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How science fiction can help predict the future - Roey Tzezana

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    Would you like to know
    what's in our future?
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    What's going to happen tomorrow,
    next year, or even a millennium from now?
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    Well, you're not alone.
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    Everyone from governments to militaries
    to industry leaders do, as well,
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    and they all employ people
    called futurists
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    who attempt to forecast the future.
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    Some are able to do this
    with surprising accuracy.
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    In the middle of the 20th century,
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    a think tank known as
    the RAND Corporation
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    consulted dozens of scientists
    and futurists
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    who together forecast
    many of the technologies
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    we take for granted today,
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    including artificial organs,
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    the use of birth control pills,
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    and libraries able to look up
    research material for the reader.
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    One way futurists arrive
    at their predictions
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    is by analyzing movements and trends
    in society,
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    and charting the paths they are likely
    to follow into the future
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    with varying degrees of probability.
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    Their work informs the decisions
    of policymakers and world leaders,
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    enabling them to weigh
    options for the future
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    that otherwise could not have
    been imagined in such depth or detail.
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    Of course, there are obvious limits to how
    certain anyone can be about the future.
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    There are always unimaginable
    discoveries that arise
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    which would make no sense
    to anyone in the present.
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    Imagine, for example,
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    transporting a physicist
    from the middle of the 19th century
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    into the 21st.
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    You explain to him that a strange material
    exists, Uranium 235,
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    that of its own accord can produce enough
    energy to power an entire city,
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    or destroy it one fell swoop.
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    "How can such energy come from nowhere?"
    he would demand to know.
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    "That's not science, that's magic."
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    And for all intents and purposes,
    he would be right.
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    His 19th century grasp of science
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    includes no knowledge of radioactivity
    or nuclear physics.
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    In his day, no forecast of the future
    could have predicted X-rays,
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    or the atom bomb,
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    let alone the theory of relativity
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    or quantum mechanics.
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    As Arthur C. Clarke has said,
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    "Any sufficiently advanced technology
    is indistinguishable from magic."
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    How can we prepare, then, for a future
    that will be as magical to us
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    as our present would appear to someone
    from the 19th century?
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    We may think our modern technology
    and advanced data analysis techniques
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    might allow us to predict the future
    with much more accuracy
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    than our 19th century counterpart,
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    and rightly so.
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    However, it's also true that our
    technological progress
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    has brought with it new increasingly
    complex and unpredictable challenges.
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    The stakes for future generations to
    be able to imagine the unimaginable
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    are higher than ever before.
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    So the question remains:
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    how do we do that?
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    One promising answer has actually been
    with us since the 19th century
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    and the Industrial Revolution
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    that laid the foundation
    for our modern world.
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    During this time of explosive development
    and invention,
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    a new form of literature, science fiction,
    also emerged.
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    Inspired by the innovations of the day,
    Jules Verne, H.G. Wells,
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    and other prolific thinkers explored
    fantastic scenarios,
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    depicting new frontiers of human endeavor.
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    And throughout the 20th century
    and into the 21st,
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    storytellers have continued to share their
    visions of the future
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    and correctly predicted many aspects
    of the world we inhabit decades later.
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    In "Brave New World,"
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    Aldous Huxley foretold
    the use of antidepressants in 1932,
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    long before such medication
    became popular.
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    In 1953, Ray Bradbury's "Fahrenheit 451,"
    forecast earbuds,
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    "thimble radios," in his words.
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    And in "2001: A Space Odyssey,"
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    Arthur C. Clarke described a portable,
    flat-screen news pad in 1968.
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    In works that often combine entertainment
    and social commentary,
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    we are invited to suspend our disbelief
    and consider the consequences
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    of radical shifts in familiar
    and deeply engrained institutions.
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    In this sense,
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    the best science fiction fulfills
    the words of philosopher Michel Foucault,
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    "I'm no prophet. My job is making windows
    where there were once walls."
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    Free from the constraints of the present
    and our assumptions of what's impossible,
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    science fiction serves as a useful tool
    for thinking outside of the box.
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    Many futurists recognize this,
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    and some are beginning to employ
    science fictions writers in their teams.
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    Just recently, a project called iKnow
    proposed scenarios
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    that look much
    like science fiction stories.
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    They include the discovery of
    an alien civilization,
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    development of a way for humans
    and animals to communicate flawlessly,
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    and radical life extension.
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    So, what does the future hold?
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    Of course, we can't know for certain,
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    but science fiction
    shows us many possibilities.
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    Ultimately, it is our responsibility
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    to determine which
    we will work towards making a reality.
Title:
How science fiction can help predict the future - Roey Tzezana
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
05:22

English subtitles

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