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 apie kalbos kilmę

Filmed:
944,446 views

Po kalbos TED2007 apie eleganciją fizikoje, nuostabusis Murray Gell-Mann pateikia glaustą aistringo pomėgio - surasti bendrą mūsų šiuolaikinių kalbų prokalbę - apžvalgą.
- 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 involveddalyvavo in other things, besidesbe to physicsfizika.
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Taigi, šalia fizikos aš įsitraukęs ir į kitus dalykus.
00:17
In factfaktas, mostlydaugiausia now in other things.
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Iš tikrųjų, į juos šiuo metu net dažniau.
00:19
One thing is distanttoli relationshipssantykiai amongtarp humanžmogus languageskalbos.
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Vienas iš jų yra tolimi santykiai tarp žmonių kalbų.
00:24
And the professionalprofesionalus, historicalistorinis linguistskalbininkai in the U.S.
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Ir profesionalūs istorikai-lingvistai iš JAV
00:28
and in WesternVakarų EuropeEuropoje mostlydaugiausia try to staylikti away
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ir Vakarų Europos dažniausiai vengia
00:31
from any long-distanceilgas atstumas relationshipssantykiai, bigdidelis groupingsgrupes,
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bet kokių tolimų santykių; didelių grupavimų,
00:35
groupingsgrupes that go back a long time,
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grupavimų, kurie siekia itin senus laikus,
00:38
longerilgiau than the familiarpažįstamas familiesšeimos.
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senesnius nei įprastų kalbų šeimų.
00:41
They don't like that. They think it's crankskriejikas. I don't think it's crankskriejikas.
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Jie to nemėgsta; jie mano kad tai keista idėja. Aš nemanau, kad tai keista idėja.
00:45
And there are some brilliantpuikus linguistskalbininkai, mostlydaugiausia RussiansRusai,
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Yra keletas talentingų lingvistų, daugiausia rusų,
00:48
who are workingdirba on that, at SantaSanta FeFE InstituteInstitutas and in MoscowMaskva,
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kurie dirba ties tuo Santa Fė institute ir Maskvoje,
00:52
and I would love to see where that leadsveda.
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ir aš norėčiau pamatyti kur tai nuves.
00:56
Does it really leadvadovauti to a singlevienišas ancestorprototipas
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Ar tai nuves prie vienos prokalbės
00:59
some 20, 25,000 yearsmetai agoprieš?
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maždaug prieš 20, 25 000 metų?
01:02
And what if we go back beyondtoliau that singlevienišas ancestorprototipas,
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O jei mes grįžtume į dar ankstesnius laikus,
01:05
when there was presumablytariamai a competitionkonkurencija amongtarp manydaug languageskalbos?
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kai buvo tikėtina konkurencija tarp daugelio kalbų?
01:09
How fartoli back does that go? How fartoli back does modernmodernus languagekalba go?
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Kaip toli atgal tai nuves? Kaip toli atgal šiuolaikinė kalba siekia?
01:13
How manydaug tensdešimtys of thousandstūkstančiai of yearsmetai does it go back?
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Kiek dešimčių tūkstančių metų atgal tai siekia?
01:16
ChrisChris AndersonAnderson: Do you have a hunchnuojauta or a hopetikiuosi for what the answeratsakyti to that is?
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Chris Anderson: ar turite nuojautą ar viltį to, koks atsakymas į šį klausimą?
01:19
MurrayMurray Gell-MannGell-Mann: Well, I would guessatspėti that modernmodernus languagekalba mustprivalo be oldervyresni
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Murray Gell-Mann: na, aš manyčiau, kad šiuolaikinė kalba turi būti vyresnė
01:22
than the caveurvas paintingspaveikslai and caveurvas engravingsgraviūros and caveurvas sculpturesskulptūros
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negu urvų piešiniai ir urvų graviravimas ir urvų skulptūros,
01:26
and dancešokis stepsžingsniai in the softminkštas claymolis in the cavesurvas in WesternVakarų EuropeEuropoje,
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ir šokio žingsniai minkštame molyje Vakarų Europos urvuose
01:31
in the AurignacianOrinjako kultūra PeriodLaikotarpis some 35,000 yearsmetai agoprieš, or earlieranksčiau.
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Aurignacijos periode prieš apytiksliai 35 000 metų, ar anksčiau.
01:37
I can't believe they did all those things and didn't alsotaip pat have a modernmodernus languagekalba.
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Aš negaliu patikėti, kad jie visa tai padarė neturėdami šiuolaikinės kalbos.
01:40
So, I would guessatspėti that the actualfaktinis originkilmė goeseina back at leastmažiausiai that fartoli and maybe furthertoliau.
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Taigi, aš manyčiau, kad tikroji kilmė siekia bent jau tiek ir galbūt toliau.
01:45
But that doesn't mean that all, or manydaug, or mostlabiausiai
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Bet tai nereiškia, kad visos, ar daugelis, ar dauguma
01:48
of today'sšiandienos attesteddiplomais languageskalbos couldn'tnegalėjo descendnusileidžia perhapsgalbūt
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šiandieninių autentiškų kalbų negalėjo kilti galbūt
01:52
from one that's much youngerjaunesnis than that, like say 20,000 yearsmetai,
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iš vienos kalbos, kuri būtų daug jaunesnė, tarkim 20 000 metų,
01:56
or something of that kindmalonus. It's what we call a bottleneckbutelio kakliukas.
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ar panašaus amžiaus. Tai yra tai, ką mes vadiname butelio kakliuku.
02:00
CACA: Well, PhilipPilypas AndersonAnderson mayGegužė have been right.
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CA: taigi, Philip Anderson gali būti teisus.
02:01
You mayGegužė just know more about everything than anyonekas nors.
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Tu gali žinoti daugiau apie viską negu apie vieną.
02:04
So, it's been an honorgarbė. Thank you MurrayMurray Gell-MannGell-Mann.
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Man buvo didelė garbė. Ačiū jums Murray Gell-Mann.
02:06
(ApplausePlojimai)
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(Plojimai)
Translated by Rytis St.
Reviewed by Andrius Burnickas

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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