The man is a freaking expert in talking, nonstop with no mistakes, with a tranquil fast fluency. Like a river carrying a lot of water without any sing of turbulence.
Sapolsky is a damn ninja. He moves forward faster than wind, without even stumbling or stopping once. At the same time he juggles with multiple disciplines and throws jokes that hit each time. And then you look and realize that meanwhile he also managed to get in your head and paint there a clear picture of what's going on.
I have binged-watched these lectures mutliple times, and I am fully aware that I do not retain enough to pass any exam, but when I listen to these lectures it makes me feel home. I keep finding hard sciences too cold and social sciences too... warm? Too romanticised? Anyway, you probably get the idea. This is right there in the middle, and it finally matches where I live in my head. It's incredibly comforting if not therapeutic. I really enjoy swimming in this universe. Thank you Dr.Sapolsky for making these and Stanford for putting these up for free! This is my Netflix.
Watching a lecture is great, but reversing it when you drift off in thought, pausing it to think, or look up nucleotide, triplet genetic code or just see what a protein actually looks like is priceless. UA-cam should make content like this a priority.
Sapolsky is a damn ninja. He moves forward faster than wind, without even stumbling or stopping once. At the same time he juggles with multiple disciplines and throws jokes that hit each time. And then you look and realize that meanwhile he also managed to get in your head and paint there a clear picture of what's going on.
Apple Books was supposed to use that idea to create better, interactive educational material. Unfortunately creators of educational material don’t agree
@@4philipp Wouldn't it be amazing if resources like Wikipedia were to not just give an overview of subjects but aim towards adding everything we know about the subjects?
This is a great comment. Thankful to Stanford for publishing and I couldn’t agree more about UA-cam. This is where the algos should be pointing people.
I am caring for an elderly relative and thus unable to do the masters I wanted to (just not got the energy while doing this stressful behaviour). Human Behavioral Biology is what I look forward to each week. I take notes and then look up some of the papers (if they are avaiiable). I have one more of his books to read - done two.It is keeping my brain alive (I am 67). Thank you Stanford and Professor Sapolsky. This is one of the things that is keeping me feeling more or less sane.
Stanford and MIT are really amazing. They are without a doubt the best universities in the world. They care so much about educating the world, that they are willing to put their courses on the internet for free, so that ordinary people may become knowledgable. Thank you for these courses!
Videos like these started out as tools for students and a form of advertising for the school, as in, "Look at the great professors and lectures we provide." I'm sure students of past generations would have killed for this technology though. No more depending on notes scribbled half asleep in an early AM class or stressing about missing a day or two when ill. Honestly, if I were enrolled in any of these courses, I would watch them all ahead of time so I could focus on homework and have the real lectures to reinforce everything. But you're right, it is nice that they've taken the time to upload full courses. When universities first started doing this, they'd upload a lesson or two and the rest would be on their private servers. I guess they finally acknowledged the public interest and free bandwidth through UA-cam. Doesn't hurt that he's also an excellent speaker and very good at making sense of these concepts.
"Crime pays but Botany doesn't " is also worth some attention (before you value the scenery as much as the educational content), "the Thought Emporium" has also been turning out long form content, I enjoy.
Here's something to consider: How lucky are we that we can actually listen to somebody as intelligent and eloquent as this man who literally is educating some of the most educationally privileged people in the world? I'm really grateful for this, because I can't afford to go to college, because information is so valuable to me, more valuable than money, and I truly enjoy having different viewpoints that challenge my belief structure. This guy is so engaging, so intelligent and yet so gentle when he disseminates so much information. He truly wants to educate people, so he is truly in his own element. We're lucky to live in a time we can actually enjoy this kind of information because we want to, not because we have to, not because anybody told us to, but because we want to enrich our lives. Anyway, everybody have a great day!
These lectures helped me recently decide to pursue a degree in Biochemistry! Free lectures of high quality such as these is so valuable to the public. Thank you very much for that.
It's incredible how he's so informed on so many different fields of study thus allowing him to explain human behavior from the micro to the macro with ease
listen to the lecture of Patrick winston about how to speak. Robert sapolsky uses a lot of technics to teach. He is really clear, he starts this course telling you the basis of what will u learn and how to learn it. And always repeat a lot of times. Even give examples when gets trickier. The best thing is that this is on youtube. So we can pause. For me with dislexya this is so perfect to study!
Love of their subject. Daily exposure to some of the greatest minds in the world. Quality of education, AND probably somewhere between 20-50 IQ points.
The more you understand a subject, the better and more compact you can explain it. He definitely has research level knowledge of the field and is giving intro classes. So, along with a bit of creativity, he can distill a *lot* of information into bite size and understandable chunks. The down side is your brain gets tired because it's just so much information and what feels like almost every other word is actually very important lol.
What's interesting about how Robert Sapolsky teaches is that although he is only talking about a specific number of subjects per lecture.... the subjects he is introducing are packed with very complicated thoughts, if you don't know anything about the subjects in the first place. Once you listen to the lecture the first time, you can then re-listen, and this allows you to now have a basis for re-understanding and be able to better grasp what he is talking about.
I was thinking similarly since I have taken no courses which would serve as any sort of introduction or preparation for this material. An awful lot is making total sense, and I'm drinking it in like an oasis spring, but another review would probably help me with better term retention, for instance, or choosing side publications to read. And I'm sure there's a concept or two I didn't grasp in full (unlike, apparently, our illustrious 'PrinceKoopa').
I find Robert Sapolsky to be a very inspirational lecturer.. Just the enthusiasm in his voice alone keeps the information he talking about more interesting.
The driving force is not intellectual, it is emotional. He is passionate about his subject. Knowledge came later, but passion was first and remained the driver.
I love how this professor injects humor in his lecture. Listening to this I find science really cool and genetics - awesome! I missed going back to school. It's interesting how he relates molecular genetics to the study of human biology and disease. How does the cell choreograph the events of cell division so that only one copy of each gene is passed on to the next generation? By what processes do genes become altered to provide the raw material for evolution? The possibility of finding answers to such fundamental questions makes molecular genetics an exciting field of biology. Good job Stanford.
I love having access to these lectures. Thank you Stanford for making these accessible to the public. I have always been interested in why people do what they do... I remember when I was about 10, I asked someone why 2 people can have the same experience and respond in such different ways. I was referring to siblings with alcoholic parents- why might one become an alcoholic while the other might stay away from alcohol. Both might say its because their parents were alcoholics that they either followed that path or avoiding it. This kind of thing always intrigued me. Later in college and through research(I never went to high school), I gained more understanding of biology. Biology fascinates me as well. This lecture series brings the two together seamlessly and holds my attention extremely well. I have been pondering returning to college to study something in the realm of biology for quite some time. After getting a concussion early this year, I've become almost obsessed with understanding how this intricate machine we call the human really works. I'm especially interested in how body & mind interplay. How internal is affected by external. How physical is affected by mental, and how mental is affected by biological. This series is filling in some gaps in my understanding & I can't express enough how much I value that. So, thank you again for making this available. Thank you, Robert Sapolsky for making it so engaging.
this reminds me of my professors I had a Rutgers. But having now graduating I have been looking endlessly to gaining more detailed knowledge on topics I have already learned about. He is amazing!
I have a Molecular Biology class for my first year of medical school here in France. It's absolutely fascinating. Thank you, Stanford; when I start my winter break next week, I'll have these wonderful videos to recapitulate the semester with.
A kindly reminder, for wobble base pairing to happen, it is usually the third base that differs, rather than the second. Check any genetics textbook and you will find me correct. Nonetheless, I enjoy Dr. Sapolsky's lectures a lot. I play them as some sort of podcast and it works wonder. Thanks a lot for putting these lectures up here.
as a 14 year old who knew the 3rd is usually least consequential, threw me off a little but i assumed i mustve misunderstood the weel from the book i read when i was 11 since that was blatantly the most obvious explanation, but im so glad you mentioned itXD i wouldve taken sapolsky at his word haha, i supose this is a little reminder on questioning my sources haha
+SpankyTheHippo83 That story made me wonder why pre-pubescent males need testosterone at all. It sounds like you can get away without it, so why spend all that metabolic effort producing it, when you could leave it out till puberty?
+HebaruSan Because it increases aggression which helps in finding a mate. I can imagine there are many other reasons too; you should probably look it up.
+HebaruSan I can't imagine that testosterone occurs before puberty tbh. As fara s I know, the release of testosterone is something that marks the start of puberty in males. If this is incorrect however, then I can only speculate -- not being a biologist myself-- that in Homo Sapiens -- with out extreme pair bonding -- it would serve to begin the process of finding a pair bond before the male is ready for reproduction as females generally are ready to mate before males. I must reiterate, I am not a biologist, you would probably be better looking this up than relying on me! :)
+Little Leigh Androgens are present while in utero and play a very important role in the development of the gonads, they continue play many other important roles throughout your entire lifespan (not just puberty) including muscle development, bone development and of course reproduction.
I only took English and Pscych in College and as interdisciplinary studies for my animation career, but just taught myself how to animate online. I love that I can continue to learn even now that I'm full time.
This is the first one in the sequence where I had to rewind to double-check my understanding. Even then, it only took me two listens to get something well outside my expertise. Terrific stuff, lucidly explained. Things like this really make me believe again in the old notion of the internet as a repository for human knowledge.
If this is him just glossing over the basics I can just imagine the details that are in his head, what the advanced students/studies get to hear/learn. Amazing! (and lucky them, the advanced students)
Thanks, Robert. I had you for a week in '87-'88 first year survey, and have enjoyed following your books and on UA-cam over the many years. Hearing you tell all about the baboons helped make Stanford worthwhile.
Damn, these lectures have made me rediscover how much I love learning. School being too easy and boring pretty much beat that out of me. Now I know again what it's like to actually be curious!
Bookmarked for now. I watched these lectures about 12 years ago. I looked for what I was hoping to understand - confirmation bias. Now taking notes and following up. Much to expand upon.
I have been watching his lectures for fun. I am taking a course this Fall in molecular genetics and thought I'd prep by watching some videos on it. I happened to search for molecular genetics and the first video that pops up is by Dr. Sapolsky. Thank you youtube!!!
Absolutely blew my mind away! I have learned more from this 90 minute lecture than I have from all my genetics classes combined! It all now clicks and makes sense.
I was the highest graded students in my science classes. I was a borderline genius and psycho. The students in higher learning have such an opportunity in this age. I hope my work will some day effect the stars that these students can be. What a venture. Especially in biology and human development. Find the stars achievers of this incredible future
Amazingly lucid lecture on a very complex subject. But I can't help but thinking this genius, while talking in terms we all can understand, there is a whirlpool of organic chemistry formulas racing through his head simultaneously.
The middle nucleotide point mutation is actually the most likely to change the amino acid. The third nucleotide point mutation will code for the same amino acid, on average, 69% of the time.
@@nate-manlovesgland2347 this allows for mutation to occur without thw change of codon which is important as mutations can have negative effects on function. Having some room for error is ideal.
Well work toward improving your education system. My bio teachers all have been epic (i live in france ) and i was not in some private high rated school , it was public school located between poor neighboor and middleclass one. Improving public school is either increasing tax (wich lots of people will bitch about) or better distribution of it. I heard that in the Usa, public school funding is related to income of the area... Wich is obvioulsy a big problem. It should be equally distributated by the state at least ..
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation: 00:00 🧬 Evolution and Criticisms - Overview of the course focus on interdisciplinary connections between behavioral biology and molecular genetics. - Criticisms of the heritability and adaptation concepts in the evolution of behavior. - Introduction to the importance of molecular biology in understanding evolution. 03:37 🧬 Sociobiologists' View on Heritability - Sociobiologists and evolutionary psychologists emphasizing heritability in behaviors. - Use of structured models based on genetics to explain behavior. - Molecular biologists' contempt for the sociobiologists' approach. 04:41 🧬 Molecular Biologists' Perspective on Evolution - Shift to molecular biology's perspective on evolution. - Emphasis on genes as molecules, specifying proteins, and their role in shaping behavior. - Introduction to the central role of proteins, DNA, and the flow of genetic information. 08:00 🧬 Proteins, DNA, and Shape - Explanation of the critical relationship between DNA sequences, protein shapes, and functions. - Importance of protein shape in interactions, illustrated by the "lock and key" analogy. - Exploration of how amino acids, proteins, and DNA contribute to the diversity of shapes. 10:45 🧬 Central Dogma of Life - Introduction to the central dogma: DNA to RNA to protein. - Overview of the flow of information and the significance of DNA as the starting point. - Mention of the violation of the central dogma with the discovery of retroviruses. 13:37 🧬 Importance of DNA Mutations - Discussion of mutations, focusing on the consequences of changes in DNA. - Explanation of point mutations, deletions, and insertions. - Emphasis on the potential impact of mutations on protein function and downstream consequences. 23:34 🧬 Microevolutionary Change - Overview of microevolutionary change resulting from mutations in proteins. - Discussion on how mutations affect the efficacy of proteins. - Connection between protein function and microevolutionary changes in the context of evolution. 24:58 🧬 Genetic Mutation Impact on Enzyme Function - Genetic mutation example: Phenylketonuria (PKU). - PKU results from a classical point mutation in a gene coding for an enzyme that converts phenylalanine into a safer form. The mutated enzyme loses its function, leading to the accumulation of toxic phenylalanine and causing neurological damage. 26:24 🧪 Hormonal Mutation: Testicular Feminization Syndrome - Example: Testicular Feminization Syndrome (TFS). - TFS involves an androgen receptor mutation, leading to insensitivity to testosterone. Despite high testosterone levels, individuals with TFS develop a female phenotype. This highlights the role of receptor mutations in gender expression. 30:08 🧬 Mutation in Testosterone Biosynthesis - Disease example: Mutation in testosterone biosynthetic enzymes. - Mutations in enzymes involved in testosterone production can result in individuals born phenotypically female with extremely low testosterone levels. Puberty triggers a surge in testosterone, causing a transition from female to male. 34:50 🧠 Neurochemical Signaling and Anxiety - Genetic variation in benzodiazepine receptors. - Variability in benzodiazepine receptor genes contributes to individual differences in anxiety levels. Examining these variations provides insights into the genetic basis of anxiety-related traits across different species. 40:01 🧬 Evolutionary Implications of Genetic Changes - Fox P2 gene as an example. - Analysis of the Fox P2 gene demonstrates how single base pair changes, driven by positive selection, can lead to significant evolutionary differences, especially in traits related to communication and language. 47:37 🧬 Genetic Relatedness and Evolutionary History - Clarification on genetic relatedness. - Sharing 50% of DNA with siblings and 98% with chimpanzees is not contradictory. The percentage reflects different aspects of genetic relatedness-siblinghood involves shared alleles, while the similarity to chimps highlights evolutionary history. 48:35 🧬 Genes and Genetic Similarities - Genes specify traits like antlers, dorsal fins, petals, pistils, and more. - Different species may share genes coding for similar traits, leading to genetic similarities. - The human-chimp genome comparison highlights a 98% similarity in genes coding for similar traits. 50:01 🧬 Types of Genes and Variants - Genes can come in different flavors or variants. - Discussion on the diversity of genes and the variations in traits they code for. - Highlighting the importance of understanding different versions of particular genes. 51:28 🧬 Evolution, Genetics, and Political Themes - Point mutations and gradual changes lead to genetic advantages in terms of evolution. - Emphasis on the role of competition in the evolution of behavior and species. - Connection between gradualism in evolution and its intertwined political and philosophical implications. 52:26 📉 Gradualism vs. Punctuated Equilibrium - Introduction to the punctuated equilibrium model by Stephen Jay Gould and Niles Eldridge. - Gradualism challenged; long periods of stasis punctuated by rapid evolutionary changes. - Exploration of the political themes associated with the two models and their contrasting worldviews. 55:07 🐚 Punctuated Equilibrium and Paleontology - Gould's punctuated equilibrium influenced by paleontology and fossil records. - Gaps in the fossil record lead to the idea of long periods of stasis and sudden evolutionary changes. - The role of paleontologists in tracing evolutionary lineages using fossil records. 56:58 🔗 Molecular Genetics and Gene Structure - Introduction to the modular construction of genes with exons and introns. - Discovery of splicing enzymes and their role in generating different proteins from the same gene. - Implications for tissue-specific gene expression and the combinatorial possibilities of protein variations. 01:07:41 🔍 Combinatorial Possibilities of Gene Expression - Baltimore's insight into the combinatorial possibilities of gene expression. - Discussion on the modular basis of gene construction leading to diverse protein outcomes. - The shift from one gene, one protein, to one gene generating multiple proteins. 01:11:54 🧬 Non-Coding DNA and Junk DNA - Discovery of non-coding DNA and the realization that 95% of DNA is non-coding. - Challenges to the notion of "junk DNA" and the quest to understand the function of non-coding DNA. - Recognition of the potential significance of non-coding DNA in genetic processes. 01:13:19 🧬 DNA Regulation Overview - DNA sequences are not the starting point of the central dogma of life; instead, they serve as the readout under the control of various factors. - 95% of DNA is dedicated to regulating genes, introducing the concept of regulatory sequences upstream from genes. - Promoter and repressor sequences are stretches of DNA coding for switches, influencing the activation or deactivation of gene transcription. 01:15:34 🔄 Transcription Factors and Gene Expression - Transcription factors are molecules, usually proteins, that bind to specific DNA sequences (promoters) and activate or inhibit gene transcription. - Different genes can share the same promoter, leading to the activation of entire networks of proteins with functional similarities. - One gene can have multiple promoters, responding to different signals, allowing for versatile gene activation in various contexts. 01:19:19 🌐 Environmental Regulation of Gene Expression - Gene expression is regulated by environmental factors, either within the cell or from external sources like hormones or chemical messengers. - Environmental signals, such as low energy levels, can activate transcription factors, influencing the transcription of genes related to energy regulation. - Hormones, like testosterone, can travel through the bloodstream and affect gene expression in distant cells, showcasing the impact of external environments. 01:24:33 🔄 Contextual Significance in Gene Expression - The most interesting aspects of DNA lie in the regulation of when genes are turned on or off, not just the properties of the proteins they encode. - Emphasis on the modular ability of one gene to generate diverse proteins based on different contexts, introducing "if-then" clauses in gene expression. - Contextual regulation, rather than the protein's intrinsic qualities, adds complexity and richness to understanding genetic information. 01:27:23 🧬 Chromatin and Epigenetic Regulation - Chromatin, the structural stabilizer of DNA, plays a crucial role in regulating access to DNA sequences by transcription factors. - Chromatin remodeling, influenced by environmental factors, determines whether transcription factors can access DNA, adding another layer of regulation. - Epigenetics, focusing on heritable changes in gene function not caused by alterations in DNA sequence, introduces the concept that development is all about epigenetics, not just genetics. Made with HARPA AI
I'm officially hooked on this course - I've just watched the first 4 straight through and really need to take a break on it, but it's addictive. I particularly enjoyed getting a bit more perspective on the "controversy" around Steven J. Gould. I read a ton of his popular essays early in my lie and found it eye opening.Then I became aware he was dismissed by some in the scientific community but never quite understood while. It sounds as if that may have been resolved and it is now appropriate to look at both the time sequence approaches when seeking understanding. (Perhaps this gets more definitive later in the course.)
THE LAST FEW QS!!! I WAS THINKING OF IT!!! This is the first time it ever happened!! Usually when I think of qs in lectures the drs never have an answer for it, or an unsatisfactory answers, but this is the first time, a professor voiced the EXACT same question Ive been thinking about in epigentics.. wow.. I wish I could meet Sapolsky 🥺🥺 stanford is sooo lucky to have him!! Its not fair 😭😭😭😭 I never knew epigenetics was a thing!!!! I was soo mindblown multiple times during this entire lecture!!! Wow.. is this what real teaching is???
These effin lectures are mind-blowing. Extremely grateful that this guy (me) , who probably only graduated high school because his siblings died, is able to watch content such as this.
Wow. I'm loving these lectures so much. This stuff has blown me away. I'm am now more fascinated and astounded by evolution than ever before. Thank you Stanford and thank you Robert Sapolsky. I will continue with this series.
i will never see or hear the simile 'like a glove' again without mentaly replaying the sound of a lecture hall of depressed young adults disappointedly muttering the last word😂😂 love to hear it
9th Grade and wanted to be a biologist since I was 4. Thanks for posting these :) Finally narrowed it down to either pursue marine biology or horticulture!
I just started my Winter break for medical school after an intense bout of finals...and I'm spending it watching a lecture series on evolutionary biology for pleasure. What is wrong with me?
LoL bro i watched it in 1 week before my 1 st year med school uni exama and since then i watched it 8-9 times and i am in halfway of my second year its natural we cant ignore data. Eneways med scince is mess. Its just jack of all master of none kinda since but i agree its tough .
His lectures are great for those that are trying to learn. I wonder how his tests are. He does a great job of illustrating the fact that nothing in phsychology is unidimensional, but that makes test taking difficult. With nothing being black and white, what would a multiple choice question look like? I'd be terrified to answer an essay question. I would love to see a sample test for him.
I would think it would be an essay weighted format with some terms to define or provide an example of as well as identifying key figures and their contribution to the science.
I am thankful for the professor as it cleared my doubt of prescription factors while I was studying A-levels. One thing that surprisingly came up to me was how our environment is more important than our genetics when he was talking about Epigenetics.
I hope the students realize bjustbhow fortunate they are to have such an fantastic teacher. This professor, he just enthralls you and keeps you interested. It's almost like you don't realise you are actually learning! I wish I had had the opportunity these students had. At least we have these videos!
Nice lectures! There is a small mistake at ca 19:45: it is always the last/third (NOT the second) nucleotide of a codon that, when exchanged for a different nucleotide, does (often) not change the amino acid it is coding for.
That is not possible.... He speaks perfect, fluent English like no professor I’ve ever had privilege of hearing. So passionate about his subject and knowledge, full stop. An absolute joy.
"There is a whole world of examples showing that everything I just said is wrong, but for our purposes, everything I just said is right." I love biology.
"If-then contingencies", is the computational biologists way of using the QM-TIME, mathematical singularity-duality, of frequency-probability shape shifting the numerical multiples of unit vector. Ie it's Quantum Chemistry and "probably" one of the best lecture-presentations of advancing the concepts of hierarchical complexity across all science.
Read "The Agile Gene" by Matt Ridley. It goes over most of the things Sapolsky talks about here as well as things he talks about in previous lectures as well. It explains what Ridley calls Nature via Nurture, where our traits are modified by our nurture, and is what Sapolsky is talking about here and gives you a richer understanding of the background finds behind the same issues.
Never made it as a poor man, couldn't make it as a blind man stealing... BUT I'm privileged to have lectures like this to enrich my mind without cost of a tuition 🙃
I'm in my first year of high school and a artist but i just want to listen to something to fulfill my interest in psychology so I'm now binging all of these lectures.
Epigenetics!! I wish my instructors would sound like this...class would be much more interesting. I love the variant of the vocabulary that is used. Science is awesome. Genetics are epic! :)
Thank you so much for this incredible, wonderful opportunity to listen and watch the lectures of Robert Sapolsky. Thank you for doing this for free! This is the best thing you could ever make! They shall be accessible like Bible, to everyone. The best educational course ever, the best professor ever.
Epigenetics very much solves the nature vs nurture debate too then. Since the nurturing inevitably affects how nature is expressed. . feels like my mind is gonna explode...... LOVE THIS
The man is a freaking expert in talking, nonstop with no mistakes, with a tranquil fast fluency. Like a river carrying a lot of water without any sing of turbulence.
He’s memorizing the texts
@lomateron buoy you a poet
@@jayshreedas8002 that makes sense
Well he is not trying to convice people with emotions, but with methodology.
He has years of practice and reflexion behind this class.
If only he would scrape off that revolting beard...
Sapolsky is a damn ninja. He moves forward faster than wind, without even stumbling or stopping once. At the same time he juggles with multiple disciplines and throws jokes that hit each time. And then you look and realize that meanwhile he also managed to get in your head and paint there a clear picture of what's going on.
this guy was born for this
The wizard...
That's talent!
@@DmSujaEntrepren
His adaptations fit his niche, wether post partum influence contributed isn't sufficiently excluded tho 😉
@@fionafiona1146 I had to read this more than a few times lol.....
I have binged-watched these lectures mutliple times, and I am fully aware that I do not retain enough to pass any exam, but when I listen to these lectures it makes me feel home. I keep finding hard sciences too cold and social sciences too... warm? Too romanticised? Anyway, you probably get the idea. This is right there in the middle, and it finally matches where I live in my head. It's incredibly comforting if not therapeutic. I really enjoy swimming in this universe. Thank you Dr.Sapolsky for making these and Stanford for putting these up for free! This is my Netflix.
I'm hoping it sinks in by listening. Way beyond my intellect but it's pretty cool.
same 😅
Such a great explanation. Couldn't agree more!
@@ThemultimediaguyProactive osmosis. That's my strategy, too.
@@ingridaholmes indeed ❤
Watching a lecture is great, but reversing it when you drift off in thought, pausing it to think, or look up nucleotide, triplet genetic code or just see what a protein actually looks like is priceless.
UA-cam should make content like this a priority.
Sapolsky is a damn ninja. He moves forward faster than wind, without even stumbling or stopping once. At the same time he juggles with multiple disciplines and throws jokes that hit each time. And then you look and realize that meanwhile he also managed to get in your head and paint there a clear picture of what's going on.
Apple Books was supposed to use that idea to create better, interactive educational material. Unfortunately creators of educational material don’t agree
@@4philipp Wouldn't it be amazing if resources like Wikipedia were to not just give an overview of subjects but aim towards adding everything we know about the subjects?
This is a great comment. Thankful to Stanford for publishing and I couldn’t agree more about UA-cam. This is where the algos should be pointing people.
Agree especially a good lecture.
I am caring for an elderly relative and thus unable to do the masters I wanted to (just not got the energy while doing this stressful behaviour). Human Behavioral Biology is what I look forward to each week. I take notes and then look up some of the papers (if they are avaiiable). I have one more of his books to read - done two.It is keeping my brain alive (I am 67). Thank you Stanford and Professor Sapolsky. This is one of the things that is keeping me feeling more or less sane.
Hey Celia Haddon, eight years after you wrote this comment. How are you doing now?
Hey Celia. 9 years after you wrote this comment. How are you? :)
hihi celia, it’s been 10 years, how ya doin mate
Yeah Celia what the fuck. I didn't think I did you in that bad.
She'd be like 77. She might have died
Stanford and MIT are really amazing. They are without a doubt the best universities in the world. They care so much about educating the world, that they are willing to put their courses on the internet for free, so that ordinary people may become knowledgable. Thank you for these courses!
Yale do it too!
You don't need to be a brown nose about it.
Yes...that's why they do it. xD
..u´d be amazed about how many (bright) doctors do that..
Videos like these started out as tools for students and a form of advertising for the school, as in, "Look at the great professors and lectures we provide." I'm sure students of past generations would have killed for this technology though. No more depending on notes scribbled half asleep in an early AM class or stressing about missing a day or two when ill. Honestly, if I were enrolled in any of these courses, I would watch them all ahead of time so I could focus on homework and have the real lectures to reinforce everything.
But you're right, it is nice that they've taken the time to upload full courses. When universities first started doing this, they'd upload a lesson or two and the rest would be on their private servers. I guess they finally acknowledged the public interest and free bandwidth through UA-cam.
Doesn't hurt that he's also an excellent speaker and very good at making sense of these concepts.
Listen, I'm just an artist who wants to listen something while painting. This is the best thing that has happened to me.
I would also recomend the Atheist experience or Talk Heathen for the same purpouse. Pretty amusing and educational call-in shows
same thing here, just with music. Practising guitar while listening.
"Crime pays but Botany doesn't " is also worth some attention (before you value the scenery as much as the educational content), "the Thought Emporium" has also been turning out long form content, I enjoy.
Saaaaaame
Dude same sketching or doodling and even while completing assignments.
Here's something to consider: How lucky are we that we can actually listen to somebody as intelligent and eloquent as this man who literally is educating some of the most educationally privileged people in the world? I'm really grateful for this, because I can't afford to go to college, because information is so valuable to me, more valuable than money, and I truly enjoy having different viewpoints that challenge my belief structure. This guy is so engaging, so intelligent and yet so gentle when he disseminates so much information. He truly wants to educate people, so he is truly in his own element. We're lucky to live in a time we can actually enjoy this kind of information because we want to, not because we have to, not because anybody told us to, but because we want to enrich our lives. Anyway, everybody have a great day!
I think you will also apreciate the YT channel of dr #RobertMorsend, just give him a try
@@galadrael thank you! I appreciate it!
Man I’m curious if he has any idea that people all around the world are still listening to his lectures like 10 or something years down the line. whoa
He probably gets drunk and checks the views just for kicks
@@whatabouttheearth - I get drunk and kick people too!
these lectures are timeless
@@self-righteousideologue9398nice
Yeah he writes books, goes on podcasts and has an Instagram run by him and his daughter.
I love UA-cam, university lectures accessible to a high school drop out
A very significant point! Kudos.
Dont let schooling get in the way of your education - Mark Twain
exactly me right now, very glad this was uploaded
4th grade dropout ....concurs.
I've known several people who only became interested in learning after leaving school
These lectures helped me recently decide to pursue a degree in Biochemistry! Free lectures of high quality such as these is so valuable to the public. Thank you very much for that.
It's incredible how he's so informed on so many different fields of study thus allowing him to explain human behavior from the micro to the macro with ease
His style of speaking really helps adhd heads to keep listening! New experience!
🙋 Same here!! 🌌
Yes!!
listen to the lecture of Patrick winston about how to speak. Robert sapolsky uses a lot of technics to teach. He is really clear, he starts this course telling you the basis of what will u learn and how to learn it. And always repeat a lot of times. Even give examples when gets trickier. The best thing is that this is on youtube. So we can pause.
For me with dislexya this is so perfect to study!
Yes! He speaks with the perfect speed and flow to keep a distractible brain focused
same! i have crippling adhd and although i need it to be on x2 speed, his teaching style is one of the only ways i ave been able to learn
It is 3 AM and i can't stop listening to this guy, and i have to go to work tomorrow....
4:30am for me, but luckily, I don't have to work tomorrow.
Duuude....how are now on your job?
* today... :)
i love it!
Oh im not alone it's 04.30am and im watching this and also i have a class at 08.30am but idc
Wow, how is it that just 20 minutes of listening to this Man has educated me more than two weeks of class with my current professor
Thanks these videos are gold
TonySoprano55 He is very user-friendly.
Because he actually makes you want to listen to him.
Love of their subject. Daily exposure to some of the greatest minds in the world. Quality of education, AND probably somewhere between 20-50 IQ points.
The more you understand a subject, the better and more compact you can explain it. He definitely has research level knowledge of the field and is giving intro classes. So, along with a bit of creativity, he can distill a *lot* of information into bite size and understandable chunks.
The down side is your brain gets tired because it's just so much information and what feels like almost every other word is actually very important lol.
What's interesting about how Robert Sapolsky teaches is that although he is only talking about a specific number of subjects per lecture.... the subjects he is introducing are packed with very complicated thoughts, if you don't know anything about the subjects in the first place. Once you listen to the lecture the first time, you can then re-listen, and this allows you to now have a basis for re-understanding and be able to better grasp what he is talking about.
I was thinking similarly since I have taken no courses which would serve as any sort of introduction or preparation for this material. An awful lot is making total sense, and I'm drinking it in like an oasis spring, but another review would probably help me with better term retention, for instance, or choosing side publications to read. And I'm sure there's a concept or two I didn't grasp in full (unlike, apparently, our illustrious 'PrinceKoopa').
I find Robert Sapolsky to be a very inspirational lecturer.. Just the enthusiasm in his voice alone keeps the information he talking about more interesting.
The driving force is not intellectual, it is emotional. He is passionate about his subject. Knowledge came later, but passion was first and remained the driver.
_"You know puberty, it's not a big deal_
_sometimes you get acne, sometimes a penis_
_people just deal with it"_
He's got a way with words doesn't he?
@Ismael Barrera lmao he said that too
Yes, he really does. 🤣
@@SeliahK lmao
I love how this professor injects humor in his lecture. Listening to this I find science really cool and genetics - awesome! I missed going back to school. It's interesting how he relates molecular genetics to the study of human biology and disease. How does the cell choreograph the events of cell division so that only one copy of each gene is passed on to the next generation? By what processes do genes become altered to provide the raw material for evolution? The possibility of finding answers to such fundamental questions makes molecular genetics an exciting field of biology. Good job Stanford.
@@airkuna have you?
@@A.K.00 :D no, i like girls only, so i would see what's under your skirt! your'e a girl , right?
I love having access to these lectures. Thank you Stanford for making these accessible to the public.
I have always been interested in why people do what they do... I remember when I was about 10, I asked someone why 2 people can have the same experience and respond in such different ways. I was referring to siblings with alcoholic parents- why might one become an alcoholic while the other might stay away from alcohol. Both might say its because their parents were alcoholics that they either followed that path or avoiding it. This kind of thing always intrigued me. Later in college and through research(I never went to high school), I gained more understanding of biology. Biology fascinates me as well. This lecture series brings the two together seamlessly and holds my attention extremely well.
I have been pondering returning to college to study something in the realm of biology for quite some time. After getting a concussion early this year, I've become almost obsessed with understanding how this intricate machine we call the human really works. I'm especially interested in how body & mind interplay. How internal is affected by external. How physical is affected by mental, and how mental is affected by biological. This series is filling in some gaps in my understanding & I can't express enough how much I value that. So, thank you again for making this available. Thank you, Robert Sapolsky for making it so engaging.
I paid more attention to 4 videos of this professor speaking than I did to all of my professors in all of undergrad and grad school combined.
this reminds me of my professors I had a Rutgers. But having now graduating I have been looking endlessly to gaining more detailed knowledge on topics I have already learned about. He is amazing!
+Carla Ralston He sure is! There is a lecture about what makes us human that Sapolsky also did; if you like this you should check it out!
This teacher is a revelation for me, I think ill watch everything I can from him whenever I can. Thanks for sharing your knowledge.
Are you still alive?
I have a Molecular Biology class for my first year of medical school here in France. It's absolutely fascinating. Thank you, Stanford; when I start my winter break next week, I'll have these wonderful videos to recapitulate the semester with.
How did it go?
A kindly reminder, for wobble base pairing to happen, it is usually the third base that differs, rather than the second. Check any genetics textbook and you will find me correct.
Nonetheless, I enjoy Dr. Sapolsky's lectures a lot. I play them as some sort of podcast and it works wonder. Thanks a lot for putting these lectures up here.
as a 14 year old who knew the 3rd is usually least consequential, threw me off a little but i assumed i mustve misunderstood the weel from the book i read when i was 11 since that was blatantly the most obvious explanation, but im so glad you mentioned itXD i wouldve taken sapolsky at his word haha, i supose this is a little reminder on questioning my sources haha
@@Summer-uq1vr I presume you have higher than average intelligence.
I’m addicted to these lectures. Kudos to Stanford for making it publicly available.
"Puberty; sometimes you get acne, sometimes you get a penis." - Prof Sapolsky.
+SpankyTheHippo83 That story made me wonder why pre-pubescent males need testosterone at all. It sounds like you can get away without it, so why spend all that metabolic effort producing it, when you could leave it out till puberty?
+HebaruSan Because it increases aggression which helps in finding a mate. I can imagine there are many other reasons too; you should probably look it up.
Little Leigh Why would you need to find a mate before puberty?
+HebaruSan I can't imagine that testosterone occurs before puberty tbh. As fara s I know, the release of testosterone is something that marks the start of puberty in males. If this is incorrect however, then I can only speculate -- not being a biologist myself-- that in Homo Sapiens -- with out extreme pair bonding -- it would serve to begin the process of finding a pair bond before the male is ready for reproduction as females generally are ready to mate before males. I must reiterate, I am not a biologist, you would probably be better looking this up than relying on me! :)
+Little Leigh
Androgens are present while in utero and play a very important role in the development of the gonads, they continue play many other important roles throughout your entire lifespan (not just puberty) including muscle development, bone development and of course reproduction.
What a outstanding gift of access to this highly motivated educator. Thank you Dr. Sapolsky!!!
I only took English and Pscych in College and as interdisciplinary studies for my animation career, but just taught myself how to animate online. I love that I can continue to learn even now that I'm full time.
This is the first one in the sequence where I had to rewind to double-check my understanding. Even then, it only took me two listens to get something well outside my expertise. Terrific stuff, lucidly explained. Things like this really make me believe again in the old notion of the internet as a repository for human knowledge.
If this is him just glossing over the basics I can just imagine the details that are in his head, what the advanced students/studies get to hear/learn. Amazing! (and lucky them, the advanced students)
He was unknown by me a year ago. But today he is one of the biggest names I know.
I sincerely respect him, he is such a good teacher too.
Thanks, Robert. I had you for a week in '87-'88 first year survey, and have enjoyed following your books and on UA-cam over the many years. Hearing you tell all about the baboons helped make Stanford worthwhile.
High quality education for all. More of this is exactly what the world needs.
Damn, these lectures have made me rediscover how much I love learning. School being too easy and boring pretty much beat that out of me. Now I know again what it's like to actually be curious!
OMG Thank you SO much, Stanford University! I'm glad I can listen and learn and not pay $30,000 a year. Thank you thank you
Bookmarked for now. I watched these lectures about 12 years ago. I looked for what I was hoping to understand - confirmation bias. Now taking notes and following up.
Much to expand upon.
I have been watching his lectures for fun. I am taking a course this Fall in molecular genetics and thought I'd prep by watching some videos on it. I happened to search for molecular genetics and the first video that pops up is by Dr. Sapolsky. Thank you youtube!!!
These lectures are wonderful, full of enthusiasm, full of humour and explain everything clearly. I think he "gets" just about anything and everything.
You did a great job and service to us lay learners out here, Robert Sapolsky.
And Stanford U.
Absolutely blew my mind away! I have learned more from this 90 minute lecture than I have from all my genetics classes combined! It all now clicks and makes sense.
How can one guy be so smart, AND be able to share his knowledge..?? Truly flabbergasting....
Thanks, now I know a new word!
Listening to him is like listening to a symphony. Wonderful.
I'm starting to change my mind about the course that I wanted to take in College, since I'm getting fond of Mr. Sapolsky's lectures.
I was the highest graded students in my science classes. I was a borderline genius and psycho. The students in higher learning have such an opportunity in this age. I hope my work will some day effect the stars that these students can be. What a venture. Especially in biology and human development. Find the stars achievers of this incredible future
Watching this in 2021! Absolutely incredible, I can't stop learning.
This is better than watching a movie. You have me hooked Mr. Sapolski.
Amazingly lucid lecture on a very complex subject. But I can't help but thinking this genius, while talking in terms we all can understand, there is a whirlpool of organic chemistry formulas racing through his head simultaneously.
What a privilege to be able to watch. Professor Sapolsky is an amazing lecturer! Thank you, Professor, and thank you, Stanford, for sharing!
This guy is a genius and Stanford is great in giving us all the gift of his videos to increase our science knowledge.
The middle nucleotide point mutation is actually the most likely to change the amino acid. The third nucleotide point mutation will code for the same amino acid, on average, 69% of the time.
Why is this?
Agree, I had to actually pause at that part
Thanks for the corrections
@@nate-manlovesgland2347 this allows for mutation to occur without thw change of codon which is important as mutations can have negative effects on function. Having some room for error is ideal.
I'm an engineering student and hasn't taken a bio class since sophomore year of HS, I wish I found these videos sooner
whoa, I just can't stop watching his lectures. I can't work, I can't do chores, I'm frickin addicted!
meanwhile, my biology teacher only knows how to read off the slides and can't answer half of my questions.
That's a world wide scenario
Hang on in there buddy! Read your own way! try not to make an arse of him or her... like I did... that didn’t work out well for me in high school BIO.
Like Socrates said:
I can’t teach them, I can only make them think.
Study by yourself
Well work toward improving your education system.
My bio teachers all have been epic (i live in france ) and i was not in some private high rated school , it was public school located between poor neighboor and middleclass one.
Improving public school is either increasing tax (wich lots of people will bitch about) or better distribution of it. I heard that in the Usa, public school funding is related to income of the area... Wich is obvioulsy a big problem.
It should be equally distributated by the state at least ..
28:58 "and you've just given away the punchline, you creep" 😂😂😂
i felt kind of bad for the person :-)
I really enjoyed a laugh 🤣
Right? That was hilarious
@@B33t_R007 me too
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
00:00 🧬 Evolution and Criticisms
- Overview of the course focus on interdisciplinary connections between behavioral biology and molecular genetics.
- Criticisms of the heritability and adaptation concepts in the evolution of behavior.
- Introduction to the importance of molecular biology in understanding evolution.
03:37 🧬 Sociobiologists' View on Heritability
- Sociobiologists and evolutionary psychologists emphasizing heritability in behaviors.
- Use of structured models based on genetics to explain behavior.
- Molecular biologists' contempt for the sociobiologists' approach.
04:41 🧬 Molecular Biologists' Perspective on Evolution
- Shift to molecular biology's perspective on evolution.
- Emphasis on genes as molecules, specifying proteins, and their role in shaping behavior.
- Introduction to the central role of proteins, DNA, and the flow of genetic information.
08:00 🧬 Proteins, DNA, and Shape
- Explanation of the critical relationship between DNA sequences, protein shapes, and functions.
- Importance of protein shape in interactions, illustrated by the "lock and key" analogy.
- Exploration of how amino acids, proteins, and DNA contribute to the diversity of shapes.
10:45 🧬 Central Dogma of Life
- Introduction to the central dogma: DNA to RNA to protein.
- Overview of the flow of information and the significance of DNA as the starting point.
- Mention of the violation of the central dogma with the discovery of retroviruses.
13:37 🧬 Importance of DNA Mutations
- Discussion of mutations, focusing on the consequences of changes in DNA.
- Explanation of point mutations, deletions, and insertions.
- Emphasis on the potential impact of mutations on protein function and downstream consequences.
23:34 🧬 Microevolutionary Change
- Overview of microevolutionary change resulting from mutations in proteins.
- Discussion on how mutations affect the efficacy of proteins.
- Connection between protein function and microevolutionary changes in the context of evolution.
24:58 🧬 Genetic Mutation Impact on Enzyme Function
- Genetic mutation example: Phenylketonuria (PKU).
- PKU results from a classical point mutation in a gene coding for an enzyme that converts phenylalanine into a safer form. The mutated enzyme loses its function, leading to the accumulation of toxic phenylalanine and causing neurological damage.
26:24 🧪 Hormonal Mutation: Testicular Feminization Syndrome
- Example: Testicular Feminization Syndrome (TFS).
- TFS involves an androgen receptor mutation, leading to insensitivity to testosterone. Despite high testosterone levels, individuals with TFS develop a female phenotype. This highlights the role of receptor mutations in gender expression.
30:08 🧬 Mutation in Testosterone Biosynthesis
- Disease example: Mutation in testosterone biosynthetic enzymes.
- Mutations in enzymes involved in testosterone production can result in individuals born phenotypically female with extremely low testosterone levels. Puberty triggers a surge in testosterone, causing a transition from female to male.
34:50 🧠 Neurochemical Signaling and Anxiety
- Genetic variation in benzodiazepine receptors.
- Variability in benzodiazepine receptor genes contributes to individual differences in anxiety levels. Examining these variations provides insights into the genetic basis of anxiety-related traits across different species.
40:01 🧬 Evolutionary Implications of Genetic Changes
- Fox P2 gene as an example.
- Analysis of the Fox P2 gene demonstrates how single base pair changes, driven by positive selection, can lead to significant evolutionary differences, especially in traits related to communication and language.
47:37 🧬 Genetic Relatedness and Evolutionary History
- Clarification on genetic relatedness.
- Sharing 50% of DNA with siblings and 98% with chimpanzees is not contradictory. The percentage reflects different aspects of genetic relatedness-siblinghood involves shared alleles, while the similarity to chimps highlights evolutionary history.
48:35 🧬 Genes and Genetic Similarities
- Genes specify traits like antlers, dorsal fins, petals, pistils, and more.
- Different species may share genes coding for similar traits, leading to genetic similarities.
- The human-chimp genome comparison highlights a 98% similarity in genes coding for similar traits.
50:01 🧬 Types of Genes and Variants
- Genes can come in different flavors or variants.
- Discussion on the diversity of genes and the variations in traits they code for.
- Highlighting the importance of understanding different versions of particular genes.
51:28 🧬 Evolution, Genetics, and Political Themes
- Point mutations and gradual changes lead to genetic advantages in terms of evolution.
- Emphasis on the role of competition in the evolution of behavior and species.
- Connection between gradualism in evolution and its intertwined political and philosophical implications.
52:26 📉 Gradualism vs. Punctuated Equilibrium
- Introduction to the punctuated equilibrium model by Stephen Jay Gould and Niles Eldridge.
- Gradualism challenged; long periods of stasis punctuated by rapid evolutionary changes.
- Exploration of the political themes associated with the two models and their contrasting worldviews.
55:07 🐚 Punctuated Equilibrium and Paleontology
- Gould's punctuated equilibrium influenced by paleontology and fossil records.
- Gaps in the fossil record lead to the idea of long periods of stasis and sudden evolutionary changes.
- The role of paleontologists in tracing evolutionary lineages using fossil records.
56:58 🔗 Molecular Genetics and Gene Structure
- Introduction to the modular construction of genes with exons and introns.
- Discovery of splicing enzymes and their role in generating different proteins from the same gene.
- Implications for tissue-specific gene expression and the combinatorial possibilities of protein variations.
01:07:41 🔍 Combinatorial Possibilities of Gene Expression
- Baltimore's insight into the combinatorial possibilities of gene expression.
- Discussion on the modular basis of gene construction leading to diverse protein outcomes.
- The shift from one gene, one protein, to one gene generating multiple proteins.
01:11:54 🧬 Non-Coding DNA and Junk DNA
- Discovery of non-coding DNA and the realization that 95% of DNA is non-coding.
- Challenges to the notion of "junk DNA" and the quest to understand the function of non-coding DNA.
- Recognition of the potential significance of non-coding DNA in genetic processes.
01:13:19 🧬 DNA Regulation Overview
- DNA sequences are not the starting point of the central dogma of life; instead, they serve as the readout under the control of various factors.
- 95% of DNA is dedicated to regulating genes, introducing the concept of regulatory sequences upstream from genes.
- Promoter and repressor sequences are stretches of DNA coding for switches, influencing the activation or deactivation of gene transcription.
01:15:34 🔄 Transcription Factors and Gene Expression
- Transcription factors are molecules, usually proteins, that bind to specific DNA sequences (promoters) and activate or inhibit gene transcription.
- Different genes can share the same promoter, leading to the activation of entire networks of proteins with functional similarities.
- One gene can have multiple promoters, responding to different signals, allowing for versatile gene activation in various contexts.
01:19:19 🌐 Environmental Regulation of Gene Expression
- Gene expression is regulated by environmental factors, either within the cell or from external sources like hormones or chemical messengers.
- Environmental signals, such as low energy levels, can activate transcription factors, influencing the transcription of genes related to energy regulation.
- Hormones, like testosterone, can travel through the bloodstream and affect gene expression in distant cells, showcasing the impact of external environments.
01:24:33 🔄 Contextual Significance in Gene Expression
- The most interesting aspects of DNA lie in the regulation of when genes are turned on or off, not just the properties of the proteins they encode.
- Emphasis on the modular ability of one gene to generate diverse proteins based on different contexts, introducing "if-then" clauses in gene expression.
- Contextual regulation, rather than the protein's intrinsic qualities, adds complexity and richness to understanding genetic information.
01:27:23 🧬 Chromatin and Epigenetic Regulation
- Chromatin, the structural stabilizer of DNA, plays a crucial role in regulating access to DNA sequences by transcription factors.
- Chromatin remodeling, influenced by environmental factors, determines whether transcription factors can access DNA, adding another layer of regulation.
- Epigenetics, focusing on heritable changes in gene function not caused by alterations in DNA sequence, introduces the concept that development is all about epigenetics, not just genetics.
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Channel admin should pin this comment.
I'm officially hooked on this course - I've just watched the first 4 straight through and really need to take a break on it, but it's addictive.
I particularly enjoyed getting a bit more perspective on the "controversy" around Steven J. Gould. I read a ton of his popular essays early in my lie and found it eye opening.Then I became aware he was dismissed by some in the scientific community but never quite understood while. It sounds as if that may have been resolved and it is now appropriate to look at both the time sequence approaches when seeking understanding. (Perhaps this gets more definitive later in the course.)
I'm studing pedagogics and psychology and I think... That I need to learn more about epigenetics! :D
Thanks for this videos!
I study philosophy (and cultural Anthropology), aiming at vocational experimental archeology.... No knowledge is ever unaplicable.
1:02:45 “evolutionary jerks” vs “creeps” (punctuated equilbrium-ists vs gradualists) wit was perfect
My eyes and ears are wide open ... As this amazing professor is not only obviously knowledgeable but also quite eloquent!🙏🙏 Thankyou SIR
THE LAST FEW QS!!! I WAS THINKING OF IT!!! This is the first time it ever happened!! Usually when I think of qs in lectures the drs never have an answer for it, or an unsatisfactory answers, but this is the first time, a professor voiced the EXACT same question Ive been thinking about in epigentics.. wow.. I wish I could meet Sapolsky 🥺🥺 stanford is sooo lucky to have him!! Its not fair 😭😭😭😭
I never knew epigenetics was a thing!!!! I was soo mindblown multiple times during this entire lecture!!! Wow.. is this what real teaching is???
It's real amazing listening to this guy, damnnn . He clarify things every straight and knock well in the head.
These effin lectures are mind-blowing. Extremely grateful that this guy (me) , who probably only graduated high school because his siblings died, is able to watch content such as this.
a Decade down the line and this stuff is still relevant as ever.
Why wouldn't be?
Wow. I'm loving these lectures so much. This stuff has blown me away. I'm am now more fascinated and astounded by evolution than ever before. Thank you Stanford and thank you Robert Sapolsky. I will continue with this series.
i will never see or hear the simile 'like a glove' again without mentaly replaying the sound of a lecture hall of depressed young adults disappointedly muttering the last word😂😂 love to hear it
9th Grade and wanted to be a biologist since I was 4. Thanks for posting these :) Finally narrowed it down to either pursue marine biology or horticulture!
Salpolsky has me enraptured, so grateful for these lectures, cheers for sharing with the world Salpolsky + Stanford.
This the kind of content UA-cam needs to promote more
I just started my Winter break for medical school after an intense bout of finals...and I'm spending it watching a lecture series on evolutionary biology for pleasure. What is wrong with me?
LoL bro i watched it in 1 week before my 1 st year med school uni exama and since then i watched it 8-9 times and i am in halfway of my second year its natural we cant ignore data. Eneways med scince is mess. Its just jack of all master of none kinda since but i agree its tough .
I don't know but you make it sound funny!
Maybe those with the intelligence to appreciate these are just happy to have good quality lectures available.
What's to hate?
The thing explained at 1:08:30 is actually code reusability. Reminds me of functions in programming 😄
I was thinking coding too. First was a hard drive directory. All fragmented.
I did mediocre in high school biology, but somehow the way this guy explains stuff makes so much sense.
His lectures are great for those that are trying to learn. I wonder how his tests are. He does a great job of illustrating the fact that nothing in phsychology is unidimensional, but that makes test taking difficult. With nothing being black and white, what would a multiple choice question look like? I'd be terrified to answer an essay question. I would love to see a sample test for him.
would probably die with an american style essay😂
I would think it would be an essay weighted format with some terms to define or provide an example of as well as identifying key figures and their contribution to the science.
I am thankful for the professor as it cleared my doubt of prescription factors while I was studying A-levels. One thing that surprisingly came up to me was how our environment is more important than our genetics when he was talking about Epigenetics.
"And that's how you get evolutionary jumps" right at the end. What a cliffhanger!
I truly love his lectures. I wish all my instructors were like Bob
"Puberty: Sometimes you get acne, sometimes you get a penis." Great stuff! :D
Thank you for posting a humorous comment and not some grandstanding self edifying statement about how technically something said wasn't correct
it was good ahahah
45 years since i studied this at UCLA, enormous breakthroughs, i am au current now. thanks
I'm a computer sci student on his 4th video on behaviour evolution 😂... what a professor wish I had this person as my programming professor.
Robert Sapolsky and Noam Chomsky, the way they speak is very soothing and it actually makes me want to listen and concentrate more
I also love the fact that he gives us so many interesting and real life examples to back up his theory. Just amazing!
I hope the students realize bjustbhow fortunate they are to have such an fantastic teacher. This professor, he just enthralls you and keeps you interested. It's almost like you don't realise you are actually learning! I wish I had had the opportunity these students had. At least we have these videos!
Nice lectures! There is a small mistake at ca 19:45: it is always the last/third (NOT the second) nucleotide of a codon that, when exchanged for a different nucleotide, does (often) not change the amino acid it is coding for.
You are right, i am studying molecular biology atm. Was just going to comment this :)
I have a B.sc. in molecular biology and this guy explains the whole genetics part better than what i got. And it's not even in my native language.
I really wonder how different his lecture would be today, 11 years out.
That is not possible....
He speaks perfect, fluent English like no professor I’ve ever had privilege of hearing. So passionate about his subject and knowledge, full stop. An absolute joy.
"There is a whole world of examples showing that everything I just said is wrong, but for our purposes, everything I just said is right."
I love biology.
"If-then contingencies", is the computational biologists way of using the QM-TIME, mathematical singularity-duality, of frequency-probability shape shifting the numerical multiples of unit vector. Ie it's Quantum Chemistry and "probably" one of the best lecture-presentations of advancing the concepts of hierarchical complexity across all science.
1:10:29 "You can find any pattern you want to any level of precision you want as long as you're prepared to ignore enough data." mattparker
That’s quite true. The importance however is not the pattern but the solution you develop from observing it.
Read "The Agile Gene" by Matt Ridley. It goes over most of the things Sapolsky talks about here as well as things he talks about in previous lectures as well. It explains what Ridley calls Nature via Nurture, where our traits are modified by our nurture, and is what Sapolsky is talking about here and gives you a richer understanding of the background finds behind the same issues.
Never made it as a poor man, couldn't make it as a blind man stealing... BUT I'm privileged to have lectures like this to enrich my mind without cost of a tuition 🙃
I'm in my first year of high school and a artist but i just want to listen to something to fulfill my interest in psychology so I'm now binging all of these lectures.
Epigenetics!! I wish my instructors would sound like this...class would be much more interesting. I love the variant of the vocabulary that is used. Science is awesome. Genetics are epic! :)
wow..you are soo pretty and being interested in smart stuff makes you amazing
Thank you:)
Ilce Torres with pleasure wonderful lady
Grateful to get this edu and adding Sapolsky to my Teacher/Master/Guru/Swami list!!!
Thanks for the courses your university puts out on the web. It's opened my eyes to new horizons.
Thank you so much for this incredible, wonderful opportunity to listen and watch the lectures of Robert Sapolsky. Thank you for doing this for free! This is the best thing you could ever make! They shall be accessible like Bible, to everyone. The best educational course ever, the best professor ever.
ok this is my 4th lecture today this guy has me hooked...on educational lectures!
Epigenetics very much solves the nature vs nurture debate too then. Since the nurturing inevitably affects how nature is expressed. .
feels like my mind is gonna explode...... LOVE THIS