Why does the universe exist? | Jim Holt | TED

7,890,735 views ・ 2014-09-02

TED


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Why does the universe exist?
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Why is there — Okay. Okay. (Laughter)
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This is a cosmic mystery. Be solemn.
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Why is there a world, why are we in it,
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and why is there something rather than nothing at all?
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I mean, this is the super ultimate "why" question?
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So I'm going to talk about the mystery of existence,
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the puzzle of existence,
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where we are now in addressing it,
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and why you should care,
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and I hope you do care.
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The philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer said that
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those who don't wonder about the contingency of their existence,
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of the contingency of the world's existence,
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are mentally deficient.
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That's a little harsh, but still. (Laughter)
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So this has been called the most sublime
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and awesome mystery,
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the deepest and most far-reaching question
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man can pose.
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It's obsessed great thinkers.
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Ludwig Wittgenstein, perhaps the greatest
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philosopher of the 20th century,
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was astonished that there should be a world at all.
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He wrote in his "Tractatus," Proposition 4.66,
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"It is not how things are in the world
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that is the mystical,
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it's that the world exists."
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And if you don't like taking your epigrams
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from a philosopher, try a scientist.
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John Archibald Wheeler, one of the great physicists
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of the 20th century,
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the teacher of Richard Feynman,
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the coiner of the term "black hole,"
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he said, "I want to know
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how come the quantum,
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how come the universe, how come existence?"
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And my friend Martin Amis —
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sorry that I'll be doing a lot of name-dropping in this talk,
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so get used to it —
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my dear friend Martin Amis once said
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that we're about five Einsteins away from answering
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the mystery of where the universe came from.
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And I've no doubt there are five Einsteins
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in the audience tonight.
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Any Einsteins? Show of hands? No? No? No?
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No Einsteins? Okay.
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So this question, why is there something rather than nothing,
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this sublime question, was posed rather late
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in intellectual history.
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It was towards the end of the 17th century,
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the philosopher Leibniz who asked it,
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a very smart guy, Leibniz,
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who invented the calculus
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independently of Isaac Newton, at about the same time,
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but for Leibniz, who asked why is there something rather than nothing,
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this was not a great mystery.
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He either was or pretended to be
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an Orthodox Christian in his metaphysical outlook,
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and he said it's obvious why the world exists:
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because God created it.
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And God created, indeed, out of nothing at all.
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That's how powerful God is.
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He doesn't need any preexisting materials to fashion a world out of.
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He can make it out of sheer nothingness,
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creation ex nihilo.
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And by the way, this is what
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most Americans today believe.
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There is no mystery of existence for them.
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God made it.
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So let's put this in an equation.
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I don't have any slides so I'm going to mime my visuals,
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so use your imaginations.
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So it's God + nothing = the world.
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Okay? Now that's the equation.
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And so maybe you don't believe in God.
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Maybe you're a scientific atheist
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or an unscientific atheist, and you don't believe in God,
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and you're not happy with it.
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By the way, even if we have this equation,
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God + nothing = the world,
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there's already a problem:
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Why does God exist?
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God doesn't exist by logic alone
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unless you believe the ontological argument,
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and I hope you don't, because it's not a good argument.
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So it's conceivable, if God were to exist,
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he might wonder, I'm eternal, I'm all-powerful,
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but where did I come from?
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(Laughter)
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Whence then am I?
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God speaks in a more formal English.
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(Laughter)
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And so one theory is that God was so bored with
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pondering the puzzle of His own existence
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that He created the world just to distract himself.
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But anyway, let's forget about God.
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Take God out of the equation: We have
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________ + nothing = the world.
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Now, if you're a Buddhist,
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you might want to stop right there,
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because essentially what you've got is
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nothing = the world,
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and by symmetry of identity, that means
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the world = nothing. Okay?
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And to a Buddhist, the world is just a whole lot of nothing.
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It's just a big cosmic vacuity.
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And we think there's a lot of something out there
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but that's because we're enslaved by our desires.
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If we let our desires melt away,
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we'll see the world for what it truly is,
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a vacuity, nothingness,
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and we'll slip into this happy state of nirvana
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which has been defined as having
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just enough life to enjoy being dead. (Laughter)
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So that's the Buddhist thinking.
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But I'm a Westerner, and I'm still concerned
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with the puzzle of existence, so I've got
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________ + —
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this is going to get serious in a minute, so —
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________ + nothing = the world.
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What are we going to put in that blank?
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Well, how about science?
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Science is our best guide to the nature of reality,
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and the most fundamental science is physics.
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That tells us what naked reality really is,
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that reveals what I call TAUFOTU,
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the True And Ultimate Furniture Of The Universe.
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So maybe physics can fill this blank,
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and indeed, since about the late 1960s or around 1970,
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physicists have purported to give
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a purely scientific explanation of how
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a universe like ours could have popped into existence
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out of sheer nothingness,
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a quantum fluctuation out of the void.
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Stephen Hawking is one of these physicists,
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more recently Alex Vilenkin,
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and the whole thing has been popularized
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by another very fine physicist and friend of mine,
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Lawrence Krauss, who wrote a book called
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"A Universe from Nothing,"
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and Lawrence thinks that he's given —
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he's a militant atheist, by the way,
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so he's gotten God out of the picture.
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The laws of quantum field theory,
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the state-of-the-art physics, can show how
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out of sheer nothingness,
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no space, no time, no matter, nothing,
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a little nugget of false vacuum
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can fluctuate into existence,
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and then, by the miracle of inflation,
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blow up into this huge and variegated cosmos
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we see around us.
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Okay, this is a really ingenious scenario.
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It's very speculative. It's fascinating.
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But I've got a big problem with it,
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and the problem is this:
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It's a pseudo-religious point of view.
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Now, Lawrence thinks he's an atheist,
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but he's still in thrall to a religious worldview.
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He sees physical laws as being like divine commands.
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The laws of quantum field theory for him
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are like fiat lux, "Let there be light."
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The laws have some sort of ontological power or clout
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that they can form the abyss,
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that it's pregnant with being.
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They can call a world into existence out of nothing.
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But that's a very primitive view of what
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a physical law is, right?
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We know that physical laws are actually
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generalized descriptions of patterns and regularities
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in the world.
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They don't exist outside the world.
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They don't have any ontic cloud of their own.
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They can't call a world into existence
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out of nothingness.
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That's a very primitive view
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of what a scientific law is.
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And if you don't believe me on this,
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listen to Stephen Hawking,
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who himself put forward a model of the cosmos
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that was self-contained,
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didn't require any outside cause, any creator,
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and after proposing this,
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Hawking admitted that he was still puzzled.
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He said, this model is just equations.
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What breathes fire into the equations
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and creates a world for them to describe?
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He was puzzled by this,
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so equations themselves can't do the magic,
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can't resolve the puzzle of existence.
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And besides, even if the laws could do that,
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why this set of laws?
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Why quantum field theory that describes
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a universe with a certain number of forces
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and particles and so forth?
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Why not a completely different set of laws?
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There are many, many mathematically consistent sets of laws.
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Why not no laws at all? Why not sheer nothingness?
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So this is a problem, believe it or not,
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that reflective physicists really think a lot about,
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and at this point they tend to go metaphysical,
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say, well, maybe the set of laws
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that describes our universe,
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it's just one set of laws
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and it describes one part of reality,
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but maybe every consistent set of laws
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describes another part of reality,
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and in fact all possible physical worlds
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really exist, they're all out there.
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We just see a little tiny part of reality
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that's described by the laws of quantum field theory,
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but there are many, many other worlds,
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parts of reality that are described
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by vastly different theories
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that are different from ours in ways we can't imagine,
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that are inconceivably exotic.
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Steven Weinberg, the father
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of the standard model of particle physics,
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has actually flirted with this idea himself,
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that all possible realities actually exist.
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Also, a younger physicist, Max Tegmark,
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who believes that all mathematical structures exist,
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and mathematical existence is the same thing
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as physical existence,
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so we have this vastly rich multiverse
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that encompasses every logical possibility.
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Now, in taking this metaphysical way out,
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these physicists and also philosophers are actually
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reaching back to a very old idea
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that goes back to Plato.
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It's the principle of plenitude or fecundity,
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or the great chain of being,
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that reality is actually as full as possible.
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It's as far removed from nothingness
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as it could possibly be.
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So we have these two extremes now.
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We have sheer nothingness on one side,
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and we have this vision of a reality
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that encompasses every conceivable world
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at the other extreme: the fullest possible reality,
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nothingness, the simplest possible reality.
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Now what's in between these two extremes?
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There are all kinds of intermediate realities
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that include some things and leave out others.
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So one of these intermediate realities
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is, say, the most mathematically elegant reality,
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that leaves out the inelegant bits,
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the ugly asymmetries and so forth.
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Now, there are some physicists who will tell you
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that we're actually living in the most elegant reality.
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I think that Brian Greene is in the audience,
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and he has written a book called "The Elegant Universe."
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He claims that the universe we live in mathematically
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is very elegant.
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Don't believe him. (Laughter)
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It's a pious hope, I wish it were true,
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but I think the other day he admitted to me
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it's really an ugly universe.
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It's stupidly constructed,
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it's got way too many arbitrary coupling constants
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and mass ratios
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and superfluous families of elementary particles,
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and what the hell is dark energy?
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It's a stick and bubble gum contraption.
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It's not an elegant universe. (Laughter)
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And then there's the best of all possible worlds
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in an ethical sense.
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You should get solemn now,
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because a world in which sentient beings
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don't suffer needlessly,
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in which there aren't things like
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childhood cancer or the Holocaust.
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This is an ethical conception.
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Anyway, so between nothingness
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and the fullest possible reality,
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various special realities.
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Nothingness is special. It's the simplest.
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Then there's the most elegant possible reality.
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That's special.
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The fullest possible reality, that's special.
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But what are we leaving out here?
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There's also just the crummy,
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generic realities
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that aren't special in any way,
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that are sort of random.
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They're infinitely removed from nothingness,
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but they fall infinitely short of complete fullness.
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They're a mixture of chaos and order,
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of mathematical elegance and ugliness.
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So I would describe these realities
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as an infinite, mediocre, incomplete mess,
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a generic reality, a kind of cosmic junk shot.
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And these realities,
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is there a deity in any of these realities?
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Maybe, but the deity isn't perfect
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like the Judeo-Christian deity.
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The deity isn't all-good and all-powerful.
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It might be instead 100 percent malevolent
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but only 80 percent effective,
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which pretty much describes the world we see around us, I think. (Laughter)
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So I would like to propose that the resolution
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to the mystery of existence
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is that the reality we exist in
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is one of these generic realities.
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Reality has to turn out some way.
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It can either turn out to be nothing
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or everything or something in between.
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So if it has some special feature,
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like being really elegant or really full
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or really simple, like nothingness,
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that would require an explanation.
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But if it's just one of these random, generic realities,
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there's no further explanation for it.
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And indeed, I would say
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that's the reality we live in.
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That's what science is telling us.
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At the beginning of the week,
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we got the exciting information that
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the theory of inflation, which predicts a big,
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infinite, messy, arbitrary, pointless reality,
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it's like a big frothing champagne
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coming out of a bottle endlessly,
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a vast universe, mostly a wasteland
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with little pockets of charm and order and peace,
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this has been confirmed,
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this inflationary scenario, by the observations
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made by radio telescopes in Antarctica
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that looked at the signature of the gravitational waves
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from just before the Big Bang.
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I'm sure you all know about this.
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So anyway, I think there's some evidence
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that this really is the reality that we're stuck with.
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Now, why should you care?
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Well — (Laughter) —
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the question, "Why does the world exist?"
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that's the cosmic question, it sort of rhymes
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with a more intimate question:
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Why do I exist? Why do you exist?
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you know, our existence would seem to be amazingly improbable,
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because there's an enormous number of genetically possible humans,
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if you can compute it by looking at
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the number of the genes and the number of alleles and so forth,
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and a back-of-the-envelope calculation will tell you
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there are about 10 to the 10,000th
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possible humans, genetically.
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That's between a googol and a googolplex.
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And the number of the actual humans that have existed
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is 100 billion, maybe 50 billion,
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an infinitesimal fraction, so all of us,
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we've won this amazing cosmic lottery.
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We're here. Okay.
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So what kind of reality do we want to live in?
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Do we want to live in a special reality?
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What if we were living in the most elegant possible reality?
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Imagine the existential pressure on us
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to live up to that, to be elegant,
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not to pull down the tone of it.
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Or, what if we were living in the fullest possible reality?
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Well then our existence would be guaranteed,
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because every possible thing
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exists in that reality,
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but our choices would be meaningless.
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If I really struggle morally and agonize
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and I decide to do the right thing,
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what difference does it make,
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because there are an infinite number
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of versions of me
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also doing the right thing
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and an infinite number doing the wrong thing.
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So my choices are meaningless.
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So we don't want to live in that special reality.
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And as for the special reality of nothingness,
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we wouldn't be having this conversation.
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So I think living in a generic reality that's mediocre,
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there are nasty bits and nice bits
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and we could make the nice bits bigger
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and the nasty bits smaller
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and that gives us a kind of purpose in life.
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The universe is absurd,
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but we can still construct a purpose,
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15:56
and that's a pretty good one,
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15:57
and the overall mediocrity of reality
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15:59
kind of resonates nicely with the mediocrity
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16:02
we all feel in the core of our being.
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And I know you feel it.
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I know you're all special,
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but you're still kind of secretly mediocre,
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don't you think?
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(Laughter) (Applause)
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16:13
So anyway, you may say, this puzzle, the mystery of existence,
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16:17
it's just silly mystery-mongering.
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You're not astonished at the existence of the universe
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16:22
and you're in good company.
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16:24
Bertrand Russell said,
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"I should say the universe is just there, and that's all."
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16:30
Just a brute fact.
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16:31
And my professor at Columbia, Sidney Morgenbesser,
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16:34
a great philosophical wag,
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16:35
when I said to him, "Professor Morgenbesser,
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16:37
why is there something rather than nothing?"
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16:40
And he said, "Oh, even if there was nothing,
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16:42
you still wouldn't be satisfied."
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16:44
So — (Laughter) — okay.
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16:47
So you're not astonished. I don't care.
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16:50
But I will tell you something to conclude
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16:53
that I guarantee you will astonish you,
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16:55
because it's astonished all of the brilliant,
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16:58
wonderful people I've met at this TED conference,
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17:00
when I've told them, and it's this:
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Never in my life have I had a cell phone.
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Thank you.
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(Laughter) (Applause)
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