Why I risked my life to expose a government massacre | Anjan Sundaram
TED Talks Daily24 Okt 2017

Why I risked my life to expose a government massacre | Anjan Sundaram

A war zone can pass for a mostly peaceful place when no one is watching, says investigative journalist and TED Fellow Anjan Sundaram. In this short, incisive talk, he takes us inside the conflict in the Central African Republic, where he saw the methodical preparation for ethnic cleansing, and shares a lesson about why it's important to bear witness to other people's suffering. "Ignored people in all our communities tell us something important about who we are," Sundaram says. "A witness can become precious, and their gaze most necessary, when violence passes silently, unseen and unheard."


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Electrical experiments with plants that count and communicate | Greg Gage

Electrical experiments with plants that count and communicate | Greg Gage

Neuroscientist Greg Gage takes sophisticated equipment used to study the brain out of graduate-level labs and brings them to middle- and high-school classrooms (and, sometimes, to the TED stage.) Prepare to be amazed as he hooks up the Mimosa pudica, a plant whose leaves close when touched, and the Venus flytrap to an EKG to show us how plants use electrical signals to convey information, prompt movement and even count. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

10 Okt 20179min

How Africa can use its traditional knowledge to make progress | Chika Ezeanya-Esiobu

How Africa can use its traditional knowledge to make progress | Chika Ezeanya-Esiobu

Chika Ezeanya-Esiobu wants to see Africans unleash their suppressed creative and innovative energies by acknowledging the significance of their indigenous, authentic knowledge. In this powerful talk, she shares examples of untapped, traditional African knowledge in agriculture and policy-making, calling on Africans to make progress by validating and dignifying their reality. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

9 Okt 201714min

How to seek truth in the era of fake news | Christiane Amanpour

How to seek truth in the era of fake news | Christiane Amanpour

Known worldwide for her courage and clarity, Christiane Amanpour has spent the past three decades interviewing business, cultural and political leaders who have shaped history. In conversation with TED Curator Chris Anderson, Amanpour discusses fake news, objectivity in journalism, the leadership vacuum in global politics and more, sharing her wisdom along the way. "Be careful where you get information from," she says. "Unless we are all engaged as global citizens who appreciate the truth, who understand science, empirical evidence and facts, then we are going to be wandering around -- to a potential catastrophe." Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

6 Okt 201717min

A global food crisis may be only a decade away | Sara Menker

A global food crisis may be only a decade away | Sara Menker

Sara Menker quit a career in commodities trading to figure out how the global value chain of agriculture works. Her discoveries have led to some startling predictions: "We could have a tipping point in global food and agriculture if surging demand surpasses the agricultural system's structural capacity to produce food," she says. "People could starve and governments may fall." Menker's models predict that this scenario could happen in a decade -- that the world could be short 214 trillion calories per year by 2027. She offers a vision of this impossible world as well as some steps we can take today to avoid it. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

5 Okt 201717min

Don't suffer from your depression in silence | Nikki Webber Allen

Don't suffer from your depression in silence | Nikki Webber Allen

Having feelings isn't a sign of weakness -- they mean we're human, says producer and activist Nikki Webber Allen. Even after being diagnosed with anxiety and depression, Webber Allen felt too ashamed to tell anybody, keeping her condition a secret until a family tragedy revealed how others close to her were also suffering. In this important talk about mental health, she speaks openly about her struggle -- and why communities of color must undo the stigma that misreads depression as a weakness and keeps sufferers from getting help. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

5 Okt 20176min

Mind-blowing, magnified portraits of insects | Levon Biss

Mind-blowing, magnified portraits of insects | Levon Biss

Photographer Levon Biss was looking for a new, extraordinary subject when one afternoon he and his young son popped a ground beetle under a microscope and discovered the wondrous world of insects. Applying his knowledge of photography to subjects just five millimeters long, Biss created a process for shooting insects in unbelievable microscopic detail. He shares the resulting portraits -- each comprised of 8- to 10,000 individual shots -- and a story about how inspiration can come from the most unlikely places. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

4 Okt 20177min

The magic of Khmer classical dance | Prumsodun Ok

The magic of Khmer classical dance | Prumsodun Ok

For more than 1,000 years, Khmer dancers in Cambodia have been seen as living bridges between heaven and earth. In this graceful dance-talk hybrid, artist Prumsodun Ok -- founder of Cambodia's first all-male and gay-identified dance company -- details the rich history of Khmer classical dance and its current revival, playing the ancient and ageless role of artist as messenger. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

3 Okt 201710min

Lessons from the longest study on human development | Helen Pearson

Lessons from the longest study on human development | Helen Pearson

For the past 70 years, scientists in Britain have been studying thousands of children through their lives to find out why some end up happy and healthy while others struggle. It's the longest-running study of human development in the world, and it's produced some of the best-studied people on the planet while changing the way we live, learn and parent. Reviewing this remarkable research, science journalist Helen Pearson shares some important findings and simple truths about life and good parenting. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

2 Okt 201712min

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