Lessons From History for a Better Future | Roman Krznaric | TED

8,921 views ・ 2025-03-18

TED


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Imagine you're standing on the old, wooden Nihonbashi Bridge
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in the ancient Japanese city of Edo, now known as Tokyo.
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It's around 1750, in the era of the Tokugawa shoguns.
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People are chatting. Laborers are pushing cartloads of rice.
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Seafood traders are rushing across to the fish market.
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Now Edo wasn’t just remarkable for being a huge city of over a million people,
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far larger than London or Paris at the time.
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It also operated what we would today call a circular economy,
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where almost everything was reused, repaired, repurposed or recycled.
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So Japan's policy of not trading with the outside world
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led to shortages of precious resources, like wood and cotton.
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So a tradition of patchwork developed, known as "boro," meaning tattered rags,
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where fragments of old cloth were sewn together
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into garments that were then passed on down the generations,
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just like the one I'm wearing, which is over 100 years old.
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A kimono might be used until the cloth began to wear out,
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then turned into pajamas, then cut up into nappies,
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then used as cleaning cloths
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and finally burned as fuel.
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Edo had over 1,000 circular businesses,
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from collecting candle wax drippings to be remolded
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to down-and-out samurai repairing old umbrellas.
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Traders even paid for human waste,
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which was then sold as agricultural fertilizer.
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Strict timber rationing rules were also introduced,
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to restore the nation's depleted old-growth forests.
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This was one of the world's first large-scale examples
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of a low-waste, low-carbon ecological civilization.
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Now Edo Japan wasn't a utopia,
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having feudal and patriarchal inequalities,
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yet 300 years on, it offers hope that we can create economies today
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that are driven not by the chronic wastefulness
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and ecological blindness of consumer capitalism,
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but by a deep culture of sustainability.
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I mean, if we were to adopt the circular mindset of "Edonomics,"
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we'd rapidly phase out the sale of products like standard smartphones,
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which use over half the elements of the periodic table
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and are often discarded after less than three years.
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And instead, we'd introduce regenerative standards
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so that the only phones permitted for sale would use recycled materials
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and be modular by design,
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with easily replaceable screens and batteries.
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I mean, wouldn't that be great?
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And like many other historical examples,
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such as the ancestral circular economy in precolonial Hawaii,
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Edo shows that it's possible to combine radical sustainability
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with cultural flourishing.
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It gave birth to the artworks of Hiroshige, to the poetry of Bashō,
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and to a thriving culture of sumo wrestling.
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I mean, what's not to like?
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Now why am I telling you about the economy of ancient Japan?
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Because it reveals how history is one of our most undervalued resources
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for thinking about the future of humanity,
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and we have vast amounts of the stuff to tap into.
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I mean, we're in an age of polycrisis,
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from a climate emergency to risks from AI and threats to democracy.
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History can help us navigate our way through the turbulence,
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acting as a counselor rather than as a clairvoyant.
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But, you know, with my background as a political scientist,
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I've become increasingly frustrated
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by the way that our politicians and policymakers
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remain trapped in the tyranny of the now,
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driven by the latest opinion poll,
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or hoping that new technologies will come to our civilizational rescue.
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They are failing to see that in order to go forwards,
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we'd be wise to look backwards.
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Now the idea of learning from history,
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what's sometimes called applied history, is far from new.
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200 years ago, the German writer Goethe declared,
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"He who cannot draw on 3,000 years is living from hand to mouth."
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Now, typically, learning from history
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focuses on warnings captured in the famous aphorism
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that those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.
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Yet my research on the power of history for tomorrow
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reveals just how much inspiration can be found
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in positive examples of what's gone right,
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not only in cautionary tales of what's gone wrong.
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Time and again, we have acted together, often against the odds,
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and succeeded to overcome crises and tackle injustices.
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So let me just offer you a couple more examples
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of where we can find hope in history,
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out of the dozens I've explored by looking across the last millennia,
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which speak to the ecological dilemmas of our time.
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Now if I could travel back to any moment in the past,
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it would be to the Spanish city of Córdoba in around the year 1000,
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which was part of the Islamic Kingdom of Al-Andalus,
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which ruled over the southern part of today's Spain.
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Now what made Córdoba so extraordinary
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was that Muslims, Christians and Jews
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managed to live side by side in relative harmony,
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in a period known as the convivencia,
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literally the "coexistence" or the "living together."
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And although there were everyday tensions and occasional outbreaks of violence,
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it was generally a time of cultural tolerance.
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Muslims and Christians played music together.
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Jews and Muslims might have a game of chess.
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People mixed together in the public bathhouses and in the marketplaces,
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creating webs of economic relations.
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There's the story of Samuel ha-Nagid,
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a Jewish poet whose skills as an Arabic scribe
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enabled him to rise to become the prime minister of the Muslim ruler of Granada,
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and even lead his military forces.
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Convivencia was built not just on the shared language of Arabic
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and on the freedom of religion permitted by Islamic law
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but was crucially due to the daily interactions of urban life.
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You know, there was this recent study of 29 countries
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which showed that levels of intercultural tolerance rise rapidly
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with even small increases in the size of size of cities,
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which is precisely what Córdoba, a city of nearly half a million people,
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proved more than 1,000 years ago.
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I think there's a message here for our era of growing xenophobia
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and far-right nationalism,
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which is set to increase as the ecological crisis
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compels more and more people to migrate from their homelands.
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History offers an antidote to the idea of an inevitable clash of civilizations,
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showing how it's possible for us to live together with difference
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in multicultural communities,
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forging what the 14th-century Islamic historian Ibn Khaldūn called asabiyya,
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an Arabic term meaning "collective solidarity" or group feeling,
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which he believed was vital to prevent the breakdown of civilizations.
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And we can all nurture the invisible threads of asabiyya in our everyday lives.
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It can be as simple as having a conversation
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with a stranger once a week
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or joining a local sports team with players from diverse backgrounds.
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So you know we can see prospects
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for a different kind of economy in 18th-century Edo, Japan,
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and for cultural coexistence in medieval Islamic Spain.
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But what about compelling our governments to take the urgent action
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required to overcome our continuing addiction to fossil fuels,
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which is driving us over perilous planetary tipping points?
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Well history offers a very clear reason for radical hope
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that disruptive movements can change the system.
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Let's journey back to the 1820s,
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when over 700,000 enslaved people were working
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on British-owned sugar plantations in the West Indies.
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Now at that time, many plantation owners and financiers
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made remarkably similar arguments to today’s fossil-fuel executives
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to defend their actions.
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They admitted that slavery, like oil and gas production,
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was morally questionable,
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but they claimed that ending it too rapidly
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could easily lead to economic collapse.
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So instead, they argued that slavery should be phased out gradually,
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over many decades.
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Well it’s an excuse we hear repeatedly today
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from the fossil-energy industry,
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which displays the very same foot-dragging gradualism.
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Now the British abolition movement was organized
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in the Society for [the Mitigation
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and Gradual Abolition of Slavery.]
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Right, the name said it all.
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Its reformist strategy
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of lobbying politicians and publishing pamphlets
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was making little headway.
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The turning point came in 1831,
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in an act of disruption which sent shock waves through Britain:
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the Jamaica Slave Revolt.
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More than 20,000 enslaved workers rose up in rebellion in Jamaica,
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setting fire to over 200 plantations.
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The revolt was brutally crushed,
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but it sent a wave of panic through the British establishment,
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who concluded that if they didn't grant emancipation,
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then the whole colony might be lost.
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Multiple studies showed that the revolt tipped the scales in favor of abolition,
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leading to the Slavery Abolition Act of 1833.
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In the absence of this disruptive radical flank movement,
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it might have taken decades longer for abolition to enter the statute books
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than if left in the hands of the reformist white elite.
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Now many people are quick to criticize today’s radical,
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nonviolent climate movements,
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like Extinction Rebellion and Just Stop Oil.
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But let's remember that they are part of long traditions
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of successful disruptive movements
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going back to the Jamaica rebels and to the suffragettes,
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and the Indian independence movement and US civil rights activists,
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whose actions have helped amplify existing crises
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and catapulted them onto the political agenda.
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In doing so, they've often broken the rules
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and, sometimes, the law,
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to create change when all other pathways were blocked.
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The great tragedy is that, while disruptive figures
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like Emmeline Pankhurst and Martin Luther King, Jr.
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are now celebrated in our children's school history textbooks,
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their modern equivalents in today's ecological movements
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are frequently demonized by the press and criminalized by the police.
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I mean, have we learned nothing?
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I mean, personally, I'm not a natural disrupter,
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and prefer sitting in old libraries, reading books.
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But because of what I’ve discovered in those libraries
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about the power of disruptive movements,
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I have found myself lying on the street,
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blocking the road with my teenage daughter in front of London's Parliament,
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exasperated by the government's glacial pace of action on the climate crisis.
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I realize that it annoys commuters,
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but our inaction is going to infuriate future generations even more.
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I can't think of a better way to be a good ancestor.
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I mean, it's too late and too reckless
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to leave this crisis to simmer on the low flame of gradualism.
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I'm not optimistic about the prospects for the human species.
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I believe that humanity is currently on a pathway
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towards ecological and technological self-termination.
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But history gives me genuine hope that it doesn't have to be this way.
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We are not starting from zero.
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The past is full of inspiring possibilities
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that must guide us today,
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so we always act as if change is possible.
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Because from what I’ve seen, it just might be.
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If our civilization is going to bend rather than break
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as we face the turbulence of the coming decades,
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we need to develop what I call temporal intelligence,
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the capacity to think on multiple time horizons,
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both forwards and backwards.
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Now, of course, history has always been used and abused by those in power.
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So we need to be wary of gross distortions and rosy romanticism
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and treat the past with care.
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How might we do so and develop our temporal intelligence?
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Well if schools taught applied history,
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then children might know how ancient Japanese sustainability practices
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could help reshape today's world.
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Or what if governments created not just foresight units,
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but backsight units,
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which systematically learn from the history of public policy?
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And wouldn't it be fascinating to visit a "History for Tomorrow Museum,"
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which explores how history can help us confront 21st-century challenges,
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from the ecological crisis
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to the risks of AI and genetic engineering.
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As we journey towards tomorrow,
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let us be guided by the Maori proverb,
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"I walk backwards into the future with my eyes fixed on the past."
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In fact, I invite you all to repeat it out loud after me, in Maori.
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So here we go, as loud as you can.
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Me first.
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Kia whakatōmuri ...
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Audience: Kia whakatōmuri ...
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Roman Krznaric: ... te haere whakamua.
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Audience: ... te haere whakamua.
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RK: Absolutely brilliant, thank you all so much.
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(Cheers and applause)
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