5 • 884 Ratings
🗓️ 1 September 2023
⏱️ 73 minutes
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0:00.0 | What we're trying to do in the museum is present some of these, you know, significant |
0:16.5 | challenges and obviously the climate crisis being the largest of those, right? |
0:20.7 | And right now that seems like, you know, the most important thing to look at from the |
0:26.8 | perspective of how might we, you know, creatively adapt to that challenge. At this point, |
0:31.4 | you know, we are talking about, you know, mitigation and adaption. I mean, we are, you know, |
0:36.1 | going to be faced with these, you know, impacts of climate change for at least the next two to |
0:40.1 | three hundred years, even if we end all admissions today. That was Lath Carlson. He's the executive |
0:46.2 | director of the Museum of the Future in Dubai. The Museum of the Future is dedicated to telling stories |
0:52.7 | about how humans might adapt to current global crises. Right now, the climate crisis is the most |
0:59.6 | pressing issue. For example, the main story takes people on a journey to 2071, where they experience |
1:07.4 | a world where people have adapted to climate change by collecting solar energy from the moon |
1:12.6 | and beaming it back to earth, giving clean energy to the majority of the world. |
1:17.8 | In order to ensure the science behind these ideas, the museum worked with collaborators from |
1:22.4 | around the world who vetted the science, including people at NASA and at the European Space Agency. |
1:30.2 | Recently, Stanford University proved that this technology wasn't just something created by a museum, |
1:36.7 | it was actually possible. The Museum of the Future opened its doors in 2022 and since then, |
1:44.2 | over 20 world leaders have visited. Lath says that this is important because climate change is an |
1:50.8 | issue that requires international collaboration. These leaders are among the ones in a position |
1:57.0 | to make changes that will positively impact their countries. Because climate change is an issue |
2:02.4 | that requires large-scale structural changes, the best thing individuals can do is lobby their |
2:07.6 | governments for change. Lath goes on to say that the best hope we have for addressing some of |
2:13.9 | these complex challenges is more indigenous knowledge than scientific understanding. Because |
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