Four billion years of evolution in six minutes | Prosanta Chakrabarty

478,397 views ・ 2018-07-06

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If we evolved from monkeys, why are there still monkeys?
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(Laughter)
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Well, because we're not monkeys,
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we're fish.
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(Laughter)
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Now, knowing you're a fish and not a monkey
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is actually really important to understanding where we came from.
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I teach one of the largest evolutionary biology classes in the US,
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and when my students finally understand why I call them fish all the time,
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then I know I'm getting my job done.
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But I always have to start my classes by dispelling some hardwired myths,
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because without really knowing it, many of us were taught evolution wrong.
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For instance, we're taught to say "the theory of evolution."
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There are actually many theories, and just like the process itself,
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the ones that best fit the data are the ones that survive to this day.
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The one we know best is Darwinian natural selection.
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That's the process by which organisms that best fit an environment
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survive and get to reproduce,
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while those that are less fit slowly die off.
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And that's it.
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Evolution is as simple as that, and it's a fact.
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Evolution is a fact as much as the "theory of gravity."
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You can prove it just as easily.
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You just need to look at your bellybutton
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that you share with other placental mammals,
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or your backbone that you share with other vertebrates,
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or your DNA that you share with all other life on earth.
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Those traits didn't pop up in humans.
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They were passed down from different ancestors
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to all their descendants, not just us.
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But that's not really how we learn biology early on, is it?
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We learn plants and bacteria are primitive things,
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and fish give rise to amphibians followed by reptiles and mammals,
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and then you get you,
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this perfectly evolved creature at the end of the line.
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But life doesn't evolve in a line,
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and it doesn't end with us.
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But we're always shown evolution portrayed something like this,
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a monkey and a chimpanzee,
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some extinct humans,
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all on a forward and steady march to becoming us.
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But they don't become us any more than we would become them.
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We're also not the goal of evolution.
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But why does it matter?
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Why do we need to understand evolution the right way?
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Well, misunderstanding evolution has led to many problems,
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but you can't ask that age-old question,
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"Where are we from?"
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without understanding evolution the right way.
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Misunderstanding it has led to many convoluted and corrupted views
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of how we should treat other life on earth,
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and how we should treat each other
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in terms of race and gender.
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So let's go back four billion years.
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This is the single-celled organism we all came from.
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At first, it gave rise to other single-celled life,
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but these are still evolving to this day,
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and some would say the Archaea and Bacteria
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that make up most of this group
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is the most successful on the planet.
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They are certainly going to be here well after us.
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About three billion years ago, multicellularity evolved.
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This includes your fungi and your plants and your animals.
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The first animals to develop a backbone were fishes.
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So technically, all vertebrates are fishes,
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so technically, you and I are fish.
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So don't say I didn't warn you.
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One fish lineage came onto land
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and gave rise to, among other things, the mammals and reptiles.
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Some reptiles become birds, some mammals become primates,
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some primates become monkeys with tails,
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and others become the great apes, including a variety of human species.
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So you see, we didn't evolve from monkeys,
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but we do share a common ancestor with them.
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All the while, life around us kept evolving:
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more bacteria, more fungi, lots of fish, fish, fish.
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If you couldn't tell -- yes, they're my favorite group.
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(Laughter)
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As life evolves, it also goes extinct.
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Most species just last for a few million years.
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So you see, most life on earth that we see around us today
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are about the same age as our species.
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So it's hubris, it's self-centered to think,
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"Oh, plants and bacteria are primitive,
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and we've been here for an evolutionary minute,
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so we're somehow special."
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Think of life as being this book, an unfinished book for sure.
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We're just seeing the last few pages of each chapter.
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If you look out on the eight million species
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that we share this planet with,
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think of them all being four billion years of evolution.
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They're all the product of that.
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Think of us all as young leaves on this ancient and gigantic tree of life,
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all of us connected by invisible branches not just to each other,
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but to our extinct relatives and our evolutionary ancestors.
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As a biologist, I'm still trying to learn, with others,
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how everyone's related to each other, who is related to whom.
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Perhaps it's better still
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to think of us as a little fish out of water.
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Yes, one that learned to walk and talk,
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but one that still has a lot of learning to do
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about who we are and where we came from.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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