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How I made friends with reality

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    I'm going to first tell you something that
    in my grandmother
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    would've elicited a five-oy alarm:
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    "Oy-oy-oy-oy-oy."
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    (Laughter)
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    And here it is ...
    are you ready?
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    OK.
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    I have stage IV lung cancer.
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    Oh, I know, "poor me."
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    I don't feel that way.
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    I'm so OK with it.
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    And granted, I have certain advantages --
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    not everybody can take
    so cavalier an attitude.
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    I don't have young children.
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    I have a grown daughter who's
    brilliant and happy and wonderful.
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    I don't have huge financial stress.
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    My cancer isn't that aggressive.
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    It's kind of like
    the Democratic leadership --
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    (Laughter)
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    not convinced it can win.
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    It's basically just sitting there,
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    waiting for Goldman Sachs
    to give it some money.
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    Oh, and the best thing of all --
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    I have a major accomplishment
    under my belt.
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    Yes.
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    I didn't even know it until someone
    tweeted me a year ago.
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    And here's what they said:
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    "You are responsible
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    for the pussification
    of the American male."
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    Not that I can take
    all the credit, but ...
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    (Laughter)
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    But what if you don't have my advantages?
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    The only advice I can give you
    is to do what I did:
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    make friends with reality.
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    You couldn't have a worse relationship
    with reality than I did.
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    From the get-go,
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    I wasn't even attracted to reality.
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    If they'd had Tinder when I met reality,
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    I would have swiped left
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    and the whole thing would have been over.
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    (Laughter)
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    And reality and I --
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    we don't share the same values,
    the same goals --
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    (Laughter)
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    To be honest, I don't have goals;
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    I have fantasies.
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    They're exactly like goals
    but without the hard work.
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    I'm not a big fan of hard work,
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    but you know reality --
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    it's either push, push, push, push, push
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    through its agent,
    the executive brain function --
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    one of the "yays" of dying:
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    my executive brain function
    won't have me to kick around anymore.
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    (Laughter)
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    But something happened
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    that made me realize
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    that reality may not be reality.
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    So what happened was,
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    because I basically wanted reality
    to leave me alone --
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    but I wanted to be left alone
    in a nice house
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    with a Wolf range
    and Sub-Zero refrigerator ...
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    private yoga lessons --
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    I ended up with
    a development deal at Disney.
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    And one day I found myself
    in my new office
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    on Two Dopey Drive --
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    (Laughter)
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    which reality thought
    I should be proud of ...
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    (Laughter)
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    And I'm staring at the present
    they sent me to celebrate my arrival --
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    not the Lalique vase or the grand piano
    I've heard of other people getting,
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    but a three-foot-tall,
    stuffed Mickey Mouse
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    (Laughter)
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    with a catalog, in case I wanted
    to order some more stuff
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    that didn't jive with my aesthetic.
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    (Laughter)
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    And when I looked up in the catalog
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    to see how much
    this three-foot-high mouse cost,
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    here's how it was described ...
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    "Life-sized."
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    (Laughter)
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    And that's when I knew.
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    Reality wasn't "reality."
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    Reality was an imposter.
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    So I dived into quantum physics
    and chaos theory
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    to try to find actual reality,
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    and I've just finished a movie --
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    yes, finally finished --
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    about all that,
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    so I won't go into it here,
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    and anyway, it wasn't until
    after we shot the movie,
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    when I broke my leg
    and then it didn't heal,
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    so then they had to do
    another surgery a year later,
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    and then that took a year --
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    two years in a wheelchair,
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    and that's when I came
    into contact with actual reality:
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    limits.
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    Those very limits I'd spent
    my whole life denying
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    and pushing past and ignoring
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    were real,
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    and I had to deal with them,
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    and they took imagination,
    creativity and my entire skill set.
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    It turned out I was great
    at actual reality.
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    I didn't just come to terms with it,
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    I fell in love.
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    And I should've known,
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    given my equally shaky
    relationship with the zeitgeist ...
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    I'll just say, if anyone
    is in the market for a Betamax --
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    (Laughter)
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    I should have known that the moment
    I fell in love with reality,
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    the rest of the country would decide
    to go in the opposite direction.
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    (Laughter)
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    But I'm not here to talk about Trump
    or the alt-right or climate-change deniers
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    or even the makers of this thing,
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    which I would have called a box,
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    except that right here, it says,
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    "This is not a box."
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    (Laughter)
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    They're gaslighting me.
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    But what I do want to talk about
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    is a personal challenge to reality
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    that I take personally,
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    and I want to preface it
    by saying that I absolutely love science.
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    I have this --
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    not a scientist myself --
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    but an uncanny ability to understand
    everything about science,
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    except the actual science --
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    (Laughter)
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    which is math.
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    But the most outlandish concepts
    make sense to me.
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    The string theory;
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    the idea that all of reality emanates
    from the vibrations of these teeny --
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    I call it "The Big Twang."
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    (Laughter)
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    Wave-particle duality:
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    the idea that one thing
    can manifest as two things ...
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    you know?
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    That a photon can manifest
    as a wave and a particle
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    coincided with my deepest intuitions
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    that people are good and bad,
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    ideas are right and wrong.
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    Freud was right about penis envy
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    and he was wrong about who has it.
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
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    And then there's this slight
    variation on that,
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    which is reality looks like two things,
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    but it turns out to be the interaction
    of those two things,
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    like space -- time,
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    mass -- energy
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    and life and death.
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    So I don't I understand --
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    I simply just don't understand
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    the mindset of people who are out
    to "defeat death" and "overcome death."
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    How do you do that?
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    How do you defeat death
    without killing off life?
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    It doesn't make sense to me.
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    I also have to say,
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    I find it incredibly ungrateful.
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    I mean, you're given
    this extraordinary gift --
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    life --
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    but it's as if you had asked Santa
    for a Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow
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    and you had gotten
    a salad spinner instead.
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    You know, it's the beef --
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    the beef with it is that it comes
    with an expiration date.
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    Death is the deal breaker.
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    I don't get that.
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    I don't understand --
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    to me, it's disrespectful.
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    It's disrespectful to nature.
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    The idea that we're going
    to dominate nature,
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    we're going to master nature,
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    nature is too weak
    to withstand our intellect --
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    no, I don't think so.
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    I think if you've actually read
    quantum physics as I have --
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    well, I read an email
    from someone who'd read it, but --
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    (Laughter)
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    You have to understand
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    that we don't live in Newton's
    clockwork universe anymore.
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    We live in a banana peel universe,
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    and we won't ever be able
    to know everything
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    or control everything
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    or predict everything.
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    Nature is like a self-driving car.
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    The best we can be is like
    the old woman in that joke --
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    I don't know if you've heard it.
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    An old woman is driving
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    with her middle-aged daughter
    in the passenger seat,
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    and the mother goes
    right through a red light.
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    And the daughter doesn't want to say
    anything that makes it sound like,
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    "You're too old to drive,"
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    so she didn't say anything.
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    And then the mother
    goes through a second red light,
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    and the daughter,
    as tactfully as possible,
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    says, "Mom, are you aware
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    that you just went through
    two red lights?"
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    And the mother says, "Oh, am I driving?"
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    So ...
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    and now, I'm going to take a mental leap,
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    which is easy for me because
    I'm the Evel Knievel of mental leaps;
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    my license plate says,
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    "Cogito, ergo zoom."
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    I hope you're willing
    to come with me on this,
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    but my real problem with the mindset
    that is so out to defeat death
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    is if you're anti-death,
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    which to me translates as anti-life,
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    which to me translates as anti-nature,
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    it also translates to me as anti-woman,
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    because women have long been
    identified with nature.
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    And my source on this is Hannah Arendt,
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    the German philosopher who wrote
    a book called "The Human Condition."
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    And in it, she says that classically,
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    work is associated with men.
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    Work is what comes out of the head;
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    it's what we invent,
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    it's what we create,
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    it's how we leave our mark upon the world.
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    Whereas labor is associated with the body.
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    It's associated with the people
    who perform labor
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    or undergo labor.
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    So to me,
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    the mindset that denies that,
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    that denies that we're in sync
    with the biorhythms,
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    the cyclical rhythms of the universe,
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    does not create a hospitable
    environment for women
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    or for people associated with labor,
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    which is to say,
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    people that we associate
    as descendants of slaves,
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    or people who perform manual labor.
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    So here's how it looks
    from a banana-peel-universe point of view,
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    from my mindset which I call
    "Emily's universe."
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    First of all,
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    I am incredibly grateful for life,
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    but I don't want to be immortal.
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    I have no interest in having
    my name live on after me.
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    In fact, I don't want it to,
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    because it's been my observation
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    that no matter how nice and how brilliant
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    or how talented you are,
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    50 years after you die, they turn on you.
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    (Laughter)
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    And I have actual proof of that.
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    A headline from the Los Angeles Times:
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    "Anne Frank: Not so nice after all."
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    (Laughter)
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    Plus, I love being in sync
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    with the cyclical rhythms of the universe.
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    That's what's so extraordinary about life:
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    it's a cycle of generation,
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    degeneration,
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    regeneration.
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    "I" am just a collection of particles
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    that is arranged into this pattern,
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    then will decompose and be available,
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    all of its constituent parts, to nature,
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    to reorganize into another pattern.
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    To me, that is so exciting,
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    and it makes me even more grateful
    to be part of that process.
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    You know,
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    I look at death now from the point of view
    of a German biologist,
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    Andreas Weber,
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    who looks at it as part
    of the gift economy.
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    You're given this enormous gift -- life,
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    you enrich it as best you can,
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    and then you give it back.
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    And, you know, Auntie Mame
    said, "Life is a banquet" --
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    well, I've eaten my fill.
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    I have had an enormous appetite for life,
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    I've consumed life,
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    but in death, I'm going to be consumed.
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    I'm going into the ground
    just the way I am,
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    and there, I invite every microbe
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    and detritus-er
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    and decomposer
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    to have their fill --
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    I think they'll find me delicious.
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    (Laughter)
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    I do.
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    So the best thing about my attitude,
    I think, is that it's real.
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    You can see it.
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    You can observe it.
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    It actually happens.
  • 13:55 - 13:58
    Well, maybe not my enriching the gift,
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    I don't know about that --
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    but my life has certainly
    been enriched by other people.
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    By TED,
  • 14:05 - 14:08
    which introduced me
    to a whole network of people
  • 14:08 - 14:11
    who have enriched my life,
  • 14:11 - 14:14
    including Tricia McGillis,
    my website designer,
  • 14:14 - 14:16
    who's working with my wonderful daughter
  • 14:16 - 14:20
    to take my website
    and turn it into something
  • 14:20 - 14:22
    where all I have to do is write a blog.
  • 14:22 - 14:24
    I don't have to use
    the executive brain function ...
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    Ha, ha, ha, I win!
  • 14:28 - 14:29
    (Laughter)
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    And I am so grateful to you.
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    I don't want to say, "the audience,"
  • 14:35 - 14:40
    because I don't really see it
    as we're two separate things.
  • 14:40 - 14:45
    I think of it in terms
    of quantum physics, again.
  • 14:46 - 14:51
    And, you know, quantum physicists
    are not exactly sure what happens
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    when the wave becomes a particle.
  • 14:54 - 14:55
    There are different theories --
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    the collapse of the wave function,
  • 14:57 - 14:58
    decoherence --
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    but they're all agreed on one thing:
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    that reality comes into being
    through an interaction.
  • 15:06 - 15:08
    (Voice breaking) So do you.
  • 15:09 - 15:11
    And every audience I've ever had,
  • 15:11 - 15:13
    past and present.
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    Thank you so much for making my life real.
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    (Applause)
  • 15:19 - 15:20
    Thank you.
  • 15:20 - 15:21
    (Applause)
  • 15:21 - 15:22
    Thank you.
  • 15:23 - 15:24
    (Applause)
  • 15:24 - 15:25
    Thank you.
  • 15:25 - 15:26
    (Applause)
  • 15:26 - 15:27
    Thank you.
Title:
How I made friends with reality
Speaker:
Emily Levine
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
15:27

English subtitles

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