The unforeseen consequences of a fast-paced world | Kathryn Bouskill

155,940 views ・ 2020-01-08

TED


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

00:12
Do you ever wonder why we're surrounded with things that help us do everything
0
12686
3898
00:16
faster and faster and faster?
1
16608
3003
00:20
Communicate faster,
2
20294
1241
00:21
but also work faster, bank faster,
3
21559
2946
00:24
travel faster, find a date faster,
4
24529
2934
00:27
cook faster, clean faster and do all of it all at the same time?
5
27487
4832
00:32
How do you feel about cramming even more into every waking hour?
6
32803
4514
00:38
Well, to my generation of Americans,
7
38690
2213
00:40
speed feels like a birthright.
8
40927
2249
00:43
Sometimes I think our minimum speed is Mach 3.
9
43200
3343
00:46
Anything less, and we fear losing our competitive edge.
10
46567
3397
00:50
But even my generation is starting to question
11
50634
2627
00:53
whether we're the masters of speed
12
53285
2487
00:55
or if speed is mastering us.
13
55796
2526
00:59
I'm an anthropologist at the Rand Corporation,
14
59475
2422
01:01
and while many anthropologists study ancient cultures,
15
61921
2775
01:04
I focus on modern day cultures and how we're adapting
16
64720
3018
01:07
to all of this change happening in the world.
17
67762
3197
01:11
Recently, I teamed up with an engineer, Seifu Chonde, to study speed.
18
71681
5304
01:17
We were interested both in how people are adapting to this age of acceleration
19
77009
5034
01:22
and its security and policy implications.
20
82067
3006
01:25
What could our world look like in 25 years
21
85556
2460
01:28
if the current pace of change keeps accelerating?
22
88040
2883
01:30
What would it mean for transportation,
23
90947
1865
01:32
or learning, communication,
24
92836
2396
01:35
manufacturing, weaponry
25
95256
2437
01:37
or even natural selection?
26
97717
1922
01:40
Will a faster future make us more secure and productive?
27
100253
3591
01:44
Or will it make us more vulnerable?
28
104279
2338
01:47
In our research, people accepted acceleration as inevitable,
29
107203
4004
01:51
both the thrills and the lack of control.
30
111231
2669
01:53
They fear that if they were to slow down,
31
113924
2137
01:56
they might run the risk of becoming obsolete.
32
116085
2658
01:58
They say they'd rather burn out than rust out.
33
118767
2823
02:02
Yet at the same time,
34
122285
1291
02:03
they worry that speed could erode their cultural traditions
35
123600
3193
02:06
and their sense of home.
36
126817
1716
02:09
But even people who are winning at the speed game
37
129524
2352
02:11
admit to feeling a little uneasy.
38
131900
1884
02:13
They see acceleration as widening the gap between the haves,
39
133808
3599
02:17
the jet-setters who are buzzing around,
40
137431
2495
02:19
and the have-nots,
41
139950
1366
02:21
who are left in the digital dust.
42
141340
2382
02:24
Yes, we have good reason to forecast that the future will be faster,
43
144984
4064
02:29
but what I've come to realize
44
149072
1723
02:30
is that speed is paradoxical,
45
150819
2523
02:33
and like all good paradoxes,
46
153366
1808
02:35
it teaches us about the human experience,
47
155198
2699
02:37
as absurd and complex as it is.
48
157921
3088
02:41
The first paradox is that we love speed,
49
161899
2412
02:44
and we're thrilled by its intensity.
50
164335
2081
02:46
But our prehistoric brains aren't really built for it,
51
166440
3672
02:50
so we invent roller coasters and race cars and supersonic planes,
52
170136
4467
02:54
but we get whiplash, carsick,
53
174627
3125
02:57
jet-lagged.
54
177776
1160
02:59
We didn't evolve to multitask.
55
179584
2277
03:01
Rather, we evolved to do one thing with incredible focus,
56
181885
4104
03:06
like hunt -- not necessarily with great speed
57
186013
2894
03:08
but with endurance for great distance.
58
188931
2750
03:11
But now there's a widening gap between our biology and our lifestyles,
59
191705
4146
03:15
a mismatch between what our bodies are built for and what we're making them do.
60
195875
4652
03:20
It's a phenomenon my mentors have called "Stone Agers in the fast lane."
61
200870
5345
03:26
(Laughter)
62
206239
1227
03:28
A second paradox of speed is that it can be measured objectively. Right?
63
208087
3498
03:31
Miles per hour, gigabytes per second.
64
211609
2890
03:34
But how speed feels,
65
214939
2240
03:37
and whether we like it,
66
217203
1452
03:38
is highly subjective.
67
218679
1660
03:40
So we can document
68
220717
1763
03:42
that the pace at which we are adopting new technologies is increasing.
69
222504
4259
03:46
For example, it took 85 years from the introduction of the telephone
70
226787
5182
03:51
to when the majority of Americans had phones at home.
71
231993
2950
03:55
In contrast, it only took 13 years for most of us to have smartphones.
72
235438
4713
04:00
And how people act and react to speed
73
240627
2599
04:03
varies by culture and among different people within the same culture.
74
243250
4977
04:08
Interactions that could be seen as pleasantly brisk and convenient
75
248251
3157
04:11
in some cultures
76
251432
1319
04:12
could be seen as horribly rude in others.
77
252775
2025
04:14
I mean, you wouldn't go asking for a to-go cup at a Japanese tea ceremony
78
254824
4407
04:19
so you could jet off to your next tourist stop.
79
259255
2512
04:21
Would you?
80
261791
1193
04:23
A third paradox is that speed begets speed.
81
263968
4272
04:28
The faster I respond, the more responses I get,
82
268264
2256
04:30
the faster I have to respond again.
83
270544
1983
04:33
Having more communication
84
273241
1950
04:35
and information at our fingertips
85
275215
2239
04:37
at any given moment
86
277478
1619
04:39
was supposed to make decision-making easier and more rational.
87
279121
3881
04:44
But that doesn't really seem to be happening.
88
284209
2344
04:47
Here's just one more paradox:
89
287759
2135
04:50
If all of these faster technologies were supposed to free us from drudgery,
90
290601
5470
04:56
why do we all feel so pressed for time?
91
296095
2871
04:58
Why are we crashing our cars in record numbers,
92
298990
2735
05:01
because we think we have to answer that text right away?
93
301749
3398
05:05
Shouldn't life in the fast lane feel a little more fun
94
305878
3496
05:09
and a little less anxious?
95
309398
1607
05:11
German speakers even have a word for this:
96
311464
2484
05:13
"Eilkrankheit."
97
313972
1444
05:15
In English, that's "hurry sickness."
98
315440
3014
05:19
When we have to make fast decisions,
99
319055
2689
05:21
autopilot brain kicks in,
100
321768
1822
05:23
and we rely on our learned behaviors,
101
323614
2638
05:26
our reflexes, our cognitive biases,
102
326276
3822
05:30
to help us perceive and respond quickly.
103
330122
2912
05:33
Sometimes that saves our lives, right?
104
333502
2001
05:35
Fight or flight.
105
335527
1194
05:37
But sometimes, it leads us astray in the long run.
106
337134
3345
05:41
Oftentimes, when our society has major failures,
107
341443
3491
05:44
they're not technological failures.
108
344958
2898
05:47
They're failures that happen when we made decisions too quickly
109
347880
3821
05:51
on autopilot.
110
351725
1515
05:53
We didn't do the creative or critical thinking required
111
353264
2811
05:56
to connect the dots
112
356099
1395
05:57
or weed out false information
113
357518
1817
05:59
or make sense of complexity.
114
359359
2214
06:02
That kind of thinking can't be done fast.
115
362352
3337
06:05
That's slow thinking.
116
365713
1882
06:08
Two psychologists, Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky,
117
368218
3062
06:11
started pointing this out back in 1974,
118
371304
3225
06:14
and we're still struggling to do something with their insights.
119
374553
3446
06:19
All of modern history can be thought of as one spurt of acceleration after another.
120
379340
4430
06:23
It's as if we think if we just speed up enough,
121
383794
2337
06:26
we can outrun our problems.
122
386155
2011
06:28
But we never do.
123
388797
1533
06:30
We know this in our own lives,
124
390354
1801
06:32
and policymakers know it, too.
125
392179
2211
06:34
So now we're turning to artificial intelligence
126
394940
2307
06:37
to help us make faster and smarter decisions
127
397271
2409
06:39
to process this ever-expanding universe of data.
128
399704
3504
06:44
But machines crunching data are no substitute
129
404412
3412
06:47
for critical and sustained thinking
130
407848
2442
06:50
by humans,
131
410314
1210
06:51
whose Stone Age brains need a little time to let their impulses subside,
132
411548
4861
06:56
to slow the mind
133
416433
1707
06:58
and let the thoughts flow.
134
418164
1712
07:01
If you're starting to think that we should just hit the brakes,
135
421040
3172
07:04
that won't always be the right solution.
136
424236
3153
07:07
We all know that a train that's going too fast around a bend can derail,
137
427413
4097
07:11
but Seifu, the engineer,
138
431534
1962
07:13
taught me that a train that's going too slowly around a bend can also derail.
139
433520
4721
07:18
So managing this spurt of acceleration starts with the understanding
140
438860
4953
07:23
that we have more control over speed than we think we do,
141
443837
3536
07:27
individually and as a society.
142
447397
3181
07:30
Sometimes, we'll need to engineer ourselves to go faster.
143
450602
3278
07:33
We'll want to solve gridlock,
144
453904
1807
07:35
speed up disaster relief for hurricane victims
145
455735
2655
07:38
or use 3-D printing to produce what we need on the spot,
146
458414
3418
07:41
just when we need it.
147
461856
1423
07:43
Sometimes, though, we'll want to make our surroundings feel slower
148
463955
3941
07:47
to engineer the crash out of the speedy experience.
149
467920
3387
07:51
And it's OK not to be stimulated all the time.
150
471861
3876
07:55
It's good for adults
151
475761
1506
07:57
and for kids.
152
477291
1277
07:59
Maybe it's boring, but it gives us time to reflect.
153
479043
3583
08:03
Slow time is not wasted time.
154
483258
3480
08:08
And we need to reconsider what it means to save time.
155
488142
3749
08:12
Culture and rituals around the world build in slowness,
156
492318
3877
08:16
because slowness helps us reinforce our shared values and connect.
157
496219
4562
08:20
And connection is a critical part of being human.
158
500805
3257
08:25
We need to master speed,
159
505387
1644
08:27
and that means thinking carefully about the trade-offs of any given technology.
160
507055
4179
08:31
Will it help you reclaim time that you can use to express your humanity?
161
511629
4417
08:36
Will it give you hurry sickness? Will it give other people hurry sickness?
162
516070
3786
08:39
If you're lucky enough to decide the pace that you want to travel through life,
163
519880
4522
08:44
it's a privilege.
164
524426
1405
08:46
Use it.
165
526464
1151
08:48
You might decide that you need both to speed up
166
528250
2717
08:50
and to create slow time:
167
530991
2003
08:53
time to reflect,
168
533869
1730
08:55
to percolate
169
535623
1629
08:57
at your own pace;
170
537276
1442
08:59
time to listen,
171
539688
1255
09:01
to empathize,
172
541611
1340
09:03
to rest your mind,
173
543517
1542
09:05
to linger at the dinner table.
174
545890
1928
09:09
So as we zoom into the future,
175
549402
1985
09:11
let's consider setting the technologies of speed,
176
551411
3761
09:15
the purpose of speed
177
555196
1881
09:17
and our expectations of speed
178
557101
2695
09:19
to a more human pace.
179
559820
2259
09:22
Thank you.
180
562760
1153
09:23
(Applause)
181
563937
1515
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7