TED Blog

The history and future of the Universe in four minutes: Brian Greene at TED2014

Physicist Brian Green promises he will tell the audience at TED 2014 the whole history of the universe in four minutes. “Forgive me,” he says, “if I leave out a detail here or there.”

He does it with two metaphors. One from the beginning till now, and another from now till the end.

Brian Greene. Photo: James Duncan Davidson

The universe today is 13.8 billion years old, and it can be very hard to get our minds around that number. So Greene uses a metaphor pioneered by Carl Sagan. Imagine that we’re part of a single calendar year. All of cosmic history compressed into a single calendar year. On this calendar:

And to top it off, that science includes the observations that led to the discovery that there was a Big Bang in the first place. Those were done by Edwin Hubble, “an Oxford-trained lawyer who changed to become an astronomer, which to me means there’s hope for absolutely everyone.”

Brian Greene. Photo: James Duncan Davidson

The future

For the future, we can now make predictions. Greene switches to a metaphor based in space, rather than time. He uses the Empire State Building. Imagine that each floor represents 10 times more time than the previous one. So the first floor is 1 year, the next 10 years, the third 100 years, and so on. All of history till now reaches to just above the 10th floor. On this building, physicists predict a future that looks like this:

Greene concludes, “What then does it all mean? Will life persist?… I don’t know, no one does. But I’d like to think that when the last human is about to leave a soon to be uninhabitable planet Earth looks back, she’s smiling at a job well done, proud to be part of a species that every so often could lift itself above the challenges of survival… and unravel so many profound mysteries of the cosmos.”