Richard Seymour: How beauty feels

137,052 views ・ 2011-10-12

TED


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

00:15
When I was little --
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and by the way, I was little once --
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my father told me a story
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about an 18th century watchmaker.
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And what this guy had done:
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he used to produce these fabulously beautiful watches.
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And one day, one of his customers came into his workshop
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and asked him to clean the watch that he'd bought.
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And the guy took it apart,
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and one of the things he pulled out was one of the balance wheels.
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And as he did so, his customer noticed
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that on the back side of the balance wheel was an engraving,
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were words.
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And he said to the guy,
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"Why have you put stuff on the back
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that no one will ever see?"
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And the watchmaker turned around and said,
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"God can see it."
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Now I'm not in the least bit religious,
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neither was my father,
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but at that point, I noticed something happening here.
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I felt something
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in this plexus of blood vessels and nerves,
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and there must be some muscles in there as well somewhere, I guess.
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But I felt something.
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And it was a physiological response.
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And from that point on, from my age at the time,
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I began to think of things in a different way.
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And as I took on my career as a designer,
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I began to ask myself the simple question:
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Do we actually think beauty,
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or do we feel it?
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Now you probably know the answer to this already.
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You probably think, well, I don't know which one you think it is,
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but I think it's about feeling beauty.
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And so I then moved on into my design career
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and began to find some exciting things.
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One of the most early work was done in automotive design --
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some very exciting work was done there.
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And during a lot of this work,
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we found something, or I found something,
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that really fascinated me, and maybe you can remember it.
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Do you remember when lights used to just go on and off,
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click click, when you closed the door in a car?
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And then somebody, I think it was BMW,
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introduced a light that went out slowly.
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Remember that?
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I remember it clearly.
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Do you remember the first time you were in a car and it did that?
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I remember sitting there thinking, this is fantastic.
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In fact, I've never found anybody
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that doesn't like the light that goes out slowly.
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I thought, well what the hell's that about?
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So I started to ask myself questions about it.
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And the first was, I'd ask other people: "Do you like it?" "Yes."
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"Why?" And they'd say, "Oh, it feels so natural,"
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or, "It's nice."
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I thought, well that's not good enough.
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Can we cut down a little bit further,
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because, as a designer, I need the vocabulary, I need the keyboard,
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of how this actually works.
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And so I did some experiments.
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And I suddenly realized
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that there was something that did exactly that --
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light to dark in six seconds --
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exactly that.
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Do you know what it is? Anyone?
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You see, using this bit, the thinky bit,
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the slow bit of the brain -- using that.
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And this isn't a think, it's a feel.
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And would you do me a favor?
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For the next 14 minutes or whatever it is,
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will you feel stuff?
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I don't need you to think so much as I want you to feel it.
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I felt a sense of relaxation
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tempered with anticipation.
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And that thing that I found
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was the cinema or the theater.
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It's actually just happened here --
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light to dark in six seconds.
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And when that happens, are you sitting there going,
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"No, the movie's about to start,"
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or are you going, "That's fantastic. I'm looking forward to it.
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I get a sense of anticipation"?
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Now I'm not a neuroscientist.
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I don't know even if there is something called a conditioned reflex.
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But it might be.
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Because the people I speak to in the northern hemisphere
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that used to go in the cinema get this.
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And some of the people I speak to
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that have never seen a movie or been to the theater
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don't get it in the same way.
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Everybody likes it,
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but some like it more than others.
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So this leads me to think of this in a different way.
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We're not feeling it. We're thinking beauty is in the limbic system --
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if that's not an outmoded idea.
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These are the bits, the pleasure centers,
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and maybe what I'm seeing and sensing and feeling
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is bypassing my thinking.
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The wiring from your sensory apparatus to those bits
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is shorter than the bits that have to pass through the thinky bit, the cortex.
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They arrive first.
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So how do we make that actually work?
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And how much of that reactive side of it
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is due to what we already know,
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or what we're going to learn, about something?
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This is one of the most beautiful things I know.
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It's a plastic bag.
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And when I looked at it first, I thought, no, there's no beauty in that.
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Then I found out,
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post exposure,
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that this plastic bag if I put it into a filthy puddle
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or a stream filled with coliforms
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and all sorts of disgusting stuff,
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that that filthy water
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will migrate through the wall of the bag by osmosis
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and end up inside it as pure, potable drinking water.
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And all of a sudden, this plastic bag
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was extremely beautiful to me.
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Now I'm going to ask you again
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to switch on the emotional bit.
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Would you mind taking the brain out,
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and I just want you to feel something.
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Look at that. What are you feeling about it?
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Is it beautiful? Is it exciting?
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I'm watching your faces very carefully.
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There's some rather bored-looking gentlemen
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and some slightly engaged-looking ladies
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who are picking up something off that.
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Maybe there's an innocence to it.
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Now I'm going to tell you what it is. Are you ready?
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This is the last act on this Earth
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of a little girl called Heidi, five years old,
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before she died of cancer to the spine.
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It's the last thing she did,
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the last physical act.
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Look at that picture.
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Look at the innocence. Look at the beauty in it.
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Is it beautiful now?
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Stop. Stop. How do you feel?
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Where are you feeling this?
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I'm feeling it here. I feel it here.
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And I'm watching your faces,
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because your faces are telling me something.
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The lady over there is actually crying, by the way.
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But what are you doing?
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I watch what people do.
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I watch faces.
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I watch reactions.
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Because I have to know how people react to things.
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And one of the most common faces
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on something faced with beauty,
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something stupefyingly delicious,
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is what I call the OMG.
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And by the way, there's no pleasure in that face.
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It's not a "this is wonderful!"
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The eyebrows are doing this, the eyes are defocused,
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and the mouth is hanging open.
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That's not the expression of joy.
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There's something else in that.
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There's something weird happening.
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So pleasure seems to be tempered
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by a whole series of different things coming in.
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Poignancy is a word I love as a designer.
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It means something triggering a big emotional response,
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often quite a sad emotional response,
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but it's part of what we do.
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It isn't just about nice.
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And this is the dilemma, this is the paradox, of beauty.
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Sensorily, we're taking in all sorts of things --
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mixtures of things that are good, bad, exciting, frightening --
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to come up with that sensorial exposure,
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that sensation of what's going on.
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Pathos appears obviously
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as part of what you just saw in that little girl's drawing.
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And also triumph, this sense of transcendence,
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this "I never knew that. Ah, this is something new."
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And that's packed in there as well.
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And as we assemble these tools,
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from a design point of view, I get terribly excited about it,
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because these are things, as we've already said,
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they're arriving at the brain, it would seem,
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before cognition, before we can manipulate them --
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electrochemical party tricks.
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Now what I'm also interested in is:
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Is it possible to separate
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intrinsic and extrinsic beauty?
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By that, I mean intrinsically beautiful things,
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just something that's exquisitely beautiful,
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that's universally beautiful.
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Very hard to find. Maybe you've got some examples of it.
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Very hard to find something that, to everybody,
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is a very beautiful thing,
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without a certain amount of information packed in there before.
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So a lot of it tends to be extrinsic.
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It's mediated by information before the comprehension.
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Or the information's added on at the back,
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like that little girl's drawing that I showed you.
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Now when talking about beauty
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you can't get away from the fact
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that a lot experiments have been done in this way
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with faces and what have you.
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And one of the most tedious ones, I think,
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was saying that beauty was about symmetry.
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Well it obviously isn't.
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This is a more interesting one
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where half faces were shown to some people,
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and then to add them into a list
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of most beautiful to least beautiful
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and then exposing a full face.
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And they found that it was almost exact coincidence.
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So it wasn't about symmetry.
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In fact, this lady has a particularly asymmetrical face,
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of which both sides are beautiful.
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But they're both different.
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And as a designer, I can't help meddling with this,
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so I pulled it to bits and sort of did stuff like this,
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and tried to understand what the individual elements were,
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but feeling it as I go.
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Now I can feel a sensation of delight and beauty
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if I look at that eye.
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I'm not getting it off the eyebrow.
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And the earhole isn't doing it to me at all.
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So I don't know how much this is helping me,
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but it's helping to guide me to the places
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where the signals are coming off.
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And as I say, I'm not a neuroscientist,
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but to understand how I can start to assemble things
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that will very quickly bypass
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this thinking part
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and get me to the enjoyable precognitive elements.
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Anais Nin and the Talmud have told us time and time again
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that we see things not as they are, but as we are.
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So I'm going to shamelessly expose something to you,
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which is beautiful to me.
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And this is the F1 MV Agusta.
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Ahhhh.
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It is really -- I mean, I can't express to you
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how exquisite this object is.
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But I also know why it's exquisite to me,
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because it's a palimpsest of things.
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It's masses and masses of layers.
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This is just the bit that protrudes into our physical dimension.
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It's something much bigger.
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Layer after layer of legend, sport, details that resonate.
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I mean, if I just go through some of them now --
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I know about laminar flow when it comes to air-piercing objects,
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and that does it consummately well, you can see it can.
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So that's getting me excited.
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And I feel that here.
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This bit, the big secret of automotive design --
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reflection management.
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It's not about the shapes,
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it's how the shapes reflect light.
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Now that thing, light flickers across it as you move,
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so it becomes a kinetic object,
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even though it's standing still --
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managed by how brilliantly that's done on the reflection.
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This little relief on the footplate, by the way, to a rider
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means there's something going on underneath it --
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in this case, a drive chain running at 300 miles and hour probably,
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taking the power from the engine.
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I'm getting terribly excited
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as my mind and my eyes flick across these things.
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Titanium lacquer on this.
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I can't tell you how wonderful this is.
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That's how you stop the nuts coming off at high speed on the wheel.
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I'm really getting into this now.
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And of course, a racing bike doesn't have a prop stand,
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but this one, because it's a road bike,
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it all goes away and it folds into this little gap.
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So it disappears.
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And then I can't tell you how hard it is to do that radiator, which is curved.
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Why would you do that?
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Because I know we need to bring the wheel farther into the aerodynamics.
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So it's more expensive, but it's wonderful.
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And to cap it all,
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brand royalty --
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Agusta, Count Agusta,
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from the great histories of this stuff.
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The bit that you can't see is the genius that created this.
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Massimo Tamburini.
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They call him "The Plumber" in Italy,
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as well as "Maestro,"
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because he actually is engineer
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and craftsman and sculptor at the same time.
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There's so little compromise on this, you can't see it.
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But unfortunately, the likes of me and people that are like me
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have to deal with compromise all the time with beauty.
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We have to deal with it.
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So I have to work with a supply chain, and I've got to work with the technologies,
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and I've got to work with everything else all the time,
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and so compromises start to fit into it.
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And so look at her.
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I've had to make a bit of a compromise there.
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I've had to move that part across, but only a millimeter.
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No one's noticed, have they yet?
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Did you see what I did?
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I moved three things by a millimeter.
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Pretty? Yes.
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Beautiful? Maybe lesser.
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But then, of course, the consumer says that doesn't really matter.
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So that's okay, isn't it?
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Another millimeter?
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No one's going to notice those split lines and changes.
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It's that easy to lose beauty,
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because beauty's incredibly difficult to do.
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And only a few people can do it.
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And a focus group cannot do it.
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And a team rarely can do it.
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It takes a central cortex, if you like,
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to be able to orchestrate all those elements at the same time.
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This is a beautiful water bottle --
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some of you know of it --
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done by Ross Lovegrove, the designer.
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This is pretty close to intrinsic beauty. This one,
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as long as you know what water is like
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then you can experience this.
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It's lovely because it is an embodiment
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of something refreshing and delicious.
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I might like it more than you like it,
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because I know how bloody hard it is to do it.
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It's stupefyingly difficult
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to make something that refracts light like that,
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that comes out of the tool correctly,
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that goes down the line without falling over.
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Underneath this, like the story of the swan,
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is a million things very difficult to do.
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So all hail to that.
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It's a fantastic example, a simple object.
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And the one I showed you before was, of course, a massively complex one.
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And they're working in beauty
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in slightly different ways because of it.
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You all, I guess, like me,
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enjoy watching a ballet dancer dance.
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And part of the joy of it is, you know the difficulty.
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You also may be taking into account the fact that it's incredibly painful.
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Anybody seen a ballet dancer's toes
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when they come out of the points?
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While she's doing these graceful arabesques and plies and what have you,
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something horrible's going on down here.
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The comprehension of it
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leads us to a greater and heightened sense
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of the beauty of what's actually going on.
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Now I'm using microseconds wrongly here,
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so please ignore me.
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But what I have to do now, feeling again,
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what I've got to do is to be able to supply enough of these enzymes,
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of these triggers into something early on in the process,
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that you pick it up,
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not through your thinking, but through your feeling.
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So we're going to have a little experiment.
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Right, are you ready? I'm going to show you something for a very, very brief moment.
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Are you ready? Okay.
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Did you think that was a bicycle when I showed it to you at the first flash?
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It's not.
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Tell me something, did you think it was quick when you first saw it? Yes you did.
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Did you think it was modern? Yes you did.
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That blip, that information, shot into you before that.
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And because your brain starter motor began there,
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now it's got to deal with it.
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And the great thing is, this motorcycle has been styled this way
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specifically to engender a sense
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that it's green technology and it's good for you
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and it's light and it's all part of the future.
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So is that wrong?
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Well in this case it isn't,
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because it's a very, very ecologically-sound piece of technology.
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But you're a slave of that first flash.
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We are slaves to the first few fractions of a second --
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and that's where much of my work
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has to win or lose,
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on a shelf in a shop.
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It wins or loses at that point.
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You may see 50, 100, 200 things on a shelf
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as you walk down it,
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but I have to work within that domain,
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to ensure that it gets you there first.
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And finally, the layer that I love, of knowledge.
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Some of you, I'm sure, will be familiar with this.
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What's incredible about this,
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and the way I love to come back to it,
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is this is taking something that you hate or bores you,
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folding clothes,
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and if you can actually do this --
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who can actually do this? Anybody try to do this?
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Yeah?
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It's fantastic, isn't it?
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Look at that. Do you want to see it again?
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No time. It says I have two minutes left, so we can't do this.
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But just go to the Web, YouTube,
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pull it down, "folding T-shirt."
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That's how underpaid younger-aged people have to fold your T-shirt.
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You didn't maybe know it.
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But how do you feel about it?
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It feels fantastic when you do it, you look forward to doing it,
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and when you tell somebody else about it -- like you probably have --
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you look really smart.
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The knowledge bubble that sits around the outside,
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the stuff that costs nothing,
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because that knowledge is free --
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bundle that together and where do we come out?
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Form follows function?
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Only sometimes. Only sometimes.
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Form is function. Form is function.
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It informs, it tells us,
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it supplies us answers before we've even thought about it.
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And so I've stopped using words like "form,"
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and I've stopped using words like "function" as a designer.
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What I try to pursue now
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is the emotional functionality of things.
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Because if I can get that right,
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I can make them wonderful, and I can make them repeatedly wonderful.
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And you know what those products and services are,
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because you own some of them.
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They're the things that you'd snatch if the house was on fire.
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Forming the emotional bond
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between this thing and you
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is an electrochemical party trick
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that happens before you even think about it.
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Thank you very much.
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(Applause)
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Original video on YouTube.com
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