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all of the wonderful benefits that sleep provides, | |
There's this fact that I love that I read somewhere once, | |
It is said that the grass is always greener | |
There is some medical news that nobody, absolutely nobody, | |
So I know TED is about a lot of things that are big, | |
I'm here today to talk about the two ideas that, | |
Father Daniel Berrigan once said that "writing about prisoners | |
that really obsessed me when I was writing my new book, | |
that the world today is full of problems. | |
And that is a palindrome. | |
that exhibits amazingly complex behaviors. | |
that was made in 1937 by the General Drafting Company. | |
some findings that really surprise me | |
and you're one of seven billion people that eats food every day, | |
that many of us suffer from. | |
that one of the things that's contributed to homo sapiens' success | |
that you're a soldier in the heat of battle. | |
and I believe that running can change the world. | |
that you can find Coca-Cola tins on top of Everest | |
and for all the wonderful predatory skills that a lion has, | |
At the same time that we're solving for climate change, | |
That is a word you can spell the same forwards and backwards, | |
Tom Green: That's a 4chan thing. | |
and it's a story of something that happened | |
Even more than that, what about predicting human behavior? | |
one that is still speculative but hugely exciting, | |
that what I really wanted to talk about was my friend, Richard Feynman. | |
those vending machines that dispense cash, | |
The remarkable progress that we're seeing | |
that lived in Micronesia in the early 1900s, called the Yap. | |
Really messed with my head, but I'll get into that later. | |
One is that I'm always on time, | |
I've been thinking about that a lot the last few years, | |
I think what he meant is that we treat prisoners as ghosts. | |
and I was humiliated by that failed commitment. | |
And the answer relies on a formula that all paleontologists use. | |
It goes without saying that it's really difficult | |
It's called Sturgeon's law, and what that means | |
That's pretty good. | |
There are an enormous number of them that we use every day. | |
some of the music that I wrote was first performed. | |
but it's just come to my attention that the person to your right is a liar. | |
that came burning down in a spectacular fashion. | |
what's the most dangerous thing that you've ever done? | |
Unlike the commercially available drones that you can buy today, | |
That means about 1.8 billion, or almost two billion people, | |
I was just talking about the things that I cared about, | |
It was three years ago that I got a call in my office | |
I feel that way. I try my best. | |
It's the only one that can start a war or say "I love you." | |
That's because it's now easy to take algorithms | |
of discovering that we're leaving the European Union, | |
I think it's something that concerns all of us -- | |
Well, it turns out that you share that experience | |
What was that about? | |
not as the most fragile of flowers that it really is, | |
Apparently, that was something humans had created by our way of living. | |
and certainly one that's growing very rapidly. | |
I was one of the fortunate few that really did get to know him | |
and it's one that's going to help us conquer | |
Now, it's generally understood that | |
you'll see that in 2025, | |
is that the majority of anything is always bad. | |
is that they were unimportant. | |
And I am telling you that they're going to do this soon. | |
that I think is both terrifying | |
Jim Simons: Well the NSA -- that's the National Security Agency -- | |
when others are able to achieve things that seem to defy all of the assumptions? | |
and that that control room | |
that are distributed throughout their body, | |
that our hairlessness, our nakedness | |
looking out at that distant horizon, | |
we really didn't take that very seriously until recently. | |
that you change your posture for two minutes. | |
For me, that would be the perfect superpower, | |
When you hear a name that you don't recognize, | |
Regardless of your time and place, there are some things that are constant. | |
Now, before we get to that answer, | |
there's certain appurtenances available to you that do make life easier. | |
that didn't transmit malaria. | |
Their impact on the world was not much greater than that of jellyfish | |
and that's very central to your concerns. | |
that it's sparking all sorts of really interesting conversations. | |
is that, using that reference point of seven to nine hours, | |
That's, like, a huge gap. | |
I believe that the startup organization | |
that you know how to bring up your children | |
And how many of you know at least one person that you avoid | |
such that two-thirds of the neurons are actually in its legs. | |
that jihad is to be understood in the language of force and violence. | |
people of color have been asking that question for centuries. | |
On that day, a column of American | |
that when they speak, people don't listen to them. | |
and crops like alfalfa hay that feed our farm animals. | |
and gather all that data that you're leaving on yourself | |
that has fallen into hard times. | |
proposed that while we're awake, | |
What does that do, | |
but because it's something that's been asked | |
how did that change during the last century? |