This man is incredibly intelligent and a wealth of knowledge in his field. I’d love to have a lifetime pass to sit in on his lectures. Thank you so much for making this available to the average person.
Sapolsky perfected teaching with a trademark style to make it impossible not to grab and keep your attention to completely learn. Gifted like no other teacher can.
@stormysampson12575 жыл бұрын
I think he could learn how to interact with the students more, eye contact, more personal history more self degrading jokes? Otherwise, I would be a very happy student in his class. Even though I am major ADD (and proud of it)...
@davidsan96544 жыл бұрын
Let's dial it back a bit buddy, sure he's good but there are plenty of good teachers out there who can easily rival or surpass Sapolsky's style.
@CyberneticArgumentCreator4 жыл бұрын
@@stormysampson1257 Sounds like a lot of ways to teach less information in a given amount of time.
@carlosandres70064 жыл бұрын
Agreed. Haven’t find any better lecturer
@mitch10784 жыл бұрын
@@davidsan9654 This page is specifically about Sapolsky so I was logically providing my opinion of him accordingly.
@vickprint13 жыл бұрын
i am OBSESSED with this amazing mans lectures... thank you stanford for allowing these to be online. youre changing/educating lives/minds and thank you for that.
@witchandspy3 жыл бұрын
simp
@baldanders3 жыл бұрын
@@witchandspy your brain is rotting online little parrot
@sonjatheierl13 жыл бұрын
Me too! And the above comments are stoners!
@believeinfuturedream11043 жыл бұрын
Do not forget language scientifically is considered fake tool to express facts !!!
@normawatkins8752 жыл бұрын
I'm OBSESSED with him too!
@abigailnichols8873 жыл бұрын
Gonna leave this here for an assignment... 0:37 | Announcements 5:26 | Arbitrariness of Language 15:53 | William's Syndrome 17:37 | Language is Lateralized 23:29 | Language Salad 27:52 | Whistling Language 35:36 | Tourette's Disease 44:43 | The Generativity of Language 54:24 | Brain Coding for a Second Language 01:00:57 | Myelin 01:15:03 | Intentionality of Communication
@im19ice33 жыл бұрын
bless u
@tonypasma17073 жыл бұрын
bästa mannen
@believeinfuturedream11043 жыл бұрын
👍❤️🇺🇸❤️👍Thank you a be lots !❤️.
@NazriB2 жыл бұрын
Lies again? Vigrx Plus
@SameAsAnyOtherStranger2 жыл бұрын
Not a literal index. Interesting to know a scholars points of interest about this video.
@Buddlebot8 жыл бұрын
This man is my idol. He's been pushing me to pursue my academic achievements for years now.
@muffinspuffinsEE6 жыл бұрын
Same here, 5 years and still going for me :) Only because, THIS GUY! ;D
@NicholasEymann6 жыл бұрын
Same
@latinaalma19474 жыл бұрын
I am a retired psych prof...the three statements below are great compliments to any prof but what every good prof really wants most is for,you to then make that JOY of of learning all yours irrespective of your prof...to learn for the joy of learning purely for itself.....go forth and inspire NEW learners.....turning on the minds of others is the highest calling of them all and yes Sapolsky ignites that first spark particularly well...kudos to,him but more kudos to YOU for developing in yourself the craving to know more. And more and more...may that give you joy all your life!
@JoseMonteverde4 жыл бұрын
I revisit these lectures constantly, you never stop seeing things in the world that do with them.
@UlanKG4 жыл бұрын
Oh nooo, my god, what about Kim Kardashian then ?
@randomvicky9392 жыл бұрын
I’m from Brazil. Came to the US 20 years ago . Unfortunately didn’t have a chance to attend college . I’m so into science , specially neuroscience . I’m so grateful for these vids you have no idea how important they’re. Thank you very much for sharing all this knowledge.
@torietorreano52143 жыл бұрын
What a wonderful way to craft your own Renaissance education under the Masters of our day! I'm grateful for this and all of his lectures and I am grateful that Stanford allows it to be broadcast to the rest of us!
@ezekielschmittart3 жыл бұрын
That was my motivation too! Gotta be like the polymaths that came before lol
@KilgoreTroutAsf5 жыл бұрын
These lectures are pure gold.
@robertmassucci13 жыл бұрын
I'm happy to report there are other instructors this good. He is very good and thankfully he's not alone.
@cannedfrootloops78033 жыл бұрын
Who else is there?
@TrinityTheOnly Жыл бұрын
Please share your knowledge with us!
@trupyrodice4462 Жыл бұрын
Links or it didn't happen...
@andrewwscott28022 жыл бұрын
This guy's lectures are awesome. If by any chance he happens to be reading these comments, or anyone can pass on a message to him, let him know how much I enjoyed his lectures from the other side of the world. And thanks Stanford for sharing, that is extremely benevolent of you.
@havesomecoffeeand60853 жыл бұрын
The way this man creates humor out of nowhere makes him a great stand-up comedian of his own sort.
@Weissenschenkel3 жыл бұрын
It's hilarious listening to him explain how erections work. 🤣
@cultsulth3 жыл бұрын
He is so funny. And he is not pushing for humour, that's what makes him a geniuly funny person.
@retard_activated2 жыл бұрын
Dr. Sapolsky. Researcher, lecturer, doctorate, author, advocate and comedian 😁 The reason so many grads actually retained and remembered his lectures. 😁😁😁
@vidalskyociosen3326 Жыл бұрын
Stand up comedian are nowhere near, these are intelligent jokes from a real highly educated professor.
@louisfaasen45113 жыл бұрын
like so many others, I absolutely love this man's lectures!(edit: I'm grateful to Stanford that they're willing to share these lectures with us, we listen to a top notch professor for free!)
@alwaysyouramanda2 жыл бұрын
KZbin used to be SOOO good. 🥲❤️ these remind me of the old days
@nassimsabba89224 жыл бұрын
Prof Sapolsky's sense of humor beats any comedian I have heard, professional or not. Science based humor goes deeper than most other forms, especially when the science is about human behavior, which includes comedians.
@retard_activated2 жыл бұрын
Puns hit different when they're being signed, lol 🤣🤣🤣
@liamfirth25132 жыл бұрын
The best jokes are always about human behaviour
@agilechloe4 жыл бұрын
He is one of the best lecturers I’ve ever seen.
@wizardfix3 жыл бұрын
One of the absolute best teachers I have encountered in years. What a mind!
@michaelsHigherPurposeIslam2 ай бұрын
I listen to his lectures when I cook and shower. I have autism and this makes me feel normal. Thank you for enhancing my life. I feel good when I hear this video.
@smroog6 жыл бұрын
What an amazing teacher !!!! Like some many I am fascinated by WHAT EVER he is teaching. in school I had only 2 teachers that got through my thick head, Miss Butts- 7th grade math, and Miss Sharp- 8th grade English. So few teachers that actually teach.
@justinjozokos16993 жыл бұрын
1:06:02 --- Sapolski talking about how we imagine the progression of time, as being left to right or east to west reminded me of a joke that another Standford professor made while delivering a lecture on relativity I'm having trouble finding it, but in one of Leonard Susskind's relativity lectures, he makes some joke along the lines of "English speakers think of time as going left to right, Hebrew speakers think of time as going right to left, traditional Chinese speakers perceive time as going top to bottom, and only physicists understand that time goes bottom to top."
@maryu83282 жыл бұрын
I don’t get the punchline but I like it
@josecarrenogarcia373411 жыл бұрын
It is an enormous pleasure to listen to this man. Even for me, into other discipline different from biology and relatives.
@sora-vn5tk Жыл бұрын
Sapolsky is the best lecturer ever
@احمدحامد-ك6د Жыл бұрын
أنا بعرف اني محكي عربي ..او عم اكتب اعربي او يمكن عمفكر بالعربي ... رغم اني استاذ انكلش ... و رغم انو انا لاشيئ بين العقول الي علقت بكل صدق... بس دايما اللغة الاولى هي القلب خاصة اذا بدك تقدم شكر من قلب صادق و دايما كنت قول في مطارح بحياة الانسان كانت ولا زالت عاجزة اللغة عن وصفها خاصة اوا بدك تشكر انسان من قلب صادق متل الدكتور هاد . مهاجر سوري مر من هنا و حب يكتب شي بصدق.
@bhupindertube Жыл бұрын
these lectures are pure *gold*
@michaeleilkamerer2098 Жыл бұрын
First time I have ever listened to this professor.What a remarkable man.He is undoubtedly a genius in his field.What a privilege to be able to listen to him.What is so obvious,is how humble he is.I admire him!!!! Michael Einkamerer from South Africa.
@gabtdw12 жыл бұрын
Watch the lectures right from the beginning. A lot of what he says is linking back to things he's said previously so that the course is a coherent whole rather than individual lectures. I've read two of his books, and his writing style is like his speaking style - many jumps and discontinuities, which lets him talk about more stuff in less space. It works well if you remember everything he's said previously, which means you remember the whole course rather than (as I said before) bits and pieces
@Centerstagerentals3 жыл бұрын
I wish there was more documentaries about him and his work also I wish that you'd be able to watch him perform his lectures and teachings and theories in a more comfortable atmosphere where hes more relaxed would be the probably the coolest thing in the whole world.
@retard_activated2 жыл бұрын
He seems pretty relaxed to me.... It bugs when he makes a great innuendo and it flies right over everyone's head, lol We do have the wonderful privilege in indulging his lectures at our leisure.... That is truly a gift to humanity. 💖 He IS the coolest, lol But you're right, if he's trying to find balance and perform multiple times a day just think about how much hilarious he could be! 😂
@vidalskyociosen3326 Жыл бұрын
Yes there is a great documentary called Zeitgeist Addendum and zeitgeist moving forward, it should be mandatory to all students.
@ElanMorin4 ай бұрын
he did an episode on Chris Williamson's podcast and it was a good watch.
@flambr3 жыл бұрын
Just today wrote my TSA essay (oxford psychology test) and I quoted this lecture four time, cheers Sapolsky!
@flambr3 ай бұрын
I aced the tsa btw, flopped my interviews and didn’t get an offer but still sapolsky rules
@mehyaraus3 жыл бұрын
I listen to these lectures to learn and to help me sleep. Thank you 🙏🏼
@URestURust4 жыл бұрын
This guy is brilliant. I'm about to binge on all his lectures.
@MG-ge5xq4 жыл бұрын
Around 1:10:00 Well, also our Germanic number system evolved from one, two, three, four, and a lot as an orginal way of counting and much later it rose to ten, which meant originally "full" or "complete", and higher numbers. We know that four must have been for a very long time period our highest number as eight means "double four" in very original proto Indo-European language. Explanation: hunters and gatherers did not need higher numbers. Just when human beings started to become animal breeders the numbers grew with the number of animals in their herds.
@eb332 жыл бұрын
its interesting that 4 is the bench mark there, as its generally agreed upon that 4 is about our working memory capacity. So maybe not only that they didn't need higher than 4, but it was the max amount of chunks we could easily work with.
@mengmar13 жыл бұрын
This is where the pros of social media and the ability for anyone to make video channels outweighs the cons. There are many cons and heaps of crap out there but coming across real intelligent content like this is just amazing. There are even other professors out there that just don't deliver it in as engaging a way as this guy. Or there are professors who are just brainwashed with ideological stances and being conduits for that. But, this is something very special indeed.
@Brendawallingbear2 жыл бұрын
Thank you, Dr. Sapolsky and Stanford Univ.! I really enjoyed this lecture.
@nunziomolonia77553 жыл бұрын
In fact for early bilinguals, languages grow scattered in the same area when they are similar, like French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese all piggybacking on the same grammatical structure, but if it is combinations of languages of different root or conception like Chinese and French or Finnish it creates different areas in Wernicke.
@elvismacpherson87008 жыл бұрын
goodness, where has he been all my life? he is amazing
@ashishghosh63396 жыл бұрын
Elvis Macpherson xxxbf
@Centerstagerentals3 жыл бұрын
Wow
@chrischristophe80813 жыл бұрын
Amazing in all his teachings.I truly love him.
@mkAYY8252 жыл бұрын
these lectures are the BEST thing on the internet !
@guystoker7468 Жыл бұрын
Hi. Phenomenal lecture as always. With regards to accents in deaf people, they do occur. My stepfather’s parents were both born deaf and used BSL, and when his mother was signing and vocalising the sound of the word she wanted to say at the same time as signing it, her voice produced those words in local, Northumbrian, accent, despite her never actually hearing the words.
@marcosvalle72182 жыл бұрын
Gee, I never thought one day I would laugh out loud in a neuro-biology-lingusitic class. This guy is a legend.
@kuriotsportokalis8 жыл бұрын
There also is a whistling language in some villages in Turkey. There must be videos online. It could be a 15,000 feet high equator situtation.
@TheSirEduard7 жыл бұрын
in the Canary island they whistle as well 'silbo gomero' from La Gomera island
@IlaughedIcried2 жыл бұрын
I was so close to getting a minor (or even double major) in Linguistics when I was in college, and this lecture has brought my obsession with neurolinguistics rushing back with fervor. Every lecture of Dr. Sapolsky's that I've watched has made me want to go back to school, which is not something I ever expected to feel!! I have no higher compliment to give him!
@retard_activated2 жыл бұрын
I hope you do Andi wish you well!!! 💖
@mitch10782 жыл бұрын
@@retard_activated llaughedcried is same person as Andi?
@sakouraboukrif23803 жыл бұрын
Professor am sitting in our empty amphitheatre here in med school imagining am attending your lecture ❤️❤️ hope I'll get to meet you one day
@ThePabit3 жыл бұрын
I'm just greatly thankful for his lectures for free, I didn't even have to enroll at Sanford for this. Cheers, I'm learning more there than in my University even though I'm form Management background. Thank you.
@maryu83282 жыл бұрын
No matter what true crime or zit videos I fall asleep to, I always wake up to this guy on auto play. I’ve never even looked for him but I always wake up going “huh, fascinating”
@spombg Жыл бұрын
I genuinely love that Dr Sapolsky gave that history lesson on lanuage in primates despite the fact not much knowledge was gained from it. Entertaining all the same
@CHEEZBRGR014 жыл бұрын
"Adults do not invent new languages" Tolkien: hold my English degree
@hungrytoaster99333 жыл бұрын
Elvish
@Radiatoron882 жыл бұрын
I take credit for inventing the word "slackadaisical." Meaning "lackadaisical" but also with the judgmental addition hinting at "slacker." A lackadaisical slacker, in short! Much like my lazy bum self, no doubt! Of course, "slackadaisical" isn't in the dictionary and is strictly my "invention." But I'm still fond of my little invention and use the word with much glee from the time to time with my "in-the-know" friends. Can we say "Bravo myself"? Yes. We can. And we just did! For that matter, I also came up with a Japanese word "Zurusha." (Accent on second "u.") The word "zurui" means "unfair" in Japanese. I wanted to be able to say "unfair person/people," so I added the Japanese suffix "sha," making it, in this case, a person. So "zurusha" means "unfair person/people." Not in any dictionary, and strictly of my own "manufacture." My wife and I use the word all the time with much silly glee. Not in reference to each other, happily. Can I say "Bravo myself" again? Yes, "by gum," I can. And did again!
@maryu83282 жыл бұрын
@@Radiatoron88 imma use slackadaisical
@Radiatoron882 жыл бұрын
@@maryu8328 I hope you enjoy it as much as I have! "You go girl!"
@mickylove769 ай бұрын
He based his languages on other languages.
@kevinbrown25894 жыл бұрын
Dr. Stanford is on the stampede...The stampeded knowledge level.Stay original Dr. Like you are
@FriskMeister3925 жыл бұрын
Has anyone else noticed that Sapolsky hardly ever, if ever, says ”uhm” when lecturing?
@annatrombley56075 жыл бұрын
He says, "ok", a lot, though.
@clawsoon4 жыл бұрын
I notice "and" a lot, where he leads directly into the next thought, and the entire lecture appears to be a single very long sentence.
@Sqlut4 жыл бұрын
@@annatrombley5607 it structurates what he says for his students. It's some kind of auditory dot.
@davecompton41744 жыл бұрын
Yep. His stream of consciousness is great. I doubt he attended Toastmasters.
@patrickbrawner24384 жыл бұрын
Yes, very few wasted words or sounds. I like listening to him a lot.
@sweetpeabrown26111 жыл бұрын
Re animals not lying. My sister's dog lies like a rug. When she comes over to my house where my dog's kibble is on the floor (being protected by my dog). Her dog goes to the window and barks... at nothing. Then when my dog goes to the window to see what's out there her dog runs over and eats her food. Eventually my dog figured it out and quit responding. Isn't that amazing!
@essami576210 жыл бұрын
Type this into google "dog cognition communication." You will be surprised at just how well dogs are able to communicate with humans.
@williammdsilva6 жыл бұрын
SweetPea Brown This! Wanted to say that on Netflix there is a documentary called the Hunt and the water buffalo will buck while running away from African painted dogs to say " I can go all day" seems like his example of the Dog has more to do with animals knowing more pheremonal information about. In that sense you couldn't lie to a dog and say u weren't scared when u were really, either.
@stormytrails6 жыл бұрын
Yeah for dogs without direction and help from humans. They are smart. If they don't do what we want it is OUR FAULT.
@whifflingtit92405 жыл бұрын
Chickens are basically my favorite thing on the planet, and most roosters lie to hens. They'll pick up a twig or a rock and tell the hen "Come here, I found food for you!", but when the hen comes over- just kidding, there was no food. I just want sum fuk. The hens wise up after a little while, but sometimes when they want to mate they'll pretend to be fooled by his ruse.
@iam1smiley15 жыл бұрын
I have a dog who distracts the other in the same way...he keeps falling for it 🤣
@ソトヤママリアテレサ4 жыл бұрын
Recurssion is a word in programming referring to to infinite repetition. Fycompa is an anti-epileptic with few side effects. but does cause increased fear but not anxiety, constipation. keppra is an anti-epileptic that causes kepprage and personality change that is permanent for side effects. American sign language and Japanese sign Language are very different. But they have poetry in most sign language that get's lost in translation.
@katherineperkinsschaller3573 жыл бұрын
I like the way he looks, the sound of his voice, his vocabulary, the fact that he moves, his jokes. I am a quiet person I don't speak, most of the time. I would like to be able to take off, like he does.
@cheapopinion3188 жыл бұрын
I deeply enjoy these lectures. I would enjoy them even more at higher resolution and most of all a pop-filter used during the recordings, because every time this genius speaks towards the camera there is resonant noise. The content is, however, priceless. Thumbs up and thank you.
@dirusbellator11 жыл бұрын
this guy is such a beast...like a walking detailed encyclopedia of intellectual cliff notes, yet the contest is so advanced
@CarpetEraser4 жыл бұрын
these lectures are legendary
@mxyzptlk...4 жыл бұрын
One of the smartest people I've ever listened to.
@JesseKanner7 жыл бұрын
The linguist's name is Lera Boroditsky. Here is one of her terrific lectures on language: longnow.org/seminars/02010/oct/26/how-language-shapes-thought/
@aidabach3 жыл бұрын
Thank you
@_phildog3 жыл бұрын
This is a big part of democratizing education - it shouldn't matter how much you pay for it, what matters is that everyone has equal opportunity to learn. The world needs more content like this.
@usedx115x8 жыл бұрын
As for the people who supposedly cant differentiate between 8 and 10 or other numbers, you have to consider that their mind can still conceptualize the number without being able to verbalize. For example, an individual could hold up 8 fingers and say "that many." The language has not limited the way they think. When they run out of fingers they could use sticks or rocks as counters to do the same for higher numbers.
@awhodothey7 жыл бұрын
Yeah numbers and counting aren't the same thing. Stanford has math videos on here that discuss that subject
@rowdeo89686 жыл бұрын
I am so grateful for professor s lectures!
@Penjolin10 жыл бұрын
Motherese doesn't appear in communities in Papua New Guinea and Samoa. They don't even talk directly to babies until they're toddlers. Since households in these communities contain many more family members, however, these children are still surrounded in language, and develop language at about the same rate. (Ochs and Schieffelin 1984)
@clydewatkins98913 жыл бұрын
If adults speak to those toddlers only in the same way as they speak to 30 year olds, then they do not use child directed speech
@gundropmusic6 жыл бұрын
I love Sapolsky and this lecture is great. A couple things he gets wrong though or doesn't go into all the nuances. 1) Broca's area isn't just for language productions and mouth movement. Its most prominent role is in word order or "syntax" and more specifically in syntactic memory. But neuroscientists have moved away from models of Broca's region for syntax, Wernicke's for semantics and towards more complex models that focus on different pathways around the perisylvian fissure (the fold that splits the brain right there). Angela Friederici is one of the best researchers in terms of language in the brain if you're curious to read more. 2) He dismisses B. F. Skinner's contributions to language research way too fast. The history of it's actually very interesting. Skinner wrote this book Verbal Behavior that adapted behaviorism to studying language. Chomsky wrote a review of it that not only decimated it but pretty much brought down behaviorism and started the "cognitive revolution." It's a brilliant take-down but the problem is that Chomsky basically just makes a lot of straw man arguments of ideas that Skinner never even held. Anyways, Chomsky's influence lasted for decades but there's been a resurgence of interest in Skinner's approach. In fact, the statistical methods that Sapolsky mentions where people learn language based on the probabilities of certain words being next to each other owes a lot to Skinner. Types of reinforcement that can be adapted from behaviorism can account for these probabilities. Statistical models are increasingly in favor and pushing out Chomsky's generative grammar. Especially since the computer models of language that have the most success (like Google translate) are based purely on statistical models. The types of learning behind these neural networks have close parallels to Skinner's operant conditioning. Anyways, Skinner's been laughed at in linguistic circles for decades but he's been gaining ground recently. It may go nowhere but he shouldn't be dismissed so fast.
@drewcassara6 жыл бұрын
Julian Bass-Krueger nah
@terencemtesla30198 жыл бұрын
"New languages are invented by kids and nobody a whole lot older than them learns the new language." (Mind blown)
@Notmehimorthem5 жыл бұрын
A useful distinction that is not mentioned, is the distinction between prescriptive and descriptive liguistics. Prescriptive linguistics is the "how to speak properly" taught in formal settings, descriptive linguistics (the area that most linguists study) is the study of how language is actually spoken. Descriptive lingustics includes the study of Patwas, slang, pidgins, and any other form of communication that exhibits syntax.
@Kram103212 жыл бұрын
These lectures are amazing but it's kind of ironic that the topics with most interest in them - depressions - are not covered by that particular year's lecture... I'd totally love to hear his version of this lecture from this year. Two years worth of new insights...
@lonelycubicle Жыл бұрын
Had a concussion by baseball and when the coach was driving me home, he asked me for directions, and I was surprised as everyone in the car when halfway home tried to say, “make a left here” and just wordless sounds came out. As far as can remember, understood what others were saying and knew what I wanted to say. Nice to now know what part of my brain was messed up. Had to just point for the rest of the ride home.
@hugegnarlyeyeball5 жыл бұрын
I've found this whole series fascinating but for pure entertainment value the whole story of Koko is a high point.
@salum6690 Жыл бұрын
Just for clarification: both the primary motor cortex and Broca's area are found in the frontal lobe with Broca's area just anterior to the premotor cortex. Just in case anyone else was thinking the same thing.
@essami576210 жыл бұрын
Wow. I would have gone to college if I thought it was going to be like this.
@hyacinth13205 жыл бұрын
College is way better than high school. In saying that, he is an exceptional professor.
@whifflingtit92405 жыл бұрын
It's not too late.
@time_g_space4 жыл бұрын
So relevant in these times now, 8 years later.
@miguelmejia46564 жыл бұрын
@Essa Mi what the fuck did you think it was?
@CarlosRamirez-ku7by4 жыл бұрын
I am picking up the pieces of my brain off the floor.
@ThisAutomaton6 жыл бұрын
Half way through the video "I hope he talks about Koko" ... Yes! He's talking about Koko, and debunks the whole thing, wow, did not expect that. Would love to hear his thoughts on Alex the african grey parrot.
@barbarafairbanks45783 жыл бұрын
Automaton Gheeze, he debunks Koko? 🤯 Ugh! I haven't watched this, just somehow landed here looking for his #6 lecture, having just finished #5 - but since I was here I dallied long enough to read a few comments before I left in search of #6. Oh, boy...yah, that's exactly where my mind would go...'Koko's a fraud??'😳 bbbut...what about Alex? Not Alex too?...please?? Not Alex😟 I am disappointed enough over his stance on 'free will', i.e., we have NONE - which I am (unhappily) beginning to understand...(and I'm only up to lecture #6! What ELSE in my little comforting/consoling belief bubble about humankind & the animal kingdom is he going to completely debunk?🤯🙄
@HkFinn833 жыл бұрын
Koko wasn’t a ‘fraud’ exactly, it was just that the researchers really didn’t know what they were doing and were not well taught enough in linguistics. Apparently one of the students they had ‘talking’ to Koko was deaf (ie he was actually fluent in American Sign Languge) and he immediately knew that Koko wasn’t doing anything remotely close to language. In fact she wasn’t even learning the signs at a Pavlovian level. It was just body language mirroring. I don’t know about this parrot but if anybody is claiming today that an animal is learning language, that probably is flat out fraud. Nobody could think an animal can learn language any more.
@sandhyanair546412 жыл бұрын
Great work ! i'm so thankful for having got a chance to watch this online !!!!!!!!!!!!! :)
@roobookaroo2 жыл бұрын
Bravissima! to Abigail Nichols for showing the way. An OUTLINE OF CONTENTS should figure at the top of each lecture, as Abigail did for this Lecture #23. Language. Such an outline inserted in the introduction in SHOW MORE would immeasurably add to the use of each lecture. It would considerably facilitate the search and locating of a desired segment in all those 25-27 lectures. It is highly surprising that the good professor SAPOLSKY never thought of it before. It would be pretty easy for him to instruct some of his graduate student-assistant to add such OUTLINE OF CONTENTS to each lecture. We can only hope he will agree with this suggestion, hear our message and act on it ASAP. It is not too late. The whole world is using this famous set of lectures as their introduction to the wonders of neurobiology and the mysteries of behavior. Everybody would benefit from this new feature, so obviously needed and until now so incomprehensibly neglected. ROO BOOKAROO, Nov. 2, 2022
@bntagkas7 жыл бұрын
combining this course while gaming is perhaps the best entertainment ive had in many years im going to try all the interesting ones from stanford and then move to mit
@madisnomme3 жыл бұрын
Good for you - pretending to educate yourself while pretending to play a game. Do one thing, do it properly. Then do the next thing
@bntagkas3 жыл бұрын
@@madisnomme i guess you are not then pretending to be alive while pretending to write smart comments on youtube you may have been right partially that mutlitasking is questionable, but since i loved sapolsky so much i actually watched his classes about 10 times (while gaming), replacing the usual music for his class, and now a couple years later i find that my internal ai has learned about 80% of the facts and 90-95% of the overarching points and lessons, and i had lots of fun while doing it, so i think it was worth it.
@madisnomme3 жыл бұрын
@@bntagkas you see. Instead of sitting down, focusing, maybe taking some notes and learning, you do it over and over, getting sporadic and vague bits here and there. Take responsibility. Commit. Suffer. Do I want to game the best? Do I want to learn the best? Stop the deceiving yourself. Your life and experiences will be so much more gratifying and authentic. Try it!
@bntagkas3 жыл бұрын
@@madisnomme i dont understand what you dont understand. i suffer every day i dont need to suffer more. the way i did it i maximized the amount of fun i had and ended up learning as good as i was ever going to learn. it took more time, but i had that time. on top not only did i learn, as a hobby, but i maximized my fun while doing it. i dont understand what you dont understand. suffering is something to be avoided or reduced, its not a virtue.
@jodiesjourney90948 ай бұрын
14:00, love what he said about the deaf university Gallaudet .. my brother is deaf and attended, it was amazing to see the unity , fluidity and growth of the culture without being hindered by hearing people in the normal world 😂 Growing up with a deaf brother has shown me exactly what this professor is teaching. Language is t just verbal/audible , it’s largely body language and facial expression. It was difficult for me as a hearing person raised with ASL to assimilate into regular western society due to the nature of hearing people being quite non-expressive in general. I perceived the world as a very unfriendly place coming out of an exuberant deaf culture , which was then taxing to my mental health. It’s been my life’s journey to learn the differences and affects of language barriers. Most notably my experience drove me to insanity trying to balance communicating to my deaf brother simultaneously translating to the world around me whilst developing in my teen years. I was constantly aware of how loud we are as a population, and if we used body language correctly we would be a more peaceable species. I became quite isolated in my adolescent due to overwhelm in the school system and in various jobs. But this lecture reminded me of the impact this situation has had on my life enough to give myself a pat on the back for even attempting to face such an unfriendly seeming world . Now I understand Perception forms your reality .
@jodiesjourney90948 ай бұрын
The story in the bible about the Tower of Babel.. how God confused human language to humble them, is my favourite because I have seen it so evidently in contrast to the deaf community versus hearing.
@jodiesjourney90948 ай бұрын
It is true that if humans could communicate effectively cross culturally, we would be too clever for our own good. There is a humility and beauty in language barrier, which reveals to humanity our need for each other.
@jodiesjourney90948 ай бұрын
ASL is the best language and communication style, I believe, for trust building and emotional revelation.
@jodiesjourney90948 ай бұрын
Another issue I struggled with while transitioning from ASL in my nuclear family structure to belonging in larger society is that I was perceived as arrogant or aloof because I would stare at before prior to the conversation in order to read their body language - a custom of the deaf community . Also I was perceived as rude because I would overuse body language such as pointing or facial expressions that could be translated as condescending to a hearing person. In our culture its typical to overuse facial expression if we think the person we’re speaking with is unintelligent- so as to overcompensate for a lack of verbal understanding. I now realize that this is why at the age of 27 having had 25 various jobs not being able to hold one down, and feeling burnt out and exhausted is largely due to this interpersonal problem. Very sad to think at the time, I didn’t consider mentioning I had a deaf brother or that I was raised with ASL, as this would help others to understand my mannerisms.
@misterdemocracy33353 жыл бұрын
This is some of the best educational content I’ve seen since I discovered Noam Chomsky. Thanks!
@ΝίκοςΜωρογιωργας2 жыл бұрын
I speak English and Greek and prefer the versatility of Greek language by far. Thank you for your wonderful lectures that we are able to listen to .
@mmhetz16 жыл бұрын
Thank you for enlightening us. Seriously.
@mamawright1562 жыл бұрын
I might be 11 years late but am loving chilling to these
@AleksyGrabovski11 жыл бұрын
Very enlightenment lecture! I should consider watching the whole course.
@xeroterragoth18662 жыл бұрын
A gerund is any verb that is used in noun form. Example: "The amount of time I spend on this question answering thing is trivial" in this case the word "answering" is a gerund since it is used as a noun (interestingly enough this makes the word question behave as an adjective rather than a noun - called an "attributive noun"). I love these lectures because I'm the type that obsessively absorbs information. I get a bunch of information from the lecture, and supplement it by pausing the video and researching terms and studies he references in passing to reinforce the concepts. All this just to keep the gremlins in my head quiet so I can focus at work (I'm a programmer lol).
@cherrymarriedindiscord14042 жыл бұрын
Good luck with mr. Grimlin, tell him hi for me 😂😂😂
@PRwebPremium12 жыл бұрын
Pro. Saplosky is a great tutor!
@xiaoyangzhou95383 ай бұрын
i took sign language class, i forgot most of them, but it's wrong to say it has nothing to do with lips and tongue. in fact, the mouth movement is far more essential than the hand movement. you should consider the hands and the facial expression as merely something to help tell apart similar mouth movements. you can't communicate with your hands moving but the mouth shut because so many words share the same hand movements whereas you can with your hands down but mouth moving.
@trefod12 жыл бұрын
I get the impression from this guy that you want to pay attention when Noam Chomsky has something to say.
@CarpetEraser4 жыл бұрын
yes
@mickbowe42524 жыл бұрын
Chomps the penis truth be told.
@sicarii5454 жыл бұрын
Nim Chimpsky agrees
@robertmassucci13 жыл бұрын
saw chomsky speak at Stonybrook University
@davissae3 жыл бұрын
Except for anything related to politics
@miguelangeljaimescruz53053 жыл бұрын
from mex. thanks for all this knowledge coach abaut the brain and theirs more funtions in kids and babys and persons too in animals really make me feel so outgoing this environment thanks editors
@merthsoft4 жыл бұрын
Hello, thanks for uploading and captioning such great lectures! Having these available and accessible is an amazing resource. Small caption correction: At 30:20 the captions read "will produce a Chinese Broca's aphasia, or an alexia," however, this should be "will produce a Chinese Broca's aphasia, or analexia,". Thanks again!
@merthsoft4 жыл бұрын
Additionally, at 1:08:14 it reads: "So these two trials-- the first is called the Paraha. And the other is called the Murdruku, I believe" should be "So these two tribes-- the first is called the Pirahã. And the other is called the Munduruku, I believe." These tribe names occur again at 1:08:30 and 1:08:41. Thanks
@somedragontoslay25794 жыл бұрын
4:40. What he calls generativity is better called discreet productivity, and it's not about words, words can also be infinite. It's about category of sounds. English only has a few sounds ~36 IIRC, but you can make infinite words and infinite sentences. About embedded clauses, it's contentious whether it's universal, but even then, it's not necessary to argue for universals.
@biltrite10783 жыл бұрын
Why did they not put ALL of his lectures up here, there are at least four more that I`m unable to find on KZbin . Please put all of them up for all of us so we may learn.
@saketgawali19813 жыл бұрын
I was looking for this, please share the topics so that I can study them myself. One is on depression as he mentioned and do you know about two being not taped?
@onghuttau3 жыл бұрын
@@saketgawali1981 Somewhere I heard him say, he would skip the one about depression, then go to Religion and finally to (other?) "Mental disorders" and: "i don't want those two being taped" ...
@saketgawali19813 жыл бұрын
@@onghuttau the missing lecture being mental disorders? Thank you
@badcodehash49712 жыл бұрын
this guy is my childhood hero. Wouldn't want it to be any other way.
@dm_grant4 жыл бұрын
When he discusses William's Syndrome, and explains IQs around 70, I immediately think of TV writers.
@andreybogoslowsky Жыл бұрын
Give yourself 1month to forget about drawings you made today. And you look at them pretending to be a stranger. Refreshing self examination is the best tool for self discovery. Knowing yourself is the best treasure. Let’s go established presumptions. Be open to all solutions.
@bebetter54733 жыл бұрын
I am going to show my kids these lectures instead of sending them to school.
@patrickkavanagh572 жыл бұрын
Just bought "Behave" Looking forward to reading it. Love it so far.
@brianconn64347 жыл бұрын
Despite this being a teacher-centered lecture, it was really fun to listen to, and quite educational. Correct me if I'm wrong though but I thought communicative aspects of language that were not related to speaking were called paralinguistics and prosody had to do with verbal/oral contours like pitch, rhythm and pausing and such.
@lanslater4 жыл бұрын
Recursive~ relating to or involving the repeated application of a rule, definition, or procedure to successive results. If you were needing it as I just was - some breakdown of recursive
@VanWarren13 жыл бұрын
I feel like I'm watching a new Darwin. I can count on one hand the number of lecturers who are so engaging!
@katerinafilippova23193 жыл бұрын
who are the others?
@toaojackson74473 жыл бұрын
@@katerinafilippova2319 John McWhorter and Bob Briar are both clearly in love with their respective fields and have hours and hours of lecture material online. Jordan Peterson's Maps of Meaning lectures are also highly engaging. Aronra has a series of videos going through our phylogenetic tree along with so many other videos that he is essentially the largest resource on mordern cladistics.
@simonboulton83474 жыл бұрын
Human contact commits to the voice... when we speak we connect and it’s like contact. Everyone’s together.
@jimmysindia9 жыл бұрын
sir ,,, thank you for this words, we learn something too with your efforts....
@thequeenundisputed Жыл бұрын
Man, that ape speech arc of this lecture was a rollercoaster! I was really rooting for them being capable of actual language in the end, but it sounds like that's most likely not the case. I'm gonna have to dive into this more to see what eventually became of that bonobo chimp Kanzi and the research surrounding their speech.
@CreationTribe11 жыл бұрын
awe man, that lecture sounded awesome! Biology of Religion ...why no not tape sir?!
@ThePoisonBiscuit10 жыл бұрын
You can find an older version of it on here somewhere.
@latinaalma19474 жыл бұрын
@Wiley Combs Thank you for that link so much Sapolsy on Biology Psych of Religion...saved it look forward to it
@latinaalma19474 жыл бұрын
Something I have really noticed in a close Spanish speaking friend..I am intermediate Spanish speaker living in a Spanish speaking country...In Spanish she speaks passionately..lots of infection of high notes and low notes in her speech...could by a recipe take the tomatoes level them, sautee them comes out like a passionant love loem... in English perfect no accent and her range is all pure business...zero emotion or passion as if she is a recptioanst in a law office...very weird when she speaks alternately in one language then the lther... almost like there are two personalities there...now I know perfectly normal.
@gbrazzers56324 жыл бұрын
@@latinaalma1947 From personal experience I have to agree. sometimes I feel like a kid when speaking Chinese because my vocab is so limited, lol.
@davidpope51613 жыл бұрын
Prosody is the timing integrated into the syllables of speech, which shapes the meaning behind our words. These words are generally produced by the left hemisphere's motor system through sequences of muscle movements necessary for human speech. Prosody is separated from the visual array of muscle movements, and the right hemisphere re-integrates prosody into the speech in real-time. The end result is a pattern of speech with a pattern of light (sounds) mixed with a pattern of darkness (prosody). I have a book about it coming out soon. "6-6-6 The Boundary Between Light & Darkness". The motor system of our frontal cortex is as complex as the universe itself.
@retard_activated2 жыл бұрын
I would love to read it. It's such an interesting topic and it really enhances (perhaps too much if you're like me with some special challenges) how you read and understand others. :)
@briseboy8 жыл бұрын
Cetaceans (some odontoceti so far) are able to transmit precise, perhaps symbolic representational information about performing complex skills and sequences. Since sound imaging differs from abstraction in important ways, and since emotional and arousal states cannot be hidden from their detection, we observe yet other species whose brains are not evolved to coevolve around deception, for which a certain symbolic verbal communicator's brain is designed. Numerous cetacean species have brains 5x human, with the now-surprising Physeter macrocephalus (Moby Dick, most of whom were genocidally slaughtered for two centuries, for lamp and machine oil) having the world's largest at 9x human, with new evidence of observational capacity and some kind of descriptive communication - teaching or learning skills through sonic observation and/or expression in water far too murky for visual learning. Neocortex, allocortex, and neuronal density differs in various brains; Since some modulation has been found through certain glial cells, the issue is still quite opaque and unknown to human research. Alliance Francaise limits their language to a smaller total vocabulary. Very top-down. Most other languages accept new words, especially scientific. Ravens and many other animals, like the human animal, can hold 7 objects in mind - above that counting is necessary. Oddly, Clark's Nutcracker remember some 3,000 locations. They perhaps use up space for spatial memory that downslope birds use for more social skills. Location and orientation skills are an ethological subject worthy of extensive discussion, having to do with cognitive choice. Dr. Irene Pepperberg at Purdue and other U's later, worked with a parrot, discovering an intentional and highly social communication capacity, able to vocalize pronouns and emotional responses in English. Other birds pass that self-recognition test in mirrors, pecking or grooming at dabbed-on objects - once used as an attempt to prove that humans and a few primates were the only animals with "consciousness." I remember prosody as being emphasis, rhythm, and tone variation. Intentionality: A young adolescent Wolf who cannot understand human nuance, would become excited as I finally responded to a new intentional signal. A teacher, indeed! Since wolves wag tails in highly specific ways only in concordance with intent (unlike the very neotenous domestic canid), dominant and assertive wolves raise and flag their tails (yes, they mistake the obligate curled-up husky, UNTIL they realize that it is not offensively intended. They learn nearly immediately that gesture of domestics does not share their wild species' meaning). Tail wags of different speeds, styles, and heights have different distinct meaning to observers who share understanding of the signal. Hormonal signaling is highly important. Wolves have a great number of exocrine glands- even we retain differentially-smelling hand and feet exudations. A little evidence of hormonal reception as communicationevoking intentinoality: I've seen 2-day old passage of familiar canids immediately excite and promote social signaling and inquisitive tracking - different by far from prey-signaling and mere asocial curiosity; also seeing tracks washed away by waves evoke excited acceleration, gazing toward likely direction, pursuit - all with momentary stares toward companions to signal intent. Meanwhile the record for developmentally-arrested dog word understanding exceeds at least 400; while different breeds have lost some social attention for wolf language - gestural, postural, ears, facial, contextual. Familiaris retain recognition of some C. lupus vocalizations, but are mired in excessive usage. Wolves meanwhile, extremely quickly use the trope we call Theory of Mind in increasingly efficient glance/context intentional signaling. With long association in free and wild conditions, the Wolf would respond to my teasing pretension to not- or mis- understand with variable nips (hard! if it was urgent or his mood was short), up to the hilarious grasp of an entire thigh with a just-firm-enough alligator grip, dragging me toward the intended goal or action). Just as human babies learn meaningful sounds from adult interaction, so do wolf pups learn significance through resting in direct physical contact with elders. Species with separately mobile ears, from ungulates to social canids, appear to have the ability to monitor aurally in two channels. One ear attending to a bonded one, the other monitoring the environment, suggesting that differential stimulation of one side of the brain may very likely be occurring. Silent communication or signaling is important to most mammals. In addition to ASL, ESL, etc. another syntactic human language is Plains Indian sign, which is taught while speaking to youth and tale-telling, the best teaching method I've seen(!)
@NathanOkun2 жыл бұрын
That there are specific brain areas for SPEAKING a language that are INDEPENDENT of the brain areas for UNDERSTANDING THE SAME LANGUAGE SPOKEN BY OTHERS is a unique (Thank God!) event that happened to me just after I graduated from high school. My telephone rang and I answered it. A woman's voice said something to me in English. I KNEW it was English, but I COULD NOT UNDERSTAND A SINGLE WORD, as if it were in Greek or some other non-English language! I asked the woman to repeat what she said and I COULD UNDERSTAND MYSELF SPEAKING IN ENGLISH. She repeated her statement and I again got the same result. This, as you might imagine, greatly disturbed me, so I again asked here to repeat what she had said twice and again I could understand myself speaking English with no problem. This time I CONCENTRATED on what she was saying (hard to explain how, now) and suddenly it was like a switch being thrown and I could understand her perfectly and she had indeed said the same thing three times, but now I could understand every word. I did not like what she said and hung up, but this event has bothered me since that time. At the time I had no idea that the brain has two interlocked, but separate, portions for hearing and speaking a language, but something selectively switched off one of them (the hearing part) in my head without touching the speaking part at all. Never happened again, but it still worries me as to what happened here...
@ncedwards12345 жыл бұрын
I was expecting something about esperanto, there was a reference to it in an earlier lecture.