A Visual History of Human Knowledge | Manuel Lima | TED Talks

211,652 views ・ 2015-09-10

TED


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Over the past 10 years,
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I've been researching the way people organize and visualize information.
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And I've noticed an interesting shift.
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For a long period of time,
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we believed in a natural ranking order in the world around us,
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also known as the great chain of being, or "Scala naturae" in Latin,
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a top-down structure that normally starts with God at the very top,
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followed by angels, noblemen,
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common people, animals, and so on.
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This idea was actually based on Aristotle's ontology,
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which classified all things known to man in a set of opposing categories,
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like the ones you see behind me.
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But over time, interestingly enough,
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this concept adopted the branching schema of a tree
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in what became known as the Porphyrian tree,
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also considered to be the oldest tree of knowledge.
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The branching scheme of the tree was, in fact,
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such a powerful metaphor for conveying information
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that it became, over time, an important communication tool
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to map a variety of systems of knowledge.
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We can see trees being used to map morality,
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with the popular tree of virtues and tree of vices,
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as you can see here, with these beautiful illustrations from medieval Europe.
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We can see trees being used to map consanguinity,
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the various blood ties between people.
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We can also see trees being used to map genealogy,
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perhaps the most famous archetype of the tree diagram.
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I think many of you in the audience have probably seen family trees.
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Many of you probably even have your own family trees drawn in such a way.
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We can see trees even mapping systems of law,
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the various decrees and rulings of kings and rulers.
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And finally, of course, also a very popular scientific metaphor,
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we can see trees being used to map all species known to man.
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And trees ultimately became such a powerful visual metaphor
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because in many ways, they really embody this human desire
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for order, for balance, for unity, for symmetry.
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However, nowadays we are really facing new complex, intricate challenges
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that cannot be understood by simply employing a simple tree diagram.
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And a new metaphor is currently emerging,
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and it's currently replacing the tree
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in visualizing various systems of knowledge.
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It's really providing us with a new lens to understand the world around us.
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And this new metaphor is the metaphor of the network.
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And we can see this shift from trees into networks
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in many domains of knowledge.
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We can see this shift in the way we try to understand the brain.
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While before, we used to think of the brain
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as a modular, centralized organ,
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where a given area was responsible for a set of actions and behaviors,
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the more we know about the brain,
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the more we think of it as a large music symphony,
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played by hundreds and thousands of instruments.
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This is a beautiful snapshot created by the Blue Brain Project,
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where you can see 10,000 neurons and 30 million connections.
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And this is only mapping 10 percent of a mammalian neocortex.
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We can also see this shift in the way we try to conceive of human knowledge.
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These are some remarkable trees of knowledge, or trees of science,
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by Spanish scholar Ramon Llull.
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And Llull was actually the precursor,
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the very first one who created the metaphor of science as a tree,
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a metaphor we use every single day, when we say,
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"Biology is a branch of science,"
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when we say,
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"Genetics is a branch of science."
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But perhaps the most beautiful of all trees of knowledge, at least for me,
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was created for the French encyclopedia by Diderot and d'Alembert in 1751.
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This was really the bastion of the French Enlightenment,
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and this gorgeous illustration was featured as a table of contents
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for the encyclopedia.
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And it actually maps out all domains of knowledge
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as separate branches of a tree.
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But knowledge is much more intricate than this.
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These are two maps of Wikipedia showing the inter-linkage of articles --
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related to history on the left, and mathematics on the right.
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And I think by looking at these maps
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and other ones that have been created of Wikipedia --
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arguably one of the largest rhizomatic structures ever created by man --
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we can really understand how human knowledge is much more intricate
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and interdependent, just like a network.
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We can also see this interesting shift
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in the way we map social ties between people.
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This is the typical organization chart.
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I'm assuming many of you have seen a similar chart as well,
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in your own corporations, or others.
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It's a top-down structure
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that normally starts with the CEO at the very top,
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and where you can drill down all the way to the individual workmen on the bottom.
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But humans sometimes are, well, actually, all humans are unique in their own way,
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and sometimes you really don't play well under this really rigid structure.
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I think the Internet is really changing this paradigm quite a lot.
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This is a fantastic map of online social collaboration
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between Perl developers.
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Perl is a famous programming language,
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and here, you can see how different programmers
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are actually exchanging files, and working together on a given project.
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And here, you can notice that this is a completely decentralized process --
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there's no leader in this organization,
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it's a network.
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We can also see this interesting shift when we look at terrorism.
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One of the main challenges of understanding terrorism nowadays
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is that we are dealing with decentralized, independent cells,
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where there's no leader leading the whole process.
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And here, you can actually see how visualization is being used.
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The diagram that you see behind me
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shows all the terrorists involved in the Madrid attack in 2004.
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And what they did here is, they actually segmented the network
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into three different years,
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represented by the vertical layers that you see behind me.
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And the blue lines tie together
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the people that were present in that network year after year.
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So even though there's no leader per se,
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these people are probably the most influential ones in that organization,
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the ones that know more about the past,
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and the future plans and goals of this particular cell.
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We can also see this shift from trees into networks
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in the way we classify and organize species.
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The image on the right is the only illustration
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that Darwin included in "The Origin of Species,"
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which Darwin called the "Tree of Life."
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There's actually a letter from Darwin to the publisher,
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expanding on the importance of this particular diagram.
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It was critical for Darwin's theory of evolution.
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But recently, scientists discovered that overlaying this tree of life
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is a dense network of bacteria,
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and these bacteria are actually tying together
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species that were completely separated before,
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to what scientists are now calling not the tree of life,
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but the web of life, the network of life.
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And finally, we can really see this shift, again,
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when we look at ecosystems around our planet.
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No more do we have these simplified predator-versus-prey diagrams
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we have all learned at school.
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This is a much more accurate depiction of an ecosystem.
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This is a diagram created by Professor David Lavigne,
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mapping close to 100 species that interact with the codfish
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off the coast of Newfoundland in Canada.
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And I think here, we can really understand the intricate and interdependent nature
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of most ecosystems that abound on our planet.
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But even though recent, this metaphor of the network,
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is really already adopting various shapes and forms,
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and it's almost becoming a growing visual taxonomy.
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It's almost becoming the syntax of a new language.
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And this is one aspect that truly fascinates me.
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And these are actually 15 different typologies
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I've been collecting over time,
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and it really shows the immense visual diversity of this new metaphor.
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And here is an example.
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On the very top band, you have radial convergence,
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a visualization model that has become really popular over the last five years.
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At the top left, the very first project is a gene network,
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followed by a network of IP addresses -- machines, servers --
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followed by a network of Facebook friends.
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You probably couldn't find more disparate topics,
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yet they are using the same metaphor, the same visual model,
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to map the never-ending complexities of its own subject.
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And here are a few more examples of the many I've been collecting,
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of this growing visual taxonomy of networks.
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But networks are not just a scientific metaphor.
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As designers, researchers, and scientists try to map a variety of complex systems,
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they are in many ways influencing traditional art fields,
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like painting and sculpture,
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and influencing many different artists.
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And perhaps because networks have this huge aesthetical force to them --
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they're immensely gorgeous --
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they are really becoming a cultural meme,
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and driving a new art movement, which I've called "networkism."
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And we can see this influence in this movement in a variety of ways.
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This is just one of many examples,
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where you can see this influence from science into art.
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The example on your left side is IP-mapping,
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a computer-generated map of IP addresses; again -- servers, machines.
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And on your right side,
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you have "Transient Structures and Unstable Networks" by Sharon Molloy,
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using oil and enamel on canvas.
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And here are a few more paintings by Sharon Molloy,
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some gorgeous, intricate paintings.
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And here's another example of that interesting cross-pollination
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between science and art.
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On your left side, you have "Operation Smile."
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It is a computer-generated map of a social network.
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And on your right side, you have "Field 4," by Emma McNally,
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using only graphite on paper.
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Emma McNally is one of the main leaders of this movement,
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and she creates these striking, imaginary landscapes,
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where you can really notice the influence from traditional network visualization.
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But networkism doesn't happen only in two dimensions.
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This is perhaps one of my favorite projects
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of this new movement.
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And I think the title really says it all -- it's called:
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"Galaxies Forming Along Filaments,
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Like Droplets Along the Strands of a Spider's Web."
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And I just find this particular project to be immensely powerful.
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It was created by Tomás Saraceno,
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and he occupies these large spaces,
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creates these massive installations using only elastic ropes.
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As you actually navigate that space and bounce along those elastic ropes,
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the entire network kind of shifts, almost like a real organic network would.
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And here's yet another example
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of networkism taken to a whole different level.
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This was created by Japanese artist Chiharu Shiota
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in a piece called "In Silence."
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And Chiharu, like Tomás Saraceno, fills these rooms with this dense network,
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this dense web of elastic ropes and black wool and thread,
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sometimes including objects, as you can see here,
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sometimes even including people, in many of her installations.
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But networks are also not just a new trend,
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and it's too easy for us to dismiss it as such.
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Networks really embody notions of decentralization,
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of interconnectedness, of interdependence.
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And this new way of thinking is critical
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for us to solve many of the complex problems we are facing nowadays,
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from decoding the human brain,
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to understanding the vast universe out there.
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On your left side, you have a snapshot of a neural network of a mouse --
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very similar to our own at this particular scale.
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And on your right side, you have the Millennium Simulation.
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It was the largest and most realistic simulation
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of the growth of cosmic structure.
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It was able to recreate the history of 20 million galaxies
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in approximately 25 terabytes of output.
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And coincidentally or not,
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I just find this particular comparison
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between the smallest scale of knowledge -- the brain --
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and the largest scale of knowledge -- the universe itself --
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to be really quite striking and fascinating.
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Because as Bruce Mau once said,
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"When everything is connected to everything else,
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for better or for worse, everything matters."
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Thank you so much.
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(Applause)
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