TED Blog
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- This
college freshman is a cancer detective: A Q&A with Brittany Wenger
- An
infographic cheat sheet for key concepts in “The Grazing Revolution”
- Let’s unite
as Team Humanity to revive degraded land: A conversation with TED Books
author Allan Savory and rancher Gail Steiger
- Sally
Kohn’s talk, the “clean” version
- The
immortality bias: Further reading on the 4 stories we tell ourselves about
death
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Posted: 12 Dec 2013 01:54 PM PST
When Brittany Wenger was a
sophomore in high school, her cousin was diagnosed with breast cancer. She
saw firsthand how the disease strikes a woman and her family, and she wanted
to help. While some of us might offer to bake a casserole or lend a listening
ear, Brittany went the extra mile: She created a breast cancer test that
could someday help millions of women catch the disease early.
Brittany, now a freshman at Duke,
is an enthusiastic, articulate young woman who is so well versed in the
science she studies that it can be tough to follow her rapid technical
explanations. She may still be a teenager, but she’s been conducting
impressive research for years. As early as the seventh grade, Wenger was
experimenting with advanced computer science and artificial intelligence
programs. (She of course taught herself to code.)
From those early experiments,
Wenger has gone on to write computer programs that improve the accuracy of
tests for breast cancer and leukemia (below, she explains how they work). Her
work has been honored by the Intel Science Talent Search, the Google Science
Fair, and the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair, and she was
just named one of Time Magazine’s
30 under 30. Wenger’s breast cancer test, which has its own app, is now in
beta tests with two cancer research centers.
We chatted with Wenger about her
first computer program, her impressive research, and some recent words of
encouragement from President Barack Obama. Below is an edited version of our
conversation.
My first question: When did
you first get excited about computer programming? Here’s Brittany –
I had to write a final term paper
on any aspect of the future, so I decided that I would write about
technologies of the future. I Googled things that may happen fifty, a hundred
years from now, and I came across the concept of artificial intelligence. I
was just enamored by it. I went home, I bought a coding textbook, and started
teaching myself how to code.
What was your first program?
An artificial intelligence program
that learned to play soccer. I worked on that for three years.
And were you successful? Did
the program learn how to play soccer?
Yeah, and it won about 95 percent
of its games.
How do you teach a computer
to play the game?
Basically, the program would look
up scenarios that it had been in before. So there are x number of players in
front of me; I am this far away from a corresponding player; I have the ball;
I don’t have the ball. And based on [that information], it would come up with
the best response in that situation.
So it was learning as you ran
it?
Yeah. Exactly. It was really
funny! At first, they played like 4-year-olds. They couldn’t do anything.
They would just stand there the whole time.
At what point did you decide
to apply your interests in artificial intelligence and computer science to
breast cancer?
When my cousin got breast cancer,
she was telling me about how difficult the diagnostic process was. I
researched and found out about fine needle aspirates, which are the least
invasive, quickest and cheapest [diagnostic] procedures that a woman can
have. Right now, they’re wildly inconclusive, so a lot of doctors refuse to
use them. Only about five hospitals in the United States still use the
procedure. I was really interested in trying to revive them, and when I found
out that the major problem was how difficult the patterns were for
pathologists to diagnose, I wanted to create a tool to aid the doctors.
I have to admit, I’m still a
bit mystified about how this breast cancer detector works. Can you break it
down for me?
Based on cell morphology, which is
how the cells look, the program will look for patterns and try to determine
whether a person has cancer or not. For example, multi-layered cells are an
indicator that a person may have cancer. It’s a little more complicated than
that, though, because masses will exhibit both characteristics of
non-cancerous masses and cancerous masses, even though clearly one mass can
only be cancer or not cancer.
And does the detector work
for all different types of breast cancer?
Right now, the detector is meant
to be an initial screening mechanism—it’s trying to go through and determine
whether the cells are cancerous or not. If it returns a diagnosis that the
cells are cancerous, further testing would be required to determine the
specific type.
So it can’t necessarily tell
the difference between a fast-growing malignant tumor versus a slow one. This
is a step before that.
Exactly. But the program would
have the capacity to do that if I had data. For example, I extended the
program to work with genetic expression programming and leukemia diagnostics.
For that, I actually go through and identify which subtype of leukemia a
person had, and then I’m able to infer how aggressive the cancer would be.
What’s happened since you
created the breast cancer program?
So much. I think one of the most
exciting things that’s happened is doctors have really started taking my
research seriously. I’m beta-testing the breast cancer program with two
hospitals, which has been incredible. I also got to go to the White House Science
Fair and explain my research to President Obama!
What did he say to you?
He had an intense look of
concentration on his face, showing me he really cared about [my research],
and he said something along the lines of that he was really proud of me. This
is the President of the country saying that, so I was really taken aback.
I’ll always really treasure those words. And this was also the first election
I got to vote in, so I think it made it even more special.
There’s so much talk about
the lack of women in science. What has your experience been as a young woman
in science?
I’ve always felt empowered to
pursue [science]. I had a lot of strong female role models. For example, my
computer science teacher in high school was a woman. I was really lucky to
grow up in that sort of environment.
Do you have any advice for
inventors or entrepreneurs, especially young scientists?
If you find your passion, just
follow it and have the persistence to stick through it. I mean, for me, the
breast cancer program failed completely two times before it succeeded. But
what’s great about science is that you learn a lot from those experiments.
They can really help you move forward.
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Posted: 12 Dec 2013 01:33 PM PST
Allan Savory has spent decades
studying the devastating effects of “desertification“: healthy land degrading
into deserts all around the world and accelerating climate change in the
process.
On the TED2013 stage, Savory offered a
fascinating idea for reclaiming degraded land — using livestock to mimic the
behavior of herds that used to roam these lands. The idea is bold and
counterintuitive, and sparked lively debate the minute Savory stepped off the
stage. Savory returns today with the TED Book The Grazing Revolution, which digs
much deeper into this idea.
The process of desertification is
complex, and Savory’s holistic solution requires many moving parts. So we’ve
provided these handy visual Cliffs notes of key terms Savory uses in the
book, to help everyone get the footing to understand this fascinating
read.
Read much more in the new TED
Book, The Grazing
Revolution: A Radical Plan to Save the Earth, available for
the Kindle or Nook, as well as through the iBookstore. Or download the TED Books app to get
access to this title — and the entire TED Books archive — for the duration of
your subscription.
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Let’s unite as Team
Humanity to revive degraded land: A conversation with TED Books author Allan
Savory and rancher Gail Steiger
Posted: 12 Dec 2013 03:04 PM PST
Allan
Savory is a biologist who has spent a lifetime trying to save degraded land.
Gail Steiger is a rancher and filmmaker who has long followed his work.
Below, what happens when the two talk. Make sure to read to the end for the
stab-you-in-the-heart final question.
All over the world, land is
turning into desert at an alarming rate. Biologist Allan Savory has dedicated
a lifetime to figuring out what’s causing this “desertification.” Finally,
after decades of work in the field, Savory discovered a radical solution—one
that went against everything scientists had always thought. He used huge
herds of livestock, managed to mimic the behavior of the natural herds that
roamed grasslands centuries ago, and saw degraded land revert to robust
ecosystems.
Here, Savory talks with rancher,
performer and acclaimed filmmaker Gail Steiger about his new TED Book The Grazing
Revolution: A Radical Plan to Save the Earth,
detailing his remarkable and often difficult journey to discovery—one that
ultimately ends with great hope for the future.
Gail Steiger: First of all,
I’d just like to thank you for all that you’ve done for—actually, for the
world. I’ve been familiar with your work since your book in ’88. Lots of my
friends here in Arizona attended your school, and you’ve just made a great
contribution to all of us. Can I ask you for some historical information?
Tell me a little bit about the most valuable experiences that informed your
thinking today.
Allan Savory: Oh, gosh. That goes
back a long way. Let me just start before I left university and joined the
Game Department, in what was then Colonial Service, in Northern Rhodesia.
(It’s now Zambia.) I was very passionate about wildlife, elephants in particular,
but also rhino and so on— the big game of Africa. And I had this new, shiny
degree, and training as a botanist, zoologist and ecologist. But when I went
into the field, I hit reality. What I’d been taught just simply wasn’t making
sense. It didn’t match with what I was seeing. To give you an example: We
were taught that overgrazing caused desertification. More specifically, that
desertification was due to too many livestock, and that the answer was
reducing the numbers of animals and burning the grass to keep it healthy.
Well, I was soon engaged in
burning massive areas of land to keep the grass healthy. This was land that
was to become our future national parks. I couldn’t help but observe the fact
that we were baring the soil, and that the bare soil was subsequently being
carried away by the rainfall. And as I mention in my TED Book, I actually
took to walking in the rain so that I could see what was happening for
myself. And just found it was wrong, you know? Of course, I didn’t have
answers, but I began very seriously looking for them.
Then came one of the biggest
mistakes of my life. Because the land degradation was so bad, but there
wasn’t any livestock on it, I proved the problem must be that there were too
many elephants. And the government, after investigating my book and
approving, shot 40,000 elephants. But the desertification only got worse, and
it’s still getting worse to this day. As I look back, one my biggest findings
came from trying something, making a mistake and saying, “Well, why did it go
wrong?” So actually some of the biggest findings came from the failures.
Another big finding for me was
when I happened to pick up a farming magazine off a coffee table in a
farmer’s house and read an article by John Acocks. John was a botanist studying
the extension of the Karoo Desert bushes taking over what had been grassland.
He had concluded that the land was understocked—was carrying too few
animals—but was overgrazed. So he said South Africa was deteriorating because
of overgrazing and understocking. This caused a furor in the scientific
community. Acocks was ridiculed, but to me it was brave new thinking. I
actually drove all the way down to the Cape to go and see him personally and
was able to visit some of the ranchers he was working with.
But the most difficult piece of
the puzzle, the one I still believe we never could have discovered in Africa,
was that the greatest single cause resulting in desertificaion is overresting
the land. And I really believe we could only have discovered that in America.
Because when I got here, I found such vast areas of land with nothing on
them. I mean, it was almost like being at sea. There was not a sound — not a
bird chirp, nothing. In Africa, India, South America, anywhere else I’d been,
it was hard to find silence. There were birds, monkeys, something all around
you. But when I struck national parks in America with not a sound, and still
saw terrible desertification taking place, that was a big horror moment.
GS: In Holistic
Management, you talked a bit about your experiences trailing
both humans and wildlife, and how that enabled you to see what was actually
happening. I appreciate that. The ranch I’m on is pretty rough country, and
sometimes we just can’t find our cattle. If you can’t trail, you’re not going
to do much good out here.
AS: I spent a lot of my life—20
years of it—in war, training army trackers and commanding a tracker unit, and
then in the Game Department, tracking lions, and elephants and poachers. So
I’ve spent literally thousands of hours tracking people or animals, and
training others to do it. And yes, that was an incredible opportunity; rarely
do scientists have the opportunity to be trying to solve a problem on the
land, and then spend so many thousands of hours tracking. I mean, we couldn’t
dictate where guerrilla gangs would penetrate the country, but wherever they
came, we had to go and track them down. And so we tracked in every imaginable
sort of county.
Then you have the long nights
where you sit and think about it: Why the hell was it easy today? Why was it
so difficult yesterday? What sort of land are we on? What sort of climate are
we in here? Am I in a national park or on communal land or on a commercial
ranch? You’re thinking about it all every night, and the next day you’re
tracking again all damn day.
Only many years later did I read
the book by
Liebenberg, where he explains pretty logically that tracking
was probably the origin of science. I think his argument was very good,
because a good tracker is not just following tracks. A good tracker is
interpreting all the time, from every little sign, you know? Not just
interpreting the age of the tracks but also: Is it wounded? Is it hungry? A
good tracker is interpreting a lot.
Allan
Savory gave a talk with a solution for land degradation that set TED2013
abuzz. Today, he releases the TED Book, The Grazing
Revolution.
GS: It certainly led to good
work! Can you tell me a little bit about your TED Book? Your earlier works
have been specifically targeted to land managers. But of course TED casts a
much broader net, and I’m wondering what do you think urban dwellers can bring
to the land-management table? What’s your intention there?
AS: Urban dwellers are the only
ones that can save the situation. Let me explain that: The bulk of the
populations of almost every country have moved to the cities, or are moving
there. That’s where the voting power is — the mass of public opinion is. Now
the stuff I talked about
at TED, we’ve talked about for years. Now you might ask: Well,
why did nothing change? At first, I too could not understand. It did not seem
logical. But as I grappled with it, I went back to researching other fields
to see if there was any reason for this, and I found there was.
Hard systems are everything we’re
using right now — computers, phones, planes, the clothes you’re wearing, the
room you’re in. Everything there involves 100% use of technology and
expertise to make it, and nothing we make — including space exploration
vehicles and so on — is complex. Everything we make is complicated. Nothing
is self-renewing. If the computer is missing a part, it doesn’t work, or the
plane is missing a part, it doesn’t work. It can’t self-organize.
But if we look at human
organizations, they are complex. In other words, they do what they’re
designed to do, and can be very efficient, be they a university, a hospital,
etc. But they—because they’re complex, self-organizing, composed of hundreds
of individual humans all interacting—they have what are called emergent
properties, things that emerge that weren’t planned or intended. And these
can result in what system science calls “wicked problems.” This doesn’t mean
they’re amoral — just that they’re extremely difficult to solve.
There are two wicked problems of
human organizations. One is that they cannot—they simply cannot—accept new
scientific insights ahead of society in general. And so that is why my TED Talk
in 20 minutes did more than 50 years of struggle within the scientific
community. Because it was seen by—as far as I can make out— over a million
people. And so the information is now getting to society. And already
organizations that have been aloof or blocked us or resisted are beginning to
collaborate with us and change.
So it’s only the people in the
cities that can begin to change public opinion or societal view. When there’s
a sufficient groundswell, then our institutions can change. We’re not going
to be able to stop the desertification of the United States when so much of
the land is federal-owned land under government agencies that are trying to
save the wildflowers or the horses or stop the terrible droughts and floods
that are occurring in America. We’re not going to be able to stop those until
the public opinion is deeper, until people understand that there is no option
but livestock over most of that land, and that these policies need to be
developed holistically.
GS: It would seem like a
holistic approach would require us to rethink the entire scientific method. I
mean, if you look at education in this day and age, there’s ever more
pressure to specialize. The higher level you attain, the more it requires you
to focus on ever-narrower subjects, and it seems like we would really have to
rework everything.
AS: That’s very much part of the
problem. John Ralston Saul points out — after studying what’s happened since
Voltaire’s time, the Age of Enlightenment, where we were no longer going to
have massive blunders because organizations would be headed by
professional-trained people and you could no longer buy or inherit your
position — that following that period in history, the blunders increased. He
notes that no matter how brilliant the people, no matter how well-meaning and
caring, if they’re in an institution or organization, because of complexity,
what emerges very often lacks common sense and humanity.
So you can—as I’ve done—talk to
city audiences almost anywhere and say: Does it make sense for the United
States to produce oil to grow corn to produce fuel? And people just laugh and
say: No, that’s stupid and it’s inhumane. Well, thousands of scientists
employed and paid salaries by organizations signed off on that. I was in
Australia recently and I found it’s a greater crime with heavier penalties
for a farmer to sell you fresh, clean raw milk than it is to sell drugs. See,
it doesn’t make sense.
Saul attributed that to the
education system. And quoting Saul here, he said, “The reality is that the
division of knowledge into feudal fiefdoms of expertise has made general
understanding and coordinated action not simply impossible but despised and
distrusted.”
GS: I remember back in the
‘80s, as ranchers we were under a lot of pressure from environmental
groups—they really wanted to remove all livestock from public lands.
AS: Yeah, “cattle-free by ’93.”
GS: Exactly. The idea that
industrial agriculture could somehow save us: Could you comment on that at
all?
AS: Those environmentalists, they’re
trained in the same universities. I understand them, because I also once
believed that if we could get rid of the livestock and return to just
wildlife, we might be able to stop the degradation of the land. But again, I
was wrong, because that became a major multi-billion dollar industry, mainly
in places like Texas and South Africa. But every single game ranch without
exception that I’ve been on, the land is still deteriorating. I held those
same beliefs — that we just had to get rid of livestock — so I understand
those environmentalists. In my case, I just saw that I was wrong. And I loved
the land and wildlife more than I hated livestock. So I changed.
GS: I have a personal
question to ask. Most of us who are involved in agriculture, who are not
landowners, have kind of resigned ourselves to the fact that the rewards come
in other than financial ways. It seems to me like the best thing about being
able to manage livestock on a big piece of land is that every day you get a
chance to appreciate just what a gift it is to get to come and live on this
planet, you know? And it seems like we operate under this economic system
that measures everything in terms of dollars and cents. I mean, most economic
theory would say we could measure all goods in those terms, and that doesn’t
appear to be a defensible assumption. And the other assumption is that all
growth is good, the more the better. It seems like a holistic approach would
require that we rethink those things, particularly the one that equates
happiness with dollars and cents.
AS: You’re absolutely right. But
again, we will not solve this by just taking a holistic approach, although
that is necessary. We’ll only solve it by actually developing policies
holistically. The things you mentioned just cannot go on. I mean,
constant growth in a finite world is just simply not scientific. The use of
fiat money — where money makes money—and wealth is accumulating ever more in
the 1% — that’s inevitable with the monetary system we have. And then the
development, or the measurement of growth on gross domestic product, is just
ridiculous. For example, how can it possibly be holistically sound, or
scientifically sound, or even common sense to measure your economic growth
where you value building jails at the same level as you value building
hospitals or schools? What we’re doing lacks humanity.
GS: In a broader sense, what assumptions does our culture make that are most
damaging to our planet? It seems that more materialistic we get, and the more
we do urbanize, the greater the threats are.
AS: I’ve thought about this for
many, many years. For me, it was best summed up at a conference my wife and I
attended long ago in Sweden in an address by Gro Harlem Brundtland. She was
appealing to the scientists there to see the problems as interconnected. She
pointed out that international agencies that she was dealing with at the time
were spending many, many millions of dollars on many things: Droughts,
floods, locust invasions, poverty, violence, weeds, etc. And everywhere, it’s
failing. We’re not succeeding. If we could see the interconnections between
these—what’s in common—maybe we could be more successful.
I did a lot of thinking after
that, and have continued to over the years. We’re blaming many things. We’re
blaming politicians; we’re blaming greed, capitalism. But it’s not that.
Because I looked at all the things we were blaming for the situation in
Africa: Overstocking, communal land tenure, people not loving the land, the
tragedy of the commons, overpopulation, inadequate access to capital. And
then I looked at the situation in West Texas and I found the opposite of
every one of these things: Private land, people loved it, they weren’t
abusing it. No overstocking with livestock, they’d been de-stocking for over
a century, consistently. No overpopulation, very low and falling population.
Great access to capital wealth. Good universities. But the same problem.
Clearly, there was something else
causing all this, and I think it’s this: When you look at agriculture
overall, it’s the biggest single problem facing humanity, even bigger than
the oil one. Agriculture in its broader sense, you know, the production of
food and fiber from the world’s land and waters. Because even after we
discover benign sources of energy, climate change and poverty and drought—all
these problems will continue because they’re manmade. And they’re causing the
climate change.
When I look at this and see that
so many millions of people who are much, much brighter than I am — far more
highly trained than I am — doing their best, and it’s still going so wrong,
then you have to, I believe, realize it’s a systemic problem.
Now, when we’re managing
holistically — doing holistic land grazing, trying to help the government
develop a policy — we begin by looking at exactly what is it that we’re
managing, get that clear first, and then define the holistic context though
tying people’s deepest cultural, societal values and needs to a
life-supporting environment. Once we have a holistic context, and we can then
look at the objectives and the actions to be taken, and see if they are in
context. And that’s the way that we are able now to insure that they’re much
more likely to achieve our objectives, because we’re not dealing with
symptoms only, but dealing with the systematic problem and making sure our
solutions don’t lead to unintended consequences.
And just as soon as governments
and city folks start insisting that all policies and projects be developed
holistically, you’ll see that the same people, the exact same people that are
producing dismal results today will astound us. They’ve got so much
knowledge. It’s just a systemic problem. And most people are good. Most
people are trying to do the right thing. And just like when the Wright
brothers discovered how to fly, on a certain day, we had no barriers in the
way after that. A whole new society believed in technology. No government, no
organization put any barriers in the way. We released human creativity, and
within 70 years we were on the moon.
If you look at centuries of
civilizations using agricultural practices that have culminated in climate
change, it’s the same story. Now that we’ve discovered how to actually
develop policies and projects holistically, if we can get the barriers out of
the way, and release the creativity that’s in our universities, our farming
organizations, amongst our farmers and land managers, we’ll be astounded. As
I’d like to express it, the human spirit will fly.
GS: So are you optimistic
about the future now? Where’s the trend going since you began?
AS: The mainstream trend is going
the wrong way. I mean, you know that. But I’m more optimistic now than I ever
could have been at any period in history because if we’d been having this
discussion, say in the Roman times when North Africa was turning to desert,
we couldn’t have done anything about it. We didn’t know what was causing it.
Now we do. And even if we’d known the causes, we still were lacking the
ability to communicate and network around the world. It’s the social
networking that is now allowing me, for instance, to spread this to millions
of people.
Now there’s one other thing that’s
lacking that we haven’t quite got yet. The last thing we need is something to
unite all humans. If we look throughout history, we unite in times of war
against a human enemy. And we’ll unite for a long time, but the moment the
war is over, we’re back to squabbling. So we need something to unite us as
team humanity— something that is not a war. The only thing I could see doing
that would be the overall acceptance of the seriousness of climate change.
Climate change is desperately serious, but we’ve still got people
deliberately causing confusion, spending millions to do that. We’ve doubters.
But the moment that humans accept the seriousness of climate change, then we
can unite as team humanity, whether you’re American or Chinese or African or
from any other part of the world. We’re humans, and we’re not going to
survive if we don’t deal with this. All the talk about adapting to climate
change is like telling the frog in a slowly boiling pot of water to adapt. We
have to actually address it.
GS: Well, thank you for doing
more than your part to bring this to the attention to many folks. Is there
something that we haven’t touched on that you would like to address?
AS: Well, I think I’ve rambled
across the whole field, because this is what I live with in my mind year in
and year out. I’m so worried about the future. I mean, at my age, I’m in the
departure lounge. But young people are going to have to face this, and I’m desperate
to give them a chance.
Read much more in the new TED
Book, The Grazing
Revolution: A Radical Plan to Save the Earth, available for
the Kindle or Nook, as well as through the iBookstore. Or download the TED Books app to get
access to this title — and the entire TED Books archive — for the duration of
your subscription.
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Posted: 12 Dec 2013 09:31 AM PST
Sally Kohn had a point to make in
her TED Talk. During her career as a
progressive lesbian talking head at Fox News, she’d get letters from people
who really, really didn’t like what she said, or objected to her very
existence. To make this attitude crystal-clear, onstage at TED@NYC Kohn read out the kind of letter
she received during the course of a typical day. The hate-filled letter
contained one of the last really untouchable curse words. Point made.
We wanted to make sure that Kohn’s
message was heard with its full force. But as we’ve encountered in the past
with other talks containing strong language or graphic imagery, not all
TEDsters were equally happy with this choice. So at the request of several
fans, we’ve created a “clean” edit of the talk. If you’d like to share Kohn’s
message of tolerance and emotional correctness with an audience that might be
sensitive to profanity, please use this version:
Other talks where the language or images have proven to be a hot topic
include Rose George: Let’s talk crap. Seriously.
(George herself uses a stronger word); Peter Singer: The why and how of effective altruism
(which opens with a violent image that prompted us to put a note in the talk
description); and Andrew Stanton: The clues to a great story
(containing a joke that’s quite deliberately in questionable taste).
Cases like these always provoke
the question: Preserve the speaker’s original form or edit to reach more viewers?
We’re hoping we’ve accomplished the best of both by providing an alternate
version. Let us know what you think in this TED Conversation »
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Posted: 12 Dec 2013 09:07 AM PST
At
TEDxBratislava, I shared 4 stories about death that have circulated over and
over again, across cultures and time. Below, notes on where you can see each
story reflected. Photo: TEDxBratislava
We each live in the shadow of a
personal apocalypse: the knowledge that — someday, somehow — we will die.
It’s a terrifying thought, and so we look for a way out. In my talk from
TEDxBratislava (and in my book Immortality)
1. The Elixir story
Almost every known culture has
legends of a magic pill or potion that can ward off ageing and disease.
Alchemists in both East and West, for example, believed they could brew an
elixir of life, while the Spaniard Juan Ponce de León believed he would find
the fountain of youth in Florida. Jorge Luis Borges wonderfully satirises
this quest in his short story ‘The Immortal’,
which details the terrible consequences of finding the water “that cleanses
men of death.”
The idea of being immune to death
is one that fills us with hope and dread in equal measure. In Gulliver’s Travels, Jonathan Swift
gives us the Struldbrugs, who never die but continue to age, so becoming
shriveled and senile. This is a retelling of the ancient Greek myth of Tithonus,
the tragic prince granted immortality by Zeus, but not eternal youth.
The most popular recent
exploration of the elixir myth is in the Harry Potter books and films. From
the Philosopher’s Stone to the Horcruxes, the series asks whether we should
accept death or rebel against it.
Despite warnings from myth and
literature, the quest for the elixir continues. The historian David Boyd
Haycock chronicles the many attempts of serious science to defeat aging and
disease in his book The Mortal Coil: A Short History of Living Longer,
or you can watch one of the leading advocates of a modern day elixir, Aubrey de Grey, in his TED Talk.
2. The Resurrection story
Given the success rate of the
average elixir, it is a good idea to have a back up plan — and that is just what
the Resurrection Story offers: it promises that if you die, you can
nonetheless physically rise to live again.
The most influential story of
resurrection can of course be found in the Gospels. If you’ve not read them
for a while, you might be surprised — for example, by the passage that tries
to explain away rumours that the disciples themselves took Jesus’s body
(Matthew 28:11-15).
But the story of Jesus was by no
means the first legend of a god-figure who died and rose again, so defeating
death for himself and the rest of us. The ancient Egyptian god Osiris, for
example, did the same as the first mummy. Spectacular artifacts from the
three thousand year cult he inspired can be seen in museums across the world,
especially the British Museum in London, the Neues Museum in Berlin, the
Musée du Louvre in Paris, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York or of
course Cairo’s own Egyptian Museum.
Whereas some hope the gods will
resurrect them to live again, others hope that scientists will do it. Like
the Elixir Story, this theme has inspired classic works of fiction, such as
Mary Shelley’s novel Frankenstein, in which we read how
the eponymous young scientist “on a dreary night of November,” manages to
“infuse a spark of being into the lifeless thing” that lies in front of him.
Like modern day mummies, those
hoping to be resurrected by science go to great lengths to preserve as much
as possible of their bodies. Their preferred method though is not balms and
bandages, but the deep freeze — a process known as cryonics. A wonderful
exploration of the troubles this can lead to can be found in Woody Allen’s
1973 film Sleeper.
Or for an account of one man’s determination to be frozen, read my Aeon magazine article,
“Frozen Dead Guys,” on cryonics.
3. The Soul Story
The majority of people on earth
believe that they have one, and this belief plays a central role in most
religions.
One of the earliest attempts to
prove the existence of the soul can be found in Plato’s account of the death
of Socrates in the Phaedo, in which the philosopher
explains his belief in the afterlife before calmly drinking deadly poison.
Early Christians preferred to
believe they would attain immortality by being physically resurrected, but as
time went by and the Last Judgement failed to materialise, more and more
turned to the Platonic doctrine of the soul. The Christian version of what happens
to this soul once it departs the body is most vividly expressed in Dante’s Divine Comedy, recently newly
translated into English by Clive James.
Many other religious and cultural
traditions subscribe to some idea of a soul — for example, Hinduism. In the
short, powerful text the Bhagavad Gita, the god Krishna tells
us how, “Just as a man casts off worn out clothing and accepts new ones, even
so the embodied soul discards worn out bodies and enters into different
ones.”
Buddhism has a similar belief in
reincarnation — the movement of the soul from one body to another — although
it confusingly also teaches that there is no permanent soul or self. The film
Uncle Boonmee
Who Can Recall His Past Lives, which won the Palme d’Or at
the 2010 Cannes Film Festival, is a charming exploration of these themes.
The dark side of the Soul Story is
when these spirits of the departed come back to haunt us. Ghost stories come
close to being a human universal, found in every culture. One of the most
enjoyable — and appropriate to this time of year — is Charles Dickens’s A Christmas Carol.
4. The Legacy Story
The Legacy Story is about living
on through the echo you leave in the world, like the great hero Achilles, who
sacrificed his life at Troy in order to win immortal fame. The film Troy
with Brad Pitt in the lead role nicely captures Achilles’ yearning to be the
most renowned of heroes. Or you could read Homer’s original The Iliad and The Odyssey,
which contains a more nuanced assessment of the quest for fame.
But nowhere is the futility of
this quest more pithily expressed than in Percy Bysshe Shelley’s 1818 poem Ozymandias,
which contains these lines about a traveller finding a ruined colossus in the
desert:
And on the pedestal these words
appear:
“My name is Ozymandias, king of kings: Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!” Nothing beside remains: round the decay Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare, The lone and level sands stretch far away.
There are, however, other ways of
leaving a legacy than becoming famous — for example, by leaving a biological
legacy. In his book The Selfish Gene, Richard Dawkins
describes how the real immortals are our genes, whose lifespans can be
measured in millions of years.
Or our legacy might be our
contribution to a much greater whole — for example, Gaia, the entire web of
life. This is the view taken by Lynn Margulis and Dorion Sagan in their
excellent book What is Life?.
An Alternative: The Wisdom
Story
None of these immortality stories
is entirely convincing — that is why there are four, as the flaws in each
lead people, or sometimes entire civilisations, from one to the next.
But there is an alternative — a
fifth story that can also be found weaving its way through history. Its
oldest expression is in the fantastic Epic of Gilgamesh, a dramatic story
of one king’s pursuit of immortality and ultimate reconciliation with death.
Coming to terms with mortality
isn’t easy. It helps if we first recognise that immortality probably
isn’t all it’s cracked up to be — as Borges’s short story The Immortal,
mentioned above, expresses. This theme is also at the heart of Karel Čapek’s
play The Makropulos Affair, which can also
be enjoyed as an opera (with the same name) by Leoš Janáček.
The next step is to realise that
we need not fear death — something first expressed by the Greek philosopher
Epicurus, whose few surviving writings are well worth reading. “While we are,
death is not; when death is come, we are not,” he wrote. “Death is thus of no
concern either to the living or to the dead.”
The final step is to cultivate
those virtues that help us to appreciate the time we have, rather than worry
about it being finite. It can help, for example, to focus on the present, a
theme common to many wisdom traditions; or to focus on other people, as the
philosopher Bertrand Russell put it: “the fear of death is somewhat abject
and ignoble. The best way to overcome it — so at least it seems to me — is to
make your interests gradually wider and more impersonal, until bit by bit the
walls of the ego recede, and your life becomes increasingly merged in the
universal life,” (from his essay ‘How to Grow Old’ in Portraits From Memory And Other Essays).
And the third virtue is gratitude,
expressed beautifully in this TED talk by the
Benedictine monk David Steindl-Rast. We shouldn’t waste
our time worrying about our time being limited, but should rather, as the
Greek Epicurean Philodemus put it, “receive each additional moment of time in
a manner appropriate to its value; as if one were having an incredible stroke
of luck.”
Stephen Cave is a philosopher
and writer. Read much more
about him »
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