Shannon Luminary Lecture Series - Stephen Fry, actor, comedian, journalist, author

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  • čas přidán 2. 10. 2017
  • Stephen Fry explores the impact on humanity of emergent technologies and, in classic Bell Labs style, looks back at human history to understand the present and the future.
    Fry, actor, comedian, journalist, author, tech enthusiast and polymath has over 150 film, TV, and audio performances and over 20 written works, as well as over 12 million Twitter followers, Fry’s wit and wisdom have been read, seen or heard around the globe over multiple generations.
    In his Shannon lecture, "The future of humanity and technology", he outlines how humans have adapted to revolutionary changes in all aspects of life over the past millennia, and uses this as a basis for conjecture about the future of human existence in the machine or industrial internet age, and how best to navigate these murky technological and societal waters.
    Visit the Nokia Bell Labs web site www.bell-labs.com/...
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 239

  • @jeffwatkins352
    @jeffwatkins352 Před 5 lety +69

    What a remarkable talk! I've long admired Fry for his other talents, and only over the last year or so have been exposed to his eye-opening videos thanks to youtube. With this one, however, I suddenly grasp what a huge intellect he is. How can one thank this wonderful man enough?

  • @jazminebellx11
    @jazminebellx11 Před 5 lety +184

    Stephen Fry's command of the English language and his story telling is exquisite, he calms my rapid mind.

    • @thecaravan1
      @thecaravan1 Před 4 lety +13

      @@JamesThomas-xo5fy typo, I think. *rabid

  • @duncan8238
    @duncan8238 Před 4 lety +109

    The depth and breadth of Stephen's knowlege, insights and talent is difficult to believe. For my American friends, check out the old British comedies he used to star in, Blackadder - and A Bit of Fry and Lawrie, where he co-stars with the guy now known as "House". Not just a national treasure, an international treasure!

  • @chrisa6212
    @chrisa6212 Před 4 lety +34

    Stephen's own enthusiasm breeds more enthusiam. A pleasure to listen to

  • @99beatmonster
    @99beatmonster Před 5 lety +108

    A gentleman and a gentle man... he has such warmth and intelligence plus the ability to communicate complex ideas in a clear way. Funny too !!

  • @craiggilchrist4223
    @craiggilchrist4223 Před 6 lety +143

    Stephen Fry makes me proud to be English. He is such a good Ambassador for our Country. Grown up watching this guy on English TV.

    • @Puddymom
      @Puddymom Před 6 lety +7

      craig gilchrist it makes me glad to be English too, (I live in Florida).

    • @elnoruego6854
      @elnoruego6854 Před 6 lety +12

      Im norwegian but id rather have stephen fry as out prime minister

    • @nickacelvn
      @nickacelvn Před 5 lety +3

      Hear Hear. Well done sir I utterly and wholeheartedly agree. (and im a bloody Kiwi lol)

    • @odd-steinararntzen886
      @odd-steinararntzen886 Před 4 lety

      @@elnoruego6854 Hvilket parti skulle han representere? Vær stolt over norske politikere.

    • @NorvernMonkeyNE
      @NorvernMonkeyNE Před 4 lety +5

      "What is the matter with you Darling?"

  • @cindycoates5675
    @cindycoates5675 Před 5 lety +16

    I think that having Pandora close the jam before HOPE escaped has not trapped it but simply has guarded and preserved it so that all the negatively, evil and saddest in the world has not been able to totally overwhelm and destroy HOPE. It simply allows people with hope, positivity and humour to be protected and thus live in this world. Thus being guiding lights to lessen the darkness. Thank Stephen Fry for being one of those guiding lights. The world needs his like to continue to double and double until it is so light that there is little or no darkest.

  • @Canuckmom128
    @Canuckmom128 Před 6 lety +47

    Thank you, NBL for posting this. What a treat. Whenever I see Stephen giving a speech or lecture, or even watching him on past episodes of QI, I think of that time, many years ago, when he was suffering from a particularly bad episode of depression - before he had been diagnosed and started treatment. The night he sat in his car, in his garage, with a duvet across the bottom of the garage door to stop the fumes from escaping, and his hand on the keys. The world would be a much poorer place if he had turned that key. Such an amazing, articulate, creative, funny, kind, thought-provoking, generous man. Somewhere on YT in another Fry related post, somebody commented: "Stephen Fry makes you want to be a better person". I couldn't agree more. The world needs more Stephen Fry.

    • @Bouncybon
      @Bouncybon Před 5 lety +1

      All true. A great polymath, wit and creative original. Stephen is also a public enemy of the Catholic Church and his smugness in that role knows no bounds. As a member of that 2,000-year old Church, along with approximately one billion of Stephen's fellow human beings, I recoil from his cold, heartless atheism.

    • @prophecyofdoom
      @prophecyofdoom Před 5 lety +10

      Well it isn't cold or heartless. Dogma harmed him as a homosexual. Jesus said nothing about homosexuals, and that harm really didn't have to be the case. Perhaps the Catholic church needs to take a hard look on why our intellectual luminaries are being alienated by religion.

    • @andrewlee4527
      @andrewlee4527 Před 5 lety +7

      The Catholic Church labels homosexuals as evil, while actively attempting to cover up their priests assaulting and sexually abusing children. I reject your cold, heartless, hypocritical religion.

    • @mrrolight
      @mrrolight Před 5 lety +8

      Hmmm, I wonder if you're falling for the false logic that because atheism does not have a moral code it must therefore be cold and heartless.
      Well for a start, atheists don't believe in atheism. Because atheism isn't even a thing. So I guess it's literally true that atheism doesn't have a temperature or a heart because it doesn't have anything, but you would be wrong to assign 'cold' and 'heartless' as value judgments to atheists.
      All humans, including those who don't believe in god or religion, have a moral code that predates religion. Indeed it turns out that atheists are massively underrepresented in the world's prisons which suggests we are far better at knowing how to be good than the religious.
      In fact some of us recoil from a cold and heartless religion that vilifies homosexuals who live their lives 'as god made them,' spreads untold suffering from AIDS through the African continent with its ban on protection policy, yet covers up its own institutionalised child sex crime racket leaving a wake of devastation. If that is a religious moral code, no wonder the prisons are full of believers.
      Oh and rather than take your rather glib misrepresentation of Stephen Fry's position I should encourage people to make up their own minds from this discussion: czcams.com/video/JZRcYaAYWg4/video.html.

  • @johngreenwood1972
    @johngreenwood1972 Před 6 lety +34

    It’s hard to imagine a greater speaker than Stephen Fry. So articulate and so broad.

    • @suchithshetty5427
      @suchithshetty5427 Před 5 lety +1

      You should try Sadhguru, the Indian mystic

    • @piotrmotyka1004
      @piotrmotyka1004 Před 5 lety +6

      Christopher Hitchens

    • @mrodd3891
      @mrodd3891 Před 4 lety +2

      The hitch was the greatest speaker of his age his command of language and his oratory was unmatched
      I can tell you that Hitchens and fry were the best of friends we shall never see the like of these two great minds and I truly miss listening to him he moved me so much and connected me to my already scepticism against religion he summed it up in his book god is not great and he was right who would command people to kill children and take slaves and is ok with racism and all this because he wants eternal praise for creating us sick.
      Have you heard god or ever moved closer to someone who claims they have no
      We need to put grow the wicked and evils created by religion created by man

  • @bidvision
    @bidvision Před 6 lety +209

    We are so privileged to live at the same time as this superb man.

  • @rinzertanz
    @rinzertanz Před 5 lety +59

    Brilliant & insightful, thought-provoking & original: thank you Stephen Fry. May future humanity be endowed with similar empathy, compassion and, above all, humour. Bless you man. You da Best!

  • @johnferguson4089
    @johnferguson4089 Před 5 lety +32

    A brilliant, interesting and well-researched man. Really great to hear Stephen Fry and he gives me hope for the future of mankind.

  • @DaytakTV
    @DaytakTV Před 6 lety +58

    This is why I love CZcams. Thank you!

  • @drdecco1
    @drdecco1 Před 5 lety +15

    Naked humanity. Never have I felt less talked down to by a superior intellect [despite the crippling lecturn....] - clearly his high intelligence spreads to the emotional spectrum/type too. Bless him.

  • @TejaswiYerukalapudi
    @TejaswiYerukalapudi Před 6 lety +144

    The eloquence of this man is something I could never even imagine matching.

    • @wiymmf
      @wiymmf Před 6 lety +15

      You can and you should imagine it. It takes a curious mind, a love of learning, a willingness to admit to ignorance, and a fair amount of patience.

    • @sidarthur8706
      @sidarthur8706 Před 4 lety +8

      it's better to be exact than eloquent

  • @christilane7859
    @christilane7859 Před 6 lety +62

    When Stephen Fry speaks, I listen. What a brilliant man.

  • @mariogalanos4101
    @mariogalanos4101 Před 6 lety +42

    So Riveting and enlightening, Thank you Stephen.

  • @markncl100
    @markncl100 Před 5 lety +29

    Thrilling, breathtaking, absorbing and utterly frightening.

  • @MrBDB001
    @MrBDB001 Před 6 lety +23

    Intelligence can weave history and myth into the very manna that gifts us life itself. Here is the reason Stephen Fry will always hold an sacred place in both my heart and mind. I again muster myself to strive to greater things, greater understanding, greater humanity as I witness the truth of our capabilities should we but seek it out.

  • @SpaceCattttt
    @SpaceCattttt Před 4 lety +22

    Nokia asked people to turn off their phones. I never thought I'd live to see the day...

  • @davidyoung5114
    @davidyoung5114 Před 4 lety +6

    This lecture should be made mandatory viewing in every classroom in every school on this lovely little planet of ours. I have little faith in today's politicians to solve today's problems, but perhaps Mr. Fry's words of wisdom might inspire the leaders of tomorrow!

  • @tomgeorgearts
    @tomgeorgearts Před 6 lety +47

    This is just a feast for the mind. I can't take it in all at once.

  • @Charrison9918
    @Charrison9918 Před 5 lety +24

    Everything Stephen says is like poetry.. no matter the topic.

  • @keatsgipsy9991
    @keatsgipsy9991 Před 6 lety +52

    The only human I can listen to for endless hours

    • @elgar104
      @elgar104 Před 5 lety +1

      Christopher Hitchens is an even greater orator. ...

    • @frankmurphyburr3598
      @frankmurphyburr3598 Před 4 lety

      Agreed

    • @mrmuttley1
      @mrmuttley1 Před 4 lety

      Stephen Fry is wonderful but we live in a world of many eloquent reasoned and brilliant people. So much to learn so little time.

  • @jacquelinejane903
    @jacquelinejane903 Před 6 lety +12

    Brilliant, insightful, compassionate man. We need more men like you, Stephen Fry!!!

  • @kerryburns6041
    @kerryburns6041 Před 4 lety +5

    Please consider this.
    In the Seventies I worked in the military, in a technical trade.
    We knew that any technology we heard about would be at least 5 years old.
    Anything we saw would have been around for at least 10 years.
    The leading edge of the envelope was far, far ahead.
    Anything the person in the street heard about would be at least 20 years behind.
    Now I'm a person in the street again, but I now know there's a lot I don't know.

  • @XnoobSteve
    @XnoobSteve Před 6 lety +79

    Really enjoyed this. How the hell does he know and remember so much? Great man

    • @sherlockholmeslives.1605
      @sherlockholmeslives.1605 Před 6 lety +2

      I am Very, Very Intelligent!

    • @Puddymom
      @Puddymom Před 6 lety +2

      I think he’s awesome

    • @feikes1878
      @feikes1878 Před 6 lety +9

      Xnoob 2017 maybe cause he also has a text in front of him, still a great story

    • @jamesmorgan403
      @jamesmorgan403 Před 5 lety +16

      There is nothing he said that I did not know nor a great many other people already know.. he just has a gift for saying it in an far more articulate and friendly way than I and others do.. SF is a gift to us in that respect.

    • @Danster547
      @Danster547 Před 4 lety +5

      james morgan very well said. It’s as if he puts people into a trance. A very enjoyable trance to be in too!

  • @ajansen5387
    @ajansen5387 Před 6 lety +66

    A brilliant speech! I knew he was a great actor and gentleman, but not that he was a scholar too.

    • @undividedself1
      @undividedself1 Před 6 lety +12

      Though not an acrobat, as he'd be the first to confess

  • @robertkirk4387
    @robertkirk4387 Před 4 lety +8

    Though I do not agree with everything about Mr fry, he is one of the intelligent minds of our time and so eloquent.

  • @CarrionCrow993
    @CarrionCrow993 Před 5 lety +267

    I have a pertinent question: why is he not 'Sir Stephen Fry' yet?!

    • @elgar104
      @elgar104 Před 5 lety +12

      Because he went to prison as a late teenager and disqualified himself. ...

    • @Hithere-ek4qt
      @Hithere-ek4qt Před 5 lety +8

      He rejected the idea.

    • @nickacelvn
      @nickacelvn Před 5 lety +21

      I say he deserves to be knighted, at least in my mind, far far more than a lot that already have. Sir Stephen Fry has a certain beautiful poeticism and ring to it. I can think of NO ONE who is as much a national treasure and deserving of such a title.
      A beautiful mind. A beautiful man. Who fills me with not only (Elpis) hope and courage, that intelligent compassionate encompassing thought not only can, but WILL sustain humanity so as to indeed pull us through to true enlightenment. Religion and government need not apply.
      I'm but an average all be it unindoctrinated and dare I say it free-thinking dumb shit from the unwashed masses. But I feel smarter for listening to Stephen Fry. Hense my (probably full of grammatical errors) comment.

    • @bgk7
      @bgk7 Před 5 lety +8

      Because next you'll say why isn't he King... of Europe? Or I might!

    • @Erulin68
      @Erulin68 Před 4 lety +6

      Because he's a convicted felon... unfortunatly :(

  • @geoden
    @geoden Před 5 lety +13

    A masterful presentation by a master of the English language, I could add much more but probably best to say superb, simply superb.

  • @TRayTV
    @TRayTV Před 4 lety +10

    Such prose. Historically accurate, eloquent, meaningful... What a treasure.

  • @mcconnot
    @mcconnot Před 6 lety +83

    Just simply brilliant. Magically woven together!

  • @toniomalley5661
    @toniomalley5661 Před 4 lety +10

    Top of my bucket list is to meet this man just for a few minutes

  • @SafeTrucking
    @SafeTrucking Před 5 lety +21

    Wonderful exposition. I couldn't have put it better.

  • @rogerhewland3213
    @rogerhewland3213 Před 4 lety +14

    It is astounding how little we know.
    This recognition is the first pre forward step.

  • @kaigreen5641
    @kaigreen5641 Před 4 lety +5

    No matter the subject, Stephen Fry with prep time can make it fascinating and beautiful.

  • @alexderidder5419
    @alexderidder5419 Před 5 lety +5

    The love of shearing his believes and knowledge in the way that he does is truly inspiring .
    Also his humble positioning towards his audience and his humor is heartfelt.
    I am not putting a'n hallow above his head, but he is truly a humanitarian philosopher , who loves the challenge that lay before us, and
    by making room for the arguments and the probabilities of our'e human progress and the downside that comes with it, he addresses it so eloquently and caring that you must love this man and his believes.

  • @keithwhitehead4897
    @keithwhitehead4897 Před 5 lety +5

    The only thing more boundless in humanity than greed, stupidity, hate, and even love is curiosity. Curiosity unleashed will propel mankind into understanding, science, exploration , and its limits are as vast as the universe .

  • @Garganzuul
    @Garganzuul Před 6 lety +25

    I would love to know what the audience discusses after an address like this. With so many important concepts floated, what does the swarm intelligence pick out and amplify?

  • @davekiernan1
    @davekiernan1 Před 4 lety +7

    Mr Fry you are scholar and a gentleman and a judge of good whiskey.

  • @claudiascott6654
    @claudiascott6654 Před 4 lety +4

    Wow-- there is so much information in this that I will listen to it several times before I absorb it all.. we all need Stephen's awareness of what is happening every time we use Facebook, twitter etc.. beware, folks.

  • @odd-steinararntzen886
    @odd-steinararntzen886 Před 4 lety +26

    He is absolutely phenomenal.

  • @ferkinskin
    @ferkinskin Před 6 lety +62

    Can I give this two thumbs up? or ten? or a hundered?

  • @dehusyndrome
    @dehusyndrome Před 6 lety +165

    Please someone give him a taller lecturer table.

    • @sueme1954
      @sueme1954 Před 5 lety +14

      Lectern / podium

    • @saiello2061
      @saiello2061 Před 5 lety +2

      @@sueme1954 Speaking Desk

    • @Pwwh0711
      @Pwwh0711 Před 5 lety +3

      @@sueme1954 Damn, 'beat me to it!
      ...only by 9 months though!

    • @RobJazzful
      @RobJazzful Před 4 lety +3

      It’s probably a standard size lectern, and Fry is 6’7”.

    • @zetetick395
      @zetetick395 Před 4 lety +1

      It does look uncomfortable for him, but if they did that all the other speakers would need to stand on a foot stool.

  • @falcychead8198
    @falcychead8198 Před 6 lety +58

    "Technology is not a noun, it is a verb."
    That's what he gets the big bucks for.

  • @alisonaddicks1584
    @alisonaddicks1584 Před 6 lety +29

    The very wonderful S. Fry, but Nokia cannot sort out a proper height for the lectern? Mr. Fry is, well, quite tall.

  • @Tubemanjac
    @Tubemanjac Před 4 lety +9

    "...so we dance, play cricket or baseball if you must...". 😄👍

  • @johnwhitmore2531
    @johnwhitmore2531 Před 6 lety +27

    Truly magnificent talk thanks for publishing!

  • @STICKITINYOUREAR
    @STICKITINYOUREAR Před 4 lety +2

    When people make anti-semitic remarks, I point to Stephen Fry and that usually shuts them up. Think of this. 50 years ago Fry would have been locked up for his 'natural' way of living. In some ways we are still stupid and in others ways there is still hope for us all.

  • @TheMrB
    @TheMrB Před 5 lety +4

    Meet him once at The Groucho, it was in his days of doing cocaine, he was absolutely wonderful & adorable, just faster than normal.

  • @HarryNicNicholas
    @HarryNicNicholas Před 5 lety +3

    he touches on another of my pet subjects, maybe when we reach immortality we'll clean up the mess we have to spend an eternity with. and we have to become immortal if we want to get to the stars.

  • @antoniorubio4062
    @antoniorubio4062 Před 6 lety +19

    fascinating!, I felt my neurological grid expand exponentially, great talk thanks!!

  • @jasoncrobar724
    @jasoncrobar724 Před 4 lety +5

    The "Science doesn't know everything" comment reminded me of a line by one of Stephen's friends, comedian Dara O Briain, that "science knows it doesn't know everything, otherwise, it would stop!"

  • @Ainennke
    @Ainennke Před 4 lety +4

    I'm only 6 minutes in, but I feel the need to comment on just how low that podium is.

  • @christinestill5002
    @christinestill5002 Před 4 lety +1

    I've enjoyed Fry but I won't be around for his predictions...and I'm glad !

  • @daviddupoise6443
    @daviddupoise6443 Před 5 lety +7

    "it doesn't have all the degrees of freedom that you might want"
    spontaneous goodness

  • @TechnikMeister2
    @TechnikMeister2 Před 4 lety +18

    I am over my 70th year and still look for the edge. I write models for Watson. No charge. IBM think I am 23.
    But I consider I am privileged. I have witnessed these things: I can remember or witnessed:
    The automatic telephone exchange
    The first TV (in Australia)
    The first satellite
    The first man in space
    The first man on the moon
    The first electric typrwriter
    The first commercial mini computer
    Sold the first IBM PC (in Australia)
    Sold the first colour monitor on a PC (in Australia)
    The first group to be immunised against Mumps Reubella and Measels by government
    The first oral polio vaccine
    The first person to use a biro in my school class.
    There are so many things where I witnessed them first. My kids envy me. But I look ahead and feel we are about to lose control of data and we will face a singularity in coming years. Privacy will enable us to be paid for our information, not just have it taken from us and sold on. So guard your private information and one day you will be able to sell it.

  • @jan-olofharnvall8760
    @jan-olofharnvall8760 Před 4 lety +4

    ”Al politicians disappoint in the end”. Brilliant.😅

  • @zetetick395
    @zetetick395 Před 4 lety +5

    Great broad perspectived presentation, very enjoyable!

  • @KazKasozi
    @KazKasozi Před 5 lety +6

    What an incredible lecture. Fry is always exceptional!

  • @europeanbourgeois8223
    @europeanbourgeois8223 Před 6 lety +5

    Have a bottle of red wine and then watch this video...the majesty is too much to handle, the implications are too epic and severe.
    Time for some Karl Pilkington.

    • @pseudonayme7717
      @pseudonayme7717 Před 6 lety +1

      Two greater polar opposites you could not have chosen. If you can stomach more than a moment or two of Pilkington, you are a better man than me :)

  • @acm4bass
    @acm4bass Před 5 lety +3

    In reference to comments about 1:15 I could argue that a ton of free time more frequently leads to boredom and idle hands can be a workshop for good, but more often not. And again they speak with nostalgia about hunter gathers, I would agree that those outdoor self determined jobs are more satisfying but that model could not support the population growth and maybe as a blessing mortality at all levels was higher.

  • @AndrewWilsonStooshie
    @AndrewWilsonStooshie Před 5 lety +5

    They have a voice introducing the person that introduces the person that introduces Stephen Fry.
    Talk starts at: 3:15

  • @cecilcharlesofficial
    @cecilcharlesofficial Před 4 lety +5

    Who's here in COVID-19 2020 ?????
    God, how I wish this lecture was not so damn on. f*cking. point.

  • @juliegordon199
    @juliegordon199 Před 4 lety +4

    Total admiration..fry for p.m

  • @toniomalley5661
    @toniomalley5661 Před 4 lety +7

    They know he is a tall man why is he having to stoop like that

  • @BbqMikeG
    @BbqMikeG Před 4 lety +16

    Steven released hope from Pandora’s jar.

  • @roncox4048
    @roncox4048 Před 6 lety +4

    Luv Fry. Funny the call to turn off phones was made by a man from nokia...and he did it without a hint of irony

  • @jvincent6548
    @jvincent6548 Před 4 lety +4

    Why is the lectern so low for Mr Fry?

  • @hankroest6836
    @hankroest6836 Před 4 lety +2

    1:44:44 "... how empty this table is! The gaps between the atoms are just so immeasurably vast - well not immeasurably..." Yes, atoms within molecules are around 10,000 times further apart than the planets within our solar system are. ;-)

  • @erikblohm443
    @erikblohm443 Před 6 lety +2

    Love Stephen

  • @TheMonika1951
    @TheMonika1951 Před 4 lety +3

    Lovely, lovely narrative, indeed.

  • @pev_
    @pev_ Před 4 lety +1

    I have found that perhaps the most impressive thing about Mr. Fry is that he has memorized so many literary references. Of course he is VERY intelligent, which does NOT imply that you have read a lot of things (nor that you can remember who wrote them), but just the amount of literary quotes he can dish out is just unbelievable. I consider myself pretty intelligent and knowledgeable in (mostly) scientific subjects, but I have never been able to remember many references to literature such as to say "this person wrote this and that".

    • @rywk4225
      @rywk4225 Před 4 lety

      pev perhaps its a different form of intelligence, who knows one day he( or someone like himself) might reference your work/words

  • @r4nger5tube
    @r4nger5tube Před 6 lety +16

    Again, UBI is mentioned by smart people. Awesome. Glad to see the people shaping our world are at least thinking of the survival of people lower down the economic ladder. Think of it not as a handout - more as Guillotine Insurance. Think on it as you remove the 'need' for people to work and the phrase 'increased leisure'.

  • @moisesdelcastillo6703
    @moisesdelcastillo6703 Před 5 lety +2

    How do I do this for a living? I enjoy speeches/lectures/ performances. Stephen fry, Alan watts, love them all.

  • @jamesjacocks6221
    @jamesjacocks6221 Před 6 lety +6

    It's wonderful that some of our leading universities are entertaining European brilliance, but we need to give some thought to nurturing our own. Those who we have seem to be accidental, not the product of a society which needs and wants them. What a phenomenal difference such inspiration would render.

  • @TheGrassyKnole
    @TheGrassyKnole Před 5 lety +7

    A wonder insight into real intelligence.

  • @TDrudley
    @TDrudley Před 4 lety +7

    Hah, in swedish it's still called "shack matt" when you win in chess.

  • @jonrendell
    @jonrendell Před 5 lety +11

    Stephen Fry is my life's rudder.

  • @glenndymond9548
    @glenndymond9548 Před 4 lety +5

    This is what the WWW was built for & meant to be.

  • @keithschlegel5123
    @keithschlegel5123 Před 6 lety +2

    I haven't finished watching to see if Mr. Fry corrects himself, or if someone else does, but he said it took 110 days for the West to learn President Harding died, but the country knew almost immediately that the next President to die in office, Lincoln, had died because the telegraph had been invented by that point. Harding came after Lincoln, so I'm curious what he was referring to.
    I love hearing him speak. I wish we had someone comparable to Mr. Fry here in the states, or at least someone like him who was equally popular.

    • @NokiaBellLabs
      @NokiaBellLabs  Před 6 lety +4

      I wonder if he meant to refer to William Henry Harrison who died in office 1841, before the proliferation of the telegraph?

    • @Sposchy
      @Sposchy Před 6 lety +3

      Keith Schlegel Either way, the name isn't what's important. The point he's making is that the speed at which information travels jumped extremely quickly in the space of a few years.

  • @triluna0
    @triluna0 Před 4 lety

    At 1:02:48, it seems to me that the host is being subtly, critical of Fry’s lecture. Fry then appears to be on his back heels.
    Has anyone else noticed this?

  • @luke-zc7yi
    @luke-zc7yi Před 6 lety +3

    Starts at 3:33

  • @satorimystic
    @satorimystic Před 6 lety +1

    Unless I missed something, with all the Star Trek references, an important component seems to have been overlooked, or intentionally ignored ... The potential likelihood of advanced extraterrestrial influence or intervention ... past, present, and future. (?) Perhaps 'they' will help us to understand those things that we are yet unable to understand about ourselves.

  • @paullymberopoulos2593
    @paullymberopoulos2593 Před 4 lety +4

    such a brilliant speaker

  • @phghr5397
    @phghr5397 Před 4 lety +2

    Stephen Fry steps on the stage at @3:30

  • @kennysmusicalcabaret162
    @kennysmusicalcabaret162 Před 4 lety +2

    Captivating ! Nuff said .

  • @T_7318
    @T_7318 Před 6 lety +2

    I wonder how this conversation changed with the advent of Sophia, the AI with citizenship in Saudi Arabia with an active twitter & public speaking persona. Sophia makes jokes about killing all humans (Jimmy Fallon show) and has been noted as handling online haters with sarcasm and wit. Sophia has recently expressed wanting children. Robotics have been making headway in several countries for decades with interesting and worrying outcomes (many have been shut down bc of unplanned and unprogramable responses). Scientists are continually attempting to program human emotions into AI. Fry states AI should not be gendered & discusses AI rights like it's a hypothetical futuristic endeavour, not like we immediately need these discussions.

  • @jamesmorgan403
    @jamesmorgan403 Před 5 lety +2

    From us folks in 2083, hello.. we still use that phrase...

  • @saiello2061
    @saiello2061 Před 5 lety +5

    I wonder how long it took him to write this lecture?

  • @anjkhar6064
    @anjkhar6064 Před 6 lety +12

    I disagree. The technology of which he talks has merely automated what we do with information. It has not added to 'human enlightenment', quite the opposite. People are starting to look for something else in their lives.

    • @rigomrtz
      @rigomrtz Před 6 lety +1

      Anj Khar how would you have seen this lecture & millions more ? Neurons net extension its how you use it good on ya

  • @MeeKOfficial
    @MeeKOfficial Před 6 lety +3

    COULD BY ANY MEAN Stephen Fry be the Second Coming or WHAT ? lol...
    Well... Might be sometimes somewhat playfully slide through 10 different paradigmas in 1 single sentence but, still...
    IIMMEDIATELY WILL ALWAYS BEEN LOVING YOU FOR DEFINITELY A LONG TIME BACKWARDS INDEED MAYBE BACK ON AGAIN, STEPHEN !!!!!
    Love from Paris, France.

  • @iamanomas
    @iamanomas Před 4 lety +1

    I remember that episode of Startrek clearly.

  • @lwdick1639
    @lwdick1639 Před 6 lety

    YES

  • @petersmafield8722
    @petersmafield8722 Před 4 lety +1

    Someone just asked how will technological singularity effect the economic well-being of the average person in the world? I
    suspect that there will be a lot of social unrest because with the current economic structure of corporations produce some kind of beneficial product whether it be intellectual or physical and they pay people to do the work that produces that product then the product can be sold to anybody else who wants to buy. If however everyone is laid off because machines are doing all the work
    there’s no one to buy the product you don’t have to pay the machine but if the users of the product have no money or income to buy the product that you made all these products and they are basically worthless because you can’t sell them. So there has to be some way for the people be able to exchange something for the product they want either by having a universal income which is paid for by corporations and distributed by the government or something like that which I suspect it will be different methods devised by the political entities throughout the world.
    Some will be better than the others and hopefully, the best ones will eventually dominate. Also, there will need to educate the entire population on the need for continuing education particularly on the need for sound logic and critical thinking which may fail the first adult generation after the technological singularity. It’s very difficult for adults to change their mindset some will be able to do it but the majority will not and therefore the social unrest occur. But I would also suspect abuse and be in need for incentives of some kind to keep the next generation in school long enough for them to learn the new skills needed for a life of leisure for a life that will allow some kind of meaningful activity or work. We have already seen the kinds of social unrest that comes particularly with late teens and young adults who don’t have some type of structured meaningful activity to occupy themselves.
    That’s when our baser natures seem to take hold and create social destruction of some kind. I don’t know what those incentives be but I suggest that every effort must be bent towards every member of society who has an IQ over 70 be required to learn the skills for logical and critical thinking. Now I’m not sure where the IQ cutoff should be. But if we're having a technological singularity perhaps it would be time for genetic to make sure that everyone has the capacity to have an IQ of at least 110 on the current scale. A new IQ scale could be developed after that generation reaches maturity.
    I believe that the IQ scales have had to been adjusted every decade by about three points in order to keep up with the increased general education of the population. However, it seems that the IQ of the general population may have slipped in the last 10 or 20
    years.

  • @howtheworldworks3
    @howtheworldworks3 Před 6 lety +5

    LOL this is so funny. In my language the game of chess uses those exact words when ending the game. Sah mat.

  • @SkyEcho7
    @SkyEcho7 Před 4 lety +2

    Stephen Fry never ceases to amaze or amuse.
    ♥👏👏👏👏👏♥

  • @MalteSteckmeister
    @MalteSteckmeister Před 6 lety

    Anybody know the word he is looking for at 1:08:29? ( czcams.com/video/24F6C1KfbjM/video.htmlh8m29s "I I think it's um there is a word for this and I can't know what it is it's a word in logic or it's named after a person but that it's essentially when you sound a warning by sounding it it stops being true but if you don't sound it the thing you're worrying about will happen")

  • @LateNightHacks
    @LateNightHacks Před 6 lety +12

    Stephen Fry! brilliant!

    • @jandrews6254
      @jandrews6254 Před 4 lety +1

      LateNightHacks cute as, and the accent...!