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  • An ant is pretty stupid.

  • It doesn't have much of a brain, no will, no plan,

  • and yet, many ants together are smart.

  • An ant colony can construct complex structures.

  • Some colonies keep farms of fungi, others take care of cattle. They can wage war or defend themselves.

  • How is this possible?

  • How can a bunch of stupid things do smart things together?

  • This phenomenon is called emergence,

  • and it's one of the most fascinating and mysterious features of our universe.

  • In a nutshell, it describes small things forming bigger things that have different properties than the sum of their parts.

  • Emergence is complexity arising from simplicity, and emergence is everywhere.

  • [Intro]

  • Water has vastly different properties to the molecules that make it up, like the concept of wetness.

  • Take wet fabric, If you zoom in far enough, there is no wetness.

  • There are just molecules sitting in the spaces between the atoms of the cloth.

  • Wetness is an emerging property of water.

  • Something new only created by a lot of individual interactions between water molecules.

  • And this is sort of it. Many things interact under a certain set of rules, creating something above and beyond themselves.

  • It turns out that more is different.

  • This different property is itself a new thing, and that new thing can couple with other new things to repeat the process.

  • You can imagine this as layers stacked upon each other every, layer made from more complex parts.

  • Atoms form molecules.

  • Molecules form proteins.

  • Proteins make up cells.

  • Cells make up organs.

  • Organs form individuals.

  • Individuals form societies.

  • But how can something be more than the sum of its parts?

  • How do ants form the sort of cloudy entity that is a colony? By following a ruleset that produces order through chaos.

  • For example, let's look at how an ant colony distributes jobs.

  • Let's assume that a colony shall have 25% workers, 25% caretakers,

  • 25% soldiers and 25% gatherers.

  • Ants communicate their current job via chemicals. For example, the worker ant constantly secretes chemicals that say: "I'm a worker".

  • When ants meet other ants, they smell each other to gather information, telling each other their job and what they're doing.

  • Both keep track of who they met in the past.

  • Now, imagine an anteater kills most of the gatherers. If this isn't fixed quickly, the colony will starve.

  • Many worker ants need to switch jobs, but how do you tell this to thousands of them?

  • Simple. You don't.

  • Our worker ant will still meet and smell other ants, but it will encounter almost no gatherers at all.

  • It counts too few gatherers, until it reaches a critical point, and then it changes its job.

  • The worker becomes a gatherer. Other ants will do the same, until after a while there are enough gatherers again.

  • The balance is restored all by itself.

  • The actions and interactions of an individual are random. You can't plan which ant will encounter which other ant.

  • But the simple set of rules is so elegant that a colony's many operations emerge as a consequence.

  • On an even more fundamental level, hundreds of millions of complicated molecules interact to maintain a robust and amazing structure.

  • A being with vastly different properties than the sum of its dead parts emerges.

  • The smallest unit of life: a cell.

  • We still don't have a clear definition of what living things are, we just know they emerge from things that are not alive.

  • Cells combine and cooperate. They specialize and respond to one another,

  • and over time, we develop into complex organisms with remarkable capacities.

  • Your arms and legs and heart are an incredibly complex and complicated system made of trillions of individual stupid things...

  • ...and yet we breathe, digest and watch YouTube videos.

  • How do your cells know what to do?

  • Think of the pacemaker cells in your heart.

  • Billions of them need to send out an impulse just at the right moment to collectively create a heartbeat.

  • Our cells exchange chemical information with their neighbor cells to see what they're up to, and then decide what to do.

  • If it's among a lot of cells that are working on the same task, it will start working on that task as well, and sync up with them.

  • There is no master mind giving commands. Just single units communicating with their neighbors, and acting according to the feedback they get.

  • What about our most important part? What is the thing that asks these kinds of questions?

  • Is our consciousness then an emergent property of the cells in our brain?

  • This question is too big and important, it deserves a video of its own.

  • Some things that emerge are hard to define. You can't touch an ant colony, only its parts.

  • It has neither brain nor face, nor body.

  • And yet the colony interacts with the world.

  • Just like colonies emerge from ants, things emerge from humans, like Nations.

  • What actually is a nation, is it its population?

  • Is it its institutions, its symbols like its flag, colours or anthems?

  • The physical things it makes like cities, the territory it occupies?

  • All of these things are fluid.

  • Populations change and are replaced.

  • Institutions come and go, cities can be constructed and abandoned.

  • Borders have changed all the time for most of history, and symbols get replaced by new symbols.

  • A nation has no face, no brain, no body.

  • Are nations not real, then? Of course they are, just like ant colonies, nations interact with the world.

  • They can change landscapes, wage wars, grow or decline, and they can stop existing.

  • But they only exist because of a lot of humans interacting with each other.

  • But not just nations. All the complex structures that surround us emerge from us.

  • Even if we don't intend to, we are constantly creating.

  • Communities, companies, cities, societies.

  • All of these things are entities that have fundamentally different properties and abilities than the pretty stupid apes they emerged from.

  • We don't know why any of this happens.

  • We just observe it, and it seems to be a fundamental property of our universe.

  • It may be the most beautiful and wonderous property of our universe.

  • [Outro]

An ant is pretty stupid.

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