跟读练习: The Black Swan Theory - The Random Moments That Change Everything - 通过YouTube学习英语口语
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This video is sponsored by the Personal Information Removal Service and Cogni.
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Protect yourself from data brokers and search sites.
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Use my link in the description to get 60% off in Cogni's annual plan.
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There are no real black swans,
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only white ones, aside from the soft grays and youth.
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We have never seen a blue,
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green, or rainbow-colored swan, and we have never seen a black one,
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because they don't exist.
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That is why, when we say something is a black swan,
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we mean to say it is not real.
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It is impossible.
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This was the belief held across all of Europe prior to the 18th century,
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just a little over 300 years ago.
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Originating from the words of the second-century Roman poet Juvenal,
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the phrase black swan was used exclusively to refer to something impossible,
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similar to the idiom when pigs fly.
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The reason for this was simple.
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No one in Europe had ever seen anything other than a white swan.
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All observations in historical records reported a consistent, clear reality.
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white swans existed.
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The problem, of course, is that black swans do very much exist.
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They're not even rare in their native habitat.
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They've existed abundantly for a very long time.
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They were just unknown.
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Only after the year 1697,
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when Dutch explorers found black swans all over Australia,
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did this reality, or rather the comprehension of reality, change.
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Centuries' worth of consistent observations and subsequent expectations in phraseology revealed to be insufficient and false.
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As if a pig suddenly flew,
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what had previously been a symbol of impossibility suddenly became a symbol of humanity's inability to ever know what is
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and isn't possible.
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Black swans became a metaphor for unexpected events that undermine entire assumptions about truth.
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More recently, the term black swan or black swan event has been popularized by the author,
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statistician, and former options trader, Nassim Nicholas Taleb.
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Across several of his books,
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including Antifragile, Fooled by Randomness,
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and The Black Swan, Taleb often explores the nature,
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impact, and pervasiveness of unforeseen,
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unpredictable, and history-altering events, many of which he refers to as black swans.
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Taleb defines a black swan event as comprising the following three essential qualities.
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1. The event comes as a surprise.
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All prevailing models of understanding and prediction struggle to foresee or,
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in some cases, even imagine it.
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2. The event has immense impact,
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reshaping major aspects of the world or how we see it. And 3.
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The event appears completely explainable after the fact.
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Contorted by retrospective rationalization, narratives are formed around the event that make seem clear or normal in hindsight.
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Crucially, Taleb believes that most important historical events are black swans.
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Scientific discoveries, artistic achievements, technological breakthroughs,
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wars, global disasters, and major shifts in markets and ideologies are often black swans, according to Taleb.
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He writes, History and societies do not crawl.
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They make jumps.
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They go from fracture to fracture with a few vibrations in between.
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Yet we like to believe in the predictable, small incremental progression.
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For Taleb, black swans reside on every landmass of society,
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swim in every stream of consciousness,
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and wade in every marsh of reality.
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We see their presence in recent history in notable moments like the rise of the internet,
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the 2008 financial crisis, the September 11th attacks,
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the fall of the Soviet Union,
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the formation of Einstein's theory of relativity,
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and the discovery of penicillin.
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Perhaps more unsettling than how immense the consequences of singular events
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can be is what these black swans reveal about our comprehension of reality,
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our expectations of the future,
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and the limits of our ability to ever truly grasp either.
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These outlier events can completely undo entire systems of logic,
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knowledge, prediction, expectation, and operation.
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They can uproot what we believed for centuries to be obvious,
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break down what were once considered natural laws of the universe,
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overhaul previously robust institutions, and generate,
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seemingly out of nothing, entirely new realms of being.
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And yet, prior to these world-changing moments,
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even when they're just one step in front of us,
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we never quite see them coming,
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or at least we never act as though we do.
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As a species, we struggle greatly with comprehending probability, odds, risk, and uncertainty.
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As the historian and writer Yuval Noah Harari points out,
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our ancestors were never obliged to handle large amounts of mathematical data.
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No forager needed to remember,
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say, the number of fruit on each tree in the forest,
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so human Human brains did not adapt to storing and processing numbers.
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Consequently, we are left, still today,
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struggling to make sense of things at large scales.
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Across long time horizons, large numbers or both,
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order begins to blur into the appearance of randomness and chaos.
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To sustain function, the human mind seems to bend around the variability,
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uncertainty and chaos of the world,
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filling in the gaps and solidifying itself like wet concrete,
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turning otherwise unstable space into something solid and walkable.
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we are left with is the illusion of stable ground and a reality that is set to break with a single step.
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Perhaps our greatest offense in the realm of faulty intuition is that we tend to expect linear progressions.
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In other words, we tend to believe that what has happened will continue to happen and in the same relative manner,
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and that what has never happened will never happen.
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This is the result of biases like the narrative fallacy and the availability heuristic,
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where we tend to significantly simplify the recent past,
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and then extrapolate this simplified version into the future.
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Of course, when these biases are addressed explicitly,
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we know it isn't the case that things always remain consistent or progress linearly.
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On some level, we know that history is full of things that had never happened,
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until they did, and we know that things once considered permanent have since ceased entirely.
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But therein lies the rub.
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Despite the apparent regularity of novel disruptions and turning points,
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and despite our general awareness of them,
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we still seem incapable of properly expecting or preparing for them,
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whether it's on an individual or societal level,
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whether it's mentally or systematically.
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Although they do sound ominous and tend to relate to negative consequences,
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of course, not all black swans are bad.
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Just as often as they bring disruption or destruction,
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they bring creation, advancement, and revelation.
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The cosmos, the stars, earth,
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life, these are all black swan events.
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And of course, we ourselves are a black swan event.
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An unlikely, unprecedented, self-aware, symbolic,
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tool-making, existence-questioning species that nothing could have ever predicted before us,
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that changed everything, and whose existence is now completely normal and obvious.
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Only because of the apparent chaos and randomness of the cosmos do we exist.
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And as beings forged by the very fire of chaos,
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we can also learn to better handle and withstand the flames.
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Another concept spearheaded by Taleb is known as antifragility.
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This idea refers to things and systems that benefit and grow stronger through exposure to disorder and randomness.
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This includes things like evolution,
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the immune system, decentralized free markets,
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airlines, the internet, and knowledge itself.
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As these things are exposed to stressors or errors,
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they adapt and strengthen, growing more capable of thriving under uncertainty in the future.
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And of course, this also includes us.
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If we are willing to take and face risks,
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undergo potential harm, and move forward through an uncertain existence with mental fortitude and resilience,
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doing our best to prepare for what we think will occur while accepting the events that actually do,
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growing from them as they shape the course of history with and through us,
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then we too can be antifragile.
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Ultimately, we don't know what black swans might be lurking around us right now,
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grazing in the shadows of unknowability,
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floating in the mires of uncertainty.
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We are always at the edge,
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where light meets shadow, where stable land meets boggy ground,
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projecting out in all directions our comfortable narratives of linearity and predictability.
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But from the surface of our expectations all the way down into our most core beliefs,
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so much of what we expect and hold to be true could reveal at any point,
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suddenly and all all at once,
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to be deeply flawed, incomplete, or flat out wrong.
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The laws of nature, our position in the cosmos,
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the very condition of the cosmos itself,
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the realities of consciousness and selfhood,
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our idea of what's right and wrong,
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what's important and what our purpose is,
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our expectations of the future.
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We don't know what is true,
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and we don't know what will happen.
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But we don't need to.
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At bottom, we don't even want to.
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The apparent randomness and unpredictability,
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as much as our minds work to smooth it over and fill in the cracks,
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provide the slants, slopes, and gaps that thrill us, that build us.
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If we wish to improve our experience in a chaotic universe,
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perhaps instead of always trying to predict or control events,
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worrying about what might happen or has happened,
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we should learn to enjoy the birdwatching from the rollercoaster ride that is existence.
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Something that very few people could have predicted just a couple decades ago is the economy built on personal information.
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Who you are, what you like,
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where you live, and so on,
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are now all sought, packaged, and sold online.
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What used to be the norm,
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general privacy, has been upended.
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A black swan made of data.
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This video's sponsor, Incogni, is protection against the uncertainty and invasiveness of the modern world.
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Data brokers are constantly obtaining your personal information,
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like your name, social security number,
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They then sell the information to businesses,
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marketers, and people's search sites.
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Incogni works to stop this by automatically contacting these sites on your behalf and getting your personal information removed.
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Legally, these sites must remove your information if you request it.
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But doing this on your own is essentially impossible, time-consuming, and confusing.
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That's why the data broker business model worked.
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And of course, as always,
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thank you so much for watching in general,
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and see you next video.
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背景與上下文
在這段視頻中,歷史和哲學的交匯點揭示了意想不到事件的重大影響,如「黑天鵝理論」。講者探索了這個理念如何從歷史上人們對事物的認知出發,轉變為一個重要的隱喻,代表那些突然改變我們對現實理解的事件。這段對話突出了知識的局限性以及人類在面對未知時的脆弱性。
日常交流的五個重要短語
- 黑天鵝事件 - 指那些意外且重大影響的事件。
- 不可預見 - 意味著無法預測或想像的情況。
- 事後解釋 - 在事情發生後,人們會嘗試解釋其發生的原因。
- 革命性突破 - 指重塑某個領域的重大進展。
- 真相的假定 - 關於某些事情的已知假設,事實上可能是不正確的。
逐步跟讀指導
提升你的英語發音可以透過有效的跟讀練習。以下是針對這段視頻的具體步驟:
- 聆聽與理解:首先,反覆聆聽視頻內容,試著理解每個句子的含義,特別是「黑天鵝事件」的定義。
- 重複跟讀:在聆聽的同時,跟隨講者的節奏進行模仿。使用 shadowspeaks 技術可以幫助你掌握正確的語調和發音。
- 記錄與對比:錄下自己的聲音,然後與講者的聲音進行對比,找出差異,特別是在重音和連音方面。
- 逐步提升:從簡單的短語開始,然後逐漸過渡到更長的句子。這樣可以有效提升你的流利度和自信心。
- 持之以恆:每天進行短時間的跟讀練習,定期回顧之前學過的短語,如「事後解釋」及「革命性突破」,以增強記憶。
通過這種 shadow speech 的訓練方式,你能夠大大提高你在英語交流中的自信和流利度,同時深化對複雜主題的理解。
什么是跟读法?
跟读法 (Shadowing) 是一种有科学依据的语言学习技巧,最初开发用于专业口译员的培训,并由多语言者Alexander Arguelles博士普及。这个方法简单而强大:您在听英语母语原声的同时立即大声重复——就像是一个延迟1-2秒紧跟说话者的影子。与被动听力或语法练习不同,跟读法强迫您的大脑和口腔肌肉同时处理并模仿真实的讲话模式。研究表明它能显着提高发音准确性,语调,节奏,连读,听力理解和口语流利度——使其成为雅思口语备考和真实英语交流最有效的方法之一。
