Our memories and bodies give us clues about who we are, but what happens when this guidance shifts? In this mind-bending talk, science writer Anil Ananthaswamy shares how the experiences of "altered selves" -- resulting from schizophrenia, Alzheimer's, foreign limb syndrome or other conditions -- shed light on the constructed nature of identity. He breaks down where our sense of self comes from and invites us to challenge our assumptions about who we are, with the aim of building a better you and a better world.
How to live with fire | Oral McGuire
The weird and wonderful art of Niceaunties | Niceaunties
The art of persuasive storytelling | Kelly D. Parker
What is an AI anyway? | Mustafa Suleyman
Sunday Pick: Unsolicited Advice — Boeing and how to lead in a crisis
Can cannabis help you sleep? Here's the science | Jen Walsh
How AI will step off the screen and into the real world | Daniela Rus
How to be an active citizen and spark change | Gabriel Marmentini
A Palestinian and an Israeli, face to face | Aziz Abu Sarah and Maoz Inon
What you can do to stop economic crime | Hanjo Seibert
Ideas change everything — and what's next for TED | Chris Anderson and Monique Ruff-Bell
Sunday Pick: How Bill Gates spends $9 billion a year
How to find joy in climate action | Ayana Elizabeth Johnson
Why great leaders take humor seriously | Jennifer Aaker and Naomi Bagdonas
Why you should disappoint your parents | Desiree Akhavan
A new national park to reclaim Indigenous land | Tracie Revis
Can AI catch criminals at sea? | Dyhia Belhabib
Sunday Pick: The bias behind your undiagnosed chronic pain
What happens to sex in midlife? A look at the "bedroom gap" | Maria Sophocles
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