Why Complexity Matters in Combating Emerging Diseases ๐ | Mark Brown | TEDxWoking
Discover how our simple, binary worldview affects our response to emerging diseases and what we can learn from bees to better understand and tackle these challenges. Join Mark Brown for eye-opening insights!

TEDx Talks
901 views โข Feb 5, 2015

About this video
How does people's binary view of the world translate into how we fight emerging disease? How is it helping to understand bees?
Let Mark walk you through how the way in which we construct how we see the world is both beneficial and problematic in scientific discovery.
(From The WWF-UK Living Planet Centre, Woking for TEDxWoking, guest-curated by Sam Marshall and Kate Mair.)
Mark Brown grew up in Warwickshire, and completed his undergraduate degree in Zoology at Oxford University, before completing his PhD on ants at Stanford University in California. He then moved countries, to Switzerland, and study systems, to parasites in bumblebees, as a European Union Post-doctoral Fellow.
After three and a half years in the โland of chocolateโ, he moved to Ireland to become Lecturer in Zoology at Trinity College Dublin, where he began to develop his interest in the conservation of bees.
In 2008, he moved to Royal Holloway University of London, where he was promoted to a Professorial Chair in 2013.
His work in the UK focuses on the interactions between parasites and bumblebees, the potential threats posed by commercial bumblebees and honeybees to wild pollinators, and the conservation of the UKโs bees.
This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at http://ted.com/tedx
Let Mark walk you through how the way in which we construct how we see the world is both beneficial and problematic in scientific discovery.
(From The WWF-UK Living Planet Centre, Woking for TEDxWoking, guest-curated by Sam Marshall and Kate Mair.)
Mark Brown grew up in Warwickshire, and completed his undergraduate degree in Zoology at Oxford University, before completing his PhD on ants at Stanford University in California. He then moved countries, to Switzerland, and study systems, to parasites in bumblebees, as a European Union Post-doctoral Fellow.
After three and a half years in the โland of chocolateโ, he moved to Ireland to become Lecturer in Zoology at Trinity College Dublin, where he began to develop his interest in the conservation of bees.
In 2008, he moved to Royal Holloway University of London, where he was promoted to a Professorial Chair in 2013.
His work in the UK focuses on the interactions between parasites and bumblebees, the potential threats posed by commercial bumblebees and honeybees to wild pollinators, and the conservation of the UKโs bees.
This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at http://ted.com/tedx
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Views
901
Likes
12
Duration
17:25
Published
Feb 5, 2015
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