Jay Walker: A library of human imagination

47,566 views ・ 2008-12-16

TED


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These rocks have been hitting our earth for about three billion years,
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and are responsible for much of what’s gone on on our planet.
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This is an example of a real meteorite,
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and you can see all the melting of the iron
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from the speed and the heat when a meteorite hits the earth,
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and just how much of it survives and melts.
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From a meteorite from space,
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we’re over here with an original Sputnik.
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This is one of the seven surviving Sputniks that was not launched into space.
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This is not a copy.
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The space age began 50 years ago in October,
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and that’s exactly what Sputnik looked like.
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And it wouldn’t be fun to talk about the space age
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without seeing a flag that was carried
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to the moon and back, on Apollo 11.
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The astronauts each got to carry
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about ten silk flags in their personal kits.
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They would bring them back and mount them.
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So this has actually been carried to the moon
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and back.
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So that’s for fun.
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The dawn of books is, of course, important.
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And it wouldn’t be interesting to talk about the dawn of books
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without having a copy of a Guttenberg Bible.
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You can see how portable and handy it was to have your own Guttenberg
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in 1455.
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But what’s interesting about the Guttenberg Bible, and the dawn of this technology,
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is not the book.
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You see, the book was not driven by reading.
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In 1455, nobody could read.
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So why did the printing press succeed?
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This is an original page of a Guttenberg Bible.
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So you’re looking here at one of the first printed books
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using movable type in the history of man,
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550 years ago.
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We are living at the age here at the end of the book,
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where electronic paper will undoubtedly replace it.
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But why is this so interesting? Here’s the quick story.
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It turns out that in the 1450s,
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the Catholic Church needed money,
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and so they
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actually hand-wrote these things called indulgences,
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which were forgiveness’s on pieces of paper.
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They traveled all around Europe
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and sold by the hundreds or by the thousands.
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They got you out of purgatory faster.
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And when the printing press was invented
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what they found was they could print indulgences,
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which was the equivalent of printing money.
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And so all of Western Europe started buying printing presses in 1455 --
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to print out thousands,
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and then hundreds of thousands,
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and then ultimately millions
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of single, small pieces of paper
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that got you out of middle hell and into heaven.
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That is why the printing press succeeded,
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and that is why Martin Luther
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nailed his 90 theses to the door:
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because he was complaining that the Catholic Church had gone amok
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in printing out indulgences and selling them
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in every town and village and city in all of Western Europe.
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So the printing press, ladies and gentlemen,
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was driven entirely by the printing of forgivenesses
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and had nothing to do with reading.
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More tomorrow. I also have pictures coming of the library
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for those of you that have asked for pictures.
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We’re going to have some tomorrow.
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(Applause)
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Instead of showing an object from the stage
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I’m going to do something special for the first time.
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We are going to show, actually, what the library looks like, OK?
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So, I am married to the most wonderful woman in the world.
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You’re going to find out why in a minute,
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because when I went to see Eileen,
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this is what I said I wanted to build.
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This is the Library of Human Imagination.
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The room itself is three stories tall.
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In the glass panels are 5,000 years of human imagination
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that are computer controlled.
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The room is a theatre. It changes colors.
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And all throughout the library are different objects, different spaces.
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It’s designed like an Escher print.
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Here is some of the lower level of the library,
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where the exhibits constantly change.
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You can walk through. You can touch.
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You can see exactly how many of these types of items would fit in a room.
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There’s my very own Saturn V.
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Everybody should have one, OK? (Laughter)
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So you can see here in the lower level of the library
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the books and the objects.
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In the glass panels all along is sort of the history of imagination.
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There is a glass bridge that you walk across
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that’s suspended in space.
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So it’s a leap of imagination.
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How do we create?
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Part of the question that I have answered is,
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is we create by surrounding ourselves with stimuli:
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with human achievement, with history,
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with the things that drive us and make us human --
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the passionate discovery, the bones of dinosaurs long gone,
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the maps of space that we’ve experienced,
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and ultimately the hallways that stimulate our mind and our imagination.
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So hopefully tomorrow I’ll show
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one or two more objects from the stage,
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but for today I just wanted to say thank you
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for all the people that came and talked to us about it.
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And Eileen and I are thrilled to open our home
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and share it with the TED community.
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(Applause)
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TED is all about patterns in the clouds.
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It’s all about connections.
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It’s all about seeing things
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that everybody else has seen before
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but thinking about them in ways that nobody has thought of them before.
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And that’s really what discovery and imagination is all about.
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For example, we can look
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at a DNA molecule model here.
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None of us really have ever seen one,
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but we know it exists because we’ve been taught
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to understand this molecule.
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But we can also look at an Enigma machine
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from the Nazis in World War II
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that was a coding and decoding machine.
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Now, you might say, what does this have to do with this?
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Well, this is the code for life,
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and this is a code for death.
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These two molecules
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code and decode.
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And yet, looking at them, you would see a machine and a molecule.
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But once you’ve seen them in a new way,
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you realize that both of these things really are connected.
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And they’re connected primarily because of this here.
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You see, this is a human brain model, OK?
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And it’s rare, because we never really get to see a brain.
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We get to see a skull. But there it is.
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All of imagination -- everything that we think,
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we feel, we sense -- comes through the human brain.
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And once we create new patterns in this brain,
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once we shape the brain in a new way,
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it never returns to its original shape.
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And I’ll give you a quick example.
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We think about the Internet;
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we think about information that goes across the Internet.
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And we never think about the hidden connection.
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But I brought along here a lump of coal --
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right here, one lump of coal.
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And what does a lump of coal have to do with the Internet?
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You see, it takes the energy in one lump of coal
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to move one megabyte of information across the net.
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So every time you download a file,
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each megabyte is a lump of coal.
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What that means is, a 200-megabyte file
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looks like this, ladies and gentlemen. OK?
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So the next time you download a gigabyte,
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or two gigabytes, it’s not for free, OK?
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The connection is the energy it takes to run the web ,
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and to make everything we think possible, possible.
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Thanks, Chris.
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(Applause)
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