Talks

Dan Dennett: Cute, sexy, sweet, funny

You either have JavaScript turned off or have an old version of the Adobe Flash Player. To view this video you need to get the latest Flash player.
If your browser allows only "trusted sites" to execute Javascript, you should add the "googleapis.com" domain to your whitelist to allow our Flash detection to work properly.

Post to:
DiggShare on digg deliciousShare on Delicious redditShare on Reddit StumbleUponShare on StumbleUpon BloggerShare on Blogger MySpaceShare on MySpace
Embed this video: Favorite Download

Audio

Audio to desktop (MP3)
This link downloads an audio file directly to your computer. Right-click (or option-click on a Mac) to ensure download.
Audio to iTunes (MP3)
This link launches iTunes on your computer, and adds an audio file into your iTunes library.

Video

Download video to desktop (MP4)
This link downloads a video file directly to your computer or iPhone. Right-click (or option-click on a Mac) to ensure download.
Download video to iTunes (MP4)
This link launches iTunes on your computer, and adds a video file into your iTunes library.
Watch high-res video (MP4)
This link lets you watch a higher-quality version of this video. Right-click (or option-click on a Mac) to ensure download.

Loading Comments...

This comment will be attributed to name. Not name?

Characters used: 0 (1000 max.)

About this talk

Why are babies cute? Why is cake sweet? Philosopher Dan Dennett has answers you wouldn't expect, as he shares evolution's counterintuitive reasoning on cute, sweet and sexy things (plus a new theory from Matthew Hurley on why jokes are funny).

About Dan Dennett

Philosopher and scientist Dan Dennett argues that human consciousness and free will are the result of physical processes and are not what we traditionally think they are. His 2003 book Freedom… Full bio and more links

What to watch next

TED2008
Jonathan Haidt on the moral roots ...

18:42 Posted: Sep 2008

Rated:
Informative Persuasive Fascinatin...

Related themes

Related tags

Creative Commons

We want to share our Talks! Just follow the guidelines outlined under our Creative Commons license.