Sunday Pick: How to be an adult — and how to raise one | How to Be a Better Human
TED Talks Daily27 Okt 2024

Sunday Pick: How to be an adult — and how to raise one | How to Be a Better Human

Each Sunday, TED shares an episode of another podcast we think you'll love, handpicked for you… by us. Whether it’s grades and test scores, cushy jobs or big salaries, our ideas of “success” tend to be incredibly narrow and often start incredibly early. Julie Lythcott-Haims is a New York Times bestselling author and former Dean of Freshmen at Stanford, and she is dedicated to helping people reconsider what really makes a happy, “successful” adult. In this episode of How to Be a Better Human, another podcast from the TED Audio Collective, Julie shares wisdom for parents and anyone who has been parented on why it’s crucial to question societal expectations, how to find your own path and why empathy towards yourself and others are the true key to loving who you’ll grow up to be.

Get more How to Be a Better Human wherever you get your podcasts.

For the full text transcript, visit go.ted.com/BHTranscripts


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Episoder(2559)

How your pictures can help reclaim lost history | Chance Coughenour

How your pictures can help reclaim lost history | Chance Coughenour

Digital archaeologist Chance Coughenour is using pictures -- your pictures -- to reclaim antiquities that have been lost to conflict and disaster. After crowdsourcing photographs of destroyed monuments, museums and artifacts, Coughenour uses advanced technology called photogrammetry to create 3D reconstructions, preserving the memory of our global, shared, human heritage. Find out more about how you can help celebrate and safeguard history that's being lost. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

31 Aug 201712min

How the US government spies on people who protest -- including you | Jennifer Granick

How the US government spies on people who protest -- including you | Jennifer Granick

What's stopping the American government from recording your phone calls, reading your emails and monitoring your location? Very little, says surveillance and cybersecurity counsel Jennifer Granick. The government collects all kinds of information about you easily, cheaply and without a warrant -- and if you've ever participated in a protest or attended a gun show, you're likely a person of interest. Learn more about your rights, your risks and how to protect yourself in the golden age of surveillance. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

31 Aug 201714min

Can a robot pass a university entrance exam? | Noriko Arai

Can a robot pass a university entrance exam? | Noriko Arai

Meet Todai Robot, an AI project that performed in the top 20 percent of students on the entrance exam for the University of Tokyo -- without actually understanding a thing. While it's not matriculating anytime soon, Todai Robot's success raises alarming questions for the future of human education. How can we help kids learn the things that humans can do better than AI? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

30 Aug 201713min

Why we need to end the era of orphanages | Tara Winkler

Why we need to end the era of orphanages | Tara Winkler

Could it be wrong to help children in need by starting an orphanage? In this eye-opening talk about the bad consequences of good intentions, Tara Winkler speaks out against the spread of orphanages in developing countries, caused in part by foreign donors, and details the harm done to children when they are separated from their families and left to grow up in institutions. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

29 Aug 201713min

When workers own companies, the economy is more resilient | Niki Okuk

When workers own companies, the economy is more resilient | Niki Okuk

Another economic reality is possible -- one that values community, sustainability and resiliency instead of profit by any means necessary. Niki Okuk shares her case for cooperative economics and a vision for how working-class people can organize and own the businesses they work for, making decisions for themselves and enjoying the fruits of their labor. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

28 Aug 201712min

"The Sacred Art of the Ori" | Laolu Senbanjo

"The Sacred Art of the Ori" | Laolu Senbanjo

Every artist has a name, and every artist has a story. Laolu Senbanjo's story started in Nigeria, where he was surrounded by the culture and mythology of the Yoruba, and brought him to law school, to New York and eventually to work on Beyoncé's "Lemonade." He shares what he calls "The Sacred Art of the Ori," art that uses skin as canvas and connects artist and muse through mind, body and soul. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

25 Aug 20178min

What the sugar coating on your cells is trying to tell you | Carolyn Bertozzi

What the sugar coating on your cells is trying to tell you | Carolyn Bertozzi

Your cells are coated with sugars that store information and speak a secret language. What are they trying to tell us? Your blood type, for one -- and, potentially, that you have cancer. Chemical biologist Carolyn Bertozzi researches how sugars on cancerous cells interact with (and sometimes trick) your immune system. Learn more about how your body detects cancer and how the latest cancer-fighting medicines could help your immune system beat the disease. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

24 Aug 201711min

What would happen if we upload our brains to computers | Robin Hanson

What would happen if we upload our brains to computers | Robin Hanson

Meet the "ems" -- machines that emulate human brains and can think, feel and work just like the brains they're copied from. Economist and social scientist Robin Hanson describes a possible future when ems take over the global economy, running on superfast computers and copying themselves to multitask, leaving humans with only one choice: to retire, forever. Glimpse a strange future as Hanson describes what could happen if robots ruled the earth. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

24 Aug 201712min

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