Eric Haseltine: What will be the next big scientific breakthrough?
埃里克·哈世廷: 下一个科学界大突破是什么?
Eric Haseltine applies discoveries about the brain to innovation and forecasting game-changing advances in science and technology. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
my passion for science.
分享一下我对科学的热爱。
that takes baby steps.
that takes enormous leaps.
革命性的科学。
that turns the world on its head.
about two ideas that might do this.
可能带来这样效果的想法。
都是彻头彻尾的错误。
most are flat wrong,
seldom have the impact
特意选择两个想法,
two ideas in particular,
compulsively thorough doctor
是一个沉着缜密的医生,
soon after giving birth
at one of the clinics than at the other.
what the difference was that caused this,
所有可能的情况。
until he happened to autopsy a doctor
to those of the mothers who were dying.
有完全相同的症状。
与刚分娩的女性得一样的疾病呢?
get the same thing as new mothers?
everything the doctor had done
一直在解剖一具尸体。
that he'd been autopsying a corpse.
造成了他的死亡?
in his wound that killed him?
for any connection he could
and dead mothers in his delivery room,
找寻了所有可能的联系,
with the high death rate,
紧接着就接生婴儿,
after autopsying corpses in the morgue.
the doctors' hands
to sterilize their hands,
had discovered infectious disease.
thought he was crazy,
人们一直都认为,
and had for hundreds of years,
有味气体带来了疾病,
called miasmas caused disease,
that you couldn't see.
for Frenchman Louis Pasteur
牛奶和啤酒经常变质。
why milk and beer spoiled so often.
could kill people in exactly the same way
to talk about tonight, in two ideas.
就是我今天想说的。
that he was a revolutionary.
塞麦尔维斯的革命性发现。
to a completely new world.
就知道细菌的存在,
that bacteria killed people.
根深蒂固的传统观念。
that people kept close to their heart.
杀死人类的实际上是细菌。
Bacteria killed people.
I want to talk about tonight.
我今晚想要讲到的两个观点。
to a completely new universe,
埃里克·白兹格博士。
to an entirely new world
Bell Laboratory
用于生物研究的新型显微镜,
拿他绝佳的想法
were taking his brilliant inventions
for figuring out
to see finer and finer details
达到前所未有的高度。
or ever could be seen.
going to understand how cells work,
如果我们想要去了解细胞的工作机理,
150th the size of a head of a pin
called the law of physics,
is the thing called the diffraction limit.
当你去诊所查视力的时候,
when you go to a doctor's office,
只能看见的最低的那一行。
no matter how good glasses you have.
figured out how to take a tiny molecule
也看不到的小分子
the best microscope could see
are not so unbreakable after all."
组建起一台显微镜。
in his friend's living room.
got different protein molecules
to turn very, very fuzzy blurs
他就可以将非常模糊的色块
令人惊叹的清晰图像。
of unprecedented and startling clarity.
with unprecedented detail
控制癌症之类的疾病。
a better handle on things like cancer.
Betzig was satisfied there?
仍旧是太慢了。
that he invented were just too slow.
如果你让两组精细图案
if you take two very, very fine patterns
be able to see.
to taking a really blurry image of a cell
拍摄模糊的细胞图像,
light patterns across it
we don't know what they're doing.
we'll have a better handle on life itself.
我们就可以更好地理解生命。
green globs that you see?
that protect other molecules
操纵它们去感染细胞。
hijack those to infect cells.
虫子一样动来动去的小东西了吧?
wormlike things moving around?
also climb down those things
deep inside a cell,
比如说艾滋病的机会。
of curing viral diseases like AIDS.
新世界的大门。
our eyes to a completely new world.
any cherished beliefs.
squirming with an interesting idea:
让所有科学家都跃跃欲试的有趣想法。
think he's a crackpot.
学生都知道,
consequence of living.
我们称作“自由基“的东西。
what we call free radicals.
结合在一起,造成变异,
应该说这和氧与铁结合
there is something called immortality:
行走的巨大恶性肿瘤。
into giant walking malignant tumors.
but could de Grey be on to something?
但是德·格雷是不是对此有什么洞见?
seeing him as a crackpot.
as a computer scientist,
生物学的博士学位。
in biology from Cambridge,
一些其他领域的研究
some very significant work
and a bunch of other stuff.
他还创建了一个抗衰老基金会,
an antiaging foundation
seven different causes of aging,
对每种原因的解决对策。
of fixes for every single one of them.
我们的线粒体DNA会变异,
is that our mitochondrial DNA mutates,
and our cells lose energy.
a convincing case,
很令人信服的观点,
is going to revolutionize our lifespans.
会彻底改变我们的寿命。
我们中的大多数也不是龙虾。
and most of us are not lobsters.
是有达尔文和爱因斯坦的,
Darwins and Einsteins out there,
alive today than during Darwin's time.
alive today as Einstein.
in the population has skyrocketed,
他们中间有一个
that there's one of them out there
and I don't know about you,
我不知道你们怎么想,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Eric Haseltine - Author, futurist, innovatorEric Haseltine applies discoveries about the brain to innovation and forecasting game-changing advances in science and technology.
Why you should listen
Dr. Eric Haseltine is a neuroscientist and futurist who has applied a brain-centered approach to help organizations in aerospace, entertainment, healthcare, consumer products and national security transform and innovate. He is the author of Long Fuse, Big Bang: Achieving Long-Term Success Through Daily Victories. For five years, he wrote a monthly column on the brain for Discover magazine and is a frequent contributor to Psychology Today's web site, where his popular blog on the brain has garnered over 800,000 views. Haseltine received the Distinguished Psychologist in Management Award from the Society of Psychologists in Management and has published 41 patents and patent applications in optics, media and entertainment technology.
In 1992 he joined Walt Disney Imagineering to help found the Virtual Reality Studio, which he ultimately ran until his departure from Disney in 2002. When he left Disney, Haseltine was executive vice president of Imagineering and head of R&D for the entire Disney Corporation, including film, television, theme parks, Internet and consumer products.
In the aftermath of 9/11, Eric joined the National Security Agency to run its Research Directorate. Three years later, he was promoted to associate of director of National Intelligence, where he oversaw all science and technology efforts within the United States Intelligence Community as well as fostering development innovative new technologies for countering cyber threats and terrorism. For his work on counter-terrorism technologies, he received the National Intelligence Distinguished Service Medal in 2007.
Haseltine serves on numerous boards, and is an active consultant, speaker and writer. Over the past three years, he has focused heavily on developing innovation strategies and consumer applications for the Internet of Things, virtual reality and augmented reality.
Haseltine continues to do basic research in neuroscience, with his most recent publications focusing on the mind-body health connection and exploitation of big-data to uncover subtle, but important trends in mental and physical health.
Eric Haseltine | Speaker | TED.com