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목록영어공부 (31)
아빠는 공부쟁이
07:31 Too often when we are faced with a crisis, we build walls in defense. I'm an architect, and I've been trained to seek solutions in permanence -- concrete, steel, glass -- these are all used to build a fortress against nature. But my search for ancient systems and Indigenous technologies has been different. It's been inspired by an idea that we can seed creativity in crisis. inventor 1.발명가 ..
07:01 So though wildfires are a natural disaster, as a consequence of climate change, they're also man-made. And what's so amazing about this is we have the ancient technology that we know can help prevent them, and we've used it for thousands of years. And what I find so fascinating about these technologies is how complex they are and how attuned they are to nature. And then, how resilient we c..
05:46 What amazes me is that while an individual acadja is pretty insignificant, when it's multiplied by 12,000, it creates an Indigenous technology the scale of industrial aquaculture, which is the greatest threat to our mangrove ecosystems... but this technology -- it builds more biodiversity than before. insignificant 1.미미한 2. 중요하지 multiply 1. 곱하다 2. 늘리다 3. 증가시키다 4. 증식시키다 5. 번식하다 indigenous [..
02:37 And the Qasab reed is integral to every aspect of life. It is food for water buffalo, flour for humans and building material for these biodegradable, buoyant islands and their cathedral-like houses that they construct in as little as three days. And this dried Qasab reed, it can be bundled into columns, it can be woven into floors or roofs or walls, and it can also be twisted into a rope t..
03:51 For me, it was really easy. I did my first professional play. I was 12 years old. I was in a play called "Saint Joan" by George Bernard Shaw at the McCarter Theatre, and -- boom! -- I was in love. My world just expanded. And that profession -- I'm almost 50 now -- that profession has never stopped giving back to me, and it gives back more and more, mostly, strangely, through the characters..
09:53 And finally, there's medicine. I think a lot about how developments in genetic medicine could improve outcomes for people with cancer or dementia, and maybe one day, your hundredth birthday will be just another milestone on the way to another two or three decades of healthy, active life. Maybe the toilet of the future that I mentioned will improve health outcomes for a lot of people, inclu..
03:55 And speaking of traffic jams, I spent a lot of time trying to picture the city of the future. What's it like? What's it made of? Who's it for? I try to picture a green city with vertical farms and structures that are partially grown rather than built and walkways instead of streets, because nobody gets around by car anymore -- a city that lives and breathes. And, you know, I kind of start ..
00:39 Our world is changing so fast, and there's a kind of accelerating feedback loop where technological change and social change feed on each other. When I was a kid in the 1980s, we knew what the future was going to look like. It was going to be some version of "Judge Dredd" or "Blade Runner." It was going to be neon megacities and flying vehicles. But now, nobody knows what the world is goin..