which are relevant to what I want to talk about. One is the extraordinary evidence of human creativity in all of the presentations that we've had
Do schools kill creativity? — Ken Robinson · TED
100 examples from real videos — listen, replay, loop.
which are relevant to what I want to talk about. One is the extraordinary evidence of human creativity in all of the presentations that we've had
Do schools kill creativity? — Ken Robinson · TED
which are relevant to what I want to talk about. One is the extraordinary evidence of human creativity in all of the presentations that we've had
Do schools kill creativity? — Ken Robinson · TED
but, you know, we shouldn't hold them up as the high-water mark of all human achievement. They're just a form of life.
Do schools kill creativity? — Ken Robinson · TED
Secondly, intelligence is dynamic. If you look at the interactions of a human brain, as we heard yesterday from a number of presentations,
Do schools kill creativity? — Ken Robinson · TED
I believe our only hope for the future is to adopt a new conception of human ecology, one in which we start to reconstitute our conception
Do schools kill creativity? — Ken Robinson · TED
one in which we start to reconstitute our conception of the richness of human capacity. Our education system has mined our minds
Do schools kill creativity? — Ken Robinson · TED
within 50 years, all life on Earth would end. If all human beings disappeared from the Earth, within 50 years, all forms of life would flourish."
Do schools kill creativity? — Ken Robinson · TED
And he's right. What TED celebrates is the gift of the human imagination. We have to be careful now that we use this gift wisely,
Do schools kill creativity? — Ken Robinson · TED
It's an essential skill for all human beings. And what the Hare
The Love of My Life (and Why I Need to Share It with You) | Ann Patchett | TED · TED
see that we were part of the larger human fabric. He through his faith and me
The Love of My Life (and Why I Need to Share It with You) | Ann Patchett | TED · TED
with this premise that human beings are ultra-social creatures with deep needs for community
How Screens Stole Childhood — and How to Get It Back | Jonathan Haidt | TED · TED
But I now believe that an even larger damage is the diminishment of the human capacity to pay sustained attention.
How Screens Stole Childhood — and How to Get It Back | Jonathan Haidt | TED · TED
Which means that puberty is the worst possible time for a human being to be on social media.
How Screens Stole Childhood — and How to Get It Back | Jonathan Haidt | TED · TED
machines. They're ultra-social human beings who need to connect with their
How Screens Stole Childhood — and How to Get It Back | Jonathan Haidt | TED · TED
couples therapy with a mixed couple, a human male and an AI female. So,
How Screens Stole Childhood — and How to Get It Back | Jonathan Haidt | TED · TED
So, in conclusion, human beings are ultra-social creatures who need to matter to one another in
How Screens Stole Childhood — and How to Get It Back | Jonathan Haidt | TED · TED
can take us out of each other's lives. But human connection is not optional. It's who we are.
How Screens Stole Childhood — and How to Get It Back | Jonathan Haidt | TED · TED
There's a fundamental paradox right at the core of human life. On the one hand, decades of research have shown
The Simple Habit for a Happier Social Life | Nicholas Epley | TED · TED
now sitting hip-to-hip with another perfectly reasonable human being. And what did we do for the next 30 to 45 minutes with each other?
The Simple Habit for a Happier Social Life | Nicholas Epley | TED · TED
And so the way to think about that is a human drives around 700,000 miles in a lifetime -- a human who lives sort of the full lifetime --
Waymo’s Case for a Driverless Future | Tekedra Mawakana, Sal Khan | TED · TED
is a human drives around 700,000 miles in a lifetime -- a human who lives sort of the full lifetime -- and so this is like six lifetimes of human driving per week.
Waymo’s Case for a Driverless Future | Tekedra Mawakana, Sal Khan | TED · TED
a human who lives sort of the full lifetime -- and so this is like six lifetimes of human driving per week. And so we're, you know, really excited.
Waymo’s Case for a Driverless Future | Tekedra Mawakana, Sal Khan | TED · TED
we are now seeing 13x reduction in serious-injury-causing crashes over a human, and the same amount of reduction
Waymo’s Case for a Driverless Future | Tekedra Mawakana, Sal Khan | TED · TED
as it relates to injuries with pedestrians. So we can now say that we are just over 10 times safer than a human at 170 million miles.
Waymo’s Case for a Driverless Future | Tekedra Mawakana, Sal Khan | TED · TED
even when they're distracted, drunk, tired and angry. We just kind of accept that that's the human condition. And so I think, you know, in the case of the child in Santa Monica ...
Waymo’s Case for a Driverless Future | Tekedra Mawakana, Sal Khan | TED · TED
and all of these things as a result of a lot of deaths. But what hasn't gotten safer is the human. And so we decided we're patching around the problem.
Waymo’s Case for a Driverless Future | Tekedra Mawakana, Sal Khan | TED · TED
that are in the level-two-plus and level three. They need an attentive human after inviting the human to be inattentive,
Waymo’s Case for a Driverless Future | Tekedra Mawakana, Sal Khan | TED · TED
They need an attentive human after inviting the human to be inattentive, to be the most attentive at the moment
Waymo’s Case for a Driverless Future | Tekedra Mawakana, Sal Khan | TED · TED
where it can recognize microscopic muscle movements just beneath our skin, movements imperceptible to the human eye. The system that first learned to recognize us
Why Humans Should Merge with AI | D. Scott Phoenix | TED · TED
like a memory. One that bridges the distance between human and AI. Now I think we'll choose to merge
Why Humans Should Merge with AI | D. Scott Phoenix | TED · TED
like Liz, are human. That fourth teacher
What Really Won the Trillion-Dollar Supreme Court Case | Neal Kumar Katyal | TED · TED
"The computer says so." Four words, human judgment ends, then people just fold like a cheap lawn chair.
What Really Won the Trillion-Dollar Supreme Court Case | Neal Kumar Katyal | TED · TED
then people just fold like a cheap lawn chair. The machine thinks, the human just nods, and in that nod somewhere, we disappear.
What Really Won the Trillion-Dollar Supreme Court Case | Neal Kumar Katyal | TED · TED
Connect. That's the last irreplaceable human skill. Persuade one person to change their mind
What Really Won the Trillion-Dollar Supreme Court Case | Neal Kumar Katyal | TED · TED
in a conversation that could save a marriage or end one. Any place in which you need to reach another human and actually connect.
What Really Won the Trillion-Dollar Supreme Court Case | Neal Kumar Katyal | TED · TED
The question is, what is the irreducibly human thing that you do? Go deeper into it.
What Really Won the Trillion-Dollar Supreme Court Case | Neal Kumar Katyal | TED · TED
The newest technology, the oldest human wisdom, the most powerful court.
What Really Won the Trillion-Dollar Supreme Court Case | Neal Kumar Katyal | TED · TED
If computers can be conscious or sentient or aware, we'd be entering a new era in human history. We'd have new entities that have their own inner lives,
Why AI Isn’t Going to Become Conscious | Anil Seth | TED · TED
we need to start by looking within ourselves at the makeup of our own human minds. Now we humans, we tend to see the world in our own terms.
Why AI Isn’t Going to Become Conscious | Anil Seth | TED · TED
We humans have a terrible track record in our ethical treatment of non-human animals and of other humans, and we don't want to make the same mistake again.
Why AI Isn’t Going to Become Conscious | Anil Seth | TED · TED
even if what it's telling us to do is very bad for us. And finally, the very idea of conscious AI undermines our human nature. The mirror of AI goes both ways.
Why AI Isn’t Going to Become Conscious | Anil Seth | TED · TED
we reduce and we diminish what it is to be a living, breathing human being in a real world. (Applause)
Why AI Isn’t Going to Become Conscious | Anil Seth | TED · TED
The sacrament of the algorithm is most likely an empty dream, delivering not post-human Paradise, but silicon oblivion. We need a different story.
Why AI Isn’t Going to Become Conscious | Anil Seth | TED · TED
And this opportunity was given to us by people who believe in humanity, people who never gave up on human values, even against all odds, whether it was political and military leaders who came to our rescue
What Kosovo Can Teach the World About Freedom | Vjosa Osmani Sadriu | TED · TED
democracies around the world who joined to save those values of freedom and human rights or, you know, leaders in churches and mosques
What Kosovo Can Teach the World About Freedom | Vjosa Osmani Sadriu | TED · TED
and we're thinking about sex in this way that we never did before. And through the human capacity for abstraction, this shame can settle in.
Why you should love gross science | Anna Rothschild
so that these decisions can be made in a way that can better the societies and better human values and protect human values.
What Kosovo Can Teach the World About Freedom | Vjosa Osmani Sadriu | TED · TED
in a way that can better the societies and better human values and protect human values. It’s not easy, and we don’t always win.
What Kosovo Can Teach the World About Freedom | Vjosa Osmani Sadriu | TED · TED
we're going to have populism, we're going to have extremism. We're not going to have the human values which kept us together during the most difficult times prevail,
What Kosovo Can Teach the World About Freedom | Vjosa Osmani Sadriu | TED · TED
because it wasn't about religious differences. It was about human differences in the sense that you either believe in human values or not.
What Kosovo Can Teach the World About Freedom | Vjosa Osmani Sadriu | TED · TED
It was about human differences in the sense that you either believe in human values or not. You either believe in the right of someone else to live,
What Kosovo Can Teach the World About Freedom | Vjosa Osmani Sadriu | TED · TED
whether they pick one religion or not. And in Kosovo, we've seen how these human values prevailed. We've seen cases where mosques sheltered Catholics,
What Kosovo Can Teach the World About Freedom | Vjosa Osmani Sadriu | TED · TED
in the search for new antibiotics, but predictions about human beings are fundamentally different than those about things.
Beware the Power of Prediction | Carissa Véliz | TED · TED
CA: So I'm glad you mentioned the security layers. I mean, you're making a huge bet on human ingenuity using this. This is an incredible tool that suddenly can maximize the power
How I Created OpenClaw, the Breakthrough AI Agent | Peter Steinberger | TED · TED
This is an incredible tool that suddenly can maximize the power of what any human can do. How many people in your community
How I Created OpenClaw, the Breakthrough AI Agent | Peter Steinberger | TED · TED
He goes on to say that marriage offers care and companionship, and the decision argues that these are basic human needs that everyone should have access to,
Why Friendship Can Be Just As Meaningful as Romantic Love | Rhaina Cohen | TED · TED
And because relationships are probably the most important variable when it comes to human flourishing, your inner weather improves even further
The Benefits of Not Being a Jerk to Yourself | Dan Harris | TED · TED
But I am comfortable embracing the broadness of the term. I consider love to be anything that falls within the human capacity to care, a capacity wired deeply into us via evolution.
The Benefits of Not Being a Jerk to Yourself | Dan Harris | TED · TED
And at the heart of sustaining desire in a committed relationship, I think, is the reconciliation of two fundamental human needs. On the one hand, our need for security, for predictability,
The secret to desire in a long-term relationship | Esther Perel | TED · TED
We are the only ones who have an erotic life, which means that it's sexuality transformed by the human imagination. We are the only ones who can make love for hours,
The secret to desire in a long-term relationship | Esther Perel | TED · TED
Number two is overlap, or finding things in common. As human beings, we like to feel like we belong, and having things in common with one another helps us bond.
3 Simple Ways to Build Stronger Relationships at Work | Alyssa Birnbaum | TED · TED
on our own, community by community. We know from research in animal and human populations that connections provided through social networks and communities
Olivia Affuso: 3 ways community creates a healthy life | TED · TED
leaders from other institutions, to help design and launch the Wu Tsai Human Performance Alliance. They wanted us to work together
What Women Athletes Need to Unlock Their Full Potential | Kate Ackerman | TED · TED
AN: We define wellness as: the freedom to oscillate through all the cycles of being human from effort to rest, from autonomy to connection ...
Emily Nagoski and Amelia Nagoski: The cure for burnout (hint: it isn't self-care) | TED · TED
other teachers who can support you and tell you, "Yes, you deserve care. You are a valuable, educated, wonderful human being. You are not just, you know, Darth Vader dealing with these kids.
Emily Nagoski and Amelia Nagoski: The cure for burnout (hint: it isn't self-care) | TED · TED
with the assets of proven tools and practices to make change that's both human and enduring. It's the best of design thinking,
Schools Urgently Need a Redesign. Here’s How | Aylon Samouha | TED · TED
for stress resilience, and that mechanism is human connection. I want to finish by telling you about one more study.
How to Make Stress Your Friend | Kelly McGonigal | TED · TED
And we normalize these forms of communication to show boys that it is perfectly human to open your minds and your hearts to your community.
3 Skills Every Middle School Boy Needs | Jerome Hunter | TED · TED
never ask permission to save your own life. It is our fundamental right as human beings to solve our own problems.
The most powerful woman you've never heard of | T. Morgan Dixon and Vanessa Renae
this country has ever seen. And they will return to their communities and model the best of human flourishing. And we --
The most powerful woman you've never heard of | T. Morgan Dixon and Vanessa Renae
It shows that we're thinking, feeling, sentient human beings who are much more than an algorithm.
The secret to living longer may be your social life | Susan Pinker
people did not happen to believe that creativity came from human beings back then, OK? People believed that creativity was this divine attendant spirit
Your elusive creative genius | Elizabeth Gilbert
People believed that creativity was this divine attendant spirit that came to human beings from some distant and unknowable source, for distant and unknowable reasons.
Your elusive creative genius | Elizabeth Gilbert
and we had this big idea, and the big idea was, let's put the individual human being at the center of the universe above all gods and mysteries,
Your elusive creative genius | Elizabeth Gilbert
of all divine, creative, unknowable, eternal mystery is just a smidge too much responsibility to put on one fragile, human psyche. It's like asking somebody to swallow the sun.
Your elusive creative genius | Elizabeth Gilbert
but everything would align. And all of a sudden, he would no longer appear to be merely human. He would be lit from within, and lit from below
Your elusive creative genius | Elizabeth Gilbert
"Olé!" to you, nonetheless, just for having the sheer human love and stubbornness to keep showing up.
Your elusive creative genius | Elizabeth Gilbert
>> But the strength community's insatiable curiosity about the human body is something I find surprisingly moving.
How to Use Your Muscles — or Risk Losing Them (W/ Bonnie Tsui) | How to Be a Better Human | TED · TED
out our podcast, How to be a better human. It has a much more indepth
How to Use Your Muscles — or Risk Losing Them (W/ Bonnie Tsui) | How to Be a Better Human | TED · TED
you listen to podcasts every week on how to be a better human. >>
How to Use Your Muscles — or Risk Losing Them (W/ Bonnie Tsui) | How to Be a Better Human | TED · TED
between the internal biological clock in the brain and our eyes. And now you may know that in the human retina, there are different types of receptors,
Why Daylight Is the Secret to Great Sleep | Christine Blume | TED · TED
a Google engineer thought that Google’s AI was sentient. And you may have had a really human-like conversation with something like ChatGPT.
How to Get Inside the "Brain" of AI | Alona Fyshe | TED · TED
appeared on our planet. But it's not like human intelligence. It has remarkable capabilities,
Can AI Match the Human Brain? | Surya Ganguli | TED · TED
of biological intelligence. The story of human intelligence might as well have started with this little critter.
Can AI Match the Human Brain? | Surya Ganguli | TED · TED
OK, now, you might say that's unfair. Sure, AI read for 24,000 human-equivalent years, but humans got 500 million years of vertebrate brain evolution.
Can AI Match the Human Brain? | Surya Ganguli | TED · TED
the entire period of dinosaurs would just be maybe one episode. And 300,000 years of human history would barely register in the credits. If we are lucky, as a teaser for the next big thing.
What If You Could Talk to Your Favorite Character in a Movie? | Christoph Lassner | TED · TED
We have never been able to do this before at any point in human history. Improv is so interesting and fun
What If You Could Talk to Your Favorite Character in a Movie? | Christoph Lassner | TED · TED
designed to generate outputs in natural language in a way that almost mimics human communication. If you are wondering how we teach these AI systems to detect lies,
What if AI Could Spot Your Lies? | Riccardo Loconte | TED · TED
can effectively classify statements as deceptive, outperforming human benchmarks and aligning with previous machine learning
What if AI Could Spot Your Lies? | Riccardo Loconte | TED · TED
but about enhancing our understanding and fostering trust. It's about developing tools that don't replace human judgment but empower it,
What if AI Could Spot Your Lies? | Riccardo Loconte | TED · TED
Instead of focusing solely on brand-to-consumer dynamics, we have to step back and draw from models that explore human relationships. One of my favorite frameworks is the triarchy of love.
Love, Trust and Marketing in the Age of AI | Amaryllis Liampoti | TED · TED
but it's not hard to imagine an emotional connection occurring between a branded AI and a human. Here's another example.
Love, Trust and Marketing in the Age of AI | Amaryllis Liampoti | TED · TED
AI can provide a sense of understanding that feels incredibly real and incredibly human. Those agents are interacting with us
Love, Trust and Marketing in the Age of AI | Amaryllis Liampoti | TED · TED
what I think those foundational principles should be. If we're about to shift our marketing playbooks towards human love and companionship,
Love, Trust and Marketing in the Age of AI | Amaryllis Liampoti | TED · TED
we have to design AI with care, empathy, and respect for the human experience. Second, we have to commit to honesty.
Love, Trust and Marketing in the Age of AI | Amaryllis Liampoti | TED · TED
Users must know unequivocally that they're interacting with AI and not a human. Transparency should be built across the entire experience,
Love, Trust and Marketing in the Age of AI | Amaryllis Liampoti | TED · TED
One of the greatest risks of AI is its potential to create addiction and diminish human agency. Our goal should be to build systems that enhance our capabilities
Love, Trust and Marketing in the Age of AI | Amaryllis Liampoti | TED · TED
This means designing AI in a way that human choices are respected and our decision-making capabilities are amplified.
Love, Trust and Marketing in the Age of AI | Amaryllis Liampoti | TED · TED
I hope it's becoming clear that AI is not just another tool in our toolkit. It is a partner that is reshaping the human experience. So as you think about your own playbooks,
Love, Trust and Marketing in the Age of AI | Amaryllis Liampoti | TED · TED
indicating that winning the caption contest, which was actually somewhat of the sine qua non of human creativity and intelligence.
Can AI Master the Art of Humor? | Bob Mankoff | TED · TED
It really couldn't even decode the image. So for the sine qua non of the human mind, DeepMind was non compos mentis and out of its depth.
Can AI Master the Art of Humor? | Bob Mankoff | TED · TED