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Never in human history have there been so many ways for privacies to be violated – or, often, just given away freely and without much thought. Using the thinly veiled metaphor of an animated alien planet teeming with terrible hovercar drivers, this animation from TED-Ed explores the value of privacy, and especially what we can lose or gain when we relinquish it. Spanning the work of philosophers ranging from Plato, who saw little value in the concept as we understand it today, to modern thinkers like the Israeli philosopher Ruth Gavison (1945-2020), who believed that certain privacies were necessary for modern democracies to function, the short asks viewers to consider both privacy’s worth and its very meaning in the modern world.
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Food and drink
The passage of time is a peculiar thing in a 24-hour diner
13 minutes
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Art
Background music was the radical invention of a trailblazing composer
16 minutes
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Anthropology
For an Amazonian female shaman, ayahuasca ceremonies are a rite and a business
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Metaphysics
What do past, present and future mean to a philosopher of time?
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Gender
A filmmaker responds to Lars von Trier’s call for a new muse with a unique application
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Computing and artificial intelligence
Why large language models are mysterious – even to their creators
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Spirituality
Through rituals of prayer, a monk cultivates a quietly radical concept of freedom
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Fairness and equality
‘To my old master’ – a freed slave answers the request to return to his old plantation
7 minutes
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Design and fashion
A ceramicist puts her own bawdy spin on the folk language of pottery
14 minutes