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All Seasons

Season 2010

  • S2010E01 Michael Shermer: The pattern behind self-deception

    • February 1, 2010
    • YouTube

    Michael Shermer says the human tendency to believe strange things -- from alien abductions to dowsing rods -- boils down to two of the brain's most basic, hard-wired survival skills. He explains what they are, and how they get us into trouble.

  • S2010E02 Sam Harris: Science can answer moral questions

    • February 1, 2010
    • YouTube

    Questions of good and evil, right and wrong are commonly thought unanswerable by science. But Sam Harris argues that science can -- and should -- be an authority on moral issues, shaping human values and setting out what constitutes a good life.

  • S2010E04 Richard Sears: Planning for the end of oil

    • April 1, 2010
    • YouTube

    As the world's attention focuses on the perils of oil exploration, we present Richard Sears' talk from early February 2010. Sears, an expert in developing new energy resources, talks about our inevitable and necessary move away from oil. Toward ... what?

  • S2010E05 Michael Spector: The danger of science denial

    • February 1, 2010
    • YouTube

    Vaccine-autism claims, "Frankenfood" bans, the herbal cure craze: All point to the public's growing fear (and, often, outright denial) of science and reason, says Michael Specter. He warns the trend spells disaster for human progress.

  • S2010E06 David Cameron: The next age of government

    • February 15, 2010
    • YouTube

    The leader of Britain's Conservative Party says we're entering a new era -- where governments themselves have less power (and less money) and people empowered by technology have more. Tapping into new ideas on behavioral economics, he explores how these trends could be turned into smarter policy.

  • S2010E07 Philip K. Howard: Four ways to fix a broken legal system

    • February 21, 2010
    • YouTube

    The land of the free has become a legal minefield, says Philip K. Howard -- especially for teachers and doctors, whose work has been paralyzed by fear of suits. What's the answer? A lawyer himself, Howard has four propositions for simplifying US law.

  • S2010E08 Temple Grandin: The world needs all kinds of minds

    • February 24, 2010
    • YouTube

    Temple Grandin, diagnosed with autism as a child, talks about how her mind works -- sharing her ability to "think in pictures," which helps her solve problems that neurotypical brains might miss. She makes the case that the world needs people on the autism spectrum: visual thinkers, pattern thinkers, verbal thinkers, and all kinds of smart geeky kids.

  • S2010E09 Raghava KK: Five lives of an artist

    • February 26, 2010
    • YouTube

    With endearing honesty and vulnerability, Raghava KK tells the colorful tale of how art has taken his life to new places, and how life experiences in turn have driven his multiple reincarnations as an artist -- from cartoonist to painter, media darling to social outcast, and son to father.

  • S2010E10 Daniel Kahneman: The riddle of experience vs. memory

    • March 1, 2010
    • YouTube

    Using examples from vacations to colonoscopies, Nobel laureate and founder of behavioral economics Daniel Kahneman reveals how our "experiencing selves" and our "remembering selves" perceive happiness differently. This new insight has profound implications for economics, public policy -- and our own self-awareness.

  • S2010E11 Gary Flake: is Pivot a turning point for web exploration

    • March 3, 2010
    • YouTube

    Gary Flake demos Pivot, a new way to browse and arrange massive amounts of images and data online. Built on breakthrough Seadragon technology, it enables spectacular zooms in and out of web databases, and the discovery of patterns and links invisible in standard web browsing.

  • S2010E12 The LXD: In the Internet age dance evolves

    • March 5, 2010
    • YouTube

    The LXD (the Legion of Extraordinary Dancers) electrify the TED2010 stage with an emerging global street-dance culture, revved up by the Internet. In a preview of Jon Chu’s upcoming Web series, this astonishing troupe show off their superpowers.

  • S2010E13 Mark Roth: Suspended animation is within our grasp

    • March 15, 2010
    • YouTube

    Mark Roth studies suspended animation: the art of shutting down life processes and then starting them up again. It's wild stuff, but it's not science fiction. Induced by careful use of an otherwise toxic gas, suspended animation can potentially help trauma and heart attack victims survive long enough to be treated.

  • S2010E14 Jane McGonigal: Gaming can make a better world

    • March 17, 2010
    • YouTube

    Games like World of Warcraft give players the means to save worlds, and incentive to learn the habits of heroes. What if we could harness this gamer power to solve real-world problems? Jane McGonigal says we can, and explains how.

  • S2010E15 Juliana Machado Ferreira: The fight to end rare-animal trafficking in Brazil

    • March 23, 2010
    • YouTube

    Biologist Juliana Machado Ferreira, a TED Senior Fellow, talks about her work helping to save birds and other animals stolen from the wild in Brazil. Once these animals are seized from smugglers, she asks, then what?

  • S2010E16 Alan Siegel: Let's simplify legal jargon

    • March 24, 2010
    • YouTube

    Tax forms, credit agreements, healthcare legislation: They're crammed with gobbledygook, says Alan Siegel, and incomprehensibly long. He calls for a simple, sensible redesign -- and plain English -- to make legal paperwork intelligible to the rest of us.

  • S2010E17 Kevin Bales: How to combat modern slavery

    • March 29, 2010
    • YouTube

    In this moving yet pragmatic talk, Kevin Bales explains the business of modern slavery, a multibillion-dollar economy that underpins some of the worst industries on earth. He shares stats and personal stories from his on-the-ground research -- and names the price of freeing every slave on earth right now.

  • S2010E18 Kirk Citron: And now, the real news

    • April 1, 2010
    • YouTube

    How many of today's headlines will matter in 100 years? 1000? Kirk Citron's "Long News" project collects stories that not only matter today, but will resonate for

  • S2010E19 Derek Sivers: How to start a movement

    • April 1, 2010
    • YouTube

    With help from some surprising footage, Derek Sivers explains how movements really get started. (Hint: it takes two.)

Season 2011

  • S2011E01 Wadah Khanfar: A historic moment in the Arab world

    • March 2, 2011
    • YouTube

    As a democratic revolution led by tech-empowered young people sweeps the Arab world, Wadah Khanfar, the head of Al Jazeera, shares a profoundly optimistic view of what's happening in Egypt, Tunisia, Libya and beyond -- at this powerful moment when people realized they could step out of their houses and ask for change.

  • S2011E02 JR's TED Prize wish: Use art to turn the world inside out

    • March 3, 2011
    • YouTube

    JR, a semi-anonymous French street artist, uses his camera to show the world its true face, by pasting photos of the human face across massive canvases. At TED2011, he makes his audacious TED Prize wish: to use art to turn the world inside out. Learn more about his work and learn how you can join in at insideoutproject.net.

  • S2011E03 Wael Ghonim: Inside the Egyptian revolution

    • March 4, 2011
    • YouTube

    Wael Ghonim is the Google executive who helped jumpstart Egypt's democratic revolution ... with a Facebook page memorializing a victim of the regime's violence. Speaking at TEDxCairo, he tells the inside story of the past two months, when everyday Egyptians showed that "the power of the people is stronger than the people in power."

  • S2011E04 Bill Gates: How state budgets are breaking US schools

    • March 4, 2011
    • YouTube

    America's school systems are funded by the 50 states. In this fiery talk, Bill Gates says that state budgets are riddled with accounting tricks that disguise the true cost of health care and pensions and weighted with worsening deficits -- with the financing of education at the losing end.

  • S2011E05 Anthony Atala: Printing a human kidney

    • March 7, 2011
    • YouTube

    Anthony Atala's state-of-the-art lab grows human organs -- from muscles to blood vessels to bladders, and more. At TEDMED, he shows footage of his bio-engineers working with some of its sci-fi gizmos, including an oven-like bioreactor (preheat to 98.6 F) and a machine that "prints" human tissue.

  • S2011E06 Salman Khan: Let's use video to reinvent education

    • March 9, 2011
    • YouTube

    Salman Khan talks about how and why he created the remarkable Khan Academy, a carefully structured series of educational videos offering complete curricula in math and, now, other subjects. He shows the power of interactive exercises, and calls for teachers to consider flipping the traditional classroom script -- give students video lectures to watch at home, and do "homework" in the classroom with the teacher available to help.

  • S2011E07 Deb Roy: The birth of a word

    • March 10, 2011
    • YouTube

    MIT researcher Deb Roy wanted to understand how his infant son learned language -- so he wired up his house with videocameras to catch every moment (with exceptions) of his son's life, then parsed 90,000 hours of home video to watch "gaaaa" slowly turn into "water." Astonishing, data-rich research with deep implications for how we learn.

  • S2011E08 David Brooks: The social animal

    • March 14, 2011
    • YouTube

    Tapping into the findings of his latest book, NYTimes columnist David Brooks unpacks new insights into human nature from the cognitive sciences -- insights with massive implications for economics and politics as well as our own self-knowledge. In a talk full of humor, he shows how you can't hope to understand humans as separate individuals making choices based on their conscious awareness.

  • S2011E09 Janna Levin: The sound the universe makes

    • March 15, 2011
    • YouTube

    We think of space as a silent place. But physicist Janna Levin says the universe has a soundtrack -- a sonic composition that records some of the most dramatic events in outer space. (Black holes, for instance, bang on spacetime like a drum.) An accessible and mind-expanding soundwalk through the universe.

  • S2011E10 Mark Bezos: A life lesson from a volunteer firefighter

    • March 16, 2011
    • YouTube

    Volunteer firefighter Mark Bezos tells a story of an act of heroism that didn't go quite as expected -- but that taught him a big lesson: Don't wait to be a hero.

  • S2011E11 Sarah Kay: If I should have a daughter

    • March 18, 2011
    • YouTube

    "If I should have a daughter, instead of Mom, she's gonna call me Point B ... " began spoken word poet Sarah Kay, in a talk that inspired two standing ovations at TED2011. She tells the story of her metamorphosis -- from a wide-eyed teenager soaking in verse at New York's Bowery Poetry Club to a teacher connecting kids with the power of self-expression through Project V.O.I.C.E. -- and gives two breathtaking performances of "B" and "Hiroshima."

  • S2011E12 Isabel Behncke: Evolution's gift of play, from bonobo apes to humans

    • March 22, 2011
    • YouTube

    With never-before-seen video, primatologist Isabel Behncke Izquierdo (a TED Fellow) shows how bonobo ape society learns from constantly playing -- solo, with friends, even as a prelude to sex. Indeed, play appears to be the bonobos' key to problem-solving and avoiding conflict. If it works for our close cousins, why not for us?

  • S2011E13 Eythor Bender demos human exoskeletons

    • March 24, 2011
    • YouTube

    Eythor Bender of Berkeley Bionics brings onstage two amazing exoskeletons, HULC and eLEGS -- robotic add-ons that could one day allow a human to carry 200 pounds without tiring, or allow a wheelchair user to stand and walk. It's a powerful onstage demo, with implications for human potential of all kinds.

  • S2011E14 Ralph Langner: Cracking Stuxnet, a 21st-century cyber weapon

    • March 29, 2011
    • YouTube

    When first discovered in 2010, the Stuxnet computer worm posed a baffling puzzle. Beyond its unusually high level of sophistication loomed a more troubling mystery: its purpose. Ralph Langner and team helped crack the code that revealed this digital warhead's final target -- and its covert origins. In a fascinating look inside cyber-forensics, he explains how.

  • S2011E15 Handspring Puppet Co.: The genius puppetry behind War Horse

    • March 30, 2011
    • YouTube

    "Puppets always have to try to be alive," says Adrian Kohler of the Handspring Puppet Company, a gloriously ambitious troupe of human and wooden actors. Beginning with the tale of a hyena's subtle paw, puppeteers Kohler and Basil Jones build to the story of their latest astonishment: the wonderfully life-like Joey, the War Horse, who trots (and gallops) convincingly onto the TED stage.

  • S2011E16 Sebastian Thrun: Google's driverless car

    • March 31, 2011
    • YouTube

    Sebastian Thrun helped build Google's amazing driverless car, powered by a very personal quest to save lives and reduce traffic accidents. Jawdropping video shows the DARPA Challenge-winning car motoring through busy city traffic with no one behind the wheel, and dramatic test drive footage from TED2011 demonstrates how fast the thing can really go

  • S2011E17 Eric Whitacre: A virtual choir 2,000 voices strong

    • April 1, 2011
    • YouTube

    In a moving and madly viral video last year, composer Eric Whitacre led a virtual choir of singers from around the world. He talks through the creative challenges of making music powered by YouTube, and unveils the first 2 minutes of his new work, "Sleep," with a video choir of 2,052. The full piece premieres April 7 (yes, on YouTube!).

  • S2011E18 Stanley McChrystal: Listen, learn ... then lead

    • April 5, 2011
    • YouTube

    Four-star general Stanley McChrystal shares what he learned about leadership over his decades in the military. How can you build a sense of shared purpose among people of many ages and skill sets? By listening and learning -- and addressing the possibility of failure.

  • S2011E19 Morgan Spurlock: The greatest TED Talk ever sold

    • April 6, 2011
    • YouTube

    With humor and persistence, filmmaker Morgan Spurlock dives into the hidden but influential world of brand marketing, on his quest to make a completely sponsored film about sponsorship. (And yes, onstage naming rights for this talk were sponsored too. By whom and for how much? He'll tell you.)

Additional Specials

  • SPECIAL 0x1 Angela Belcher: Using nature to grow batteries

    • April 27, 2011
    • YouTube

    Inspired by an abalone shell, Angela Belcher programs viruses to make elegant nanoscale structures that humans can use. Selecting for high-performing genes through directed evolution, she's produced viruses that can construct powerful new batteries, clean hydrogen fuels and record-breaking solar cells. At TEDxCaltech, she shows us how it's done.

  • SPECIAL 0x49 AnnMarie Thomas: Hands-on science with squishy circuits

    • April 4, 2011
    • YouTube

    In a zippy demo at TED U, AnnMarie Thomas shows how two different kinds of homemade play dough can be used to demonstrate electrical properties -- by lighting up LEDs, spinning motors, and turning little kids into circuit designers.

  • SPECIAL 0x50 Lisa Gansky: The future of business is the mesh

    • February 17, 2011
    • YouTube

    With streams and rivers drying up because of over-usage, Rob Harmon has implemented an ingenious market mechanism to bring back the water. Farmers and beer companies find their fates intertwined in the intriguing century-old tale of Prickly Pear Creek.

  • SPECIAL 0x51 Mick Ebeling: The invention that unlocked a locked-in artist

    • April 7, 2011
    • YouTube

    The nerve disease ALS left graffiti artist TEMPT paralyzed from head to toe, forced to communicate blink by blink. In a remarkable talk at TEDActive, entrepreneur Mick Ebeling shares how he and a team of collaborators built an open-source invention that gave the artist -- and gives others in his circumstance -- the means to make art again.

  • SPECIAL 0x52 Brian Cox: Why we need the explorers

    • April 1, 2010
    • YouTube

    In tough economic times, our exploratory science programs -- from space probes to the LHC -- are first to suffer budget cuts. Brian Cox explains how curiosity-driven science pays for itself, powering innovation and a profound appreciation of our existence.