The “myth” of the boiling frog

1,478,191 views ・ 2021-02-16

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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Two frogs are minding their own business in the swamp when WHAM—
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they’re kidnapped.
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They come to in a kitchen, captives of a menacing chef.
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He boils up a pot of water and lobs one of the frogs in.
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But it’s having none of this.
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The second its toes hit the scalding water it jumps right out the window.
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The chef refills the pot, but this time he doesn’t turn on the heat.
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He plops the second frog in, and this frog’s okay with that.
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The chef turns the heat on, very low, and the temperature of water slowly rises.
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So slowly that the frog doesn’t notice.
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In fact, it basks in the balmy water.
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Only when the surface begins to bubble does the frog realize: it’s toast.
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What’s funny about this parable is that it’s not scientifically true... for frogs.
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In reality, a frog will detect slowly heating water and leap to safety.
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Humans, on the other hand, are a different story.
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We’re perfectly happy to sit in the pot and slowly turn up the heat,
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all the while insisting it isn’t our hand on the dial,
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arguing about whether we can trust thermometers,
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and questioning— even if they’re right, does it matter?
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It does.
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Since 1850, global average temperatures have risen by 1 degree Celsius.
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That may not sound like a lot, but it is.
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Why? 1 degree is an average.
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Many places have already gotten much warmer than that.
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Some places in the Arctic have already warmed 4 degrees.
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If global average temperatures increase 1 more degree,
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the coldest nights in the Arctic might get 10 degrees warmer.
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The warmest days in Mumbai might get 5 degrees hotter.
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So how did we get here?
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Almost everything that makes modern life possible relies on fossil fuels:
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coal, oil, and gas full of carbon from ancient organic matter.
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When we burn fossil fuels,
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we release carbon dioxide that builds up in our atmosphere,
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where it remains for hundreds or even thousands of years,
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letting heat in, but not out.
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The heat comes from sunlight, which passes through the atmosphere to Earth,
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where it gets absorbed and warms everything up.
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Warm objects emit infrared radiation, which should pass back out into space,
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because most atmospheric gases don’t absorb it.
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But greenhouse gases— carbon dioxide and methane—
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do absorb infrared wavelengths.
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So when we add more of those gases to the atmosphere,
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less heat makes it back out to space, and our planet warms up.
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If we keep emitting greenhouse gases at our current pace,
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scientists predict temperatures will rise 4 degrees
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from their pre-industrial levels by 2100.
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They’ve identified 1.5 degrees of warming—
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global averages half a degree warmer than today’s—
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as a threshold beyond which the negative impacts of climate change
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will become increasingly severe.
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To keep from crossing that threshold,
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we need to get our greenhouse gas emissions down to zero
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as fast as possible.
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Or rather, we have to get emissions down to what's called net zero,
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meaning we may still be putting some greenhouse gases into the atmosphere,
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but we take out as much as we put in.
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This doesn’t mean we can just keep emitting and sequester all that carbon—
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we couldn’t keep up with our emissions through natural methods,
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and technological solutions would be prohibitively expensive
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and require huge amounts of permanent storage.
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Instead, while we switch from coal, oil, and natural gas
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to clean energy and fuels, which will take time,
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we can mitigate the damage by removing carbon from the atmosphere.
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Jumping out of the proverbial pot isn’t an option,
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but we can do something the frogs can’t:
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reach over, and turn down the heat.
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