How to read the genome and build a human being | Riccardo Sabatini

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 21 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 358

  • @JLone55
    @JLone55 6 років тому +107

    How is this NOT the #1 Ted talk? Breathtaking in the subject matter, expertly delivered and perfectly relevant to everyone

  • @novusvoss
    @novusvoss 8 років тому +21

    Ah finally a well spoken TED talk. This is how it looks, sounds and feels like when someone has no stage fear whatsoever and is completely immersed inside the topic. And what a topic it is! All I want is to hear more..

  • @tarazed84
    @tarazed84 8 років тому +165

    Now THAT was a proper TED talk. Thanks!

  • @dsaguilardenis
    @dsaguilardenis 6 років тому +54

    What a well-explained video!
    It reminds me what an ancient book of wisdom accurately states: “Your eyes even saw me as an embryo; all its parts were written in your book regarding the days when they were formed, before any of them existed.”-Psalm 139:16.

    • @nathaliejohn3614
      @nathaliejohn3614 3 роки тому +6

      The Bible, the word of God, the good news , you meant. Jesus Christ is the greatest designer, architect. We can never be wiser than Jesus Christ.

    • @TheAnianite
      @TheAnianite 2 роки тому +1

      Haha I just quoted the same! :D

    • @dsaguilardenis
      @dsaguilardenis 2 роки тому +1

      @@nathaliejohn3614 🙂👍
      "Thus saith Jehovah, the Holy One of Israel, and his Maker . . . I have made the earth, and created man upon it."-Isaiah 45:11, 12 ASV

  • @ngailai1763
    @ngailai1763 4 роки тому +111

    He acknowledged Rosalind Franklin and not the other 2 guys - it's long due.

    • @neharai4927
      @neharai4927 3 роки тому +5

      He was being factually correct. She took the picture u know. The picture encoded in XRD data. She collected the data. The other two interpreted the data with her help to correctly predict the helical nature

    • @XMysticHerox
      @XMysticHerox 3 роки тому

      "the other 2 guys" do deserve recognition. They did do most of the interpretation. I don´t think he was specifically doing it to acknowledge Rosalind Franklin either. Also "it´s long due"? Everyone knows about her.
      But don´t take it out on Watson and Crick. Watson actually advocated for her getting a nobel prize posthumously at the time long before most people knew anything about this story or cared much about feminism.

    • @XMysticHerox
      @XMysticHerox 3 роки тому

      @@neharai4927 Well she didn´t actually take the picture either. What she did do and why she deserves recognition is proving the double helix structure of DNA that had been suspected from models earlier which was then used by Watson and Crick to construct their model for DNA as the building block of life.

  • @Von-dee
    @Von-dee 2 роки тому +2

    this is the best talk I have ever watched. I was completely absorbed I forgot all surrounding noises for 16 mins.

  • @user-nz5bn8iw7f
    @user-nz5bn8iw7f 8 років тому +7

    I can't explain how mind boggling this this. We only discovered the human genome in a matter of decades ago so imagine being able to properly read it and properly manipulate it. Give it a few hundred years and we'll be able to control absolutely everything to do with the human body; from reversing diseases to *maybe* even stopping death.

    • @selgut464
      @selgut464 3 роки тому +1

      It is starting to being manipulated by the va x
      And if u are able to control the human body, you will not be completely human anymore but part of an AI.

  • @ashwinchakravarthy5603
    @ashwinchakravarthy5603 6 років тому +61

    Hahaha his Italian accent and what he's explain are both brilliant

  • @vipul6304
    @vipul6304 5 років тому +12

    This was very fascinating and especially the way he presented all the information. One of the best ted talks.

  • @ClockworkRBLX
    @ClockworkRBLX 6 років тому +73

    What did the librarian say to the student?
    *Read more*

  • @athensf
    @athensf Рік тому

    As an outsider, I am trying to understand the significance of genomics for mankind today. This is an amazing resource to motivate the topic.

  • @benjaminpjatkevich3641
    @benjaminpjatkevich3641 8 років тому +3

    Truely inspiring. Every time I come across a talk like this it gives me chills because it's like geting to the future not in a dream but reality. The things that used to be fiction are now becoming ordinary. I love living nowadays.

  • @TheDrunkardHu
    @TheDrunkardHu 8 років тому +31

    Brilliant presentation.

  • @kateapples1411
    @kateapples1411 8 років тому +170

    TED is wonderful when it isn't acting as a social justice and/or feminist platform for factless or out of context BS. This is definitely a talk that's high up on the list of favorites.

    • @flensdude
      @flensdude 8 років тому +11

      Eww, is that an opinion? How gross! Why would you ever post that?

    • @justdev8965
      @justdev8965 8 років тому +2

      +flensdude | pTarian did you have a stroke? Ytoy didn't make any sense at all in your comment. It was rather hot today so don't wory maybe tomorrow you won't have another stroke and blabber rubbish

    • @b8m8wuts46
      @b8m8wuts46 8 років тому +8

      I avoid all feminazi ted videos

    • @flensdude
      @flensdude 8 років тому

      devis ago Nah, I am not that good. I wouldn't have been able to write proper sentences if I was having a stroke, but I am sure some can.

    • @B33Ys
      @B33Ys 8 років тому +1

      stay ignorant! good citizen!

  • @harvirsingh6046
    @harvirsingh6046 6 років тому +3

    I don't know why but this talk gave me goosebumps . Loved it !

  • @mvinayagar
    @mvinayagar 4 роки тому +2

    A grand salute for the passion the speaker holds.

  • @msamadyasimbarashe6646
    @msamadyasimbarashe6646 2 роки тому +2

    Psalm 139:13-16
    13 For you formed my inward parts;
    you knitted me together in my mother’s womb.
    14 I praise you, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made.
    Wonderful are your works;
    my soul knows it very well.
    15 My frame was not hidden from you,
    when I was being made in secret,
    intricately woven in the depths of the earth.
    16 Your eyes saw my unformed substance;
    in your book were written, every one of them,
    the days that were formed for me,
    when as yet there was none of them.

  • @cupcakearmy
    @cupcakearmy 8 років тому +4

    THIS are the TEDs a signed up for. Awesome, thanks for sharing

  • @VolodymyrMelnyk
    @VolodymyrMelnyk 8 років тому +2

    There've been so many amazing talks lately and this one is so thought provoking, especially what he says at the end. So balanced and farseeing.

  • @danielhicks
    @danielhicks 8 років тому +27

    this means everything to everything we can think or dream of

    • @JonathanHartwig
      @JonathanHartwig 8 років тому +13

      This + CRISPR = wow.

    • @changchoonkit
      @changchoonkit 8 років тому

      +Jonathan Hartwig exactly what came to my mind while watching this video

    • @MyChihuahua
      @MyChihuahua 3 роки тому

      Horrifying what they will attempt...

  • @dimitrismitsopoulos4265
    @dimitrismitsopoulos4265 4 роки тому

    Tον αυγουστο του 2019 και ενω βρισκομουν εκτος διαδικτυακης χρησης μερικους μηνες,μιας και ειχα διακοψει την συνδεση,στο σπιτι που κατοικω μεχρι σημερα.Ομαδα ερευνητων αποτελουμενη απο γυναικες,σε συνδυασμο με ομαδα αντρων που παρισταναν του κουτσους,και σχηματιζαν γκριματσες στο προσωπο τους καθε φορα που εμφανιζοταν μπροστα μου,αρχισαν να με παρενοχλουν καθημερινα στις κοινωνικες μου συναναστροφες,ειτε βρισκουμαν για λογους ψυχαγωγιας ειτε για λογους οικονομικων και εμπορικων συνναλαγων.Πολυ γρηγορα καταλαβα οτι σχετιζοντουσαν με τα minds control programmes του artificial inelligence.Oι λογοι που με οδηγησαν στο παραπανω συμπερασμα ηταν οτι χρησιμοποιουσαν λογια που αφορουσαν τις προσωπικες μου μυστικες σκεψεις,και αναφεροντουσαν σε προσωπικες μου μνημες απο την παιδικη μου ηλικια μεχρι τη ηλικια των 49 του σημερα.Καταλαβα συχρονως οτι βρισκομουν και σε παρακολουθηση απο την αστυνομια,και τις μυστικες υπηρεσιες,ετσι πριν ακομα ξανασυνδεθω με τον διαδυκτιακο τοπο στη κατοικια μου,κατι που εγινε τον γεναρη του 2020,με συνδεση μου στην cosmote,αρχισα να αναλυω με εναν προσωπικο μονολογο,φωναχτα μιας και ηξερα οτι κατεγραφε η αστυνομια οτι ελεγα στην κατοικια μου,την σχεση της ομαδας των ερευνητριων με τα mind control programmes ,και την αναμειξη των ερευνητικων ομαδων στις πολιτικες διαδικασιες στις αναρχικες και κουμουνιστικες ομαδες,σε συνδυασμο με τη χρηση προηγμενης τεχνολογιας.Αυτο οδηγησε τις ιδιες τις ερευνητικες ομαδςς σε ενα μπαραζ αποκαλυψεων μπροστα στα ματια μου,μιας η μια ερευνητικη ομαδα ξεσκεπαζε την αλλη εμφανιζοντας μπροστα μου σχεδον ολους τους πολιτικους αρχηγους των πολιτικων κομματων της ελλαδος.Με την ακολουθη σειρα εμφανιστηκαν μπροστα μου ο κυριος μιχαλολιακος την ιδια ημερα με τον κυριο τσιπρα,στη συνεχαια εμφανιστηκε η κυρια παπαρηγα,και στη συνεχεια ο κυριος βαρουφακης.Αυτωματος συνειδητοποιησα οτι τα mind control programmes του artificial intelligence διαχειριζονται απο τις ερευνητικες ομαδες που συνδεονται μεσω του Ο.Η.Ε με τις ερευνητικες ομαδες των ηγεσιων των πολιτικων κομματων της ελλαδος,και συχρονως δραστηριοποιουνται και στις αναρχικες πολιτικες διαδικασιες παντα με τη χρηση προηγμενης τεχνολογιας,του ελεγχου σκεψης,και αλλων προηγμενων μεθοδων που χρησιμοποιουνται ανορθοδοξα και με επικυνδυνες μεθοδους απεναντι στην ασφαλεια καθε ανυποψιαστου πολιτη,και συμμετεχοντα στις πολιτικες διαδικασιεςΜιας και η συνεργασια των ερευνητικων ομαδων επεκτεινεται και στους κατασκοπικους και πρακτορικους κυκλους της ελληνικης πολιτικης κοινωνικης συνθεσης.Οι παραπανω αποκαλυψεις απο μερους μου γινανε μεσα απο την κατοικια μου χρησιμοποιωντας την ιδια την παρακολουθηση της αστυνομιας σαν μαρτυρα της βασανιστικης καθημερινοτητας που ζουσα.Επακολουθα οι ερευνητικες και κατασκοπικες μοναδες τις ελληνικης κοινωνιας εξαγριωθηκαν με αποτελεσμα να δεχθω εκατονταδες απειλες απο τους πιο σκληρους ελληνες,στον δρομο,μιας με τη χρηση της πρηγμενης τεχνολογιας,οι κατασκοποι και οι ερευνητριες με παρουσιαζαν να απειλω και να εξυβριζω,πρακτορες,αστυνομικους,παρανομους και αλλους σκληροτραχιλους ανθρωπους του στρατου και της αστυνομιας που εργαζονταν για τον ελληνικο εθνικο διοικητικο κορμο στο συνολο του.Εχω γλυτωσει τη ζωη μου ως εκ θαυματος και παρακαλω για τη βοηθεια σας...

  • @srikanthtupurani6316
    @srikanthtupurani6316 7 місяців тому

    Most remarkable thing is people are able to find the structure of dna. It is not easy. Millions of combinations of a,c,t,g. It is mind-blowing.

  • @jessebalderas6406
    @jessebalderas6406 8 років тому

    it's a shame that only the most ignorant people in our human race leave comments and people that are actually making a difference are working so hard they don't have enough time to chime in it's embarrassing thank you for moving Humanity forward

  • @cherylangel1714
    @cherylangel1714 3 роки тому +7

    God is an awesome creator to have created us all so unique, while using such similar coding.

  • @8203105208088
    @8203105208088 8 місяців тому

    I have watched it several times and still and still mind blowing.

  • @jimwilliams1536
    @jimwilliams1536 8 років тому +15

    a longer useful life span is paramount in the quest for a better world. With age comes wisdom.

    • @kianheus2487
      @kianheus2487 8 років тому

      With age also comes a higher population and a faster rate of global warming, increasing the chance that we won't overcome it and die to extreme climate change

    • @spongebobspongebob24
      @spongebobspongebob24 8 років тому

      Politicians don't listen to wise people today, why do you think they would in the future. Actually, I think that the majority of people who will ever get to afford and want to use this tech so they could add more years into their life are the greedy, powerful, rich moguls/politicians who bring devastation to our planet.
      Wise people, on the other hand, doesn't need to live forever to help mankind. Leaving their knowledge on books, internet, videos, etc. are enough.

    • @jimwilliams1536
      @jimwilliams1536 8 років тому +1

      I'll remember to read the pamflet of your life..

    • @spongebobspongebob24
      @spongebobspongebob24 8 років тому

      Oh. I thought I'd get a proper discussion. I was wrong.
      Bye.

    • @jimwilliams1536
      @jimwilliams1536 8 років тому +1

      With a name like spongebobspongebob24 you should expect no one to take you seriously. I bet you think immortality is unnatural too..

  • @sindhuramrutha
    @sindhuramrutha 2 роки тому +1

    A Masterpiece. Period

  • @Faisal-tx9ii
    @Faisal-tx9ii 2 роки тому

    One of the best speech I heard in my life.

  • @nothajzl
    @nothajzl Рік тому

    This is one of the most interesting TED talks and it has only 290K views?? That’s sad

  • @TGILCLOVERSG
    @TGILCLOVERSG 3 роки тому

    This video should become the most watched video on UA-cam. 👏🏼👏🏼

  • @haleIrwinG
    @haleIrwinG 7 років тому +2

    if there's anyone who ever think that this won't go wrong, you seriously need to think again

  • @bombytetoo
    @bombytetoo 4 роки тому

    This is the only TED Talk that didn't put me to sleep

  • @funnysundayfunnys8537
    @funnysundayfunnys8537 2 роки тому

    this video is going to blow up in about 5 years when the news pick up the new trend

  • @rohanpandey2037
    @rohanpandey2037 8 років тому +4

    AMAZING TED TALK- both presentation and content

  • @nesrineemira6381
    @nesrineemira6381 4 роки тому

    "think about that again when we think that we are different THIS IS THE AMOUNTTHAT WE SHARE "

  • @barleben48
    @barleben48 5 років тому +3

    Excellent presentation. The use of that book collection provides a down to earth appreciation of the complexity of the subject. I wonder if this facial prediction method would work on children?

  • @isatousarr7044
    @isatousarr7044 3 місяці тому +1

    In the near future, reading and interpreting the human genome will be as simple as scanning a barcode. With advancements in AI and biotechnology, we’ll be able to map out not only genetic predispositions but also manipulate the genome in real-time to optimize health, extend life, and even enhance human capabilities. Building a human from scratch could become a sophisticated design process, allowing us to tailor genetics for intelligence, resilience, and creativity, pushing the boundaries of human evolution. With the ability to fully decode and modify the human genome, will we be able to program emotions, memories, or even consciousness itself? And if so, how will this reshape our concept of humanity, what will it mean to ‘be human’ in an era of genetic customization and bioengineering?

  • @hiamjanusz7354
    @hiamjanusz7354 8 років тому +18

    fascinating

  • @kd1s
    @kd1s 8 років тому

    Actually I did a 14 month gig helping to package sequences genomic data. A full gene scan takes about 1 Terabyte of storage. Exomes take significantly less.

  • @MayurPanghaal
    @MayurPanghaal 7 років тому +1

    wow !!! that face modelling based on your genome was mind blowing. Judge dredd is a reality

  • @geobla6600
    @geobla6600 7 років тому +7

    It's amazing to see the the genome in a printed state. It's truly mind boggling to see the massive amount of pages needed to print this out in an exact specific order .
    And to think that this is accurately multiplied over 3,000,000,000,000 times in every cell in a human body. And how a small mutation of the omission of just 2 letters can cause serious illness.
    It's also amazing that a specific group or groups of these letters can be read and reproduced to create the billions of specific cells that makeup all life ,
    Whats even more fascinating is that there's plants , insects and other animals that have 50 times larger genomes then humans with the same very specific order that's required in the human genome.
    It's truly amazing that evolution was capable of testing the quadrillions of quadrillions of wrong combinations to come up with just one right one and do this trillions of individual times,

    • @bretolroyd2952
      @bretolroyd2952 5 років тому +4

      Your lost!

    • @MyChihuahua
      @MyChihuahua 3 роки тому

      Out of all that you get 'evolution'?? *eyeroll*

    • @annab8312
      @annab8312 3 роки тому

      Code cannot arise by random chance.

  • @AbhishekVerma-iz2hl
    @AbhishekVerma-iz2hl 2 роки тому

    Current update please! It must have been upgraded enormously by now (after 6 years).

  • @aparice1
    @aparice1 8 років тому +30

    I wanna see a prediction of Steve Hawkings to see how would he look if he didn't have ALS.

    • @JediNiyte
      @JediNiyte 8 років тому

      Me too! I'm guessing Eddie Redmayne? :D

    • @KyuuubI92
      @KyuuubI92 8 років тому +4

      or we could try to cure him ?

    • @chicnflopper6460
      @chicnflopper6460 8 років тому +4

      +SystemizationHD Nah he likes his chair

    • @h1nkle
      @h1nkle 6 років тому +7

      Daniel Aparicio he’s dead now :(

    • @leec2724
      @leec2724 4 роки тому +1

      He would not have gone through what he did if he had not sold himself out to the devil...and therefore his disabilities would not have appeared.

  • @antonvelmozhnyi7401
    @antonvelmozhnyi7401 8 років тому +27

    Gattaca?

  • @arash4712
    @arash4712 2 роки тому

    A tiny window to peep inside, to see outside here and now, and what may be over our horizon.

  • @dayanithi1947
    @dayanithi1947 7 років тому

    Thank you so much - what a revelation of information about human body which we have taken for granted and this gives me the incredible sensation of how complex our human body building exercise is all about yet simple.

  • @mariagabrielafreitasdasilv5189
    @mariagabrielafreitasdasilv5189 3 роки тому +3

    Simplesmente fantástico está palestra!!!!

  • @VexedFilms
    @VexedFilms 8 років тому +4

    Fantastic talk.

  • @Dimitris-uf7zx
    @Dimitris-uf7zx 3 роки тому

    What an amazing speaker.

  • @RGPankO
    @RGPankO 8 років тому

    What an era to be alive in!

  • @strauss7151
    @strauss7151 2 роки тому

    Great talk, Mr. Mario.

  • @archisachrekaryoutub
    @archisachrekaryoutub 4 роки тому

    probably the best ever...

  • @pratapnaik6168
    @pratapnaik6168 5 років тому

    wow! to think that we are able to do this and still call it scratching the surface..what will we be able to achieve when we understand it completely. Exciting!
    Great work and beautifully presented!

  • @nibinkarayi
    @nibinkarayi 8 років тому

    Excellent ted talk!! Riccardo is a brillant communicator!!

  • @brittbrann5797
    @brittbrann5797 8 років тому

    Anyone else wondering about practical applications for this device? Like possibly creating photo profiles based on crime scene evidence? No, it's not an exact match, but it could give general descriptions, particularly when there are no witnesses or witness stories don't match.

  • @Aleziss
    @Aleziss 8 років тому +5

    I feel I am born in the wrong era... half my life just passed in a flash and all the best discoveries, medical breakthrough and techonologies are coming or will be available in the near future, just when I will be on my death bed... I wish I could have benifit from all these new discoveries...

    • @jacksonyu7257
      @jacksonyu7257 8 років тому +4

      From your comment, it sounds like you are going through an existential crisis where you are scared of death and that you think this research is able to increase longetivity, perhaps give immortality. The reason why i think you are thinking this, is that I too am also thinking about this.

    • @jacklynyeh4893
      @jacklynyeh4893 8 років тому +7

      we all think we're born in the wrong era! everyone behind us wishes they could be a part of being able to mass communicate, and to experience that for the first time, and everyone ahead of us wishes they were born in time for space exploration, and those ahead time travel. we're all just longing for the future.
      good luck in figuring it out though

    • @SpaceHawk13
      @SpaceHawk13 8 років тому +4

      Relax, we are in the future now, craziest stuff ever is going to happen over the next 10 years, we have just entered into the new medical revolution, and like everything it starts off slow, kind of like a light breeze but soon its going to turn into a hurricane, better hold onto something so you don't get blown away.

    • @Aleziss
      @Aleziss 8 років тому +3

      I wish you were right... I see TONS of incradible breakthrough in medical and engineering but where is this stuff ? all those incradible discoveries are soooo slow to release yet, life passes like a flash...

    • @Aleziss
      @Aleziss 8 років тому +4

      I don't think I'm scared of death but rather from suffering or becoming mentally hill like my 82 year old mom is starting to get mentally hill, uncurable... In 40 years from now, these horrible degenerative illness or cancer will probably be a thing from the past or be controlled way better than how they are handled right now... I won't be part of it...
      Another thing is that I do enjoy technology a lot... I saw how technology grew from when I was I yong kid, having the chance to play with an Apple IIe with a green monochrome monitor and a tape recorder to keep your program or an IBM PC junior having 128k of memory running an Intel 8088 processor with a 16 color monitor... Now my mobile phone has a AMOLED display with millions of colors, a processor 100X faster than a 8088 and it's holding 128GB of data in the palm of my hand...
      I saw and listen to an 8 track tape up to high end DSD digital music files being playable in the palm of your hand for hours... This all happened in a little more than 40 years...
      A tiny micro SD card can hold billions of bit of information that fit on the tip of your finger... probably the entire human genome that we see in all the big books could fit on a micro sd card...
      My dad used to install phones for Bell back in 1950, and his dad who also worked for Bell was also installing phones that you had to crank, talk to a live operator to patch the call... When my dad sees my mobile phone, if finds that pretty amazing...
      Imagine what will be the technology in another 40 years from now in science or health care ? and I (with all the other in my age) won't be part of it... just so close though, this is what makes me sad...
      I think that in the last 100 years, advencement has never gone soooo fast and exponential... this is where you realize that you are alive for a microscopic period in the whole timeline of evolotion and incradible discoveries... time goes fast... way fast...

  • @markslovik4115
    @markslovik4115 Рік тому

    Does anyone know where could I get a handle of the books in digital? It would be very interesting to investigate them

  • @silencesanchez5894
    @silencesanchez5894 3 роки тому +5

    Revelation 20:11-12
    Then I saw a great WHITE throne and Him who sat on it, from whose face the earth and the heaven fled away; and there was found no place for them.
    And I saw the dead, small and great, stand before God; and the books were opened: and another book was opened, which is the book of life: and the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books, according to their works.
    This man testified that our genome, our DNA is actually our BOOKS which we will be judged by on judgement day. Remember we are made in "God's own likeness and image".
    Notice that it said a great WHITE throne. Did you know that DNA is only found in WHITE blood cells?
    Also, sadly, do you think it's coincidence that this Cov!d shot will alter the genome of a person?
    Stay blessed and get ready.

  • @ChowMeinWarrior
    @ChowMeinWarrior 2 роки тому

    Thank you so much!

  • @SamyHacker
    @SamyHacker 8 років тому +3

    i got shivers from this talk. i know people will try to play god and they will suffer harsh consequences from it mark my words.

  • @rufusmackenzie2020
    @rufusmackenzie2020 4 роки тому +3

    What about in forensics? Surely this could be used find out what criminals look like?

  • @PraveenMax
    @PraveenMax 3 роки тому

    The most meaningful TED talk 🙂👏👏👏

  • @sarahverbeke3
    @sarahverbeke3 8 років тому

    This excites me so much, I so badly want to learn about machine learning !!

  • @NepalSadikshya
    @NepalSadikshya 4 роки тому

    that's majestic

  • @chromanin
    @chromanin 8 років тому +3

    I think it's funny that he points out the result of missing two letters in the whole code is cystic fibrosis, then proceeds to downplay differentiation by pointing out the half-book we don't share. Obviously small alterations lead to big differences. Otherwise, very enlightening.

    • @DWZBT
      @DWZBT 8 років тому +1

      I think the point of the latter is to give a visual comparison between how much we differ and how much we are similar

  • @omaroprado
    @omaroprado 2 роки тому

    This seems fascinating to me !

  • @HanadiH
    @HanadiH 6 років тому +15

    DOES HE REALISE THIS TECHNOLOGY CAN BE USED FOR CRIMINAL IDENTIFICATION??!!

  • @kalindaly
    @kalindaly 6 років тому +1

    Amazing talk!

  • @Ristro44
    @Ristro44 8 років тому

    Good point about personalized medicine. Will be interesting to see if/ when it translates into that field.

  • @darwinm906
    @darwinm906 8 років тому +5

    reading the wisdom in the comments everyone thinks To have eventhough they know nothing about genetics is so stressfull

    • @Garium87
      @Garium87 4 роки тому +1

      Almost as stressful as reading your "I am so smart!" comments.

  • @nadahisham75
    @nadahisham75 2 роки тому

    سبحان الله العظيم 💙💙
    هذا خلق الله 💙💙💙

  • @ebonyn8901
    @ebonyn8901 4 роки тому

    wow this is amazing and he presented it so well

  • @sourabhhaldar8181
    @sourabhhaldar8181 4 роки тому

    Extraordinary work

  • @ekeetley123
    @ekeetley123 8 років тому +2

    Mind boggling...love it :o

  • @karinaorozcog
    @karinaorozcog 3 роки тому

    Una exposición asombrosa

  • @laelleduff8021
    @laelleduff8021 8 років тому +3

    Amazing

  • @badr_marfou
    @badr_marfou 8 років тому +1

    There is some things I'd like you to explain, you picked the first book and read the eye color, and you picked last book and said half of it make us different and everything else we all share and absolutely identical in all humans, how could we have same eye color gene while different real color?! And how could you you predict some information that mainly affected by the person life style like weight?
    Thanks a lot for this speech,

    • @stigcc
      @stigcc 8 років тому +12

      The differences are spread out over all books. He just showed that the differences is half a book in size.

    • @badr_marfou
      @badr_marfou 8 років тому +2

      Stig Eide oh, ok thank you for explanation, I really appreciate your kind

    • @connorp3030
      @connorp3030 8 років тому

      I think that what he was trying to show was that weight is largely genetic, obviously how much we eat is going to be the main factor in weight, but the largest factors in how much we eat is implied to be genetic.

  • @Gippo50
    @Gippo50 8 років тому

    Really Interesting talk, very well presented too

  • @sabiyamir2653
    @sabiyamir2653 Рік тому

    Loved it

  • @seamus9305
    @seamus9305 8 років тому

    Amazing, I was expecting to be disappointed with such a title.

  • @atechie2010
    @atechie2010 3 роки тому +1

    Being a programmer, seeing a human in encoded form had tears in my eyes - I get the 4B+ years of evolution/mutations theory but it had to be programmed by someone the first time in order for it to evolve! - this proves beyond an iota of doubt that there is a Creator who created everything out of nothing.

  • @solidrevo9008
    @solidrevo9008 7 років тому +2

    The topic is amazing, he sound a bit like the "renzi" but I think that renzi can't think like him.
    He can't pronounce gn like in England but I would thank him for showing to the world the problems and how they started solve some of them.
    4 sure politicians can't solve certain problems...

  • @alicaptainny
    @alicaptainny 3 роки тому

    Very well done develop work.

  • @vexivero
    @vexivero 8 років тому +34

    This is insane

  • @StephenRoseDuo
    @StephenRoseDuo 7 років тому

    Where's the publication for this?

  • @kw_cooper
    @kw_cooper 8 років тому

    Has anyone found the paper or have they not published yet?

  • @zohrafatimah4033
    @zohrafatimah4033 4 роки тому +3

    He's just great , how effortlessly he taught us everything ✨✨✨

  • @Thisguysgoinplaces
    @Thisguysgoinplaces 8 років тому

    watching this in 0.5 speed is absolutely worth your time lol

  • @bsher2115
    @bsher2115 8 років тому +2

    I still can't believe that someone know all of that amount of informations, and reached that level of knowledge, or just watched this video, then he say arrogantly: Am atheist..🙉🙊🙈

    • @arpitnayak
      @arpitnayak 8 років тому

      I'm an atheist. This information just shows how nature can work without the need for an omniscient creator.

    • @bsher2115
      @bsher2115 8 років тому +1

      Can this nature you belive think, hear or watch ?
      What kind of intelligence that gives it the abelity to create a genome and read it, or create a human being?
      Just think about it..

    • @LetoDK
      @LetoDK 8 років тому

      Random mutation over millions of years. Only the mutations that you call "intelligent" survived. So now we have a big bunch of mutations that survive well. So well we can find a pattern that humans use to survive, which is intelligence.
      Not so intelligent yet though - we still get sick and so on.

    • @bsher2115
      @bsher2115 8 років тому +1

      ***** if its random you'll see the world messed up, like if your country made a random decisions or random rules, that'll be worst than a jungle.

    • @arpitnayak
      @arpitnayak 8 років тому +1

      +BISH ER no. Only the random mutations that redound to the survival of a species survive. The rest are eliminated. please understand evolution before you make sweeping statements and try to argue for an 'intelligent' creator.

  • @mhalawany
    @mhalawany 6 років тому +4

    For this amazing miraculous complexity say God create not nature made

  • @Shulstar
    @Shulstar 8 років тому

    Anyone know what this machine he speak of is called?

  • @MyChihuahua
    @MyChihuahua 3 роки тому +1

    'Nature' is the creation NOT the Creator. And the True Creator did it in 1 day!!

  • @jacksonyu7257
    @jacksonyu7257 8 років тому +2

    He is very careful on 'avoiding' ethical disputes about this. Throughout the later half of his talk, I just felt like there was stress in myself as well as the people in the audience. The atmosphere was changed completely when topics of death was touched upon. I feel everyone is both excited but also concerned on finding the truth of how their consciousness exists only for that individual, but it also shows the futility of our existence, that we are just a very lucky and rare bag of atoms that were assorted over millions of years that all started by chance.

  • @Haluna11
    @Haluna11 2 роки тому

    how much storage is there on the thumbdrive tho 🙄

  • @Drforeverok
    @Drforeverok 3 роки тому

    Excellent

  • @mohammaddarawsheh8498
    @mohammaddarawsheh8498 4 роки тому

    I am supposed to study for my test tommorow!

  • @onsinasri9775
    @onsinasri9775 Рік тому

    3 letters for cystic fibrosis not 2 letters . 3 letters that code for the Aminoacid phenylalanine. Otherwise , good presentation !

  • @dragony3931
    @dragony3931 8 років тому

    what a lecture

  • @shrutigupta5118
    @shrutigupta5118 3 роки тому

    Loveee it.

  • @kerryrobinson4225
    @kerryrobinson4225 4 роки тому

    I’m really shocked he made a mistake! The cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator- CFTR otherwise known as cystic fibrosis, is located on chromosome 7, not 13.