WEBVTT 00:00:00.053 --> 00:00:01.479 Growing up in Missouri, 00:00:01.503 --> 00:00:04.155 they would kind of take us out into the woods, 00:00:04.179 --> 00:00:07.238 and they would give you a map, and they would give you a compass, 00:00:07.262 --> 00:00:08.887 and you had to find your way home. 00:00:08.911 --> 00:00:10.583 And without the compass, 00:00:10.607 --> 00:00:12.089 you can't even read the map. 00:00:12.113 --> 00:00:13.715 That's what I'm here to tell you. 00:00:13.739 --> 00:00:14.972 The compass is the key. NOTE Paragraph 00:00:14.996 --> 00:00:16.228 [Small thing.] NOTE Paragraph 00:00:16.252 --> 00:00:18.124 [Big idea.] NOTE Paragraph 00:00:20.559 --> 00:00:25.256 A compass is most simply a piece of metal that has been magnetized, 00:00:25.280 --> 00:00:28.729 so that it will turn towards the Earth's magnetic pole. 00:00:28.753 --> 00:00:31.655 The one that we all think of is the pocket compass. 00:00:31.679 --> 00:00:33.200 It looks like a watch, right? 00:00:33.224 --> 00:00:34.639 You can hold it in your hand 00:00:34.663 --> 00:00:37.045 and watch the little needle bounce around 00:00:37.069 --> 00:00:38.596 until you find north. NOTE Paragraph 00:00:38.620 --> 00:00:42.618 Magnetism is still a pretty mysterious force to physicists, 00:00:42.642 --> 00:00:45.825 but what we do know for sure is that a compass works 00:00:45.849 --> 00:00:48.071 because the Earth is this giant magnet. 00:00:48.095 --> 00:00:49.757 And when you use a compass, 00:00:49.781 --> 00:00:53.435 you are in touch with the very center of our planet, 00:00:53.459 --> 00:00:57.245 where this kind of roiling ball of molten iron 00:00:57.269 --> 00:01:00.235 is spinning around and creating a magnetic field. 00:01:00.259 --> 00:01:03.035 Just like a magnet you can play with on your tabletop, 00:01:03.059 --> 00:01:04.931 it has a north pole and a south pole, 00:01:04.955 --> 00:01:08.165 and we use compasses to find our way north because of that fact. NOTE Paragraph 00:01:08.743 --> 00:01:13.798 The earliest known compass comes from about 200 BC in China. 00:01:13.822 --> 00:01:17.047 They figured out that some of the metal coming out of the ground 00:01:17.071 --> 00:01:18.334 was naturally magnetic, 00:01:18.358 --> 00:01:21.106 and so they fashioned this magnetized metal 00:01:21.130 --> 00:01:22.959 into this kind of ladle-looking thing, 00:01:22.983 --> 00:01:24.466 put it on a brass plate 00:01:24.490 --> 00:01:25.926 and then it would point north. 00:01:25.950 --> 00:01:28.730 It seems to have been primarily used to improve feng shui, 00:01:28.754 --> 00:01:32.281 so they could figure out what was the best way for energy to flow 00:01:32.305 --> 00:01:34.044 through their living spaces. NOTE Paragraph 00:01:34.068 --> 00:01:36.769 Sailors were probably the early adopters 00:01:36.793 --> 00:01:39.184 of the more portable versions of it, 00:01:39.208 --> 00:01:40.932 because no matter where the sun was, 00:01:40.956 --> 00:01:43.152 no matter what the condition of the stars were, 00:01:43.176 --> 00:01:45.042 they would always be able to find north. NOTE Paragraph 00:01:45.066 --> 00:01:48.568 Now, much later, the Europeans are the ones who innovate 00:01:48.592 --> 00:01:50.418 and come up with the compass rose. 00:01:50.442 --> 00:01:51.765 It essentially laid out 00:01:51.789 --> 00:01:54.335 what north, south, east and west looked like, 00:01:54.359 --> 00:01:57.795 and it also enabled you to kind of create new directions, 00:01:57.819 --> 00:02:00.916 like northwest, southeast, what have you. 00:02:00.940 --> 00:02:03.648 And for the first time, they knew where they were going. 00:02:03.672 --> 00:02:05.239 That's kind of a big deal. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:05.263 --> 00:02:09.146 But also, I think it was part of this general reinvigoration 00:02:09.170 --> 00:02:10.565 of European science. 00:02:10.589 --> 00:02:12.385 You might know it as the Renaissance. 00:02:12.409 --> 00:02:14.685 Lots of new tools were invented, 00:02:14.709 --> 00:02:16.635 from the telescope to the microscope. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:16.659 --> 00:02:19.176 Maps got better because of compasses, right? 00:02:19.200 --> 00:02:22.450 Because then you start to understand which direction is which, 00:02:22.474 --> 00:02:23.784 you get a lot more detail, 00:02:23.808 --> 00:02:25.497 and that just kind of changes 00:02:25.521 --> 00:02:27.855 the human relationship to the world. 00:02:27.879 --> 00:02:30.555 The compass with a map is like a superpower. 00:02:30.579 --> 00:02:33.305 Everything that we think of as world history 00:02:33.329 --> 00:02:35.909 would not have taken place without the compass: 00:02:35.933 --> 00:02:39.812 the age of exploration, Magellan circumnavigating the globe, 00:02:39.836 --> 00:02:41.945 even the fact that we know it is a globe. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:41.969 --> 00:02:45.400 The compass ends up getting embedded in all these other tools, 00:02:45.424 --> 00:02:47.767 because it is such a functional object. 00:02:47.791 --> 00:02:50.455 So you might have it embedded in your multi-tool, 00:02:50.479 --> 00:02:52.412 you might have it embedded in your phone. 00:02:52.436 --> 00:02:53.692 The compass is everywhere, 00:02:53.716 --> 00:02:57.555 because it's literally how we find our way across the face of the Earth. 00:02:57.579 --> 00:02:59.275 So you can go off and explore, 00:02:59.299 --> 00:03:03.673 and find out what is over that next hill or that next horizon, 00:03:03.697 --> 00:03:06.681 but you can also reliably find your way home.