-
I've been spending my summers
-
in the Marine Biological Laboratory in
Woods Hole, Massachusetts
-
And there, what I've been doing is
essentially renting a boat.
-
What I would like to ask you to do
-
is to come on a boat ride with me tonight.
-
So, we ride off from Eel Pond into
the Vineyard South,
-
right off the coast of Martha's Vineyard,
-
equipped with a drone to
identify potential spots
-
from which to peer into the Atlantic.
-
Earlier I was going to say
-
into the depths of the Atlantic,
-
but we don't have to go too deep
to reach the unknown.
-
Here, barely two miles away,
-
from what is arguably the greatest
marine biology lab in the world,
-
we lower a simple plankton net
into the water
-
and bring up into the surface things
that humanity rarely pays attention to
-
and oftentimes, have never seen before.
-
Here is one of the organisms
that we caught in our net,
-
this is a jellyfish.
-
But look closely, living inside this
animal is another organism
-
that is very likely entirely
new to science.
-
A complete new species.
-
Or how about this other
transparent beauty?
-
With a beating heart,
asexually growing,
-
on top of its head,
-
progeny that will move on to
reproduce sexually.
-
Now let me say that again,
-
this animal is growing asexually,
-
on top of its head,
-
progeny that is going to reproduce
sexually in the next generation.
-
A weird jellyfish, not quite,
-
this is an ascidian,
this is a group of animals
-
that now we know we share
extensive genomic ancestry with,
-
and it is perhaps the closest
invertebrate species to our own.
-
Meet your cousin,
Thalia democratica
-
(Laughter)
-
I'm pretty sure you didn't
save a spot
-
in your last family reunion for Thalia.
-
But, let me tell you,
-
these animals are profoundly related to us
-
in ways we are just
beginning to understand.
-
Next time you hear anybody
derisively telling you
-
that this type of research is a
simple fishing expedition,
-
I hope that you remember
the trip that we just took.
-
Today, many biological sciences
only see value
-
in studying deeper what we
already know,
-
In mapping already discovered continents.
-
But some of us are much more
interested in the unknown,
-
we want to discover completely
new continents,
-
and gaze at magnificent vistas
of ignorance.
-
We crave the experience of being
completely baffled
-
by something we have
never seen before.
-
And yes, I agree that there's a lot of
ego satisfaction in being able to say
-
"Hey, I was the first one
to discover that."
-
This is not a self-aggrandizing
enterprise
-
because in this type of
discovery research,
-
if you don't feel like a complete
idiot most of the time,
-
you're just not science-ing
hard enough.
-
(Laughter)
-
Every summer, I bring onto the deck
of this little boat of ours,
-
more and more things that
we know very little about.
-
Very, very, very little about.
-
I would like to tell you tonight,
-
a story about life that
rarely gets told
-
in an environment like this.
-
From the vantage point of
our 21st biological laboratories,
-
our 21st century
biological laboratories,
-
we have began to illuminate
-
many mysteries of life with knowledge.
-
We sensed that after centuries
of scientific research,
-
we're beginning to make significant
inroads into understanding
-
some of the most fundamental
principles of life.
-
Our collective optimism is reflected
-
by the growth of biotechnology
across the globe.
-
Striving to utilize scientific knowledge
to cure human diseases,
-
things like cancer, aging,
degeneretive diseases,
-
these are but some of the
undesirables we wish to tame.
-
What I often wonder is,
-
"Why is it that we are
having so much trouble
-
trying to solve the
problem of cancer?
-
Is it that we're trying to solve
the problem of cancer,
-
and not trying to
understand life?"
-
Life on this planet
shares a common origin.
-
I can summarize 3.5 billion years
of the history of life on this planet
-
in a single slide.
-
What you see represented here
-
are all known species,
-
representative of all
known species of our planet.
-
in this immensity of life
and biodiversity
-
we occupy a rather
unremarkable position.
-
Homo sapiens,
the last of our kind.
-
And though I don't really
want to disparage
-
all the accomplishments
of our species,
-
as much as we wish it to be so,
-
and often pretend that it is so,
-
we are not the measure of all things.
-
We are, however, the measurers
of many things.
-
We relentlessly quantify,
analyze and compare,
-
and some of these are absolutely
invaluable and indeed necessary,
-
but this emphasis today,
-
on forcing biological research
to specialize,
-
and to produce practical outcomes,
-
is actually restricting our ability
to interrogate life,
-
to accept only narrow confines
and unsatisfying depths.
-
We are measuring an astonishingly
narrow sliver of life,
-
and hoping that those numbers
will save all of our lives.
-
How narrow, you ask?
-
Well let me give you a number,
-
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
-
recently estimated, that about 95%
of our oceans remain unexplored.
-
Now let that sink in for a second.
-
95% of our oceans
remain unexplored.
-
I think it's very safe to say
that we don't even know
-
how much about life
we do not know.
-
It's no surprise that every
week in my field
-
we begin to see the addition
of more and more new species
-
to this amazing tree of life.
-
This one for example,
-
discovered earlier this summer,
-
new to science and now occupying
its lonely branch in a family tree.
-
What is even more tragic is that
we know about
-
a bunch of other species of
animals out there,
-
but their biology remains
sorely understudied,
-
I'm sure some of you have heard
about the fact that
-
a starfish can actually regenerate
its arm after it's loss,
-
but some of you might not know
-
that the arm itself can actually
regenerate a complete starfish.
-
There are animals out there
that do truly astounding things,
-
and I'm almost willing to bet,
-
that many of you have never heard
of the flatworm
-
Schmidtea mediterranea.
-
This little guy right here does things
that essentially just blows my mind.
-
You can grab one of these animals
and cut them into 18 different fragments,
-
each and every one of those fragments
-
will go on to regenerate a complete
animal in under two weeks.
-
18 heads, 18 bodies, 18 mysteries.
-
For the past decade and a half or so,
-
I've been trying to figure out how
these little dudes do what they do,
-
how they pull this body trick off?
-
But like all good magicians,
-
they're not really releasing their
secrets readily to me.
-
(Laughter)
-
So here we are, after 20 years
of essentially studying these animals,
-
genome mapping, chin scratching,
-
thousands of amputations and
thousands of regenerations,
-
we still don't fully understand
-
how these animals do
what they do.
-
Each planaria, an ocean
unto itself,
-
full of unknowns.
-
Now, one of the common characteristics
of all these animals
-
I have been talking to you about is that
-
they did not appear to have
received the memo,
-
that they need to behave according
to the rules that we have derived
-
from a handful of randomly selected
animals that currently populate
-
the vast majority of biomedical
laboratories across the world.
-
Meet our Nobel Prize winners,
-
7 species, essentially,
that have produced for us
-
the bulk of our understanding
of biological behavior today.
-
This little guy right here,
-
3 Nobel Prizes in 12 years.
-
And yet, after all the attention
they have garnered
-
and all the noise they have generated
as well as the lion share of the funding,
-
here we are standing in front of the
same litany of tractable problems
-
and many new challenges.
-
That's because, unfortunately,
-
these 7 animals correspond to
0.00009% of all of the species
-
that inhabit the planet.
-
So, I'm beginning to suspect that
-
our specialization is beginning to
impede our progress at best,
-
and at worst, leading us astray.
-
That's because life on this
planet and its history
-
is the history of rule breakers.
-
Life started on the face of this
planet as single-cell organisms,
-
swimming for millions of years
in the ocean,
-
until one of those creatures
decided that,
-
"I'm going to do things
differently today,
-
today I would like to invent
something called Multicellularity,
-
I'm going to do this."
-
I'm sure it was not a popular
decision at the time,
-
(Laughter)
-
but somehow it managed to do it.
-
And then, Multicellular organisms
began to populate
-
all these ancestral oceans,
and they thrived,
-
and we have them here today.
-
Land masses began to merge
from the surfaces of the oceans,
-
and another creature thought,
-
"Hey, that looks like a really nice
piece of real estate,
-
I'd like to move over there.
-
What, are you crazy?
-
You're going to dessicate out there,
nothing can live out of water."
-
But life found a way,
-
and there are organisms now
of course that live on land.
-
Once on land, they may have looked up
into the sky and said,
-
"Hey, it'd be nice to go to the clouds,
I'm going to fly!
-
You can't break the law of gravity,
there's no way you can fly."
-
And yet, nature has invented
multiple and independent times
-
ways to fly.
-
I love to study animals
that break the rules
-
because every time they break a rule,
they invent something new
-
that made it possible for us
to be able to be here today.
-
These animals did not
get the memo,
-
they have broken the rules.
-
So if we are going to study
animals that break the rules,
-
shouldn't how we study them
also break the rules?
-
I think that we need to renew
our spirit of exploration,
-
rather than bringing nature into
our laboratories and interrogating them,
-
we need to bring our science into
the majestic laboratory that is nature.
-
And there, with our modern
technological armamentarium,
-
interrogate every new form of
life we find
-
and any new biological attribute
that we may find.
-
We actually need to bring all
of our intelligence
-
to becoming stupid again.
-
Clueless in the immensity,
-
in front of the immensity
of the unknown.
-
Because, after all,
-
science is not really about knowledge,
science is about ignorance,
-
that's what we do.
-
So if we're serious about this,
-
we are going to have to start
seriously supporting
-
those institutions that make it
possible
-
for discovery research to take place.
-
Institutions like our own
-
Stowers Institute for Medical Research
in Kansas City, Missouri,
-
or the National Institute of General
Medical Science in Bethesda, Maryland,
-
and of course our gateway
to biodiversity,
-
the Marine Biological Laboratory
in Woods Hole, Massachusetts.
-
I have been very fortunate to be able
to do some of this training myself,
-
and it is a pleasure for me
-
to actually grab students out of the
confines of their laboratories
-
away from their computers and
their catalogues,
-
and throw them into the world
of discovery and exploration.
-
It is an immense pleasure,
a real pleasure to actually see
-
how these bright, young minds'
curiosity spreads its wings
-
and flies away when faced
with the unknown.
-
This is how we become
real scientists.
-
So we need these people
to actually go out there
-
and ask the better questions
that will bring us closer
-
to the answers that we seek.
-
Antoine de Saint-Exupery
actually wrote
-
that if you want to build a ship,
-
don't drum up people to collect wood
-
and don't assign them tasks and work,
-
but rather teach them to long for
the endless immensity of the sea.
-
As a scientist and a teacher,
-
I like to paraphrase this to read,
-
that we scientists need to
teach our students
-
to long for the endless immensity
of the sea
-
that is our ignorance.
-
We, Homo sapiens, are the only
species we know of
-
that is driven to scientific inquiry,
-
we, like all other species on this planet
-
are inextricably woven into the
history of life in this planet.
-
I think that I'm a little wrong when
I say that life is a mystery,
-
because I think that life is
actually an open secret
-
that has been begging our species
for millennia to understand it.
-
So I ask you,
-
are we the best chance that
life has to know itself?
-
And if so, what the heck
are we waiting for?
-
We need to do things differently.
-
Tonight I'm going to ask you
-
to please help us build the
greatest discovery research vessel
-
in the history of humankind.
-
Call your legislators,
-
ask them to fund basic discovery research,
-
support and give what you can
to institutions such as these
-
that are dedicated to discovery research,
-
and hop on board with us
on a grand expedition
-
to radically transform our
understanding of life.
-
And along the way,
-
change the way we do
biomedical research forever.
-
Thank you.
-
(Applause)