardly fair, since he is in veritas teaching with a very comprehensive insight. I enjoyed it a lot.
      As for the rest: I personally know teachers that haven't got a clue of the world they live in and who could use this experience, preachers are in my opinion indoctrinated storytellers, and politicians too often seem to me to regulate with a disregard to science.
      I tend to agree with OP.

    • @thomassby7139
      @thomassby7139 4 роки тому +4

      @@MikeS-um1nm It isn't sad IMO. It is a fact and calls for you to educate the people around you. Not indoctrinate, but encourage them to seek the answers themselves. Yes, there are people less educated, but that doesn't make them stupid.
      I'd personally like to encourage you to read some of the other books Mr Dawkins has written and also other writers.

  • @wcsxwcsx
    @wcsxwcsx 6 років тому +7

    It is good that science humbles us about our understanding of reality. It shows that we're on the right track.

  • @JFrazer4303
    @JFrazer4303 6 років тому +17

    4:37
    "The nucleus of the atom is as a fly in the middle of a sports stadium."

    • @gensara1
      @gensara1 4 роки тому +2

      John Frazer ... and the next nucleus is a stadium away.

  • @justinh8810
    @justinh8810 9 років тому +41

    One of the best talks ever given.

  • @aaronwhiting7725
    @aaronwhiting7725 4 роки тому +3

    My mind is blown. 23 minutes of profound 1-liners will have to be watched many times to grasp.

  • @JosephNordenbrockartistraction
    @JosephNordenbrockartistraction 9 років тому +234

    I'm glad my mother insisted I get an education so I can understand clearly what Richard Dawkins is talking about. He's a very good man.

    • @mkendall68
      @mkendall68 6 років тому +16

      But if you understand it you don't really understand it

    • @Mekratrig
      @Mekratrig 6 років тому +10

      Mkendall68 - You do, if the hair on the back of your neck stands up.

    • @keithsolloway9544
      @keithsolloway9544 4 роки тому +2

      Just make sure that what you call education is not indoctrination, question everything without exception.

    • @hannahpumpkins4359
      @hannahpumpkins4359 4 роки тому +4

      My mother taught me all about how the Earth is flat, that we are covered by a clear dome, that we never went to the Moon, that the Sun is only 3,000 up in the sky, all islands float, and there is only a limited amount of wind...

    • @HighestRank
      @HighestRank 4 роки тому +2

      mkendall68 but if you really did understand it, it can’t really be quantum physics, can it?

  • @Nognamogo
    @Nognamogo 11 років тому +7

    Dawkins. You're my new favorite scientist. I got that feeling of awe listening to this. Love getting that feeling.

  • @stewy1109
    @stewy1109 8 років тому +28

    Insight beyond compare. cheers mate.

  • @user-ed1mj5zk6f
    @user-ed1mj5zk6f 6 років тому +10

    Admirable clarity of thoughts!

  • @thanujaa8492
    @thanujaa8492 2 роки тому +1

    probably one of the moto searched TED talk ever, thanks Richard. you always inspire us

  • @Blablablarandomguy
    @Blablablarandomguy 9 років тому +26

    Richard Dawkins is my hero.

  • @playmesalsa
    @playmesalsa 5 років тому +3

    Big fan of Richard Dawkins here... in this video he sounds like a Buddhist Philosopher; which from my point of view only adds to his greatness.

    • @HAL-nt6vy
      @HAL-nt6vy 5 років тому

      Do you believe that every atom of your teeth has been replaced? Bones? Nerve and muscle cells?

  • @Anandkshivanna
    @Anandkshivanna 5 років тому +2

    I been watching this video multiple time, each time I listen my understanding is bettering. Can watch it 100's of time ...

  • @GW-tr8xn
    @GW-tr8xn Рік тому +2

    I first watched this when I was 13 or 14 and now I'm 18y11m
    I would say this very speech had a pround impact on my way of understanding the world

  • @unstoppablezone4980
    @unstoppablezone4980 4 роки тому +22

    Before I came here I was confused about this subject. Having listened to your lecture I am still confused. But on a higher level. :)

  • @andrewstang-green3107
    @andrewstang-green3107 8 років тому +10

    Thank you, very good information.

  • @michaelmisanthrope
    @michaelmisanthrope 5 років тому +1

    I have heard and read much from this man. I can't explain why, but this particular lecture moves me more than any other. Thank you TED

  • @alvaromd3203
    @alvaromd3203 5 років тому +1

    This talk is So poetic, so deep and beautiful. I’m truly thankful for the experience of dreaming along these ideas and awakening so many perceptions during the journey.

  • @EebstertheGreat
    @EebstertheGreat 7 років тому +8

    OK I get Dawkins's point, but it's clearly not exactly right that "not a single atom" from my childhood is still present in my body. Most aren't of course, but there are _a lot_ of atoms in my body, and while only a small fraction from my childhood may still remain, that tiny fraction is still an enormous integer in ordinary terms.

    • @Monocerus90
      @Monocerus90 7 років тому

      What integer?

    • @BowerBomB
      @BowerBomB 7 років тому

      EebstertheGreat why is it not exactly right? the rate of exchange lends them to think a complete exchange takes around 7 years....

    • @EebstertheGreat
      @EebstertheGreat 7 років тому

      BowerBomB That is an average for certain cell types. But there are something like 10^28 atoms in a typical person. If the median atom is replaced every 7 years, there are still 5*10^27 left. If the median atom is replaced every year, there are still 8*10^25 left at the end. If the median atom is replaced every month, there are still around 500 left after 7 years. It does not seem likely that every single atom gets replaced.
      Apart from that, not all cells or parts of cells grow in the same way or at the same rate. Atoms trapped in bone minerals far from living bone tissue will probably _never_ be replaced. Atoms in enamel will only be replaced if they are worn away. Atoms in parts of the chromatin in aplastic neurons that are never expressed will usually never be replaced. That's my point. While _most_ atoms from my childhood are gone, there were so many atoms to begin with, and exchange is sufficiently random, that it is very unlikely not a single one survived.

    • @theultimatereductionist7592
      @theultimatereductionist7592 7 років тому +2

      Bill Gates' bank account. No. Wait. Mathematicians have not yet invented a name for an integer that big.

    • @vampyricon7026
      @vampyricon7026 7 років тому +1

      The Ultimate Reductionist googol? Graham's number?

  • @PhilosophyScience11
    @PhilosophyScience11 8 років тому +17

    That's what i was thinking since last few days. Mind blowing talk . Thank you so much

  • @spybubbble
    @spybubbble 2 роки тому +2

    The guy’s laugh in 8:02 is so contagious! 😂😂😂

  • @dmknight08
    @dmknight08 5 років тому +2

    What a lovely way to point out how flawed and insufficient our human perspective is. I hoped that this would be more obvious to all people but it appears not to be so. What I see most is that people think that the human design and the human mind are so perfect and they are not able to see how genuinely lacking we actually are of understanding the world, much less the universe, that we live in.

  • @joskokustura8854
    @joskokustura8854 5 років тому +7

    Richard Dawkins is one of the most intelligent man on the world, thanks to mother nature!

  • @sumdeo23
    @sumdeo23 7 років тому +13

    I came back to this after watching the results of US Elections 2016... "Queerer than we can suppose. The strangeness of the universe." :o

    • @HAL-nt6vy
      @HAL-nt6vy 5 років тому +4

      Yeah, we dodged a bullet. I refuse to even contemplate the horror of a Hillary Clinton presidency.

    • @BillFromTheHill100
      @BillFromTheHill100 4 роки тому

      Go TRUMP

  • @dowehavetodothis
    @dowehavetodothis 4 роки тому +1

    whenever I feel anxious, I listen to this soothing lecture

  • @dkelban
    @dkelban 4 роки тому +2

    Amazing: both the subject and the great Richard Dawkins

  • @Nyt250
    @Nyt250 8 років тому +115

    what a smart guy

    • @domcasmurro2417
      @domcasmurro2417 6 років тому +2

      Mudkipp2
      Not smart enough to know that atoms are not majority of empty space..that "empty space" is 100% filled by the wave function.
      Eletrons are not like moons surrounding the center of the atom, like he apparently believe.

    • @AlmostBipedal
      @AlmostBipedal 6 років тому +6

      DR GREEN - He actually said "almost entirely empty space", and not what you said.
      Did he actually say like moons surrounding the centre of the atom? I don't recall that either?

    • @politicallyincorrect9607
      @politicallyincorrect9607 6 років тому +2

      along with these 'smarts' comes an arrogance that limits one's potential to know more.

    • @runenight280
      @runenight280 6 років тому +5

      Except that's not true at all. A lot of these 'smarts' are smart enough to realize how little they know and are humbled by it. Arrogance is a result of pseudo-intelligence.

    • @thomasf.9717
      @thomasf.9717 5 років тому +3

      Counting Strings Dawkins is one of the most humble people I've seen. I guess intelligence does look like arrogance if you look at it from below.

  • @CutcliffePaul
    @CutcliffePaul 7 років тому +5

    Brilliant, as ever.

  • @paulscousedownie
    @paulscousedownie 4 роки тому +2

    What a brilliant and insightful talk. Excellent!

  • @jamesart9
    @jamesart9 9 років тому

    Actually a rather brilliant synopsis of the individuality of world views, of ourselves and all things that sense and interact with the universe.
    If truly understood then it opens worlds of wonders.
    And, if nothing else, it certainly should inspire awe.

  • @paulrobert9286
    @paulrobert9286 9 років тому +35

    Whoa...I'm trippin out....man!

  • @shananagans5
    @shananagans5 7 років тому +38

    Come on Ted, you can't use the word queer?

    • @isaiahbaker3597
      @isaiahbaker3597 7 років тому +5

      language police wee-oo-wee-oo

    • @timm6175
      @timm6175 7 років тому +3

      Isaiah Moorehead hes saying this videos title should've used the word queer instead of strange

    • @isaiahbaker3597
      @isaiahbaker3597 7 років тому

      Timothy Marinaccio
      Oh I see, probably

    • @zeishei5649
      @zeishei5649 7 років тому +1

      shananagans5 lol.

    • @vincerussett7922
      @vincerussett7922 5 років тому

      Well, it can: whatever current sexual politics decide, he was quoting a mid-2oth century scientist (Haldane), who was using the word in its then current meaning of 'very strange'. The word spread to describe gay individuals because they were also perceived *at that time* and in the mainstream as 'very odd', and acquired a pejorative ring, as well. We've all come a long way in 70 years...

  • @nicholasivanderstoop4282
    @nicholasivanderstoop4282 4 роки тому

    The first book I read by Dawkins was the Blind Watch Maker. Being of simple mind I understood and thoroughly enjoyed
    The read. Hence Kudos to Dawkins for his wit, his science and understanding of his less gifted readers.

  •  4 роки тому +2

    Mind blowing and marvellous

  • @sngscratcher
    @sngscratcher 4 роки тому +3

    Because it is strange. Mind-boggling, to say the least. And being alive, conscious and aware of this astonishing reality is the most bizarre of all.
    "This is the strangest life I've ever known" - Jimbo!

  • @boomelyh3llik
    @boomelyh3llik 8 років тому +261

    i notice the good people at TED did not have the maturity, (or presume us mature enough) to give this piece its natural/deserved title: 'Why the universe seems so QUEER". I find
    it more offensive to have such words edited out for me in order to placate the immature. Good talk though; I now appreciate Dawkins more dense and less 'showbiz' type style.

    • @Someguy-my3he
      @Someguy-my3he 7 років тому +9

      While I can already hear the counterargument that using a word with such a strong association with an unrelated subject (homosexuality) may obscure the meaning of this title, I do agree with you. I'm pretty sure we can handle it.

    • @EebstertheGreat
      @EebstertheGreat 7 років тому +10

      I kind of agree with you, but I wouldn't assign so much baseless blame to the people who edited and uploaded this talk. There are a number of valid reasons why they might have chosen this title. For one, the Sapling Foundation that runs TED talks is an American organization, and while its audience is global and very diverse, it tends to default to American styles, which is inevitable anyway with an American staff. Clearly the word "queer" is not commonly used anymore by Americans to mean "strange," and even in England, Dawkins's home, "strange" is substantially more common. For another thing, using "queer" in such limited context as this title is very ambiguous. "Strange" has a relatively clearly-understood meaning, and it is not TED's intent to misdirect people to videos by confusing the subject matter. The title is accurate after all, and if I had wanted to watch a video about how the universe was sexually complex, and gotten this instead, I might be upset. And finally, it could easily have been an honest mistake.
      Personally, I agree that they ought to have stuck to the exact wording used in this talk for several reasons, but I don't think people changed it deliberately to satisfy some agenda or irrational fear.

    • @user-qb3tk8rs8t
      @user-qb3tk8rs8t 7 років тому +7

      Seamus Mac maybe because they knew you'd all make a big deal out of it, like you are now

    • @boomelyh3llik
      @boomelyh3llik 7 років тому +7

      Quinn Rogers makes a lot of sense... I see it now - they did it in an incredibly benign scheme to provoke a 'big deal', involving one whole comment with a few mundane replies. Genius. I also really like the general philosophical implications of your comment, i.e shut up and watch without any of that pesky 'thinking' or 'commenting' nonsense. You seem like a real cool, intelligent and interesting... oh... no... I drifted... was daydreaming... about... Marina Sirtis for a sec. Sorry. Anyway, thanks for clarifying Quinn

    • @user-qb3tk8rs8t
      @user-qb3tk8rs8t 7 років тому +3

      i didnt read this

  • @peterf90
    @peterf90 2 роки тому +1

    What a great lecture and this guy is just so articulate and bright. I loved the selfish gene and a few other books he wrote were pretty good also.

  • @michaeljames1585
    @michaeljames1585 10 років тому +2

    Lol that one person who laughs really loud. Great talk, loved it. :)

  • @mikaelnoone7304
    @mikaelnoone7304 7 років тому +4

    A brilliant and mind blowing experience to hear Dawkins speak, however there is one critical point towards the end: "Treating people as machines may be scientifically and philosophically accurate" A self-contradictary statement if taken literally, but I wonder if anyone with an educated opinion would agree with this. The field of human action is in no way predictable with fully mechanistic degrees, for the action of conscious being in itself is never throughoutly calculated with binary logic or mechanistic laws (which in themselves stop being correct when applied to certain areas of reality) - so in contradiction with Dawkins' attitude, the idea of a human as a machine seems more likely to be the useful fiction here rather than the personification of human beings

  • @philipose66
    @philipose66 9 років тому +6

    well thought out presentation---not easy to understand because the science is deep and the references are complex. Also, he is reading and the cadence can throw some of the meaning 'off'. He 'desperately' is trying to convey to us in WORDS what he deeply grasps---not easy to do.

    • @johnsalmond
      @johnsalmond 9 років тому

      yes, it is pretty rich in info and references which one needs to pick up. A couple of runthroughs might help. As we not studying a structured course that problem is inevitable for us amateurs

    • @shubhamparashar3540
      @shubhamparashar3540 9 років тому +1

      Philip SIXTY SIX "cadence can throw some of the meaning 'off" - What the do you mean by that ? From your comment I seem to think you mean to say that for amateurs it might be that they take the wrong meaning instead of the one Dawkins intended. There are no euphemisms in the talk, if thats what you mean. Dawkins is known for elucidating scientific facts in a manner as clear as possible. (as clear as possible is the supremum of all the ways clarity can be expressed)

  • @mohitsn519
    @mohitsn519 9 років тому +1

    fabulous talk Mr Dawkins :) Awesome.

  • @SAM1v0v
    @SAM1v0v 2 роки тому +1

    Addicted to listen Sir Richard Dawkins 🙂

  • @mikevieira8583
    @mikevieira8583 4 роки тому +10

    Love you, Richard. Thanks for being an important part of my liberation from religion!

  • @bebo91body32
    @bebo91body32 7 років тому +14

    if we took this video back in time, say 100 years, what would they have thought of this man, surrounded by computers, using them for info to give a public speech. They would call it science fiction

    • @missinformation3449
      @missinformation3449 7 років тому +7

      Go back another 100 years, and they'd call it witchcraft.

    • @iAMJaws
      @iAMJaws 7 років тому +4

      jl lancerz89 they might even call him a god with all of the things he knows.

    • @jobhunter5090
      @jobhunter5090 7 років тому +4

      the problem with calling him a god is a being a god isn't about knowing (though knowledge is proscribed to the ficticious deities), but rather doing. A grenade and a gun or modern medicine would make someone look far more godlike than a computer or knowing things (that would contradict with current practice)

    • @danielharrington5690
      @danielharrington5690 5 років тому

      @@jobhunter5090 I couldn't disagree more

    • @jobhunter5090
      @jobhunter5090 5 років тому

      Care to elaborate, because if I was playing devil's advocate i could have disagreed a lot more with myself than you did. All you did was state your opinion.

  • @vgrof2315
    @vgrof2315 3 роки тому +1

    The man is obviously a world hero. He certainly is my hero.

  • @paulfletcher7371
    @paulfletcher7371 4 роки тому +1

    Stunning mini lecture. Read all his books and followed both his Atheism and his take on evolution but this was a stellar summary worthy of mass share folks...

  • @greganton9639
    @greganton9639 7 років тому +7

    Richard Dawkins is a great man who does great work

    • @dinkyman8591
      @dinkyman8591 5 років тому +1

      He is an educated idiot nothing more.

  • @IsaacAsimov1992
    @IsaacAsimov1992 4 роки тому +3

    RD would get my vote for Educator of the Century.

  • @defenderoftheadverb
    @defenderoftheadverb 4 роки тому

    78 and still at it. Good on ya Richard. You must live well.

  • @marianaleibniz3783
    @marianaleibniz3783 6 років тому

    Once upon a long time ago ,I was travelling with a friend, and a dog friend in the car, and observing how happy and concentrated the dog was, with his nose out the window and sniffing, with eyes almost shut. I said to my (not dog) friend: it is like, dog appreciates the journey, experiencing what we see, with theirs nose; smelling the landscapes, instead of seeing with the eyes.
    What a joy to see Dawkins identifying with this at 14:35

  • @colly3333
    @colly3333 8 років тому +3

    Beautiful.

  • @1292liam
    @1292liam 6 років тому +3

    8.02 man at the back goes mental !

  • @kennethmarshall306
    @kennethmarshall306 2 роки тому

    Brilliant. He is very good at making himself understood and what he says makes sense.

  • @kashmohammadi9785
    @kashmohammadi9785 3 роки тому

    What a beautiful message.

  • @shawnmatthews75
    @shawnmatthews75 9 років тому +8

    He's so good at words.

  • @bunney3272
    @bunney3272 9 років тому +17

    I just drank a bottle of water.

    • @n3nshat11
      @n3nshat11 9 років тому +2

      Sir George Severn Water is a gift from our creator. It sustains all life.

    • @bunney3272
      @bunney3272 9 років тому +6

      Sorry, for you to think there is a creator, you are absolutely deluded!

    • @cerverg
      @cerverg 9 років тому +14

      n3nshat11 I just farted is that a gift as well?

    • @n3nshat11
      @n3nshat11 9 років тому

      cerverg indeed your body is a temple of God.
      that is simply a sign that your body is processing the necessary functions it needs.

    • @bunney3272
      @bunney3272 9 років тому +3

      In the eyes of the 'God' who isn't there your fart is his gift.

  • @AlbertGuilmont
    @AlbertGuilmont 6 років тому +1

    Finally, a rare occasion when a video produced in 2007 is not advertised on UA-cam as "NEW!!! 2018 RICHARD DAWKINS SCIENCE DEBATE!!!"

  • @billypilgrim7838
    @billypilgrim7838 4 роки тому

    be nice to date these talks

  • @reviewerman9786
    @reviewerman9786 9 років тому +4

    Is there a transcript of this talk somewhere?

    • @reviewerman9786
      @reviewerman9786 9 років тому +4

      Reviewer Man
      www.ted.com/talks/richard_dawkins_on_our_queer_universe/transcript

  • @Fransamsterdam
    @Fransamsterdam 7 років тому +4

    I am not a native English speaker, so maybe that's why I don't see the problem with the word 'queer'. Could anyone explain?
    I like his sense of humor and open mindness. Not a waste of time.

    • @marcusrosales3344
      @marcusrosales3344 7 років тому +3

      Queer is usually used in a derogatory way towards homosexuals in this day and age. The way he is using it has no problem though.

    • @ConnorGunn
      @ConnorGunn 7 років тому +3

      To add to your point, it should be noted that the word "Queer" has been recently taken back by the LGBT community to represent an ambiguous sexuality (for people that aren't comfortable with the label "Bisexual" for various reasons.)
      It's a bit of a sensitive word to use, due to its history.

  • @carlprince2866
    @carlprince2866 4 роки тому

    Probably one of the best speachs I have ever heard

  • @kellygiles3823
    @kellygiles3823 9 років тому

    A very, very good talk. Well done Richard, I hope to find more content to explore such ideas further. If anyone has suggestions, they would be appreciated :)

  • @billsny9243
    @billsny9243 4 роки тому +8

    Everyone should watch this coming down from shrooms. It makes so much more sense

    • @HighestRank
      @HighestRank 4 роки тому +1

      bill sny the English attempts at avoiding creating offense is somehow countered by a detoxification, during which every little thing is offensive. Also applicable to smoking cessation.

  • @seanfinkelfuck9935
    @seanfinkelfuck9935 9 років тому +4

    A good talk, prevalent then as now, just like science.

  • @KieranLeCam
    @KieranLeCam 10 років тому +1

    Wow this was a really good TED. I especially love an idea he put forward that I'd thought about before but never heard anyone else speak of, that although some of us scientifically understand that our personalities and characters are the product of our brain structure and chemical differences (what he calls the mechanical approach), we still see people as, well...people, and blame them for faults they may have.
    I understand our insistence on personification when we talk about an act such as murder, or when generally talking about individuals that are a danger to society, life, and our experience of life, but I think we should act more mechanical (or reasonable) when talking about mental conditions for instance, or even slight mental variations.
    We still stigmatise, exclude and blame those that differ from us too much for my taste. And it's why I love youtube. Because educating people on the truth of matter, and explaining why things are the way they are, or seem the way they are, is of paramount importance to developing a better quality of life for everyone.
    So next time, if someone doesn't "get" something, or if someone acts like a douche, instead of laying blame on them, or attacking, excluding, or labelling them, try explaining the truth to them, and being a force of guidance and cohesion, instead of a tool of repression or an instrument of division.

  • @snook377
    @snook377 4 роки тому

    listening to this man, is never boring, would like to have a few beers with him, or maybe a few single malts would be far more enlightening.

  • @Strype13
    @Strype13 4 роки тому +7

    I never thought I'd see the day Richard Dawkins would make a penis joke during a recorded lecture. That fella is usually busy taking life far too seriously. Regardless, today is a good day. Hope to see him continue to wind down like that. He's an incredibly smart man, but he seems like he could benefit from more humor.

    • @barbaramack2897
      @barbaramack2897 3 роки тому

      Yet, that Playboy thing took me a minute to get and it was funny in a suitable manner. Have you heard him read of how he met his wife. That's a wonderful story and speaks of the man as a bit more that an ultra intellectual. He appears to be a very well-rounded and grounded individual.

  • @thoserusskies115
    @thoserusskies115 8 років тому +5

    "The Universe. Queer as a three dollar bill". by Richard Dawkins, 1 billion copies sold.

  • @naveenthomas9931
    @naveenthomas9931 4 роки тому +1

    It's so impossible that it is inevitable.
    Just majestic.

  • @brostepisthebest
    @brostepisthebest 10 років тому

    i am so so so interested. i can't remember how meany times but my hair stood on end loads of times in this talk. i even cried.

  • @superstringcheese
    @superstringcheese 7 років тому +13

    To save you some time: We exist on a scale somewhere between the atomic and astronomical, and so our model of reality is oriented to the magnitudes and characteristics of that scale. The entire talk is the repetition of this idea using different analogies.

    • @yoso585
      @yoso585 5 років тому +1

      The analogies are for the imagination.

    • @noisepuppet
      @noisepuppet 4 роки тому +2

      I'd expect Dawkins to add that in biological terms, cognition, like other capacities, is expensive. It's resource intensive to develop and to use cognitive capacity. Given finite resources, anything an organism spends on one capacity is unavailable for others that might contribute to reproductive success (which is the the driver in evolution by natural selection, not survival). So selection tends to produce capacities that are efficient-- only just adequate for the purpose, no more. More would be a waste, and the wasteful expenditure is selected out. So evolution has equipped us to understand what we need to in order to pass the genes down, and not substantially more. That's the efficiency of our genetic endowment of biological capacities, including cognition.

    • @averyjoycelynbarakudablock4139
      @averyjoycelynbarakudablock4139 4 роки тому +1

      Much more than scale. Among other things, nuances of species types and their unique"preloaded" templates. And, much praise is offered for the purported brilliance of the human, many of whose finest features -- such as well-honed nervous systems' applications, genuine intuition and the ability to seek out medicines -- are all but lost though yet actively employed by other species. Primates and cetaceans and most assuredly elephants for example.
      (The more i observe my fellow animal species in action, the less lofty i find our wondrous wandering and wondering selves).

    • @noisepuppet
      @noisepuppet 4 роки тому

      Avery Joycelyn Barakuda Block I just heard Donald Hoffman say, "natural selection drives true perception to swift extinction." Not really startling if you get what natural selection fundamentally is. Of course, with our fellow human beings, our observations are complicated by the fact that we are effectively animals living in captivity. But whether it's our genetic endowment or our artificial environment that's to blame, or both, I agree that it's getting harder and harder to be impressed with us.

    • @averyjoycelynbarakudablock4139
      @averyjoycelynbarakudablock4139 4 роки тому +1

      @@noisepuppet s0 gRoovn 0nYr wRK spEHshlyQUICKsōte
      Most assuredly not bad (fra HewMan). Thankyu

  • @skram1000
    @skram1000 8 років тому +3

    awesome guy love to learn about/from him, a favorite. Great speaker. Now did that commercial at the end just smbolicly say they were better then Frank lloyd Wright architecture? haha NO. no bmw, you're not worth it. and your not That good.

  • @wetsidedown
    @wetsidedown 4 роки тому

    This is a remarkable essay, on par with of J.B.S. Haldane's masterpiece "On Being the Right Size"

  • @bobaldo2339
    @bobaldo2339 7 років тому +2

    The concept he uses here of "middle world" is very important I believe. Human language evolved to handle human scale experience, the experience in our "middle world". When we stretch human scale concepts beyond the range of their usefulness, we can tie ourselves in conceptual knots. I suggest that this misuse of everyday (middle world) language is what gives rise to many of the metaphysical questions in traditional continental philosophy.

  • @unclemunch
    @unclemunch 10 років тому +8

    I went to Tiny World once and bought a t-shirt. When I returned to Middle World, the t-shirt didn't fit. What a ripoff.

  • @RevBobAldo
    @RevBobAldo 10 років тому +7

    He asks if anything is inherently ungraspable. That is a question all too rarely asked by science.

    • @HAL-nt6vy
      @HAL-nt6vy 5 років тому +2

      Joe Biden has investigated widely and found that everything can be grasped. And sniffed. And Mouthed.

    • @jeschinstad
      @jeschinstad 4 роки тому +1

      It is a question that by definition cannot be solved by science and isn't scientific. Science can only prove that graspable things are graspable. It cannot prove that ungraspable things are ungraspable.

  • @bobaldo2339
    @bobaldo2339 7 років тому

    This is the best talk by Dawkins that I have seen.

  • @ezrabalcha1800
    @ezrabalcha1800 7 років тому +2

    that howl at 2:27

  • @leebennett4117
    @leebennett4117 4 роки тому +5

    The Universe is under no obligation to make sense to you,Sorry Humans its not all Me,Me,Me,Me

  • @AJZulu
    @AJZulu 8 років тому +5

    Middle World? Me thinks Midgard...

    • @tortysoft
      @tortysoft 4 роки тому

      He told you not to :-)

  • @JoeSmith-jd5zg
    @JoeSmith-jd5zg 4 роки тому

    Great perspective.

  • @kitersrefuge7353
    @kitersrefuge7353 5 років тому +1

    How did i ever miss this fantastic Physics talk...its so old but its monumental in its content...given the fact that I am an arm-chair Physicist (i know, that is too big a claim) i have watched so many, that the weirdness of me having missed this is, well, weird.