2017年11月26日 星期日

Activism needs introverts

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This week on TED.com
November 26, 2017

Sarah Corbett: Activism needs introverts

13:57 minutes · Filmed Nov 2016 · Posted Nov 2017 · TEDxYouth@Bath

Almost everyone has a cause they love and want to support, but for the introverts among us, the traditional forms of activism -- the marches, the protests, the door-to-door canvassing -- can be really intimidating. Take it from Sarah Corbett, an activist and self-proclaimed introvert. She introduces us to "craftivism," a quieter form of activism that uses handicrafts in clever ways to help people think deeply about the issues they're facing. Who says an embroidered handkerchief can't change the world?

Playlist of the week

The power of asking

As these talks reveal: Some things are more within your grasp than you may think ... especially if you ask. Watch »

4 TED Talks • Total run time 48:11

This week's new TED Talks

In this spectacular rant, marketing prof Scott Galloway breaks down the increasing power of Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google. How did these four companies come to infiltrate our lives so completely? You'll hear insights and eye-opening stats about their dominance and motivation -- and what happens when a society prizes shareholder value over everything else. Followed by a thoughtful Q&A with TED Curator Chris Anderson. (Note: This talk contains graphic language.) Watch »

Across the world, the "informal economy" -- made up of small shops and stands, skilled craftspeople and day laborers -- is the invisible engine that keeps the economy running. It's tempting to think of these workers as tax-dodgers, even criminals -- but Niti Bhan, who studies informal markets in Africa, makes the case that this booming segment of the economy is legitimate and worthy of investment. "These are the fertile seeds of businesses and enterprises," Bhan says. "Can we start by recognizing these skills and occupations?" Watch »

We all know that when we make decisions in large groups, they don't always go right -- and sometimes they go very wrong. How can groups make good decisions? With his colleague Dan Ariely, neuroscientist Mariano Sigman has been inquiring into how we interact to reach decisions -- and performing experiments with live crowds to find out. In this fun, fact-filled explainer video, he shares some intriguing early results on people can think better together. Watch »

Leah Chase's New Orleans restaurant Dooky Chase changed the course of American history over gumbo and fried chicken. During the civil rights movement, it was a place where white and black people came together, where activists planned protests and where the police entered but did not disturb, and it continues to operate in the same spirit today. In conversation with TEDWomen Curator Pat Mitchell, the 94-year old Queen of Creole Cuisine shares wisdom from a lifetime of speaking up, building relationships -- and cooking. Watch »

Read more on ideas.ted.com

Wisdom: Brilliant life advice from seniors >>
Hard-won wisdom from long, well-lived lives

We humans: Would democracy work better on the jury system?
Read more about intriguing research into group decision-making

Science: Could these three moons help us find life beyond Earth?
Three moons in our solar system have oceans -- and maybe the conditions for life

Quote of the Week

We've personified these companies, and just as when you're really angry over every little thing someone does in your life and relationships, you've got to ask yourself, 'What's going on here? Why are we so disappointed in technology?' I believe it's because the ratio of 1 percent pursuit of shareholder value and 99 percent the betterment of humanity that technology used to play has been flipped, and now we're totally focused on shareholder value instead of humanity."

Scott Galloway
How Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google manipulate our emotions

ted radio hour: big data revolution

Once invisible details of our lives can now be tracked and turned into data. Will this make life easier or more complicated? This hour, TED speakers imagine how Big Data will reshape our world. Get the TED Radio Hour on Apple Podcasts, directly through the TED Android App, or wherever you get your podcasts. 

 

 

2017年11月18日 星期六

Got apocalypse fatigue? How to have a real conversation about global warming

Turns out, we all care. Open in your browser
TED
This week on TED.com
November 18, 2017

Got apocalypse fatigue? How to have a real conversation about global warming

15:00 minutes · Filmed Sep 2017 · Posted Nov 2017 · TEDGlobal>NYC

What's the biggest obstacle to dealing with climate change? It's between your ears, says psychologist Per Espen Stokes. He's spent years studying the mental defenses we use to avoid thinking about hard things -- and he's developed a new way of talking about global warming, one that keeps us from tuning out and shutting down, and instead encourages us to do what we can. Step away from the hopeless doomsday narratives and learn new techniques for talking and empowering with this fun, informative talk.

Playlist of the week

Why it's sometimes good to be bored

Yes, being bored can lead to new possibilities, better ideas and even an extra shot of creativity. Watch »

4 TED Talks • Total run time 41:49

This week's new TED Talks

There's no easy answer to the issue of homelessness, but Lloyd Pendleton shares how he went from skeptic to believer in the Housing First approach: helping people on the streets to find housing without pre-conditions. As a leader, Pendleton shares how he confronted his own assumptions -- and shows the numbers that convinced him. Watch »

Are you nervous about saying the wrong thing when you talk to a transgender person? In this funny, frank talk, Jackson Bird offers useful tips (and clears up a few misconceptions) about handling pronouns, understanding someone who's transitioning, bathroom politics and more. And check out the excellent footnotes and reading guide attached to this talk. Watch »

In 2011, Teresa Njoroge was jailed for a financial crime she didn't commit. And she discovered that most of the women and girls locked up with her were victims of the same broken system, caught in a revolving door of life in and out of prison. Now free and cleared, Njoroge shares how she's working to give women in prison the skills, tools and support they need to break the cycle and build a better life. Watch »

Musician, filmmaker and artist Kayla Briët creates art that explores identity and self-discovery -- and the fear that her culture may someday be forgotten. She shares how she found her creative voice and reclaimed the stories of her Dutch-Indonesian, Chinese and Native American heritage by infusing them into film and music, as artistic time capsules carrying these cultures into the next generations. Watch »

With warmth and grace, Beth Malone tells the deeply personal story of her dad's struggle with frontotemporal lobe dementia, and how it changed how she thinks about death (and life). A moving talk about a daughter's love -- and of letting go and finding peace. Watch »

In a refreshingly practical, nonpartisan take on climate preparedness, David Titley, a scientist and retired US Navy officer, shares the science of how the military is prepping for a warming planet. "The ice doesn't care who's in the White House. It doesn't care which party controls your parliament," Titley says. "It just melts." Watch »

Read more on ideas.ted.com

Language: Was this poem written by a human or a computer?
Take our test and see if you can tell the difference

Politics: How to turn your cause into US law >>
Tips on navigating the system, learned on a quest to protect victims' rights 

Comedy: What's it like to live under a dictator your entire life? 
In an unmissable, timely set, one comedian from Zimbabwe makes actual jokes about life under Robert Mugabe 

Global issues: The surprising link between refugees and global security >>
David Miliband's expert analysis puts the problem in a new perspective

Math: How to win at Monopoly, according to math experts >>
Get ready to win the annual after-dinner family game

Quote of the Week

Climate isn't really about some abstract, distant climate far, far away from us. It's about this air that surrounds us. The air you can feel in this room, the air that moves right now in your nostrils. This air is our earth's skin. And inside this skin, we're all closely connected. Inside this thin, fluctuating, unsettled film, all of life is nourished, protected and held."

Per Espen Stoknes
How to transform apocalypse fatigue into action on global warming

TED Radio hour: Simple solutions

Sometimes, the best solutions to complex problems are simple. But simple doesn't always mean easy. This hour, TED speakers Sam Kass, Wendy Troxel, Mileha Soneji, Dr. Myriam Sidibe and Amos Winter describe the innovation and hard work that goes into achieving simplicity. Available now on Apple Podcasts, the TED Android app, or wherever you listen.

 

 

2017年11月15日 星期三

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31 days of ideas

Close out 2017 by remembering that the world can be a wonderful, challenging, amazing place. Each day this December, get an idea worth spreading -- chosen and recommended by a TED speaker -- delivered to your inbox (for free)!

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Your elusive creative genius

By Adam Savage

You probably know about Elizabeth Gilbert because her non-fiction book about traveling around the world to find herself after divorce, Eat, Pray, Love, was an international bestseller, and then a movie starring Julia Roberts. I knew that the book existed, like nearly everyone with a pulse, but I hadn't read it, nor did I have plans to. To be honest, I'd arrogantly filed it away in my brain under "self-help-How-Stella-Got-Her-Groove-Back-type-books-I'll-probably-never-read."

What an idiot. It was idiotic to judge Gilbert by her cover story -- because in late 2014 she rocked my world. I was on a 32-city tour with my stage show and looking for stuff to read. I can't remember who recommended it, but I picked up Gilbert's 2010 novel, The Signature of All Things, and promptly had my world rocked. The book KILLED me, and I found myself transported every time I picked it up and often openly weeping at its amazing chronicle of the development of a natural scientist in the 19th century. It's a masterpiece.

I mentioned this to a friend (thank you, Hodgman!) who promptly told me that Gilbert was a friend and had also given a great TED Talk, "Your elusive creative genius." I discovered in fact that she gave given two talks. But really, they're two halves of one talk, and indeed one of the best ever given, in my humble opinion.

Gilbert gave her first talk right after the success of Eat, Pray, Love. She speaks eloquently and confidently about creativity and success. From the vantage point of achieving international acclaim after two decades of struggle, she begins her talk reminding the crowd that, as she put it, "It's exceedingly likely that my greatest success is behind me." She continues to talk about where the successful creative process comes from. She fears it might not happen to her again, decides to see how others coped with success and, in her investigation, discovers that the concept of a "creator" as the singular source for ideas is fairly recent -- and that ancient tribes, the Greeks and the Romans all had a concept of genius as an "other." Something outside ourselves. It floats on the wind or down a river. And if we're quiet enough, and attentive enough, and quick enough, we might be able to catch it and be stewards of its light, for awhile. 

She mentions that her follow-up book will tackle this subject. That book is the selfsame The Signature of All Things, the book that so cracked me open from the inside and poured its heady ichor of grace, loss and purpose into me.

Ultimately, my takeaway is that success and failure are two sides of a river, a bandwidth, and that our job as creators is to stay as close to the center as possible: the center of ourselves. Keeping our ass in the seat, doing our work, waiting to see if a poem or a song or a book or painting or dance is going to let us bring it into being.

Watch "Your elusive creative genius"
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