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

Muray Gell-Mann despre strǎmoşul limbii vorbite

Filmed:
944,446 views

Dupǎ discursul de la TED2007 despre eleganţa fizicii, uimitorul Murray Gell-Mann oferǎ o scurtǎ descriere a unei alte pasiuni ale sale: gǎsirea unui strǎmoş comun al limbilor noastre de astăzi.
- 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 involvedimplicat in other things, besidesin afara de asta physicsfizică.
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Ei bine, sunt implicat şi în alte lucruri în afarǎ de fizicǎ.
00:17
In factfapt, mostlyMai ales now in other things.
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De fapt, acum mai mult în alte lucruri.
00:19
One thing is distantîndepărtat relationshipsrelaţii amongprintre humanuman languageslimbi.
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Una din ele este relaţia distantǎ dintre limbile umane.
00:24
And the professionalprofesional, historicalistoric linguistslingvişti in the U.S.
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Şi profesioniştii istoriei lingvistice din SUA
00:28
and in WesternWestern EuropeEuropa mostlyMai ales try to staystau away
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şi vestul Europei încearcǎ, în general, sǎ se fereascǎ
00:31
from any long-distancedistanta lunga relationshipsrelaţii, bigmare groupingsgrupările,
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de subiectul înrudirii distante; grupuri majore,
00:35
groupingsgrupările that go back a long time,
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grupuri care îşi au originea în trecutul îndepǎrtat
00:38
longermai lung than the familiarfamiliar familiesfamilii.
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mai îndepǎrtat decât familiile cunoscute.
00:41
They don't like that. They think it's crankmanivelă. I don't think it's crankmanivelă.
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Nu le place subiectul; li se pare cǎ-i aiurealǎ. Eu nu cred cǎ-i aiurealǎ.
00:45
And there are some brilliantSclipitor linguistslingvişti, mostlyMai ales RussiansRuşii,
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Şi existǎ nişte lingvişti excepţionali, majoritatea ruşi,
00:48
who are workinglucru on that, at SantaSanta FeFe InstituteInstitutul and in MoscowMoscova,
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care lucreazǎ la asta la Institutul Santa Fe şi la Moscova
00:52
and I would love to see where that leadsOportunitati.
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şi mi-ar plǎcea sǎ vǎd unde duce asta.
00:56
Does it really leadconduce to a singlesingur ancestorstrămoş
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Chiar duce la un strǎmoş comun
00:59
some 20, 25,000 yearsani agoîn urmă?
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de acum 20-25.000 de ani?
01:02
And what if we go back beyonddincolo that singlesingur ancestorstrămoş,
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Şi dacǎ ne întoarcem în trecut înainte de acel unic strǎmoş,
01:05
when there was presumablyprobabil a competitioncompetiție amongprintre manymulți languageslimbi?
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când probabil exista o competiţie între mai multe limbi?
01:09
How fardeparte back does that go? How fardeparte back does modernmodern languagelimba go?
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Cât merge asta în trecut? Cât de departe în trecut ajunge limbajul modern?
01:13
How manymulți tenszeci of thousandsmii of yearsani does it go back?
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Câte zeci de mii de ani se întinde în trecut?
01:16
ChrisChris AndersonAnderson: Do you have a hunchbănuială or a hopesperanţă for what the answerRăspuns to that is?
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Chris Anderson: Aveţi vreo presimţire sau speranţǎ cam care ar putea fi răspunsul?
01:19
MurrayMurray Gell-MannGell-Mann: Well, I would guessghici that modernmodern languagelimba musttrebuie sa be oldermai batran
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Murray Gell-Mann: Pǎi, aş presupune cǎ limbajul modern trebuie sǎ fie mai vechi
01:22
than the cavePestera paintingspicturi and cavePestera engravingsgravuri and cavePestera sculpturessculpturi
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decât picturile rupestre şi gravurile rupestre şi sculpturile rupestre
01:26
and dancedans stepspași in the softmoale claylut in the cavespeșteri in WesternWestern EuropeEuropa,
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şi paşii de dans din lutul moale din peşterile vest-europene
01:31
in the AurignacianAurignacian PeriodPerioada some 35,000 yearsani agoîn urmă, or earliermai devreme.
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din perioada aurignacianǎ, de acum 35.000 de ani, sau char mai vechi.
01:37
I can't believe they did all those things and didn't alsode asemenea have a modernmodern languagelimba.
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Nu pot sǎ cred cǎ au fǎcut toate astea şi nu aveau şi un limbaj modern.
01:40
So, I would guessghici that the actualreal originorigine goesmerge back at leastcel mai puţin that fardeparte and maybe furthermai departe.
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Aşa cǎ aş presupune cǎ îşi are originea cel puţin în acea perioadǎ, poate chiar mai devreme.
01:45
But that doesn't mean that all, or manymulți, or mostcel mai
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Dar asta nu înseamnǎ ca toate, sau multe, sau majoritatea
01:48
of today'sastăzi attestedatestat languageslimbi couldn'tnu a putut descendcoborî perhapspoate
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limbilor cunoscute azi nu ar putea proveni
01:52
from one that's much youngermai tanar than that, like say 20,000 yearsani,
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dintr-una care e mai recentǎ, sǎ zicem de acum 20.000 de ani,
01:56
or something of that kinddrăguț. It's what we call a bottleneckstrangulare.
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sau ceva asemǎnǎtor. E ceea ce numim o gâtuire.
02:00
CACA: Well, PhilipFilip AndersonAnderson mayMai have been right.
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C.A.: Se pare cǎ Philip Anderson avea probabil dreptate.
02:01
You mayMai just know more about everything than anyoneoricine.
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Ştiţi mai multe despre orice decât oricine altcineva.
02:04
So, it's been an honoronora. Thank you MurrayMurray Gell-MannGell-Mann.
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Aşa cǎ a fost o onoare. Vǎ mulţumim, Murray Gell-Mann
02:06
(ApplauseAplauze)
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(Aplauze)
Translated by Arnold Platon
Reviewed by Mihai Olteanu

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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