yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

The More You Know about Plants, the More You Feel a Part of the World | Big Think


3m read
·Nov 4, 2024

I think plants present an opportunity for people to look closely at something and get invested in something that's truly very much outside of themselves. Plants are not like us, and the more you study plants, the more different and deep ways you see that they are not like us. All the important things that we do, from how we move around to how we reproduce to how we react to the sun. Any human activity you could point to, you're going to see something very different in plants.

And the more you know about how plants function, and the more you watch them function and test their functioning, the more deeply you understand how different they are. I think that's useful because I think people have a need to transcend themselves. And I know that when I get bogged down in the dysfunctionalities of how people treat each other and conflicts between men and women and money problems and science and all this kind of thing, that I can take some comfort and joy in transcending what seemed like very small scale human noise and look at the differences in a life form that's been successfully occupying the planet for 400 million years.

So, quite frankly, I get a lot of joy and comfort and happiness from considering these things. I mean, I think that's the main reason to do science, is that it feeds the soul. I think that, and I see this in students year after year, that the more you know about the world, the more you feel like you're part of it. And it's like nothing else.

You teach somebody not to just walk up by a tree, but to look up at it and say, "Yup, that one's deciduous, and that one's evergreen, and that one is going to lose its leaves this fall, but that one is going to stay green," just very basic things like that. And you see people's sense of self and self-esteem rise, and all of a sudden they know something about the world that they journey through, and it makes them a little bit bigger as a person. And that's really a wonderful thing to watch in students and to be able to facilitate.

So, I think we should plant trees not to save trees. I think planting a tree is not unlikely to be a method you use to save yourself and to find meaning in something that will be with you and grow with you and be something you can come back to and contrast your own life with.

I'm very influenced by some research that came out I think in the '80s that compared retention during learning. And I remember very strongly that the main result of that was the larger the number of senses that you invoked. If you were touching something, if you were writing and listening and watching and even smelling something or tasting, the more senses that you could engage during learning, the more effectively that information was integrated into the person and learned.

I think with digital media, we're very, very strongly going towards a medium that is visual only. I mean, you do hear the message, et cetera, but I worry that it's a passive stance just in terms of using the five senses and that you can't learn passively. I think the best learning is done with active manipulation.

And we need to be able to work with our hands; it's not just about using our brains. I mean, eventually we have to manipulate the world with our hand in order to make tangible change. And students need practice with that. Kids need practice with that. We need to do that in life.

And for better or worse, our screen experiences will never, never give us that. It's very important to put children in an environment where they can take things apart; where they can break things and then learn to fix them; where they can trust their hands and know their capacity to manipulate objects. And I see that as a much more active interaction than what the newer types of technologies offer as they supply learning.

So, I'm not anti-screen, et cetera, but I do worry that the hours we spend that way are replacing some of the things that are going to be important.

More Articles

View All
Follow a Nat Geo Photographer on His Silk Road Adventure | National Geographic
I’m John Stanley. I’m a photographer with National Geographic magazine here on assignment for part six of the Out of Eden Walk. We started in Africa in January 2013, and we’ve been walking overland, doing slow journalism. Now we’re in Uzbekistan. [Music]…
Using matrices to transform a 4D vector | Matrices | Precalculus | Khan Academy
We’ve already thought a lot about two by two transformation matrices as being able to map any point in the coordinate plane to any other point or any two-dimensional vector to any other two-dimensional vector. What we’re going to do in this video is gener…
Representing quantities with vectors | Vectors | Precalculus | Khan Academy
We’re told a powerful magnet is attracting a metal ball on a flat surface. The magnet is pulling the ball at a force of 15 newtons, and the magnet is 20 degrees to the south from the eastward direction relative to the ball. Here are a few vectors where th…
1994 Berkshire Hathaway Annual Meeting (Full Version)
Put this over here, right? Am I live yet? Yeah. Morning! We were a little worried today because we weren’t sure from the reservations whether we could handle everybody. But it looks to me like there may be a couple of seats left up there. However, I thin…
Sources of income during retirement | Investments and retirement | Financial literacy | Khan Academy
Let’s talk a little bit about sources of income during retirement. So, we’re assuming you’re retired, you’re not working, so you’re not going to get that income. But one of them is perhaps just your straight-up investment income. You save money over time…
Meeting a Black-Market Marijuana Dealer | Trafficked with Mariana van Zeller
[Music] One of the big players in that world, someone I’m told moves more than a million dollars worth of product daily, has agreed to meet me. Well, kind of. Okay, we ready? So I’m currently in an empty room and in front of a table with nine pounds of a…