Tired of Doomscrolling?
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زیرنویسها (105 segments)
DownloadBeing a human in the 21st century often feels frustrating. We are clearly at the high point
of our species – never have so many of us lived so well, been so healthy and well off. At the same time life is
incredibly hard – more than 15 thousand children died yesterday, 700 million people live in extreme
poverty, even within rich societies there is loads of unfairness and daily struggle. We are divided,
unable to solve our problems while creating new ones, destroying our world in the process.
In many ways the vibe is that we live in dark times. It is so easy to feel
disconnected and powerless in the face of problems too big to solve. And so the state
of the world fills many of us with doom, hopelessness and sadness. We feel it too.
It is one of the most pervasive stories of our time and there is a lot of truth to it.
But as Terry Pratchett said, we are the storytelling ape, we think in narratives
and live in a network of stories that make up our world. So without minimising the darkness,
we want to add a story that we find helpful for dealing with the world.
This is subjective and not a science video, so you don’t need to buy into it.
Our story begins with the first moment that ever was.
14 billion years ago time and space began from some kind of state of pure energy. From this
very first moment the universe grew and evolved. Things that were one
became many. Energy turned into forces and particles, out of chaos emerged the laws of
nature. From these ingredients stars arose, gigantic engines, turning simple stuff into
complex stuff only to die violently and spread the new complexity around.
Out of this more complex stuff, new stars and more worlds emerged,
repeating the cycle until most of the simple stuff was used up and most stars that will
ever be born had been born. And then, on one planet, where the conditions were just right,
dead particles and molecules combined to make another jump in complexity. Maybe the laws that
govern everything were destined to make life happen. Maybe it was just a cosmic dice throw.
But life, now the most complex thing in existence, wasted no time and spread to even the tiniest
corners. For billions of years cells held on, fighting against the elements and each other,
evolving in the process. Until one day they came together and made another jump in complexity,
to plants, animals and fungi. First in the oceans, then on the land.
Earth was now the stage of something grand, a complexity acceleration machine going at
full speed. Millions of new species emerged and vanished. Life was beaten down over and over,
but every time it came back stronger. Resettling niches filled with corpses of the ones that came
before. Most of these beings are hidden in time forever, we only know their faint echoes.
Until a few million years ago an animal looked at the night sky. It looked at its
hands. It saw its reflection in a puddle. And it realised it existed. That it was alive. Here and
now. You probably had such a moment as a small child, mundane and majestic at the same time.
This is where the human story begins, about six million years ago, with the hominins.
Still just another animal among many others. They split into many families and lineages
evolving further or disappearing again. But for some reason their evolutionary niche enabled
their brains to grow and they learned more about this strange world. They prayed to the stars,
they tamed fire and turned stones into tools. They celebrated and cried together. Life was
hard and brutally short but together they endured – probably by telling themselves
stories about the world. For almost 250,000 generations they built a biological foundation.
And then, at some point 200,000 years or about 10,000 generations
ago they became us. Humanity had arrived.
Our ancestors did not waste any time. Their world was still hard and unforgiving,
but out of pure stubbornness they did not accept that. They wanted their lives to be
better. So they made better tools and learned to preserve their knowledge beyond death. Progress
started slow. And then suddenly they (or better WE) made the planet our own. Agriculture and
the first villages and temples snowballed into civilization. Kingdoms and empires,
technology, writing, astronomy, medicine, philosophy. A hot second later, science,
industrialization, the modern world, the information age where we are today.
Earth is truly ours now.
We changed it in ways unfathomable a few short generations ago. We turned the land
into fields worked by millions of machines, built thousands of gigantic jungles made of
sand and metal. We split the atom and travelled to other worlds. Everything is different today.
Except us of course. We humans have not changed. We were molded by a
cold and unforgiving world, where we needed to be hard and brutal
to survive. We are all still bound to our nature that made us so successful.
We still tell stories, are hungry for food, greedy for resources,
desperate to be accepted by our peers. We are scared by the dangers that lurk in the dark,
imagined and real ones. We are still brutal to each other and the animals we hold power over.
We are still territorial and possessive, we fear losing what we have, and we fear
change. We downplay the damage we cause and ignore the people in need outside our tribes.
Humans are not nice and if we look at our history, how could we expect ourselves to
be? In nature we see great beauty but also endless violence and struggle,
devoid of morals or kindness. We are an instinct driven apex predator that survived in an uncaring
world, only now we have coal plants, nuclear weapons and social media.
This would be hard to handle for any animal,
so it makes sense that we continue to follow the impulses so deeply ingrained in us. But
this is only because we have not yet caught up with the mind numbing gift we have been handed.
The real tragedy of humanity today is that we are these amazingly powerful beings that
have not awoken to their potential. We are trapped in the present and the mindset of a
scarce world. But aside from the physical limits of the universe there is nothing
stopping us from creating a literal paradise for ourselves. This seems so daft, but it is
true. If we dare to tell ourselves a different story about who we are and who we could be.
Humans throughout history felt like they would witness the apocalypse and
this feels especially true today, but you are probably not living in the end times. There is
a solid chance that humanity will persist for thousands, maybe millions of years.
If this might be the very start of our history,
what can we dream of achieving? Just like our very first ancestors six million years ago,
we may be the ancestors of another 250,000 generations of people. But while the hominins
found themselves powerless in a world they had to adapt to, our starting conditions
could not be more different. It’s like we got handed a save file of a game where others put
in millions of hours of work – and where we can decide what game we want to play in the future.
The world is still horrible. And it is also the best world that has ever
existed. And we can make it so much better.
An optimistic person living in the year 1924 would not believe the progress we have made
in just a century. How much we reduced poverty, how many diseases we cured,
how much free time we have, what kind of luxuries are ordinary to us, what technological wonders
we take for granted, how few of us die in war, how many live in a democracy.
And today we might very well be gearing up for a jump like our ancestors 10,000 years ago,
when agriculture changed everything for everybody. From AI possibly transforming
the information age, to biotechnology enabling us to manipulate the language of life itself,
to new sustainable ways of harvesting the energy we crave.
If we start thinking in decades and centuries, it is perfectly reasonable that we will solve
our problems. We can eliminate poverty, maybe all material needs. Defeat all diseases, maybe even
death itself. We have the potential to restore balance to the climate and heal the planet again.
We may be able to adapt to the information age and make lasting peace. None of this is
guaranteed and it will be hard and full of failure and setbacks. Some things will get
worse before they get better. We will run up against our nature over and over again.
But if we manage to clean up our act we could create a world better than we
dare hope for. You get to do that. You get to live in a world that is deeply flawed
but also the best it ever was. And you get the opportunity to make it better.
A world with the smallest amount of suffering possible, that fits our nature and
inspires us to be the best version of ourselves.
Key Vocabulary (50)
toward
"Go to school."
belonging
"Cup of tea."
also
"You and me."
inside
"In the house."
specific
"That book."
A third-person singular pronoun used to refer to an object, animal, or situation that has already been mentioned or is clear from context. It is also frequently used as a dummy subject to talk about time, weather, or distance.
Used to show who is intended to have or use something, or to explain the purpose or reason for an action. It is also frequently used to indicate a specific duration of time.
A function word used to express negation or denial. It is primarily used to make a sentence or phrase negative, often following an auxiliary verb or the verb 'to be'.
A preposition used to indicate that people or things are together, in the same place, or performing an action together. It can also describe the instrument used to perform an action or a characteristic that someone or something has.
Used to refer to the person or people that the speaker is addressing. It is the second-person pronoun used for both singular and plural subjects and objects.
A preposition used to indicate a specific point, location, or position in space. It is also used to specify a particular point in time or a certain state or activity.
Used to identify a specific person, thing, or idea that is physically close to the speaker or has just been mentioned. It can also refer to the present time or a situation that is currently happening.
A coordinating conjunction used to connect two statements that contrast with each other. It is used to introduce an added statement that is different from what has already been mentioned.
Used to indicate the starting point, source, or origin of something. It can describe a physical location, a point in time, or the person who sent or gave an item.
A third-person plural pronoun used to refer to two or more people, animals, or things previously mentioned. It is also commonly used as a singular pronoun to refer to a person whose gender is unknown or to someone who identifies as non-binary.
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Being a human in the 21st century often feels frustrating. We are clearly at the high point of our species, while at the same time life is incredibly hard! We are divided, unable to solve our...
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