Why humans run the world Yuval Noah Harari

Seventy-thousand years ago, our ancestors
were insignificant animals.

The most important thing to know
about prehistoric humans

is that they were unimportant.

Their impact on the world was not
much greater than that of jellyfish

or fireflies or woodpeckers.

Today, in contrast,
we control this planet.

And the question is:

How did we come from there to here?

How did we turn ourselves
from insignificant apes,

minding their own business
in a corner of Africa,

into the rulers of planet Earth?

Usually, we look for the difference
between us and all the other animals

on the individual level.

We want to believe – I want to believe –

that there is something special about me,

about my body, about my brain,

that makes me so superior
to a dog or a pig, or a chimpanzee.

But the truth is that,
on the individual level,

I’m embarrassingly similar
to a chimpanzee.

And if you take me and a chimpanzee
and put us together on some lonely island,

and we had to struggle for survival
to see who survives better,

I would definitely place my bet
on the chimpanzee, not on myself.

And this is not something
wrong with me personally.

I guess if they took almost any one
of you, and placed you alone

with a chimpanzee on some island,

the chimpanzee would do much better.

The real difference between humans
and all other animals

is not on the individual level;

it’s on the collective level.

Humans control the planet
because they are the only animals

that can cooperate both flexibly
and in very large numbers.

Now, there are other animals –

like the social insects,
the bees, the ants –

that can cooperate in large numbers,
but they don’t do so flexibly.

Their cooperation is very rigid.

There is basically just one way
in which a beehive can function.

And if there’s a new opportunity
or a new danger,

the bees cannot reinvent
the social system overnight.

They cannot, for example,
execute the queen

and establish a republic of bees,

or a communist dictatorship
of worker bees.

Other animals, like the social mammals –

the wolves, the elephants,
the dolphins, the chimpanzees –

they can cooperate much more flexibly,

but they do so only in small numbers,

because cooperation among chimpanzees

is based on intimate knowledge,
one of the other.

I’m a chimpanzee and you’re a chimpanzee,

and I want to cooperate with you.

I need to know you personally.

What kind of chimpanzee are you?

Are you a nice chimpanzee?

Are you an evil chimpanzee?

Are you trustworthy?

If I don’t know you, how can I
cooperate with you?

The only animal that can combine
the two abilities together

and cooperate both flexibly
and still do so in very large numbers

is us, Homo sapiens.

One versus one, or even 10 versus 10,

chimpanzees might be better than us.

But, if you pit 1,000 humans
against 1,000 chimpanzees,

the humans will win easily,
for the simple reason

that a thousand chimpanzees
cannot cooperate at all.

And if you now try to cram
100,000 chimpanzees

into Oxford Street,
or into Wembley Stadium,

or Tienanmen Square or the Vatican,

you will get chaos, complete chaos.

Just imagine Wembley Stadium
with 100,000 chimpanzees.

Complete madness.

In contrast, humans normally
gather there in tens of thousands,

and what we get is not chaos, usually.

What we get is extremely sophisticated
and effective networks of cooperation.

All the huge achievements
of humankind throughout history,

whether it’s building the pyramids
or flying to the moon,

have been based not
on individual abilities,

but on this ability to cooperate
flexibly in large numbers.

Think even about this very talk
that I’m giving now:

I’m standing here in front of an audience
of about 300 or 400 people,

most of you are complete strangers to me.

Similarly, I don’t really know
all the people who have organized

and worked on this event.

I don’t know the pilot
and the crew members of the plane

that brought me over here,
yesterday, to London.

I don’t know the people
who invented and manufactured

this microphone and these cameras,
which are recording what I’m saying.

I don’t know the people
who wrote all the books and articles

that I read in preparation for this talk.

And I certainly don’t know all the people

who might be watching this talk
over the Internet,

somewhere in Buenos Aires or in New Delhi.

Nevertheless, even though
we don’t know each other,

we can work together to create
this global exchange of ideas.

This is something chimpanzees cannot do.

They communicate, of course,

but you will never catch a chimpanzee
traveling to some distant chimpanzee band

to give them a talk about bananas
or about elephants,

or anything else that might
interest chimpanzees.

Now cooperation is, of course,
not always nice;

all the horrible things humans
have been doing throughout history –

and we have been doing
some very horrible things –

all those things are also based
on large-scale cooperation.

Prisons are a system of cooperation;

slaughterhouses are a system
of cooperation;

concentration camps
are a system of cooperation.

Chimpanzees don’t have slaughterhouses
and prisons and concentration camps.

Now suppose I’ve managed
to convince you perhaps that yes,

we control the world because we can
cooperate flexibly in large numbers.

The next question that immediately arises

in the mind of an inquisitive listener is:

How, exactly, do we do it?

What enables us alone, of all the animals,
to cooperate in such a way?

The answer is our imagination.

We can cooperate flexibly
with countless numbers of strangers,

because we alone, of all
the animals on the planet,

can create and believe fictions,
fictional stories.

And as long as everybody believes
in the same fiction,

everybody obeys and follows
the same rules,

the same norms, the same values.

All other animals use
their communication system

only to describe reality.

A chimpanzee may say, “Look!
There’s a lion, let’s run away!”

Or, “Look! There’s a banana tree
over there! Let’s go and get bananas!”

Humans, in contrast, use their language
not merely to describe reality,

but also to create new realities,
fictional realities.

A human can say, “Look,
there is a god above the clouds!

And if you don’t do what I tell you to do,

when you die, God will punish you
and send you to hell.”

And if you all believe this story
that I’ve invented,

then you will follow the same
norms and laws and values,

and you can cooperate.

This is something only humans can do.

You can never convince a chimpanzee
to give you a banana

by promising him, “… after you die,
you’ll go to chimpanzee heaven …”

(Laughter)

“… and you’ll receive lots and lots
of bananas for your good deeds.

So now give me this banana.”

No chimpanzee will ever
believe such a story.

Only humans believe such stories,

which is why we control the world,

whereas the chimpanzees are locked up
in zoos and research laboratories.

Now you may find it acceptable that yes,

in the religious field, humans cooperate
by believing in the same fictions.

Millions of people come together
to build a cathedral or a mosque

or fight in a crusade or a jihad, because
they all believe in the same stories

about God and heaven and hell.

But what I want to emphasize
is that exactly the same mechanism

underlies all other forms
of mass-scale human cooperation,

not only in the religious field.

Take, for example, the legal field.

Most legal systems today in the world
are based on a belief in human rights.

But what are human rights?

Human rights, just like God and heaven,
are just a story that we’ve invented.

They are not an objective reality;

they are not some biological effect
about homo sapiens.

Take a human being,
cut him open, look inside,

you will find the heart, the kidneys,
neurons, hormones, DNA,

but you won’t find any rights.

The only place you find rights
are in the stories

that we have invented and spread around
over the last few centuries.

They may be very positive stories,
very good stories,

but they’re still just fictional stories
that we’ve invented.

The same is true of the political field.

The most important factors
in modern politics are states and nations.

But what are states and nations?

They are not an objective reality.

A mountain is an objective reality.

You can see it, you can touch it,
you can even smell it.

But a nation or a state,

like Israel or Iran or France or Germany,

this is just a story that we’ve invented

and became extremely attached to.

The same is true of the economic field.

The most important actors today
in the global economy

are companies and corporations.

Many of you today, perhaps, work
for a corporation,

like Google or Toyota or McDonald’s.

What exactly are these things?

They are what lawyers call legal fictions.

They are stories invented and maintained

by the powerful wizards we call lawyers.

(Laughter)

And what do corporations do all day?

Mostly, they try to make money.

Yet, what is money?

Again, money is not an objective reality;
it has no objective value.

Take this green piece
of paper, the dollar bill.

Look at it – it has no value.

You cannot eat it, you cannot drink it,

you cannot wear it.

But then came along
these master storytellers –

the big bankers,

the finance ministers,

the prime ministers –

and they tell us a very convincing story:

“Look, you see this green piece of paper?

It is actually worth 10 bananas.”

And if I believe it, and you believe it,

and everybody believes it,

it actually works.

I can take this worthless piece of paper,

go to the supermarket,

give it to a complete stranger
whom I’ve never met before,

and get, in exchange, real bananas
which I can actually eat.

This is something amazing.

You could never do it with chimpanzees.

Chimpanzees trade, of course:

“Yes, you give me a coconut,
I’ll give you a banana.”

That can work.

But, you give me
a worthless piece of paper

and you except me to give you a banana?

No way!

What do you think I am, a human?

(Laughter)

Money, in fact, is
the most successful story

ever invented and told by humans,

because it is the only story
everybody believes.

Not everybody believes in God,

not everybody believes in human rights,

not everybody believes in nationalism,

but everybody believes in money,
and in the dollar bill.

Take, even, Osama Bin Laden.

He hated American politics
and American religion

and American culture,

but he had no objection
to American dollars.

He was quite fond of them, actually.

(Laughter)

To conclude, then:

We humans control the world
because we live in a dual reality.

All other animals live
in an objective reality.

Their reality consists
of objective entities,

like rivers and trees
and lions and elephants.

We humans, we also live
in an objective reality.

In our world, too, there are rivers
and trees and lions and elephants.

But over the centuries,

we have constructed on top
of this objective reality

a second layer of fictional reality,

a reality made of fictional entities,

like nations, like gods,
like money, like corporations.

And what is amazing is that
as history unfolded,

this fictional reality became
more and more powerful

so that today, the most powerful
forces in the world

are these fictional entities.

Today, the very survival of rivers
and trees and lions and elephants

depends on the decisions and wishes
of fictional entities,

like the United States, like Google,
like the World Bank –

entities that exist only
in our own imagination.

Thank you.

(Applause)

Bruno Giussani: Yuval, you have
a new book out.

After Sapiens, you wrote another one,

and it’s out in Hebrew, but not
yet translated into …

Yuval Noah Harari: I’m working on
the translation as we speak.

BG: In the book, if I
understand it correctly,

you argue that the amazing breakthroughs
that we are experiencing right now

not only will potentially
make our lives better,

but they will create – and I quote you –

“… new classes and new class struggles,
just as the industrial revolution did.”

Can you elaborate for us?

YNH: Yes. In the industrial revolution,

we saw the creation of a new class
of the urban proletariat.

And much of the political and social
history of the last 200 years involved

what to do with this class,
and the new problems and opportunities.

Now, we see the creation of a new
massive class of useless people.

(Laughter)

As computers become better and better
in more and more fields,

there is a distinct possibility that
computers will out-perform us

in most tasks and will make
humans redundant.

And then the big political
and economic question

of the 21st century will be,

“What do we need humans for?”,

or at least, “What do we need
so many humans for?”

BG: Do you have an answer in the book?

YNH: At present, the best guess
we have is to keep them happy

with drugs and computer games …

(Laughter)

but this doesn’t sound
like a very appealing future.

BG: Ok, so you’re basically saying
in the book and now,

that for all the discussion
about the growing evidence

of significant economic inequality,
we are just kind of at the beginning

of the process?

YNH: Again, it’s not a prophecy;

it’s seeing all kinds
of possibilities before us.

One possibility is this creation
of a new massive class of useless people.

Another possibility is
the division of humankind

into different biological castes,

with the rich being upgraded
into virtual gods,

and the poor being degraded
to this level of useless people.

BG: I feel there is another TED talk
coming up in a year or two.

Thank you, Yuval, for making the trip.

YNH: Thanks!

(Applause)

七万年前,我们的祖先
是微不足道的动物。

关于史前人类

,最重要的一点是他们并不重要。

它们对世界的影响并不
比水母

、萤火虫或啄木鸟大多少。

相比之下,今天,
我们控制着这个星球。

问题是:

我们是如何从那里来到这里的?

我们是如何把自己从在非洲的一个角落里做自己的事
的无足轻重的猿

变成地球的统治者的?

通常,我们在个体层面上寻找
我们与所有其他动物之间的差异

我们想要相信——我想要相信——

、我的身体、我的大脑有一些特别之处,

这让我
比狗、猪或黑猩猩更优秀。

但事实是,
在个人层面上,

我与黑猩猩非常相似

如果你把我和一只
黑猩猩放在一个孤岛上

,我们必须为生存而奋斗,
看看谁活得更好,

我肯定会把赌注押
在黑猩猩身上,而不是我自己身上。


对我个人来说并没有什么问题。

我想如果他们几乎
把你们中的任何一个人带走,把你

和一只黑猩猩单独放在某个岛上

,黑猩猩会做得更好。

人类
与所有其他动物之间的真正

区别并不在于个体层面,而是在于个体层面。

这是在集体层面上。

人类控制着地球,
因为他们是

唯一可以灵活
且大量合作的动物。

现在,还有其他动物——

比如群居昆虫
、蜜蜂、蚂蚁

——可以大量合作,
但它们并不灵活。

他们的合作非常僵化。

基本上只有一种
方式可以让蜂箱发挥作用。

如果有新的机会
或新的危险

,蜜蜂不可能
在一夜之间重塑社会系统。

例如,他们不能
处决女王

并建立蜜蜂共和国

或工蜂的共产主义
专政。

其他动物,如社会性哺乳动物

——狼、大象
、海豚、黑猩猩——

它们可以更灵活地合作,

但它们只在少数情况下这样做,

因为黑猩猩之间的合作

是基于亲密的知识,
其中之一 另一个。

我是黑猩猩,你是黑猩猩

,我想和你合作。

我需要亲自认识你。

你是哪种黑猩猩?

你是一只漂亮的黑猩猩吗?

你是邪恶的黑猩猩吗?

你值得信赖吗?

如果我不认识你,我怎么能
和你合作?

唯一可以
将这两种能力结合在一起

并灵活合作
并且仍然大量合作的动物

是我们智人。

一对一,甚至十对十,

黑猩猩可能比我们好。

但是,如果你让 1000 只人类
对抗 1000 只黑猩猩

,人类将很容易获胜,
原因很简单

,一千只黑猩猩
根本无法合作。

如果你现在试图把
100,000 只黑猩猩

塞进牛津街、
温布利大球场、

天安门广场或梵蒂冈,

你会陷入混乱,完全混乱。

想象一下
拥有 100,000 只黑猩猩的温布利球场。

彻底的疯狂。

相比之下,人类通常
以数万人聚集在那里

,我们得到的通常不是混乱。

我们得到的是极其复杂
和有效的合作网络。

人类历史上所有的巨大成就,

无论是建造金字塔
还是飞向月球,

都不是
基于个人的能力,

而是基于这种
大规模灵活合作的能力。

甚至想一想
我现在正在做的这个演讲:

我站在
大约 300 或 400 人的观众面前

,你们中的大多数人对我来说是完全陌生的。

同样,我并不真正认识
所有组织

和参与此活动的人。

我不认识昨天

把我
带到伦敦的飞机的飞行员和机组人员。

我不认识
发明和制造

这个麦克风和这些相机的人,
它们正在记录我所说的话。

我不
认识写

了我为准备这次演讲而阅读的所有书籍和文章的人。

我当然不认识所有

可能在互联网上观看这个演讲
的人,

在布宜诺斯艾利斯的某个地方或在新德里。

尽管如此,即使
我们彼此不认识,

我们也可以共同努力,创造
这种全球性的思想交流。

这是黑猩猩做不到的。

他们当然会交流,

但你永远不会看到一只黑猩猩
前往某个遥远的黑猩猩乐队

,让他们谈论香蕉
或大象,

或其他任何可能
让黑猩猩感兴趣的事情。

当然,现在合作
并不总是好的。

人类
在整个历史上一直在做的所有可怕的事情

——我们一直在做
一些非常可怕的事情——

所有这些事情也是
基于大规模的合作。

监狱是一个合作系统;

屠宰场是一个
合作系统;

集中营
是一个合作系统。

黑猩猩没有屠宰场
、监狱和集中营。

现在假设我已经
设法说服你,是的,

我们控制着世界,因为我们可以
灵活地大量合作。

好奇的听众脑海中立即出现的下一个问题是:

我们究竟是如何做到的?

是什么使我们,在所有动物中,
能够以这种方式合作?

答案是我们的想象。

我们可以灵活地
与无数陌生人合作,

因为只有我们,
在这个星球上的所有动物中,

可以创造和相信虚构,
虚构的故事。

只要每个人都
相信相同的虚构,

每个人都会遵守并
遵循相同的规则

、相同的规范、相同的价值观。

所有其他动物仅使用
它们的通信系统

来描述现实。

黑猩猩可能会说:“看!
有一只狮子,我们快跑吧!”

或者,“看!那边有一棵
香蕉树!我们去拿香蕉!”

相比之下,人类不仅使用他们的语言
来描述现实,

而且还创造新的现实,
虚构的现实。

人类可以说:“看,
云层之上有神

!如果你不按我说的去做,

当你死的时候,上帝会惩罚你
,把你送进地狱。”

如果你们都
相信我编造的这个故事,

那么你们就会遵循同样的
规范、法律和价值观

,你们可以合作。

这是只有人类才能做到的事情。

你永远无法说服黑猩猩
给你一根香蕉

,承诺他说:“……你死后,
你会去黑猩猩的天堂……”

(笑声)

“……你会收到很多
很多 香蕉为了你的善行。

所以现在把这个香蕉给我。”

没有黑猩猩会
相信这样的故事。

只有人类相信这样的故事,

这就是我们控制世界的原因,

而黑猩猩则被关
在动物园和研究实验室中。

现在你可能会发现,是的,

在宗教领域,人类
通过相信相同的虚构来进行合作,这是可以接受的。

数百万人聚集
在一起建造大教堂或清真寺,

或者参加十字军东征或圣战,因为
他们都相信

关于上帝、天堂和地狱的相同故事。

但我想强调的
是,同样的

机制是所有其他形式
的大规模人类合作的基础,

不仅在宗教领域。

以法律领域为例。

当今世界上的大多数法律制度
都是基于对人权的信仰。

但什么是人权?

人权,就像上帝和天堂一样,
只是我们编造的故事。

它们不是客观现实;

它们不是
关于智人的某种生物学效应。

拿一个人,
把他切开,往里看,

你会发现心脏、肾脏、
神经元、荷尔蒙、DNA,

但你找不到任何权利。

您找到权利的唯一地方

是我们
在过去几个世纪中发明和传播的故事。

它们可能是非常积极的故事,
非常好的故事,

但它们仍然只是我们虚构的故事

政治领域也是如此。

现代政治中最重要的因素
是国家和民族。

但是什么是国家和民族?

它们不是客观现实。

一座山是客观存在的。

你可以看到它,你可以触摸它,
你甚至可以闻到它。

但是一个国家或一个国家,

如以色列、伊朗、法国或德国,

这只是一个我们编造的故事,

并变得非常依恋。

经济领域也是如此。

当今全球经济中最重要的参与者

是公司和公司。

今天你们中的许多人,也许,
为一家公司工作,

比如谷歌、丰田或麦当劳。

这些东西到底是什么?

它们就是律师所说的法律虚构。

它们是

由我们称为律师的强大巫师发明和维护的故事。

(笑声

) 公司整天都在做什么?

大多数情况下,他们试图赚钱。

然而,钱是什么?

同样,金钱不是客观现实;
它没有客观价值。

拿着这张绿色
的纸,美元钞票。

看看它——它没有价值。

不能吃,不能喝

,不能穿。

但随后出现了
这些讲故事

的大师——大银行家

、财政部长

、总理

——他们告诉我们一个非常有说服力的故事:

“看,你看到这张绿纸了吗?

它实际上值 10 根香蕉。”

如果我相信它,你相信它

,每个人都相信它,

它确实有效。

我可以拿着这张一文不值的纸,

去超市,

把它交给一个
我素未谋面的陌生人

,换取
真正可以吃的香蕉。

这是一件了不起的事情。

你永远不能用黑猩猩做到这一点。

黑猩猩交易,当然:

“是的,你给我一个椰子,
我给你一个香蕉。”

那可以工作。

可是,你给我
一张不值钱的纸

,你除了我给你一根香蕉?

没门!

你以为我是什么人?

(笑声)

事实上,金钱是

人类发明和讲述的最成功的故事,

因为这是
每个人都相信的唯一故事。

不是每个人都相信上帝,

不是每个人都相信人权,

不是每个人都相信民族主义,

但每个人都相信金钱
和美元钞票。

甚至拿奥萨马·本·拉登来说。

他讨厌美国政治
、美国宗教

和美国文化,

但他不
反对美元。

事实上,他很喜欢他们。

(笑声)

那么总结一下:

我们人类控制着世界,
因为我们生活在一个双重现实中。

所有其他动物都生活
在客观现实中。

他们的现实
由客观实体组成,

如河流、树木
、狮子和大象。

我们人类,我们也生活
在客观现实中。

在我们的世界里,也有河流
、树木、狮子和大象。

但几个世纪以来,

我们在
这个客观现实之上构建

了第二层虚构现实,

一个由虚构实体组成的现实,

如国家、神
、金钱、公司。

而令人惊奇的是,
随着历史的展开,

这个虚构的现实变得
越来越强大

,以至于今天,世界上最强大的
力量

就是这些虚构的实体。

今天,河流
、树木、狮子和大象的生存

取决于虚构实体的决定和
愿望,

比如美国、谷歌
、世界银行——这些

实体只存在
于我们自己的想象中。

谢谢你。

(掌声)

Bruno Giussani:Yuval,你有
一本新书出版了。

在 Sapiens 之后,你又写了一个

,它是希伯来语的,但还
没有翻译成……

Yuval Noah Harari:
我们说话的时候,我正在翻译。

BG:在书中,如果我
理解正确的话,


认为我们现在正在经历的惊人突破

不仅可能
使我们的生活更美好,

而且它们将创造——我引用你的话——

“……新 阶级和新的阶级斗争,
就像工业革命一样。”

你能为我们详细说明一下吗?

YNH:是的。 在工业革命中,

我们看到
了城市无产阶级新阶级的产生。

过去 200 年的大部分政治和社会
历史都涉及

如何处理这个阶级,
以及新的问题和机遇。

现在,我们看到了一个新的
大量无用的人的创造。

(笑声)

随着计算机
在越来越多的领域变得越来越好

,计算机很可能

在大多数任务中胜过我们,并且会使
人类变得多余。

然后 21 世纪的重大政治
和经济

问题将是,

“我们需要人类做什么?”,

或者至少,“我们需要
这么多人类做什么?”

BG:你在书中有答案吗?

YNH:目前,我们最好的
猜测是让他们对

毒品和电脑游戏感到满意……

(笑声)

但这听起来
不像是一个非常吸引人的未来。

BG:好的,所以你基本上
是在书中说

,对于所有
关于日益

严重的经济不平等的证据的讨论,
我们只是在

这个过程的开始?

YNH:再说一次,这不是预言。

它看到了
摆在我们面前的各种可能性。

一种可能性是创造
了一个新的大量无用的人。

另一种可能是
人类

分化为不同的生物种姓

,富人升格
为虚拟神

,穷人
降格为这种无用的人。

BG:我觉得一两年内还会有另一个 TED 演讲

谢谢你,Yuval,你来了。

YNH:谢谢!

(掌声)