Entries from TED Blog tagged with 'David Deutsch'
26 October 2009
A new way to explain explanation: David Deutsch on TED.com
For tens of thousands of years our ancestors understood the world through myths, and the pace of change was glacial. The rise of scientific understanding transformed the world within a few centuries. Why? Physicist David Deutsch proposes a subtle answer.(Recorded at TEDGlobal 2009, July 2009, Oxford, UK. Duration: 16:39)
Twitter URL: http://on.ted.com/4G
Watch David Deutsch's talk on TED.com, where you can download this TEDTalk, rate it, comment on it and find other talks and performances from our archive of 500+ TEDTalks.
22 July 2009
David Deutsch at TEDGlobal 2009: Running notes from Session 5

Unedited running notes from TEDGlobal 2009.
Our ancestors wondered what stars are. Humans have always yearned to know more -- it is a survival instinct. "How can I be warmer, cooler, safer, in less pain?" Prehistoric cave artists may have wished to draw better. But although they wished for more knowledge, for progress, they failed. The world did not improve for a long, long, long time.
What makes stars shine? We only really knew why as recently as 1899. We made many important discoveries and advancements in the 40 years that followed, so why did we not discover this in the 100,000 years before? Our ancestors had brains of the same design as we have. But somehow they stagnated, while we have driven our knowledge and technology forward at a staggering pace. Deutsch asks, Why? What event revolutionized the human condition?
The scientific revolution is where we should start to look for answers. Ever since then, our knowledge of the physical world and how to adapt it to our wishes has grown. The revolution was based on the fact that "It is possible to know." But what is that notion itself based on?
It was thought, in more primitive times, that "all that is important to know is already known." People believed that ancient scrolls and dogma were all the truth we needed. But starting to actually make progress away from that is not as simple as just "rejecting authority." Authorities have been rejected many times before, with no scientific progress resulting.
Promoting observation is important, but, as we learned today, perception does not offer a direct channel into "absolute reality." It's not like equations are carved into mountains. And if they are, it's because we carved them there. (He says: "By the way, why don't we DO that? What's WRONG with us?")
How do we know things? Empiricists would say: induction. How do we know spacetime is curved? "Looking at an eclipse, and seeing a dot here rather than there." How do we know evolution is true? "Looking at rocks." A creationist would say, "Ah! Gotcha! You're using guesswork." But they fail to see that their understanding of their ancient religious texts is also based on guesswork.
So is testability, as Karl Popper would say, the key to advancement? No. Even cranks can make theories that are "testable."
What is the one thing that allows for scientific advancement, for progress, rather than stagnation? Deutsch's answer comes from a Simpson's clip. In the clip, Lucy Lawless, actress who played Xena in Xena: The Warrior Princess answers geeky fans' questions about plotholes and inconsistencies with one answer: "If you see any plothole, remember that a wizard did it." Deutsch says, interestingly, this type of explanation is not problematic because it contradicts a different explanation -- it's just about it being a bad explanation. In the clip, character Professor Frink asks for an explanation. Lucy Lawless offers a poor explanation. (Does it make sense to argue about what happened off stage in fiction?) The reason Lucy Lawless' explanation doesn't work, according to Deutsch, is because the "Wizard" entity that provided the explanation could easily be substituted for any other entity.
Easy variability is a sign of a bad explanation.
Look for explanations that can't be easily varied, which still explain the phenomenon. In the case of our explanation of seasons, the tilt of the Earth's rotation has many specific characteristics, any given one of which when challenged would affect everything about the theory. That's why it is powerful. But if the activities of fickle gods were what the changing seasons where attributed to, any given detail could be changed about the gods -- they created spring as a revenge! vs. spring returned as a sort of godly marriage blessing! -- without actually affecting the end result.
Deutsch's final conclusion: The truth consists of hard-to-vary assertions about reality.
Photo: David Deutsch at TEDGlobal 2009, Session 5: "Hidden algorithm" July 22, 2009, in Oxford, UK. Credit: TED / James Duncan Davidson
22 July 2009
Twitter Snapshot: David Deutsch boggles minds
Quantum physicist David Deutsch is at TEDGlobal talking about how the stars shine, reality as conjecture and parallel universes. It's fascinating, but some of us are a little mentally intimidated and Twitter reflected that.
Day 2 @ TED. Settling in for a talk by quantum theorist David Deutsch. Is my mind ready fir this one? -- afar_diaz
will virtually hug the first tweeter to tweet the 'what makes stars shine' formula ;-) in David Deutsch's talk -- iamhelenharrop
David Deutsch "The Nature of Scientific Explanation" is beyond my twit-ability, sorry. Must. Focus. Brain. Hurts. -- ruthannharnisch
Chris Anderson asks physicist David Deutsch how the whole parallel universe thing is going. -- shanehegarty
David Deutsch talking about how we should look for the explanation that is the hardest to vary in order to progress in knowledge. -- tweodor
Well then, there's a reason for all the headache.
10 July 2009
Watch TEDTalks from speakers at the upcoming TEDGlobal 2009
From TEDGlobal's speaker list of more than 90 -- including 18-minute talks, demos and TED U courses -- 13 of our scheduled speakers already have TEDTalks online from previous TEDs and partners. To find them, check out our new theme, Speaking at TEDGlobal 2009, and watch archive gems from these returning speakers. All of these speakers are bringing something new to TEDGlobal 2009, exploring the theme of the conference, "The Substance of Things Not Seen."
Browse the new theme Speaking at TEDGlobal 2009 >>
See the full conference schedule for TEDGlobal 2009, July 21-24 in Oxford >>
04 August 2008
From the TEDTalks archive, David Deutsch on our place in the cosmos
For the next two weeks, we're presenting some of our favorite TEDTalks from among the 275 talks and performances we've posted since June 2006. Look for brand-new TEDTalks starting August 18. Until then, enjoy these gems -- and suggest your own by writing to contact@ted.com
Physicist David Deutsch is author of The Fabric of Reality and the leading proponent of the multiverse intrepretation of quantum theory -- the astounding idea that our universe is constantly spawning countless numbers of parallel worlds. In this rare (and delightfully engaging) public appearance, he weaves a complex and captivating argument placing the study of physics at the center of our species' survival. (Recorded July 2005 in Oxford, UK. Duration: 19:45)
Watch David Deutsch's 2005 talk on TED.com, where you can download it, rate it, comment on it and find other talks and performances.
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14 March 2008
A non-trivial holiday
The TED office is running in circles trying to get the word out about Pi Day, that special day for number nerds that only comes around once a year. We'd love to hear what TED fans are doing to celebrate -- whether watching Pi, baking a pie or taking an irrational out to dinner.
If you've chosen to circumvent the fanfare, however, keep in mind that March 14th is also Talk Like a Physicist Day. (It's Albert Einstein's birthday, after all.) TEDTalks can help you brush up on your non-Newtonian oratorical skills with lessons from Murray Gell-Mann, Martin Rees and David Deutsch. -- Matthew Trost
27 July 2007
A hard week for space exploration
This has been a hard week for lovers and dreamers of space travel -- a frequent topic at TED. An explosion at Burt Rutan's Scaled Composites spaceport caused three victims. It was followed by a report on issues of personal safety at NASA, part of the unfolding story there.
Space exploration is an inherent high-risk endeavor. We invite you to view several talks on TED.com that can help recapture the excitement and pure imagination that has inspired generations of people to reach for the stars: Burt Rutan's own vision, Bill Stone's audacity, and cosmologist David Deutsch, who tells us that humanity's true purpose -- the reason we exist -- is to explore and learn, to gain knowledge.
15 November 2005
Quantum genius
Our congratulations to David Deutsch, who's just won the $100,000 Edge of Computation Prize. The physicist credited as the inspiration behind today's quantum computing pioneers, he gave a stunning talk at
TEDGLOBAL in Oxford this year, which included two minutes in complete darkness... his vivid description of a "typical" place in the universe where the human eye would not be able to detect a single star or galaxy. His book The Fabric of Reality is a mind-bending read that may just convince you that we are part of a 'multiverse' made up countless parallel universes.
btw, if you don't know about Edge, you should. John Brockman's site is home to many great TED speakers and some of the best intellectual conversation on the internet.

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