ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Murray Gell-Mann - Physicist
Murray Gell-Mann brings visibility to a crucial aspect of our existence that we can't actually see: elemental particles. He won the Nobel Prize in Physics for introducing quarks, one of two fundamental ingredients for all matter in the universe.

Why you should listen

He's been called "the man with five brains" -- and Murray Gell-Mann has the resume to prove it. In addition to being a Nobel laureate, he is an accomplished physicist who's earned numerous awards, medals and honorary degrees for his work with subatomic particles, including the groundbreaking theory that the nucleus of an atom comprises 100 or so fundamental building blocks called quarks.

Gell-Mann's influence extends well beyond his field: He's a member of the National Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the Council on Foreign Relations. He also serves on the board of the Wildlife Conservation Society and is a director of Encyclopedia Britannica. Gell-Mann, a professor emeritus of Caltech, now heads the evolution of human languages program at the Santa Fe Institute, which he cofounded in 1984.

A prolific writer -- he's penned scores of academic papers and several books, including The Quark and the Jaguar -- Gell-Mann is also the subject of the popular science biography Strange Beauty: Murray Gell-Mann and the Revolution in 20th-Century Physics.

More profile about the speaker
Murray Gell-Mann | Speaker | TED.com
TED2007

Murray Gell-Mann: The ancestor of language

Murray Gell-Mann o porijeklu jezika

Filmed:
944,446 views

Nakon što je govorio na TED2007 o eleganciji u fizici, nevjerojatni Murray Gell-Mann daje brzi pregled još jednog svog strastvenog interesa: pronalaženja zajedničkog porijekla modernih jezika.
- Physicist
Murray Gell-Mann brings visibility to a crucial aspect of our existence that we can't actually see: elemental particles. He won the Nobel Prize in Physics for introducing quarks, one of two fundamental ingredients for all matter in the universe. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:13
Well, I'm involvedumiješan in other things, besidesosim toga physicsfizika.
0
1000
4000
Dakle, uključen sam i u druge stvari osim fizike.
00:17
In factčinjenica, mostlyuglavnom now in other things.
1
5000
2000
U stvari, sada se uglavnom bavim drugim stvarima.
00:19
One thing is distantudaljen relationshipsodnosa amongmeđu humanljudski languagesjezici.
2
7000
4000
Jedna stvar su daleka srodstva među ljudskim jezicima.
00:24
And the professionalprofesionalac, historicalpovijesni linguistslingvisti in the U.S.
3
12000
4000
A profesionalni, povijesni jezikoslovci u SAD-u
00:28
and in WesternZapadni EuropeEurope mostlyuglavnom try to stayboravak away
4
16000
3000
i Zapadnoj Europi uglavnom pokušavaju ostati po strani
00:31
from any long-distancevelika udaljenost relationshipsodnosa, bigvelika groupingsgrupacije,
5
19000
4000
od bilo kakvih dalekih povezanosti; velikih grupiranja,
00:35
groupingsgrupacije that go back a long time,
6
23000
3000
grupiranja koja sežu daleko u prošlost,
00:38
longerviše than the familiarupoznat familiesobitelji.
7
26000
3000
dalje od poznatih porodica jezika.
00:41
They don't like that. They think it's crankručica. I don't think it's crankručica.
8
29000
4000
Oni to ne vole; misle kako je to neozbiljno. Ja se ne slažem s time.
00:45
And there are some brilliantsjajan linguistslingvisti, mostlyuglavnom RussiansRusi,
9
33000
3000
I postoje neki briljantni jezikoslovci, uglavnom Rusi,
00:48
who are workingrad on that, at SantaDjed Mraz FeFe InstituteInstitut and in MoscowMoskva,
10
36000
4000
koji na tome rade u Santa Fe institutu i u Moskvi,
00:52
and I would love to see where that leadsvodi.
11
40000
4000
I volio bih vidjeti gdje će nas to odvesti.
00:56
Does it really leaddovesti to a singlesingl ancestorpredak
12
44000
3000
Vodi li to zaista ka jednom pretku
00:59
some 20, 25,000 yearsgodina agoprije?
13
47000
3000
nekih 20, 25 tisuća godina unazad?
01:02
And what if we go back beyondIznad that singlesingl ancestorpredak,
14
50000
3000
I što ako odemo još dalje od tog jedinstvenog pretka.
01:05
when there was presumablyvjerojatno a competitionkonkurencija amongmeđu manymnogi languagesjezici?
15
53000
4000
kada je, po svoj prilici, postojalo suparništvo između mnoštva jezika?
01:09
How fardaleko back does that go? How fardaleko back does modernmoderan languagejezik go?
16
57000
3000
Koliko daleko moramo ići? Koliko dugo postoji moderan jezik?
01:13
How manymnogi tensdeseci of thousandstisuća of yearsgodina does it go back?
17
61000
3000
Koliko desetina tisuća godina to seže u povijest?
01:16
ChrisChris AndersonAnderson: Do you have a hunchpredosjećaj or a hopenada for what the answerodgovor to that is?
18
64000
3000
Chris Anderson: Imate li osjeća ili nadu kakav bi mogao biti odgovor?
01:19
MurrayMurray Gell-MannGell-Mann: Well, I would guessnagađati that modernmoderan languagejezik mustmora be olderstariji
19
67000
3000
Murray Gell-Mann: Pretpostavljam kako moderni jezik mora biti stariji
01:22
than the cavešpilja paintingsslike and cavešpilja engravingsgravure and cavešpilja sculpturesskulpture
20
70000
4000
od špiljskih crteža, gravura, skulptura
01:26
and danceples stepskoraci in the softmekan clayglina in the cavesšpilje in WesternZapadni EuropeEurope,
21
74000
5000
i plesnih koraka u mekanoj glini u pećinama Zapadne Europe
01:31
in the AurignacianSorinjasijenskom PeriodRazdoblje some 35,000 yearsgodina agoprije, or earlierranije.
22
79000
6000
u razdoblju orinjasijena prije nekih 35,000 godina ili ranije.
01:37
I can't believe they did all those things and didn't alsotakođer have a modernmoderan languagejezik.
23
85000
3000
Ne mogu vjerovati kako su radili sve te stvari, a da nisu imali moderni jezik.
01:40
So, I would guessnagađati that the actualstvaran originpodrijetlo goeside back at leastnajmanje that fardaleko and maybe furtherunaprijediti.
24
88000
5000
Tako da pretpostavljam kako stvarno porijeklo seže barem dotle, a možda i dalje.
01:45
But that doesn't mean that all, or manymnogi, or mostnajviše
25
93000
3000
Ali to ne znači kako svi, ili puno, ili većina
01:48
of today'sdanas je attestedo čemu svjedoči languagesjezici couldn'tne mogu descendspuštaju perhapsmožda
26
96000
4000
danas poznatih jezika možda ne vodi porijeklo
01:52
from one that's much youngermlađi than that, like say 20,000 yearsgodina,
27
100000
4000
od nekog koji je mnogo mlađi od toga, recimo 20,000 godina
01:56
or something of that kindljubazan. It's what we call a bottleneckusko grlo.
28
104000
3000
ili tako nešto. To je ono što nazivamo uskim grlom.
02:00
CACA: Well, PhilipFilip AndersonAnderson maysvibanj have been right.
29
108000
1000
CA: Dakle, Philip Anderson je možda bio u pravu.
02:01
You maysvibanj just know more about everything than anyonebilo tko.
30
109000
3000
Vi možda doista znate više o svemu od bilo koga drugoga.
02:04
So, it's been an honorčast. Thank you MurrayMurray Gell-MannGell-Mann.
31
112000
2000
Zaista mi je bila čast. Hvala vam Murray Gell-Mann.
02:06
(ApplausePljesak)
32
114000
4000
(Pljesak)
Translated by Mislav Ante Omazić - EFZG
Reviewed by Zeljko Babic

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Murray Gell-Mann - Physicist
Murray Gell-Mann brings visibility to a crucial aspect of our existence that we can't actually see: elemental particles. He won the Nobel Prize in Physics for introducing quarks, one of two fundamental ingredients for all matter in the universe.

Why you should listen

He's been called "the man with five brains" -- and Murray Gell-Mann has the resume to prove it. In addition to being a Nobel laureate, he is an accomplished physicist who's earned numerous awards, medals and honorary degrees for his work with subatomic particles, including the groundbreaking theory that the nucleus of an atom comprises 100 or so fundamental building blocks called quarks.

Gell-Mann's influence extends well beyond his field: He's a member of the National Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the Council on Foreign Relations. He also serves on the board of the Wildlife Conservation Society and is a director of Encyclopedia Britannica. Gell-Mann, a professor emeritus of Caltech, now heads the evolution of human languages program at the Santa Fe Institute, which he cofounded in 1984.

A prolific writer -- he's penned scores of academic papers and several books, including The Quark and the Jaguar -- Gell-Mann is also the subject of the popular science biography Strange Beauty: Murray Gell-Mann and the Revolution in 20th-Century Physics.

More profile about the speaker
Murray Gell-Mann | Speaker | TED.com