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Weird, or just different?

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    So, imagine you're standing on a street anywhere in America
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    and a Japanese man comes up to you and says,
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    "Excuse me, what is the name of this block?"
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    And you say, "I'm sorry, well, this is Oak Street, that's Elm Street.
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    This is 26th, that's 27th."
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    He says, "OK, but what is the name of that block?"
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    You say, "Well, blocks don't have names.
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    Streets have names; blocks are just the
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    unnamed spaces in between streets."
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    He leaves, a little confused and disappointed.
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    So, now imagine you're standing on a street, anywhere in Japan,
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    you turn to a person next to you and say,
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    "Excuse me, what is the name of this street?"
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    They say, "Oh, well that's Block 17 and this is Block 16."
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    And you say, "OK, but what is the name of this street?"
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    And they say, "Well, streets don't have names.
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    Blocks have names.
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    Just look at Google Maps here. There's Block 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19.
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    All of these blocks have names,
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    and the streets are just the unnamed spaces in between the blocks.
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    And you say then, "OK, then how do you know your home address?"
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    He said, "Well, easy, this is District Eight.
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    There's Block 17, house number one."
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    You say, "OK, but walking around the neighborhood,
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    I noticed that the house numbers don't go in order."
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    He says, "Of course they do. They go in the order in which they were built.
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    The first house ever built on a block is house number one.
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    The second house ever built is house number two.
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    Third is house number three. It's easy. It's obvious."
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    So, I love that sometimes we need to
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    go to the opposite side of the world
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    to realize assumptions we didn't even know we had,
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    and realize that the opposite of them may also be true.
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    So, for example, there are doctors in China
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    who believe that it's their job to keep you healthy.
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    So, any month you are healthy you pay them,
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    and when you're sick you don't have to pay them because they failed
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    at their job. They get rich when you're healthy, not sick.
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    (Applause)
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    In most music, we think of the "one"
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    as the downbeat, the beginning of the musical phrase: one, two, three, four.
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    But in West African music, the "one"
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    is thought of as the end of the phrase,
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    like the period at the end of a sentence.
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    So, you can hear it not just in the phrasing, but the way they count off their music:
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    two, three, four, one.
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    And this map is also accurate.
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    (Laughter)
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    There's a saying that whatever true thing you can say about India,
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    the opposite is also true.
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    So, let's never forget, whether at TED, or anywhere else,
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    that whatever brilliant ideas you have or hear,
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    that the opposite may also be true.
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    Domo arigato gozaimashita.
Title:
Weird, or just different?
Speaker:
Derek Sivers
Description:

"There's a flip side to everything," the saying goes, and in 2 minutes, Derek Sivers shows this is true in a few ways you might not expect.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
02:21
TED edited English subtitles for Weird, or just different?
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