Are athletes really getting faster, better, stronger? | David Epstein
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- čas přidán 28. 04. 2014
- When you look at sporting achievements over the last decades, it seems like humans have gotten faster, better and stronger in nearly every way. Yet as David Epstein points out in this delightfully counter-intuitive talk, we might want to lay off the self-congratulation. Many factors are at play in shattering athletic records, and the development of our natural talents is just one of them.
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My goodness .. this dude didn't even stutter and I don't even know if he took a breath. Spectacular speaking athlete.
He is better at giving speeches because of his small shoulders. Less pressure on the lungs. Soon, other athletes will follow.
There is that moment when talking about 530 runners under a 4 minute mile since 1956 where he says less than 10 new runners added per DECADE. He makes mistakes. He's still a human.
Why would u point that out, i cant unhear his breathing now
u can hear him breathe the whole video though
I'm just here to notify @QJAndra 😘
After several years of this video in my recommendations, you win CZcams algorithm
So true lmfao
same
Abd El-Ghazali do you have the same surname as me?
So true man
facts
Everyone talking about how good a speaker he is, but I'm just amazed at that powerpoint.
Ikr
@@KevinBoneSosa it looks like Prezi Classic. Does anyone know if this can be done on Prezi Next?
I am pretty sure he doesn't use powerpoint but something more akin with lucid chart
Use Prezi. An amazing website.
You stole my comment nine months before I thought of it.
"Have you seen an apes butt? They have no buns."-David Epstein 2014
Baby got buns, uhn!!!
You gonna tell him? I'mmmm not gonna tell him.....
Apes may have no buns, but they do have short tempers....
Lmao
Lmao no, I can’t say I have
Well, if a 600 pound gorilla can do a one-handed chinup, you gotta respect that
My personal record for running the mile is 300 meters.
Ahahahahahahaaha OMG.....
Feakos dang yours is fast mine in 1600 meters
Or is that 301 - Ur IQ? lol
😂
Legend
I was born with a muscle-wasting disease called spinal muscular atrophy. Basically: every muscle in my body gets weaker as I get older. I’m 26, and until very recently, many with my disease typically passed away in their 30s and 40s. Last year, the first-ever treatment for my disease was discovered and approved by the FDA, a profound event that permanently changed the trajectory of my future. I can’t properly describe the flood of joyous relief I felt when I received the news. I’ve been on the drug for about a year now, which means I’m no longer getting weaker, and even, dare I say it, slowly gaining back some of the strength and ability I’ve lost over the years. A month or two ago, I sat up unassisted for the first time since childhood, and you better believe that felt just as exhilarating as breaking the record for fastest mile or lifting ten billion pounds on the bench press. Idk I just wanted to share with you after watching this! TL;DR Man in wheelchair is basically an athlete.
❤️❤️❤️
can you hit the gym or no
Congrats man !
I’m very happy for you!
I definitely wasn’t expecting to see you here.
Awesome news, I hope you keep getting stronger.
4:02 - "Sir Roger Bannister... who trained for 45 minutes at a time while he skipped gynecology lectures in med school."
Wow. I'm speechless.
I know... who'd want to skip gynecology lectures? Especially back then?
@@davidvarnes7708 creep.
I dont know why people think there is something sexy about that. Its about the least sexy thing in medicine. No one is thinking about that while doing that stuff.
@@scottbickerton4152 Plenty of convictions of gynaecologist engaging in sexual crimes with their patients. The rate of male gynaecologists has gone down in recent times. Possibly due to not having the sort of privileges that someone like David Varnes fantasizes about and also because the good male gynaecologist don't want to be associated with the idea of male doctors who act according to David Varnes' line of behavior. We'd all do better remembering that humans are common descendants of animals and when sexual deviancy is possible, it should be assumed that at one point it will or will have already occurred in a population of humans.
@@davidvarnes7708 I would imagine a lot of what they study is diseased, damaged, or deformed...not exactly sexy.
Brilliant. Direct, concise delivery of essential information, perfect visuals and a hint of humor. Well done!
He is dead wrong at 14:02 though.
Killian Jornet is an absolute freak, he has an "astronomical VO2 Max of 92 ml/min/kg, which is among the highest levels ever recorded"
"if you know someone who is 7 feet tall, there is a 17% chance that they play in the NBA."
thats pretty cool
that's the craziest fact in the presentation
between ages 20-40 or thereabouts
Evan Brown I just met a dude, a 7’2” security guard Turns out he played in the NBA about 15-20 years ago
KD has a wingspan of 7'4 but his height is 6'10
Guy was fucking made for NBA
Aditya Aswal Theres photos of KD standing next to 6’11 players and he’s taller than them. I think he lies about his height lol
That was the quickest 14 minutes in my life
And pretty soon someone else will beat your record of fastest 14 minutes
Kachow ski that’s what she said
@@smartaclesllama8677 you are one smart llama
True. He is a fantastic speaker, you understand him easily and time goes quickly.
Cant relate
THIS DUDE IS PERFECT!!! WHAT A PRESENTATION! He was genuinely so funny!! Every second of this was informative! Thank you so so much!
Well then suck him off will ya
@@EpicBunty LMAO
Not sure whether you are being sarcastic or not.
he took his own advice but in picking the on what to work on.
That is, by far, the best TED talk I've ever seen. A lot of well interpreted statistics, great animations beetween the slides and the world class speaker delivering it. And at the top of it all, it was really interesting.
This is what education truly is. Authentic learning. His presentation is so superb that the viewer becomes interested in his presentation. Authentic learning is when we humans want to learn. Learning in school for me isnt authentic learning because I dont want to learn, I know I have to. He got me engrossed in his presentation thus learning something new. Thats something not anyone can do but exceptional individuals like him.
You seriously didn't buy into his biased presentation, did you?
Just because it's presented professionally, doesn't mean it's not BS.
@@PPA625 So how is it baised? Since u think its baised pls do explain what part of it is baised
What about when he have to learn...surely thats the most authentic learning if the concept of "authentic learning" even stands up
@@sarahl3721 authentic learning is learing something you're interested in. So it depends whether he was interested in the topic he studied and presented.
When you compare that to the social justice drivel, lies and delusion of a Ted X talk it seems even better!
Ok CZcams I’ll watch it damnit!
Same here lol
lmao so true
rofl....same here...after month of it popping up....
Tom Erwin same
In all fairness this one was actually worth the time, not like that weird joe rogan prison story..
This guy has really done his home work, and as already mentioned is a machine gun speaker... almost no pauses, just fire, fire, fire... if there was an olymipics for speakers he might be in it.
Well, he's written a pretty genius sports book
I love TED talks. So many varied topics and always very informative.
This guys presentation skills are off the chart!!
agreed, when i run out of ambien ;)
that’s just do to technology
This guy is brilliant. He could see me cancer and I'd buy it.
The that's a terrible chart. Use log scale if your data range is very wide. What a terrible presentation. The data is off the chart.
looks and sounds like he just read a book on "how to give a perfect presentation." Presentation could have been quarter the duration with more info if Epstein dropped the emotional whooaa isn't this soo amazing inflection
His presentation of the topic was exquisite
+Hamza Tahir i agree
Are you kidding? First he claims all improvements are due to technology, then contradicts himself by pointing out that athletes train harder and smarter than ever before. And he never explained how there's been an 80 minute improvement in the marathon in less than 100 years.
That's not contradictory at all. The reason that athletes are training harder and smarter than ever is because more research has gone into the training these athletes put themselves through. We better understand biomechanics and the way that different bodies are genetically predisposed to performing better in certain sports.The improvement in marathon times is multifaceted as mentioned by sienna three.
I have spent months researching into how to jump higher and discovered a fantastic website at Enyeto jump plan (google it if you are interested)
he explained it, kenyans didn't run in marathons 100 years ago, they weren't invited.
training harder and smarter doesn't explain the big changes, the increased diversity of the population pool has.
This video was hands down the best, most informative, most engaging Ted talk I have ever watched, this man is an amazing speaker and that PowerPoint was just wow.
As a human race, we don’t improve how good of a job we do, we just make the job easier
Assuming you are American I have never understood why many Americans say "... how good of a..." instead of just "...how good a..."
@@joyfulzero853 many of us americans tend to have a "lazier" form of speaking in casual conversation, so saying "how good a..." would be more common. "how good of a..." is actually the proper phrase, and the one that I personally prefer to use - mostly because I'm a stickler for precise language.
@@joyfulzero853 You got ratio'd you bozo
@@joyfulzero853 I think only the British say it with an of
We're also making things harder for ourselves. Capitalistic bureaucracy to increase profit is a thing, and overproduction of unecessary products are harming our climate which in turn harms us.
This guy is a master presenter. One of the best
Totally agree
jon doe ehh i wonder if you’d have the guts to do the same thing
LAS: The two issues are unrelated.
I agree. Must have participated in theater or speech at a younger age. Or he has a complete disconnect with stage fright.
"have you ever looked at an ape's butt?"
I'm dying
redrounin no buns
umbasa! lol
Then maybe you should see a doctor.
If you're dying how are you typing?
yeah, everyone has looked at an ape's butt once or twice in this lifetime
Are athletes really getting faster, better, stronger?
This video: well yes but actually no but actually yes.
Yes. He explains why, and pretends that once you explain the reason for a change, the change didn't happen. Bogus reasoning.
The video just shows that the changes are not natural but artificial.
clown the athlete is not anymore athletic its the extra boost being given to him or her which means it can be applied to athlete of any era and essentially says today's athlete is nothing special compared to the athletes of the past
The question "Are athletes getting faster" implies that the human gene pool somehow improved over the decades. He goes on to explain that this is not the case. Athletes today aren't faster than athletes of the past because we as humans have gotten faster, but because of changes in technology and because more people participate in sports therefore there are more freak athletes to chose from
People are born with tremendous genetics all over the past thousands of years and some aren’t so no athletes are not getting better but nutrition and training programmes are and also PED’s.
As close to perfect of a informative presentation as you'll get Everything was on point & gave a much better understanding on why things are where there at today
That Kenyan tribe statistic is absolutely insane
Everybody is good at something. If they try wrestling, with their long thin legs, they gonna have a pb ^^
@@Fabzil Elaborate?
@@sbwzrd athletes have bodies specified to their own category, runners have long slender and thin muscles to conserve energy and long lasting stamina, powerlifters are heavyset with fats to store energy 5. Fighters are a little bit balanced for maximum performance
You just on CZcams to much
Cheers …. most kind. @@jrock0block80
One thing he doesn't mention is that Jessie Owens time was hand-timed whereas today it's handled by computers. Hand-times can vary wildly especially in a sport where the difference between first and second can be .01 of a second.
Michael Anthony this. That 10.2 could've been a 10.00 or a 10.4.
Let's say it was actually 10.00, the faster case. 0.2 is a lot to shave, but handtiming it is certainly possible to be off that much. Now put Owens on a modern track, that's 1.5% decrease, so his time is now 9.85. Now add in blocks. That alone could drop to 9.75 (.10) which would break Bolts record. Now add in nutrition and new exercise protocols. Now add in shoes.
Now this is what is mystifying to me. Track today takes advantage of the physiological advantages, longer limbs, etc. They have the better nutrition and s&c. They have the better technology. Some, maybe most even, use PEDs. How is it that Owens would theoretically be capable of running faster than Bolt if given the modern tools today?
Owens 10.2 before the tech is only a top 3 in a state for HS (compared to now).
Owens with the tech today would be a freak among freak athletes (9.8 is not too unreasonable, you're top 5 in world).
So is Owens THE biggest freak, in that he can run the pace of a modern athlete in 1940s or has human performance not really increased, and mainly technology or PEDs? It kind of disheartening if true actually.
yea owens was a pack a day smoker! no way an elite level sprinter of today could smoke
JS bolts record is 9.58 btw
JS hand times are always faster compared to electronic times because the person has to react to the sound of the gun or the body movement of the runner. The clock and the gun didn’t start at the same time at they do today. Idk why U used the 10.00 instead of the 10.4.
No kidding Jesse Owens smoked?? Imagine if he didn't!! Good Lord He'd have been flying...
One of the best posts Ive ever seen !! Some of these insights have occurred to me, but nothing close to what this man has revealed . Social factors, economic factors, probablities of physical traits within populations...amazing !!! So glad I watched this. And Ive shared it to those I know who are interested !
Bloody amazing! Such a great speaker, great use of voice, humour, tonality and cool calm and collective! Such a great use of visual aids but didn't distract from the main topic!
I'm 6ft 8 inches tall. A cheeky lady at a party asked me in front of everyone if "everything else" was in proportion to my height! I had to tell her:
"No. If it was, I would be over 11 feet tall" :-)
If that were true, then i would be a dwarf •_•
That's a high IQ play right there
300 IQ
Bobby Silver Speech 100
and then you pulled her in and kissed her and everyone cheered and clapped.... r/thathappened
This is a whole lot more educational than I thought it was going to be
truth
Incredible presentation style, thanks a lot.
This guy: 2:00:00 marathon is highly improbable
Kipchoge: Hold my beer
This guy is incredibly confident. Great speech.
@humanISvegan why are you so mad lol? he did provide scientific evidence what are you even talking about?? are how is he jealous?
@humanISvegan You are the nonsensical one. How is he jealous? Didn't he provide you enough scientific explanations through this entire video? What are you even talking about?
I like this cunning linguist.
Expected nerdy, anti-jock gibberish... ended up getting a masterpiece of information.
I want to know where the limit is. How much faster can the human body theoretically run? How much more weight can it lift?
Kinda like wanting to read the End of the book huh, guess we'll have to stay healthy and strong long enough to find out :D I wanna live to be a hundred & 3
Yo are you spons Caue im interested
Hilarious and Original
That’s exactly what I was thinking 😂
14:54 of my evening well spent. Thoroughly enjoyable Speach to listen to. 👍🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Amazing speech you were talking very clear and used very specific words. Nice job my man
I wish I was that good at prezis.
He has actually very little presentation content - a few stock image cutouts. The construct of the presentation is very good the images accompany his words and they are only present when he needs to illustrate something visually. Nothing he says is repeated on the screen. Thats the beauty.
Bear McBear
I wish I was that good at pretzels
If you continue to wish for things instead of pursuing what you want, you will never achieve it. You think Prez Trump wished to be prez and then did nothing? He attacked his dream. Now we are all benefiting.
Just learn to speak fluently and you can do the same, Stubby has the right idea
That was actually a good talk, very intresting and informative!
humanISvegan how smart can u be then?🤔
he did his homework
Fascinating talk, never thought of all those details! Really enjoyed the speaker, too. Will recommend...
It would have been interesting to hear about how nutrition has gotten far better in the modern era, making us grow larger etc.
"Ser Rodger Bannister" sounds like a game of thrones character lol
Lannister
It’s Sir
Sir Roger Bannister. He was a Brit.
Not in GoT
there was Ser Roger Reyne who was killed by Tywin Lannister
you know the song "Reins of Castamere" is all about that or for TV show fans "Lannister Song" sung by Bronn
Recent world records in the marathon
2:03:38 Patrick Makau Kenya September 25, 2011
2:03:23 Wilson Kipsang Kenya September 29, 2013
2:02:57 Dennis Kimetto Kenya September 28, 2014
2:01:39 Eliud Kipchoge Kenya September 16, 2018
... from population the size of suburban Atlanta...
Similarly, Dagestan is the foundry of wrestling champions
@@LAZLOWEYO A lot of the Kenyans got caught doping.
yeah, but are their hearts enlarged and will die at an early age?
Look up what kinda animals are in Kenya, people learn to sprint pretty fast when sharing a habitat with the fastest predators to coexist with humans
I Need More Sleep Kenyans aren’t known for being fast lol they’re known for their endurance
This fella would run rings around most other TED talks excellent stuff - interesting, funny, well researched and well presented.
Best content and presentation on TED I've seen! Real science too!
My dad would have loved this talk. He'd always tell me how much harder he had it back in the day. Happy Fathers' Day, old man!
(Oops jumped the gun -- I am disqualified ...)
E
L
That was an excellent speech, however he did forget one huge variable and that is the precision of time keep. In the 1920's time wasn't as precisely measured than it is today. I feel he needed to cover this matter, as well as steroids.
I was about to point that out abou the timekeeper.
www.amazon.com/Sports-Gene-Extraordinary-Athletic-Performance/dp/161723012X
But there is a delay at the start too, also since you can anticipate the runner crossing the finish line there is no reaction time there. That would make it plus .2
He said something about performance enhancing drugs but they usually get caught for it.
But he also didn't talk mention how the gene pool was "upgraded" due to increase in average human health standards etc.
There's both pros and cons he didn't talk about, because he can't talk about everything. So he has to make it flow, therefor with the theme of the presentation I feel like this was better. He had already mentioned technology, he's not gonna talk about every single one. He didn't mention the flop for high jump or better poles for pole jumping etc.
That was a wonderful presentation! Thank you! : )
One of the best Ted talks that I've seen. 100 percent interesting from start to finish.
Correction:
Athletes are getting _harder, better, faster, stronger_
Wooooooo At least someone thought of it! XD
no they are not. better and stronger athletes are born or discovered
@@2yc352 lol do you realize what reference he's making? XD
@@Thisisnotanid45 Kanye West' song right?
@@akhileshnidamanuri8460 How dare you
So, Saitama is mentally disabled then. He broke his limiter, became bald and now is the most powerful man on Earth (in that Universe)...
U catch up fast. Goku also keeps breaking his limiter.
@@huskiehuskerson5300 nah, there's a difference between a limiter and limit. Goku just broke his new limit reaching new heights and there's still a new limit after that. Saitama broke the concept of the limiter, as in, he has no limit.
@@huskiehuskerson5300 fkin captain america
Pretty sure Saitama is socially disabled, nowhere in the entire manga did he show any signs of having basic social skills.
Goku isnt human. He is of godly race that forgot its own power.
This is one of my favorite ted talks ever
Amazing & Informative speech ✌️
One of the most engaging presentations I've seen. My appreciation, David Epstein.
Probably my favourite Ted Talk, along with the gentleman who responded to Spammers. Profoundly interesting and informative.
wow. this is one of the most fabulous ted talks out there.
This is my favourite, most watched TED talk
point of this presentation for me was, it's not the human abilities that's changing much, but the ability to get around the body's systems that control the output. with conditioning, training, selective skills and predespositions.
Rok Podlogar right on my dude
You can see it in basketball easily. Pg's are usually always 6'1-6'4 and quick. Centers are usually 6'10-7'2 and lumbering. Different expectations of gameplay require different body types. Being tall hurts dribbling, being to short hurts rebounding. Specialized skills for socialized body types.
Giannis/Ben Simmons.
Tombriderx there’s always exceptions, we talking about the average nba player
Giannis, LBJ, Kevin Durant, Anthony Davis, Carmelo Anthony, Rodney Hood, Shaun Livingston, Brandon Ingram, Kevin Love, Kyle kuzma, Ben Simmons, there’s a lot more too. These are just the ones that come to my head initially.
KLove? Seriously? LMAO
We thought KD & LBJ were physical freaks until Giannis came along
Thank you David , Short and simple in every point .
Fabulous lecture, gripping.
I think it just goes to show how stellar and concise this guys presentation is to get me to watch a 15 minute speech about a topic I otherwise wouldn't care about. Job well done, this was a very enjoyable video!
Honestly misread the title as "Are ATHEISTS Getting faster better stronger."
hahaha thanks for sharing that! no, but i wouldn't blame 'em in this day and age
brightbite lol same
I wish XD
Same
SAME.
One of the best TED talks I've seen, if not the best.
This is so interesting and brilliantly presented.
so people aren't really better now than then... just different technology and selection of athletes.
Yeah the human race isn't evolving athletically like the constant record-breaking would have you believe.
Actually, you could say it's de-volving, the athletic capabilities of the average person has been plummeting thanks to an increasingly sedentary lifestyle and a weaker education system.
www.ericcressey.com/why-were-losing-athleticism
If you liked the video you'll find this article interesting.
forzacavaliere everyone knows acquired traits aren't acquired. How exactly does a sedentary lifestyle select for less athletic people? It doesn't.
Peter Chiang you clearly misunderstood
I agree.
Peter Chiang read up on epigenetics, the traits aren't so much acquired or lost, they're just more likely to not be expressed or expressed (depends on the gene in particular)
I remember some announcers talking about this. About how the balance beam evolved. The announcer said he remembered when a split was daring. Nobody did flips on the balance beam
Great video. Thank you for sharing.
What an amazing Lecture. This talk can be broken into so many subsections to discuss: Advances in brain activity, the decrease in the aging process, the effects athletics has had on the female physique.
This man is incredible...such a good speaker and presenter, wow!
Another thing is the world population had exploded in the 20th century. The salaries of professional athletes also exploded and gave much more incentive to train harder on the road to become a professional.
Yah, changed from a hobby to a career.
Yeah they were called Amateurs before, no money at all just medals.
@@xsolent why r u replying everywhere😂😂
It’s been a while and I don’t have the article but scientists found the fossilized footprints of some person in some part of Africa estimated to have run faster than any modern Olympic athlete. I guess running for your life against some of the fastest predators to have coexisted with humans is bound to break some records
Very good point
This is the greatest sports ted talk, Thanks so much sir
Damn this popped up on the recommended at a bad time, his last name lmaooo
Hahaha. you have mono?
Yup, physically cringed when I read it.
@@hunterG60k lmao same when I read your last name
Truly interesting. Does this guy have his own channel or something? I feel he makes great videos and would like to binge on them hahaha. Also, is there any other TedTalks that are sports related?
message me if you found some. I'm as interested as you.
www.amazon.com/Sports-Gene-Extraordinary-Athletic-Performance/dp/161723012X
John Vatkevich I got the book
E C3 about to order
KingSalv34 let me know what you think
Not watched the video, but seen this in my recommendations and I'm absolutely gutted its not called 'Are athletes really getting harder, better, faster, stronger?'
Yeah, how daft of them.
Punks.
^ I like all of you
I just listened to a remix of this. Ya'll savage.
You'll be ok Kieran. After all, what doesn't kill you makes your stronger.
Great Video!! However, I'd like to point out that the image placed under Eddy Merckx name is misleading. He completed the hour record on a track bike with drop bars, not a bike with mud guards and flat bars. Additionally, modern challengers of the hour record are allowed to use far more aerodynamic bike frames and aero bars.
That's so cool about the large difference between the types of tracks!
My personal record for running a mile is just under 4 hours
Grainy Corcelles It was a joke bro
r/whoooooosh
@@dpfilms1904 super whoosh lol
6 seconds
10 minutes
1 hour
5 days
and counting ....
Dude i walk to school which is 1.2 miles away i can walk in 30 minutes
They have no bunnz
#priorities haha ;)
Desmond moonbear 😂😂😂
lol you can have the most eloquent talk video and then the comments are like this
@AC130 BOMBDROPPA So now you have no bunnz either? 😂
500th like
Absolutely spectacular presentation.
Amazing speaker, one of the best ted talks ive seen. But he was mostly just speaking facts, i wish he gave some personal input along with this presentation
To all my Naruto fans out there, when he was talking about limiters on our bodies, I was thinking about the Eight Inner Gates.
Joshua Bautista lmao
HACHIMON TONKO... KAIMON... KAI!
I feel the human race still has a lot of gates to go through
7th GATE OPENNNNN!
i think that´s literally what he ´s talking about
I know me too.
This was amazingly well done
The problem is the 1904 olympics is notorious for its horrendous setup, if he had used the 1908 one, which the winner won in 2 hours and 55 minutes , it would have been more accurate to describe the growth of athletes.
I read a statistic somewhere that only 23 Olympic marathon runners in history finished with a slower time than the winner of the 1904 marathon. Of those 23, only 10 were not run in 1904.
Not all statistics are right
@@jondovik6250 nor they are to be taken as straight undeniable facts. There's always room for errors :)
"Send a group of people to the gym for a couple hundred years and its paying dividends, they're fuxking dunking on us"
-Bill Burr
Bill gates*
This is the best Prezi presentation I've ever seen
The only thing I didn’t like it that he picked the 1904 Olympics for the marathon. That is the slowest marathon ever, and it isn’t a good pick for comparison.
To be honest this is the best lecture on sport I have ever heard. I always thought like this, but I was never able to give as many examples. All of them are the simple laws of physics, but there's too much buzz about the athletes as THE REAL FIGHTERS AND THE REAL WINNERS therefore I was shy to speak. There's definitely a great significance of this lecture more for those people who are no winners at all but they know the value of sport and practice it all the time. They are always under some pressure of those "tough guys"="champions"="winners" I always looks at as jokes)))) I practice sport for all my life and I'm 49 now and this lecture lets me laugh at them even more. G-d gave you the body so run, but don't tell me that since you run faster you exert yourself more, you are kind more of the human. You have the better physics))))))))))))))
Una de las mejores charlas de TED que he visto.
prolly the best ted talk I've ever watched.
Excellent presentation.
Great video. probably one of the goat ted talks
Excellent speaker! Well done 👏 👏 👏
this guy is really smart
Just got done watchin one of your vids, this was in my up next.
Damn straight
are you sure about that sir
Nah
No, he just wears glasses lol
"Limits are like fears, often just a illusion" - Michael Jordan
I wonder how the sprinters today would fare on cinder tracks...
about 1.5% worse
zaggernut 50 Idk, it seems like it would be like a parabola, where it gets worse for short distance, like 100m, where there isn’t enough traction to use all of your strength, not that bad for mid distance, like up to 3k, and then worse for 5k and up as it continually drains their energy over a longer course.
@@JoeARedHawk275 I remember when we use to run along the beach in Okinawa Japan for PT. Sand really feels like its sucking the life out of you through your damn feet. 4 miles later and i was finally back on asphalt kissing the ground
Dr. David Epstein is so smart and is a talented speaker. This clip ended up being much more informational and enjoyable than I expected.
This talk seems to ignore the elephant in the room, athletes are professionals in today's age (even though he mentions it briefly). The stress, recovery adaptation cycle of suitable anatomic structures will yield improved performance. Yes, technology plays a remarkable role in sports, as does nutrition, supplementation and better medical care of athletes. He didn't mention the ways in which athletes come back from potential career ending injuries due to medical advancements. As a coach, I would be really careful to credit any single factor as the driving force.
i would instead say all such factor are *further* proof that we are in fact barely progressing athletic performance per se at all, which is what i had gathered from the presentation.
And the limitation to the measuring technology back then? How accurate to the millisecond? How legit was the time keeping, or the measurement? Like he said, in a sport such as sprinting, a few milliseconds is eternity.
Work it harder make it better, do it faster, makes us stronger, more than ever hour after our work is never over.
Daft Punk ftw!
Excellent Presentation.
As an athlete this was interesting
That was freaking amazing to know! Now i just need to remember it!