WEBVTT 00:00:00.625 --> 00:00:02.375 I love my food. 00:00:02.375 --> 00:00:05.181 And I love information. 00:00:05.181 --> 00:00:08.496 My children usually tell me 00:00:08.496 --> 00:00:11.958 that one of those passions is a little more apparent than the other. 00:00:11.958 --> 00:00:14.042 (Laughter) NOTE Paragraph 00:00:14.042 --> 00:00:16.292 But what I want to do in the next eight minutes or so 00:00:16.292 --> 00:00:18.500 is to take you through how those passions developed, 00:00:18.500 --> 00:00:21.583 the point in my life when the two passions merged, 00:00:21.583 --> 00:00:25.625 the journey of learning that took place from that point. 00:00:25.625 --> 00:00:29.083 And one idea I want to leave you with today 00:00:29.083 --> 00:00:31.458 is what would would happen differently in your life 00:00:31.458 --> 00:00:36.500 if you saw information the way you saw food? NOTE Paragraph 00:00:36.500 --> 00:00:39.917 I was born in Calcutta -- 00:00:39.917 --> 00:00:42.167 a family where my father and his father before him 00:00:42.167 --> 00:00:44.125 were journalists, 00:00:44.125 --> 00:00:47.625 and they wrote magazines in the English language. 00:00:47.625 --> 00:00:49.833 That was the family business. 00:00:49.833 --> 00:00:51.583 And as a result of that, 00:00:51.583 --> 00:00:54.542 I grew up with books everywhere around the house. 00:00:54.542 --> 00:00:57.125 And I mean books everywhere around the house. 00:00:57.125 --> 00:01:00.458 And that's actually a shop in Calcutta, 00:01:00.458 --> 00:01:03.375 but it's a place where we like our books. 00:01:03.375 --> 00:01:06.000 In fact, I've got 38,000 of them now 00:01:06.000 --> 00:01:09.125 and no Kindle in sight. NOTE Paragraph 00:01:09.125 --> 00:01:15.417 But growing up as a child with the books around everywhere, 00:01:15.417 --> 00:01:16.708 with people to talk to about those books, 00:01:16.708 --> 00:01:20.379 this wasn't a sort of slightly learned thing. NOTE Paragraph 00:01:20.379 --> 00:01:23.458 By the time I was 18, I had a deep passion for books. 00:01:23.458 --> 00:01:26.333 It wasn't the only passion I had. 00:01:26.333 --> 00:01:28.375 I was a South Indian 00:01:28.375 --> 00:01:30.875 brought up in Bengal. 00:01:30.875 --> 00:01:33.125 And two of the things about Bengal: 00:01:33.125 --> 00:01:35.083 They like their savory dishes 00:01:35.083 --> 00:01:36.833 and they like their sweets. 00:01:36.833 --> 00:01:39.250 So by the time I grew up, 00:01:39.250 --> 00:01:41.875 again, I had a well-established passion for food. 00:01:41.875 --> 00:01:46.292 Now I was growing up in the late 60s and early 70s, 00:01:46.292 --> 00:01:49.875 and there were a number of other passions I was also interested in, 00:01:49.875 --> 00:01:52.500 but these two were the ones that differentiated me. 00:01:52.500 --> 00:01:54.583 (Laughter) NOTE Paragraph 00:01:54.583 --> 00:01:56.542 And then life was fine, dandy. 00:01:56.542 --> 00:01:58.292 Everything was okay, 00:01:58.292 --> 00:02:02.417 until I got to about the age of 26, 00:02:02.417 --> 00:02:06.583 and I went to a movie called "Short Circuit." 00:02:06.583 --> 00:02:08.583 Oh, some of you have seen it. 00:02:08.583 --> 00:02:11.958 And apparently it's being remade right now 00:02:11.958 --> 00:02:12.833 and it's going to be coming out next year. 00:02:12.833 --> 00:02:16.375 It's the story of this experimental robot 00:02:16.375 --> 00:02:19.917 which got electrocuted and found a life. 00:02:19.917 --> 00:02:24.500 And as it ran, this thing was saying, "Give me input. Give me input." NOTE Paragraph 00:02:24.500 --> 00:02:26.250 And I suddenly realized that for a robot 00:02:26.250 --> 00:02:29.458 both information as well as food 00:02:29.458 --> 00:02:32.667 were the same thing. 00:02:32.667 --> 00:02:35.292 Energy came to it in some form or shape, 00:02:35.292 --> 00:02:36.167 data came to it in some form or shape. 00:02:36.167 --> 00:02:39.875 And I began to think, 00:02:39.875 --> 00:02:41.625 I wonder what it would be like 00:02:41.625 --> 00:02:43.500 to start imagining myself 00:02:43.500 --> 00:02:48.542 as if energy and information were the two things I had as input -- 00:02:48.542 --> 00:02:50.292 as if food and information were similar in some form or shape. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:50.292 --> 00:02:55.667 I started doing some research then, and this was the 25-year journey, 00:02:55.667 --> 00:02:56.542 and started finding out 00:02:56.542 --> 00:03:00.250 that actually human beings as primates 00:03:00.250 --> 00:03:03.250 have far smaller stomachs 00:03:03.250 --> 00:03:05.792 than should be the size for our body weight 00:03:05.792 --> 00:03:07.542 and far larger brains. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:07.542 --> 00:03:11.667 And as I went to research that even further, 00:03:11.667 --> 00:03:16.708 I got to a point where I discovered something 00:03:16.708 --> 00:03:19.333 called the expensive tissue hypothesis. 00:03:19.333 --> 00:03:23.500 That actually for a given body mass of a primate 00:03:23.500 --> 00:03:26.417 the metabolic rate was static. 00:03:26.417 --> 00:03:30.375 What changed was the balance of the tissues available. 00:03:30.375 --> 00:03:33.625 And two of the most expensive tissues in our human body 00:03:33.625 --> 00:03:37.333 are nervous tissue and digestive tissue. 00:03:37.333 --> 00:03:42.079 And what transpired was that people had put forward a hypothesis 00:03:42.079 --> 00:03:46.292 that was apparently coming up with some fabulous results by about 1995. 00:03:46.292 --> 00:03:49.542 It's a lady named Leslie Aiello. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:49.542 --> 00:03:53.042 And the paper then suggested that you traded one for the other. 00:03:53.042 --> 00:03:58.042 If you wanted your brain for a particular body mass to be large, 00:03:58.042 --> 00:03:59.958 you had to live with a smaller gut. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:59.958 --> 00:04:04.208 That then set me off completely 00:04:04.208 --> 00:04:05.958 to say, Okay, these two are connected. 00:04:05.958 --> 00:04:11.083 So I looked at the cultivation of information as if it were food 00:04:11.083 --> 00:04:13.750 and said, So we were hunter-gathers of information. 00:04:13.750 --> 00:04:18.125 We moved from that to becoming farmers and cultivators of information. NOTE Paragraph 00:04:18.125 --> 00:04:19.875 Does that really explain what we're seeing 00:04:19.875 --> 00:04:22.625 with the intellectual property battles nowadays? 00:04:22.625 --> 00:04:26.250 Because those people who were hunter-gatherers in origin 00:04:26.250 --> 00:04:29.625 wanted to be free and roam and pick up information as they wanted, 00:04:29.625 --> 00:04:32.250 and those that were in the business of farming information 00:04:32.250 --> 00:04:34.625 wanted to build fences around it, 00:04:34.625 --> 00:04:37.250 create ownership and wealth and structure and settlement. 00:04:37.250 --> 00:04:40.875 So there was always going to be a tension within that. 00:04:40.875 --> 00:04:42.625 And everything I saw in the cultivation 00:04:42.625 --> 00:04:45.875 said there were huge fights amongst the foodies 00:04:45.875 --> 00:04:47.625 between the cultivators and the hunter-gatherers. 00:04:47.625 --> 00:04:50.417 And this is happening here. NOTE Paragraph 00:04:50.417 --> 00:04:53.083 When I moved to preparation, this same thing was true, 00:04:53.083 --> 00:04:55.625 expect that there were two schools. 00:04:55.625 --> 00:04:58.708 One group of people said you can distill your information, 00:04:58.708 --> 00:05:02.083 you can extract value, separate it and serve it up, 00:05:02.083 --> 00:05:04.458 while another group turned around 00:05:04.458 --> 00:05:05.333 and said no, no you can ferment it. 00:05:05.333 --> 00:05:07.583 You bring it all together and mash it up 00:05:07.583 --> 00:05:09.333 and the value emerges that way. 00:05:09.333 --> 00:05:12.333 The same is again true with information. NOTE Paragraph 00:05:12.333 --> 00:05:16.083 But consumption was where it started getting really enjoyable. 00:05:16.083 --> 00:05:18.917 Because what I began to see then 00:05:18.917 --> 00:05:22.500 was there were so many different ways people would consume this. 00:05:22.500 --> 00:05:24.250 They'd buy it from the shop as raw ingredients. 00:05:24.250 --> 00:05:26.667 Do you cook it? Do you have it served to you? 00:05:26.667 --> 00:05:28.417 Do you go to a restaurant? 00:05:28.417 --> 00:05:32.083 The same is true every time as I started thinking about information. NOTE Paragraph 00:05:32.083 --> 00:05:34.458 The analogies were getting crazy -- 00:05:34.458 --> 00:05:37.000 that information had sell-by dates, 00:05:37.000 --> 00:05:41.750 that people had misused information that wasn't dated properly 00:05:41.750 --> 00:05:44.083 and could really have an effect on the stock market, 00:05:44.083 --> 00:05:45.917 on corporate values, etc. 00:05:45.917 --> 00:05:47.667 And by this time I was hooked. 00:05:47.667 --> 00:05:51.708 And this is about 23 years into this process. NOTE Paragraph 00:05:51.708 --> 00:05:54.167 And I began to start thinking of myself 00:05:54.167 --> 00:05:56.792 as we start having mash-ups of fact and fiction, 00:05:56.792 --> 00:06:01.125 docu-dramas, mockumentaries, whatever you call it. 00:06:01.125 --> 00:06:02.000 Are we going to reach the stage 00:06:02.000 --> 00:06:05.958 where information has a percentage for fact associated with it? 00:06:05.958 --> 00:06:10.042 We start labeling information for the fact percentage? 00:06:10.042 --> 00:06:13.208 Are we going to start looking at what happens 00:06:13.208 --> 00:06:15.833 when your information source is turned off, as a famine? NOTE Paragraph 00:06:15.833 --> 00:06:18.292 Which brings me to the final element of this. 00:06:18.292 --> 00:06:22.500 Clay Shirky once stated that "There is no such animal as information overload, 00:06:22.500 --> 00:06:25.667 there is only filter failure." 00:06:25.667 --> 00:06:28.292 I put it to you that information, 00:06:28.292 --> 00:06:30.458 if viewed from the point of food, 00:06:30.458 --> 00:06:34.375 is never a production issue; you never speak of food overload. 00:06:34.375 --> 00:06:36.125 Fundamentally it's a consumption issue. 00:06:36.125 --> 00:06:38.792 And we have to start thinking 00:06:38.792 --> 00:06:44.958 about how we create diets within ourselves, exercise within ourselves, 00:06:44.958 --> 00:06:46.708 to have the faculties to be able to deal with information, 00:06:46.708 --> 00:06:50.458 to have the labeling to be able to do it responsibly. 00:06:50.458 --> 00:06:54.292 In fact, when I saw "Supersize Me," I starting thinking of saying, 00:06:54.292 --> 00:06:56.250 What would happen 00:06:56.250 --> 00:06:58.875 if an individual had 31 days nonstop Fox News? 00:06:58.875 --> 00:07:03.833 Would there be time to be able to work with it? NOTE Paragraph 00:07:03.833 --> 00:07:08.042 So you start really understanding 00:07:08.042 --> 00:07:13.042 that you can have diseases, toxins, a need to balance your diet, 00:07:13.042 --> 00:07:16.292 and once you start looking, and from that point on, 00:07:16.292 --> 00:07:20.625 everything I have done in terms of the consumption of information, 00:07:20.625 --> 00:07:23.417 the production of information, the preparation of information, 00:07:23.417 --> 00:07:26.042 I've looked at from the viewpoint of food. 00:07:26.042 --> 00:07:29.958 It has probably not helped my waistline any 00:07:29.958 --> 00:07:31.708 because I like practicing on both sides. NOTE Paragraph 00:07:31.708 --> 00:07:35.167 But I'd like to leave you with just that question: 00:07:35.167 --> 00:07:38.227 If you began to think of all the information that you consume 00:07:38.227 --> 00:07:39.810 the way you think of food, 00:07:39.810 --> 00:07:42.292 what would you do differently? NOTE Paragraph 00:07:42.292 --> 00:07:44.708 Thank you very much for your time. NOTE Paragraph 00:07:44.708 --> 00:07:45.583 (Applause)