Eric Haseltine: What will be the next big scientific breakthrough?
艾瑞克·黑柔廷: 下個科學大突破將會是甚麼?
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.
我對科學的熱愛。
that takes baby steps.
that takes enormous leaps.
that turns the world on its head.
革命性科學。
about two ideas that might do this.
可能改變世界的想法。
most are flat wrong,
seldom have the impact
也不容易有我們所冀望的大影響。
two ideas in particular,
compulsively thorough doctor
嚴肅、極度龜毛的醫生,
soon after giving birth
的比率是另一間的三倍。
at one of the clinics than at the other.
what the difference was that caused this,
檢視每一樣可能性。
until he happened to autopsy a doctor
死於被手術刀割傷而感染的醫生。
to those of the mothers who were dying.
在死亡線上掙扎的產婦相同。
get the same thing as new mothers?
和新媽媽們得到同樣的病?
everything the doctor had done
那醫生罹病前做過的每一件事,
that he'd been autopsying a corpse.
in his wound that killed him?
而導致他的死亡?
太平間裡的屍體和
for any connection he could
and dead mothers in his delivery room,
with the high death rate,
after autopsying corpses in the morgue.
會立即接生嬰兒。
the doctors' hands
to sterilize their hands,
had discovered infectious disease.
thought he was crazy,
and had for hundreds of years,
called miasmas caused disease,
that you couldn't see.
for Frenchman Louis Pasteur
why milk and beer spoiled so often.
牛奶和啤酒常會腐壞。
could kill people in exactly the same way
to talk about tonight, in two ideas.
that he was a revolutionary.
to a completely new world.
全新世界的眼界。
有細菌這個東西。
that bacteria killed people.
that people kept close to their heart.
固有的老舊想法。
Bacteria killed people.
I want to talk about tonight.
to a completely new universe,
使我們看到嶄新的宇宙;
to an entirely new world
開啟了我們一個全新的世界。
Bell Laboratory
were taking his brilliant inventions
差勁地使用他傑出的發明。
for figuring out
to see finer and finer details
更精細的細節的方法,
or ever could be seen.
going to understand how cells work,
如果你要瞭解細胞如何運作、
150th the size of a head of a pin
called the law of physics,
is the thing called the diffraction limit.
when you go to a doctor's office,
no matter how good glasses you have.
能看清楚的小字仍有極限。
figured out how to take a tiny molecule
可顯示的程度更小的小分子
the best microscope could see
are not so unbreakable after all."
in his friend's living room.
組建了一台顯微鏡。
got different protein molecules
to turn very, very fuzzy blurs
of unprecedented and startling clarity.
前所未有、意想不到地清晰的影像。
獲得去年的化學諾貝爾獎。
with unprecedented detail
a better handle on things like cancer.
Betzig was satisfied there?
這樣就心滿意足了嗎?
that he invented were just too slow.
if you take two very, very fine patterns
be able to see.
to taking a really blurry image of a cell
非常模糊的細胞影像上,
light patterns across it
we don't know what they're doing.
we'll have a better handle on life itself.
我們就能掌握生命的奧秘。
green globs that you see?
that protect other molecules
保護其他分子。
hijack those to infect cells.
來感染細胞。
wormlike things moving around?
像蠕蟲般扭動的東西嗎?
also climb down those things
deep inside a cell,
of curing viral diseases like AIDS.
例如愛滋病。
our eyes to a completely new world.
帶領我們來到一個全新的世界。
any cherished beliefs.
奧布里·德·格雷博士。
squirming with an interesting idea:
肯定使得科學家輾轉不安:
think he's a crackpot.
的學生都知道
consequence of living.
what we call free radicals.
there is something called immortality:
into giant walking malignant tumors.
but could de Grey be on to something?
會不會握有某種重大發現的關鍵呢?
seeing him as a crackpot.
as a computer scientist,
in biology from Cambridge,
生物學博士學位,
some very significant work
and a bunch of other stuff.
an antiaging foundation
seven different causes of aging,
of fixes for every single one of them.
[螢幕:老化的七種修正方式]
is that our mitochondrial DNA mutates,
線粒體DNA變異,
and our cells lose energy.
a convincing case,
is going to revolutionize our lifespans.
會大大地改變我們的壽命。
and most of us are not lobsters.
而且大多數人不是龍蝦。
Darwins and Einsteins out there,
達爾文和愛因斯坦,
alive today than during Darwin's time.
alive today as Einstein.
in the population has skyrocketed,
that there's one of them out there
並即將為人類帶來震撼,
and I don't know about you,
但我迫不及待要被震撼。
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