1 00:00:00,550 --> 00:00:02,016 For the past few years, 2 00:00:02,040 --> 00:00:06,369 I've been spending my summers in the marine biological laboratory 3 00:00:06,393 --> 00:00:08,383 in Woods Hole, Massachusetts. 4 00:00:08,931 --> 00:00:13,093 And there, what I've been doing is essentially renting a boat. 5 00:00:13,117 --> 00:00:15,717 What I would like to do is ask you 6 00:00:15,741 --> 00:00:17,971 to come on a boat ride with me tonight. 7 00:00:19,836 --> 00:00:24,729 So, we ride off from Eel Pond into Vineyard Sound, 8 00:00:24,753 --> 00:00:27,264 right off the coast of Martha's Vineyard, 9 00:00:27,288 --> 00:00:30,625 equipped with a drone to identify potential spots 10 00:00:30,649 --> 00:00:33,126 from which to peer into the Atlantic. 11 00:00:33,150 --> 00:00:36,429 Earlier, I was going to say into the depths of the Atlantic, 12 00:00:36,453 --> 00:00:39,632 but we don't have to go too deep to reach the unknown. 13 00:00:40,311 --> 00:00:42,882 Here, barely two miles away 14 00:00:42,906 --> 00:00:47,452 from what is arguably the greatest marine biology lab in the world, 15 00:00:47,476 --> 00:00:50,697 we lower a simple plankton net into the water 16 00:00:50,721 --> 00:00:52,542 and bring up to the surface 17 00:00:52,566 --> 00:00:55,966 things that humanity rarely pays any attention to, 18 00:00:55,990 --> 00:00:58,522 and oftentimes has never seen before. 19 00:00:59,260 --> 00:01:02,204 Here's one of the organisms that we caught in our net. 20 00:01:02,228 --> 00:01:03,487 This is a jellyfish. 21 00:01:03,881 --> 00:01:05,193 But look closely, 22 00:01:05,217 --> 00:01:08,208 and living inside of this animal is another organism 23 00:01:08,232 --> 00:01:10,937 that is very likely entirely new to science. 24 00:01:10,961 --> 00:01:12,639 A complete new species. 25 00:01:13,117 --> 00:01:15,820 Or how about this other transparent beauty 26 00:01:15,844 --> 00:01:17,384 with a beating heart, 27 00:01:17,408 --> 00:01:20,836 asexually growing on top of its head, 28 00:01:20,860 --> 00:01:24,046 progeny that will move on to reproduce sexually. 29 00:01:24,547 --> 00:01:26,034 Let me say that again: 30 00:01:26,058 --> 00:01:29,744 this animal is growing asexually on top of its head, 31 00:01:29,768 --> 00:01:34,255 progeny that is going to reproduce sexually in the next generation. 32 00:01:34,960 --> 00:01:36,278 A weird jellyfish? 33 00:01:36,796 --> 00:01:38,106 Not quite. 34 00:01:38,130 --> 00:01:39,412 This is an ascidian. 35 00:01:39,772 --> 00:01:41,056 This is a group of animals 36 00:01:41,080 --> 00:01:44,827 that now we know we share extensive genomic ancestry with, 37 00:01:44,851 --> 00:01:49,574 and it is perhaps the closest invertebrate species to our own. 38 00:01:50,376 --> 00:01:51,745 Meet your cousin, 39 00:01:51,769 --> 00:01:53,199 Thalia democratica. 40 00:01:53,223 --> 00:01:55,181 (Laughter) 41 00:01:55,205 --> 00:01:59,195 I'm pretty sure you didn't save a spot at your last family reunion 42 00:01:59,219 --> 00:02:00,651 for Thalia, 43 00:02:00,675 --> 00:02:02,327 but let me tell you, 44 00:02:02,351 --> 00:02:05,679 these animals are profoundly related to us 45 00:02:05,703 --> 00:02:08,735 in ways that we're just beginning to understand. 46 00:02:10,164 --> 00:02:14,289 So, next time you hear anybody derisively telling you 47 00:02:14,313 --> 00:02:18,210 that this type of research is a simple fishing expedition, 48 00:02:18,234 --> 00:02:21,234 I hope that you'll remember the trip that we just took. 49 00:02:21,675 --> 00:02:25,515 Today, many of the biological sciences only see value 50 00:02:25,539 --> 00:02:28,088 in studying deeper what we already know -- 51 00:02:28,112 --> 00:02:30,622 in mapping already-discovered continents. 52 00:02:31,099 --> 00:02:34,437 But some of us are much more interested in the unknown. 53 00:02:34,849 --> 00:02:38,793 We want to discover completely new continents, 54 00:02:38,817 --> 00:02:42,218 and gaze at magnificent vistas of ignorance. 55 00:02:42,674 --> 00:02:46,770 We crave the experience of being completely baffled 56 00:02:46,794 --> 00:02:48,968 by something we've never seen before. 57 00:02:48,992 --> 00:02:50,262 And yes, I agree 58 00:02:50,286 --> 00:02:54,086 there's a lot of little ego satisfaction in being able to say, 59 00:02:54,110 --> 00:02:56,585 "Hey, I was the first one to discover that." 60 00:02:57,102 --> 00:03:00,007 But this is not a self-aggrandizing enterprise, 61 00:03:00,031 --> 00:03:02,731 because in this type of discovery research, 62 00:03:02,755 --> 00:03:06,373 if you don't feel like a complete idiot most of the time, 63 00:03:06,397 --> 00:03:08,678 you're just not sciencing hard enough. 64 00:03:08,702 --> 00:03:10,736 (Laughter) 65 00:03:12,014 --> 00:03:17,997 So every summer I bring onto the deck of this little boat of ours 66 00:03:18,021 --> 00:03:21,438 more and more things that we know very little about. 67 00:03:22,816 --> 00:03:26,304 I would like tonight to tell you a story about life 68 00:03:26,328 --> 00:03:29,668 that rarely gets told in an environment like this. 69 00:03:30,915 --> 00:03:36,250 From the vantage point of our 21st-century biological laboratories, 70 00:03:36,274 --> 00:03:40,191 we have begun to illuminate many mysteries of life with knowledge. 71 00:03:40,869 --> 00:03:44,506 We sense that after centuries of scientific research, 72 00:03:44,530 --> 00:03:46,637 we're beginning to make significant inroads 73 00:03:46,661 --> 00:03:50,527 into understanding some of the most fundamental principles of life. 74 00:03:51,223 --> 00:03:56,224 Our collective optimism is reflected by the growth of biotechnology 75 00:03:56,248 --> 00:03:57,522 across the globe, 76 00:03:58,326 --> 00:04:02,974 striving to utilize scientific knowledge to cure human diseases. 77 00:04:03,685 --> 00:04:08,523 Things like cancer, aging, degenerative diseases; 78 00:04:08,547 --> 00:04:12,879 these are but some of the undesirables we wish to tame. 79 00:04:13,817 --> 00:04:15,261 I often wonder: 80 00:04:15,285 --> 00:04:18,446 Why is it that we are having so much trouble 81 00:04:18,470 --> 00:04:20,632 trying to solve the problem of cancer? 82 00:04:21,096 --> 00:04:24,350 Is it that we're trying to solve the problem of cancer, 83 00:04:24,374 --> 00:04:26,668 and not trying to understand life? 84 00:04:27,657 --> 00:04:30,845 Life on this planet shares a common origin, 85 00:04:30,869 --> 00:04:35,922 and I can summarize 3.5 billion years of the history of life on this planet 86 00:04:35,946 --> 00:04:37,426 in a single slide. 87 00:04:37,450 --> 00:04:40,926 What you see here are representatives of all known species in our planet. 88 00:04:41,321 --> 00:04:44,732 In this immensity of life and biodiversity, 89 00:04:44,756 --> 00:04:47,923 we occupy a rather unremarkable position. 90 00:04:47,947 --> 00:04:48,963 (Laughter) 91 00:04:48,987 --> 00:04:50,210 Homo sapiens. 92 00:04:51,016 --> 00:04:52,621 The last of our kind. 93 00:04:53,570 --> 00:04:56,681 And though I don't really want to disparage at all 94 00:04:56,705 --> 00:04:58,676 the accomplishments of our species, 95 00:04:58,700 --> 00:05:03,686 as much as we wish it to be so and often pretend that it is, 96 00:05:03,710 --> 00:05:06,586 we are not the measure of all things. 97 00:05:07,311 --> 00:05:10,798 We are, however, the measurers of many things. 98 00:05:11,311 --> 00:05:15,057 We relentlessly quantify, analyze and compare, 99 00:05:15,081 --> 00:05:18,861 and some of this is absolutely invaluable and indeed necessary. 100 00:05:19,661 --> 00:05:26,048 But this emphasis today on forcing biological research to specialize 101 00:05:26,072 --> 00:05:28,620 and to produce practical outcomes 102 00:05:28,644 --> 00:05:32,198 is actually restricting our ability to interrogate life 103 00:05:32,222 --> 00:05:36,305 to unacceptably narrow confines and unsatisfying depths. 104 00:05:37,007 --> 00:05:42,048 We are measuring an astonishingly narrow sliver of life, 105 00:05:42,072 --> 00:05:45,848 and hoping that those numbers will save all of our lives. 106 00:05:46,425 --> 00:05:47,818 How narrow do you ask? 107 00:05:47,842 --> 00:05:49,446 Well, let me give you a number. 108 00:05:49,470 --> 00:05:53,989 The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration recently estimated 109 00:05:54,013 --> 00:05:57,940 that about 95 percent of our oceans remain unexplored. 110 00:05:58,674 --> 00:06:00,386 Now let that sink in for a second. 111 00:06:01,030 --> 00:06:04,877 95 percent of our oceans remain unexplored. 112 00:06:05,712 --> 00:06:07,877 I think it's very safe to say 113 00:06:07,901 --> 00:06:12,730 that we don't even know how much about life we do not know. 114 00:06:13,810 --> 00:06:16,735 So, it's not surprising that every week in my field 115 00:06:16,759 --> 00:06:19,970 we begin to see the addition of more and more new species 116 00:06:19,994 --> 00:06:22,253 to this amazing tree of life. 117 00:06:22,277 --> 00:06:23,674 This one for example -- 118 00:06:23,698 --> 00:06:25,604 discovered earlier this summer, 119 00:06:25,628 --> 00:06:26,841 new to science, 120 00:06:26,865 --> 00:06:30,157 and now occupying its lonely branch in our family tree. 121 00:06:30,973 --> 00:06:32,124 What is even more tragic 122 00:06:32,148 --> 00:06:35,783 is that we know about a bunch of other species of animals out there, 123 00:06:35,807 --> 00:06:39,368 but their biology remains sorely under-studied. 124 00:06:39,392 --> 00:06:41,726 I'm sure some of you have heard about the fact 125 00:06:41,750 --> 00:06:45,946 that a starfish can actually regenerate its arm after it's lost. 126 00:06:45,970 --> 00:06:47,412 But some of you might not know 127 00:06:47,436 --> 00:06:51,785 that the arm itself can actually regenerate a complete starfish. 128 00:06:52,759 --> 00:06:56,807 And there are animals out there that do truly astounding things. 129 00:06:57,461 --> 00:06:59,171 I'm almost willing to bet 130 00:06:59,195 --> 00:07:03,514 that many of you have never heard of the flatworm, Schmidtea mediterranea. 131 00:07:04,423 --> 00:07:06,522 This little guy right here 132 00:07:06,546 --> 00:07:09,620 does things that essentially just blow my mind. 133 00:07:10,131 --> 00:07:14,135 You can grab one of these animals and cut it into 18 different fragments, 134 00:07:14,159 --> 00:07:17,921 and each and every one of those fragments will go on to regenerate 135 00:07:17,945 --> 00:07:19,263 a complete animal 136 00:07:19,287 --> 00:07:20,921 in under two weeks. 137 00:07:21,694 --> 00:07:25,931 18 heads, 18 bodies, 18 mysteries. 138 00:07:26,348 --> 00:07:28,744 For the past decade and a half or so, 139 00:07:28,768 --> 00:07:32,478 I've been trying to figure out how these little dudes do what they do, 140 00:07:32,502 --> 00:07:34,701 and how they pull this magic trick off. 141 00:07:34,725 --> 00:07:36,439 But like all good magicians, 142 00:07:36,463 --> 00:07:39,318 they're not really releasing their secrets readily to me. 143 00:07:39,342 --> 00:07:40,548 (Laughter) 144 00:07:40,572 --> 00:07:41,730 So here we are, 145 00:07:41,754 --> 00:07:46,209 after 20 years of essentially studying these animals, 146 00:07:46,233 --> 00:07:48,540 genome mapping, chin scratching, 147 00:07:48,564 --> 00:07:51,783 and thousands of amputations and thousands of regenerations, 148 00:07:51,807 --> 00:07:55,602 we still don't fully understand how these animals do what they do. 149 00:07:56,028 --> 00:07:59,624 Each planarian an ocean unto itself, 150 00:07:59,648 --> 00:08:01,254 full of unknowns. 151 00:08:02,476 --> 00:08:04,160 One of the common characteristics 152 00:08:04,184 --> 00:08:06,796 of all of these animals I've been talking to you about 153 00:08:06,820 --> 00:08:09,583 is that they did not appear to have received the memo 154 00:08:09,607 --> 00:08:12,274 that they need to behave according to the rules 155 00:08:12,298 --> 00:08:16,467 that we have derived from a handful of randomly selected animals 156 00:08:16,491 --> 00:08:19,213 that currently populate the vast majority 157 00:08:19,237 --> 00:08:21,754 of biomedical laboratories across the world. 158 00:08:22,117 --> 00:08:24,347 Meet our Nobel Prize winners. 159 00:08:24,371 --> 00:08:26,373 Seven species, essentially, 160 00:08:26,397 --> 00:08:29,999 that have produced for us the brunt of our understanding 161 00:08:30,023 --> 00:08:32,490 of biological behavior today. 162 00:08:33,172 --> 00:08:34,964 This little guy right here -- 163 00:08:34,988 --> 00:08:37,458 three Nobel Prizes in 12 years. 164 00:08:38,204 --> 00:08:40,960 And yet, after all the attention they have garnered, 165 00:08:40,984 --> 00:08:43,044 and all the knowledge they have generated, 166 00:08:43,068 --> 00:08:45,093 as well as the lion's share of the funding, 167 00:08:45,117 --> 00:08:48,990 here we are standing [before] the same litany of intractable problems 168 00:08:49,014 --> 00:08:50,638 and many new challenges. 169 00:08:51,220 --> 00:08:53,035 And that's because, unfortunately, 170 00:08:53,059 --> 00:08:55,673 these seven animals essentially correspond 171 00:08:55,697 --> 00:09:02,473 to 0.0009 percent of all of the species that inhabit the planet. 172 00:09:03,962 --> 00:09:06,348 So I'm beginning to suspect 173 00:09:06,372 --> 00:09:11,133 that our specialization is beginning to impede our progress at best, 174 00:09:11,157 --> 00:09:13,584 and at worst, is leading us astray. 175 00:09:14,235 --> 00:09:17,309 That's because life on this planet and its history 176 00:09:17,333 --> 00:09:19,050 is the history of rule breakers. 177 00:09:19,433 --> 00:09:22,780 Life started on the face of this planet as single-cell organisms, 178 00:09:22,804 --> 00:09:25,126 swimming for millions of years in the ocean, 179 00:09:25,150 --> 00:09:27,436 until one of those creatures decided, 180 00:09:27,460 --> 00:09:29,519 "I'm going to do things differently today; 181 00:09:29,543 --> 00:09:32,551 today I would like to invent something called multicellularity, 182 00:09:32,575 --> 00:09:33,848 and I'm going to do this." 183 00:09:33,872 --> 00:09:36,524 And I'm sure it wasn't a popular decision at the time -- 184 00:09:36,548 --> 00:09:37,575 (Laughter) 185 00:09:37,599 --> 00:09:39,205 but somehow, it managed to do it. 186 00:09:39,229 --> 00:09:41,795 And then, multicellular organisms began to populate 187 00:09:41,819 --> 00:09:43,195 all these ancestral oceans, 188 00:09:43,219 --> 00:09:44,407 and they thrived. 189 00:09:44,431 --> 00:09:45,964 And we have them here today. 190 00:09:46,789 --> 00:09:49,786 Land masses began to emerge from the surface of the oceans, 191 00:09:49,810 --> 00:09:51,264 and another creature thought, 192 00:09:51,288 --> 00:09:54,077 "Hey, that looks like a really nice piece of real estate. 193 00:09:54,101 --> 00:09:55,352 I'd like to move there." 194 00:09:55,376 --> 00:09:56,535 "Are you crazy? 195 00:09:56,559 --> 00:09:59,843 You're going to desiccate out there. Nothing can live out of water." 196 00:09:59,867 --> 00:10:01,024 But life found a way, 197 00:10:01,048 --> 00:10:03,371 and there are organisms now that live on land. 198 00:10:03,395 --> 00:10:05,793 Once on land, they may have looked up into the sky 199 00:10:05,817 --> 00:10:08,076 and said, "It would be nice to go to the clouds, 200 00:10:08,100 --> 00:10:09,251 I'm going to fly." 201 00:10:09,275 --> 00:10:12,350 "You can't break the law of gravity, there's no way you can fly." 202 00:10:12,374 --> 00:10:14,659 And yet, nature has invented -- 203 00:10:14,683 --> 00:10:16,690 multiple and independent times -- 204 00:10:16,714 --> 00:10:17,921 ways to fly. 205 00:10:18,368 --> 00:10:20,885 I love to study these animals that break the rules, 206 00:10:20,909 --> 00:10:24,538 because every time they break a rule, they invent something new 207 00:10:24,562 --> 00:10:28,321 that made it possible for us to be able to be here today. 208 00:10:28,624 --> 00:10:30,894 These animals did not get the memo. 209 00:10:30,918 --> 00:10:32,618 They break the rules. 210 00:10:32,642 --> 00:10:35,437 So if we're going to study animals that break the rules, 211 00:10:35,461 --> 00:10:38,456 shouldn't how we study them also break the rules? 212 00:10:39,666 --> 00:10:43,054 I think we need to renew our spirit of exploration. 213 00:10:43,440 --> 00:10:45,924 Rather than bring nature into our laboratories 214 00:10:45,948 --> 00:10:47,263 and interrogate it there, 215 00:10:47,287 --> 00:10:48,993 we need to bring our science 216 00:10:49,017 --> 00:10:51,922 into the majestic laboratory that is nature, 217 00:10:51,946 --> 00:10:55,857 and there, with our modern technological armamentarium, 218 00:10:55,881 --> 00:10:58,707 interrogate every new form of life we find, 219 00:10:58,731 --> 00:11:01,724 and any new biological attribute that we may find. 220 00:11:02,486 --> 00:11:06,640 We actually need to bring all of our intelligence 221 00:11:06,664 --> 00:11:08,756 to becoming stupid again -- 222 00:11:08,780 --> 00:11:12,639 clueless [before] the immensity of the unknown. 223 00:11:13,116 --> 00:11:14,477 Because after all, 224 00:11:14,501 --> 00:11:16,660 science is not really about knowledge. 225 00:11:16,684 --> 00:11:19,425 Science is about ignorance. 226 00:11:19,449 --> 00:11:20,814 That's what we do. 227 00:11:20,838 --> 00:11:23,969 Once, Antoine de Saint-Exupéry wrote, 228 00:11:23,993 --> 00:11:25,794 "If you want to build a ship, 229 00:11:25,818 --> 00:11:27,762 don't drum up people to collect wood 230 00:11:27,786 --> 00:11:30,088 and don't assign them tasks and work, 231 00:11:30,112 --> 00:11:34,206 but rather teach them to long for the endless immensity of the sea ..." 232 00:11:34,646 --> 00:11:36,350 As a scientist and a teacher, 233 00:11:36,374 --> 00:11:38,335 I like to paraphrase this to read 234 00:11:38,359 --> 00:11:41,517 that we scientists need to teach our students 235 00:11:41,541 --> 00:11:43,992 to long for the endless immensity of the sea 236 00:11:44,016 --> 00:11:45,453 that is our ignorance. 237 00:11:46,768 --> 00:11:50,633 We Homo sapiens are the only species we know of 238 00:11:50,657 --> 00:11:53,093 that is driven to scientific inquiry. 239 00:11:53,645 --> 00:11:55,779 We, like all other species on this planet, 240 00:11:55,803 --> 00:12:00,294 are inextricably woven into the history of life on this planet. 241 00:12:00,989 --> 00:12:04,156 And I think I'm a little wrong when I say that life is a mystery, 242 00:12:04,180 --> 00:12:06,891 because I think that life is actually an open secret 243 00:12:06,915 --> 00:12:10,899 that has been beckoning our species for millennia to understand it. 244 00:12:11,344 --> 00:12:12,945 So I ask you: 245 00:12:12,969 --> 00:12:16,742 Aren't we the best chance that life has to know itself? 246 00:12:17,053 --> 00:12:18,204 And if so, 247 00:12:18,228 --> 00:12:19,958 what the heck are we waiting for? 248 00:12:20,368 --> 00:12:21,569 Thank you. 249 00:12:21,593 --> 00:12:24,847 (Applause)