A speech to Harvard's architects of the future

I was invited to address the 2011 graduating class of architects from the Harvard Graduate School of Design last week. Some of them wrote me over the weekend asking to put the talk up online.  So here it is....

First of all, I'm not sure if your organizers today were aware of this, but I actually don't give a lot of speeches. I'm usually the guy doing the inviting. Frankly, it's a lot more comfortable that way. But... I couldn't pass up the chance to spend some time with a group of people who have so much to offer the world. Truly, it's an honor to be here.

To begin with, a favor. If you are one of the graduating class, I would like you please to stand up. I want to see you properly. Thank you. Congratulations. You made it. And if you would, I would like you to hold your heads very still for just the next 10 seconds or so. Because I  have an app on my ipad here that's pretty cool. I'm not taking your picture. What I'm doing, if you don't mind, is just grabbing a download of the contents of each of your brains. Thank you. You may sit.

Now unfortunately, this app is still in, let's say, pre-alpha mode. It doesn't work that reliably. But if it did, I wonder what a read out would reveal. Of course today there would be all manner of emotions around the years you've spent here and the prospects ahead. Excitement, nostalgia, hope...  regret, panic. We'd no doubt uncover a few unexpected jealousies, embarrassing memories, a complete record of everything that happened late at night over there in the trays.  (Don't worry, it's all 100% privacy protected, unless you forgot to check the box marked no public humiliation.) But along with all that, there would be something else in this data. We would be able to see an astonishing picture of...  the future. Better than any crystal ball, or forecasting tool, we could see what our world will look like in a couple decades' time.   

Now I mean this quite literally and seriously. By getting this far in this place, you, the Harvard Graduate School of Design class of 2011, have proved that you possess a certain, incredible talent. It's a talent that is unique to our species. And if you were to rank this talent among members of our species in general, I have no doubt you would all be in the top 1% of 1%. I'm not talking about intelligence, fine breeding, good looks, dress sense, or compelling social skills. (Though I have no doubt you excel there too.)  I am talking about the talent which some would call...   imagination or invention or innovation. It is the remarkable ability first of all to model some aspect of the external world inside our heads... and secondly to play with that mental model until suddenly... bingo... you find a a way to rearrange it so that it's actually better. This is the amazing engine that underpins both technology the T of TED, and Design the D of TED. It is this skill that has made possible the human progress of the last 50,000 years.

It's really astonishing that we can do this. For almost the entire period of life on earth, the appearance of design has been driven differently. By random trial and error. Like a drunkard lumbering through a dark maze of passages, life has lurched its way forward. For every evolutionary step forward there have been countless dead ends. In a single lifetime, change was not detectable. It happened slowly, painfully over millions of years. Somehow in our species the light came on. We actually found a way to model the future before lumbering into it. That... changed... everything.

Viewed from a different perspective, you could say our brains became the ecosystems for a new kind of life, a life that replicated and transformed itself at a rate hitherto unknown in our corner of the universe. The thrilling life of the world of ideas. TED is devoted to nurturing this life form. And in a sense, you're about to devote the rest of your life to that same mission. But whereas we at TED nurture ideas by putting free talks up on the Internet, you will be not just dreaming them but turning them into reality so that thousands or millions of other people will be impacted by them.

And that is why I'm so excited by this group brain scan I'm holding here in my hand. It's the future right here.

Wait I think I can make out something, albeit it's a little fuzzy. Espoused in a mind over here, I think I can just about make out... a gorgeous building, full of natural light whose bio-inspired curves evoke wonder and delight in everyone who sees it. Over there I can see a once barren industrial wasteland converted into a glorious city park where people gather, mill, walk, play and dream. And emanating from a mind on this side...  oh wow. Here is a spectacular city of the future. One in which cars are replaced by intelligent, next-generation  transport systems, and human-scale meeting places where people naturally mingle and connect.  A city which breathes and adjusts and interacts with its citizens like a living system.

When you sum up all the visions contained in this room right now I have to tell you, the future looks pretty enticing. And the most thrilling part? A significant proportion of those dreams will within the next decade or two become real. Why? because you will make it so. You are the 2011 graduate class of the GSD. Like few other people on earth, you have the skills and the  resources to truly change the world.

But here's the rub. What will determine which of the dreams here present today see the light of day, and which will languish unfunded, forgotten, ignored?

Well, usually a single person can't make a big idea come true (unless they have extremely rich parents). In almost every case an idea needs multiple backers. So it must first spread from one brain to many, spreading excitement as it goes. So what makes THAT happen? It certainly helps if the idea itself is powerful. By which I mean some combination of beautiful, ingenious, and... affordable. But there's something else.  It needs to be communicated with power. One of the most tragic things in the world is a powerful idea stuck inside the head of someone who can't actually explain it to anyone else. At TED over the years, we've had a lot of architects come and share their visions with us, and a good number of them have been absolutely... awful.  How can that be? They have the most compelling subject matter imaginable. Giant designs at a scale that impacts thousands or millions of people... Yet when it come to articulating them, they descend into gibberish - the abstract, over-intellectual language of architectural criticism that makes an audience's eyes glaze over and their brains numb. This is an utter tragedy!  Whatever else you do in the coming years of your life, I beg you, I truly beg you to find a way of sharing your dreams in a way that truly reveals the excitement and passion and possibility behind them.

The good news here is that you're entering the profession at a wonderful moment. I speak as an outsider, but it seems to me that three giant trends are combining to transform both the role of architecture -- and  how it can be talked about. First of all, in recent years a mode of thought that has dominated intellectual life for much of the past century is gradually being laid to rest. I'm referring to the toxic belief that human nature and aesthetic values are infinitely malleable, and determined purely by cultural norms. For a while this gave a generation of architects exhilarating freedom to abandon all traditional architectural rules, and impose their own vision on society. But, like similar experiments in music, art, drama, and literature, they didn't always win the world's love.

Today there's a growing consensus that we should think of humans differently. That far from living in separate cultural bubbles we actually share millions of years of evolutionary history. That there are far far more ways that we're the same than that we're different. The anthropologist Donald Brown has documented more than 200 human universals present in every culture on earth. They ranged from things like body adornment, feasting, dancing to common facial expressions and, yes, shared aesthetic values. This latter question has been the subject of countless experiments around the world in the past couple decades, and they've mostly revealed an amazing degree of resonance among vastly different people on what they find...  beautiful.

This shift is surely allowing us to change the language in which architecture is discussed. In a world of pure cultural relativism, there are no absolutes to appeal to. To succeed you had to learn the opaque language of a tight-knit clique of critics and opinion formers. It didn't matter if the rest of the world was left scratching its head. Today, slowly, gingerly, it's become possible once again to use language the rest of us can understand. I think it's even OK to use that B word again. Beauty. Not as a proxy for arrogant artistic self-expression, but as a quest to tap into something that can resonate deeply in millions of souls around the world.  I'm happy to report that in the last couple years at TED  we've been wowed by a new generation of architects  Joshua Prince-Ramus,  Bjarke Ingels, Liz Diller, Thomas Heatherwick and others, as they've shared with us - in plain English -  their passion, their dreams, and yes, the beauty of what they're created. When Thomas Heatherwick shared his vision for a stunning, new residential complex in Kuala Lumpur, curved out from narrow bases like a bed of tulips, I had just one thought.  I wish I had been born in the future.

I suppose an architect might have dreamt of such a development 30 years ago... but it could never have been built. And that brings us to the second trend. Technology is changing the rules of what's possible. The astounding power of computer-assisted design and new construction techniques are giving us the ability to actually build what before could only have been a whimsical doodle on a sketch-pad..  Suddenly the fractals and curves of Mother Nature, are a legitimate part of the architectural lexicon. And around the world, as people watch these new buildings arise, instead of muttering "monstrosity", their jaws are dropping, their eyes moistening.

And finally, perhaps most important of all, we're at a moment in history where the world is paying attention to you like never before. As leading designers of scale, you, more than anyone else, hold in your hands the answers to the most important question we all face. Namely this. Can the coming world of 10 billion people survive and flourish without consuming itself in the process. The answers if they are to be found, - and I think they will - will come from... design. Better ways to pattern our lives. There is nothing written into our nature that says that the only path to a wonderful, rich, meaningful life is to own two cars and a McMansion in the suburbs.

But it's becoming urgent for the world to start to see a compelling alternative vision. Probably it's going to come down to re-imagining what a city can be, and making it so wonderful, that few people would want to live anywhere else. If there are to be 10 billion of us, we will have to, for the most part, live close to each other -- if only to give the rest of nature a chance. Indeed more than half the world already lives in cities and the best of them offer so much to the world : richer culture, a greater sense of community, a far lower carbon footprint per person - and  the collision of ideas that nurtures innovation.  And the future cities you will help create need not feel claustrophobic or soulless. By sculpting beautiful new forms into the city's structures and landscapes; by incorporating light, plants, trees, water; by imagining new ways to connect with each other and work with each other, you will allow the coming crowd to live more richly, more meaningfully, than has ever been possible in history - and to do so without sacrificing your grandchildren.  

Now finally, I guess it's traditional at a time like this to offer some personal advice to you as you embark on your career. Everything from "one word: plastics".  to... "follow your dream, pursue your passion". Indeed the mantra of romantically pursuing passion is hammered into us by countless movies, novels and pulp TV. I'm not convinced it is very good advice. Apart from the fact that many people aren't sure what their passion is, even if they were, there are lots of wonderful things in life that absolutely should not be pursued directly. Take love. We all want it. But there's a word for people who pursue love a little too directly. Stalker. Or take happiness. Go after that wholeheartedly and most likely you'll end up a hedonist, a narcissist, an addict.  A great musician who wants to pursue the absolute in artistic creativity doesn't get there by being creative. She gets there by being disciplined. By learning, listening and by practicing for hours... until one day the creativity just flows of its own accord.

The architect Moshe Safdie ended his TED talk a few years with this poem.

    He who seeks truth shall find beauty. He who seeks beauty shall find vanity. 
    He who seeks order, shall find gratification. He who seeks gratification, shall be disappointed. 
    He who considers himself the servant of his fellow beings shall find the joy of self-expression. He who seeks self-expression, shall fall into the pit of arrogance. 
    Arrogance is incompatible with nature. Through nature, the nature of the universe and the nature of man, we shall seek truth.  
    If we seek truth, we shall find beauty.

So I guess my advice would be... Don't pursue your passion directly. At least not yet. Instead... pursue the things that will empower you. Pursue knowledge. Be relentlessly curious. Listen, learn. You're leaving Harvard this week, but your learning cannot ever, ever be allowed to stop.

Pursue discipline. It's an old-fashioned word, but it's never been more important.Today's world is full of an impossible number of distractions. The world-changers are those who find a way of ignoring most of them.

And above all: Pursue generosity. Not just because it will add meaning to your life -- though it will do that -- but because your future is going to be built on great ideas and in the future you are entering, great ideas HAVE to be given away. They do. The world is more interconnected than ever. The rules of what you give and what you hold on to have changed forever. If you hold on to your best ideas, maybe you can for a moment grab some short-term personal commercial gain. But if you let them roam free, they can spread like wildfire, earning you a global reputation. They can be reshaped and improved by others. They can achieve impact and influence in the world far greater than if you were to champion them alone. If we've discovered anything at TED these past few years, it's that radical openness pays. We gave away our talks on the web, and far from killing demand for the conference, it massively increased it, turning TED from something which reached 800 people once a year to something which reached half a million people every day. We gave away our brand in the form of TEDx, and far from diluting TED, it democratized it, and multiplied its footprint a thousand fold.

Knowledge, discipline, generosity. If you pursue those with all the determination you possess, one day before too long, without your even knowing it, the chance to realize your most spectacular dreams will come gently tap you on the shoulder and whisper... "Let's go!".  And you'll be ready.

And that is how you're going to help shape a better future for all of us.

No pressure or anything, but we're counting on you.

72 responses
Thank you so much for sharing. Truly inspirational - even for someone who graduated over 25 years ago.
Just beautiful, Chris!
Great speech. Having just written a short blog on passion I was intrigued with your advice on don't pursue your passion and agree with what you say in the context you have said it. wise advice.
Wyn
I appreciate your suggestions to the thinkers and imaginers and creators of tomorrow. I find that this starts with children. I am simply trying to develop a program to have children realize percipience, archive it cognitively with necessary metaphor, then discuss it democratically in a community of inquiry. One example is to look at a piece of art at a museum, write a poem about it and talk about it. This process could apply to hypothesis, invention, national defense and solving social paradigm dilemmas. Someday maybe I’ll share my studies with you through TED.
Brilliant talk! One of my early music teachers impressed upon me the idea of hearing the sound in your head, and working in a disciplined fashion until imagination equals reality. Thanks for this inspiration.
... thanks.. a brilliant speech....
"Whatever else you do in the coming years of your life, I beg you, I truly beg you to find a way of sharing your dreams in a way that truly reveals the excitement and passion and possibility behind them." Loved this message and the entire speech.
what a great speech, can we see the speech?
Great speech!
Nice speech! I hope they don't sell out and settle down especially when even rank amateurs can build beautiful natural homes with just their hands and feet:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/smallape/5264325909/
If one person in the audience hears these words and takes them to heart, the world will be changed. If everyone does, the world will be transformed.

Thank you for words which have touched and inspired me on a very low day.

Beautiful words! And trully inspiring for a recent architect graduate who is a little lost at the moment
Not only for the recent graduates, this is a beautiful reminder for us who graduated years ago. Knowledge, discipline, generosity. Those are my new mantra words.
It's always sad for me to listen to these speeches, when graduates are full of hope and promise towards to the future. Then most of them get dead end corporate jobs designing washrooms for office complexes for yet another downtown core, get into debt and are forced to work a job they hate for decades.
Beautiful! Inspiring! Thank you for sharing.
Fantastic, fabulous! Just shared with my three children, one just graduated from college, one is a rising junior and the third graduating from high school next week. Thank you SO much for sharing Chris. This is truly wonderful.
Thank you Chris. I feel like I just graduated again.
I liked this statement most : "Usually a single person can't make a big idea come true. An idea needs multiple backers. So it must first spread from one brain to many, spreading excitement as it goes. It helps if the idea itself is powerful. It needs to be communicated with power. One of the most tragic things in the world is a powerful idea stuck inside the head of someone who can't actually explain it to anyone else."
Awesome. Great message.
Truly inspirational. Thanks for sharing.
Awesome talk Chris, very inspiring. Thanks!
Great advice, for designers of all realms. It's encouraging to hear that I'm doing the right thing by not rushing into my passion headlong, but "empowering" myself first and letting the work flow forth naturally from acquired knowledge and skill. It's very true that there is a lot of pressure out there to produce and to do it quickly, be the first, get the credit. But I know from experience that hurrying usually results in at least some error, sloppiness, or overlooked important detail. I figure, this is my passion project (of the moment), so why not take the time to make it just how I want it to be? Thanks, Chris!
Inspirational! Thanks so much for sharing!
What a fantastic speech.

I think your comments extend further then just the design professions, I hope that many people read and are inspired by your words.

It has taken me 11 years as an occupational therapist building my skills which have enabled myself and colleagues to develop a new way of using animation in therapy. It takes courage to share ideas especially in this world where IP and commercial tactics can stop beautiful things in their tracks.

Some of my most rewarding work has been with the Royal College of Art and it has developed from inspiring conversations and connecting together the right brains in unusual ways. I agree with Chris its important to let a good thing fly and not over protect ideas. It takes courage to let go.

Thank you TED for sharing this important speech, and good luck to all the 2011 graduates, I hope the mind capture app process did not cause you any lasting effects! ;)

Appreciated how you answered this one: What will determine which of the dreams here present today see the light of day, and which will languish unfunded, forgotten, ignored? A question asked by everyone.

Awesome

Thanks for sharing

THANK YOU Chris! Enjoyed reading your words while listening ( via
http://harvardmagazine.com/2011/05/ted-curator-chris-anderson-challenges-desi... )

Q&A at the end of the audio excellent too.
Thanks again @TEDchris

"Suddenly the fractals and curves of Mother Nature, are a legitimate part of the architectural lexicon."
...I think it's even OK to use that B word again. Beauty" (big smile)

from Q&A: "Don't build them (ideas), let them grow" (incorporate crowdsourcing)
Yes, *emergence* and hold tight to a compus - (wonderful) "Radical Openness" :-)

amazing speech! totally mind blowing! I am an archi student and i will keep this in mind to convey my ideas not in gibberish but in plain language to all my fellow people........for a better future cheers!
"Pursue knowledge. Be relentlessly curious" What a fabulous expression. If this is the quality of your speeches, perhaps you should do more of them :)
Wonderful! This is truly an amazing time where anything is possible, but getting the great ideas to reality is the real challenge. And for those going into architecture, the nature of practice is changing as radically as what we are able to build... you're designers: design everything - your life, your habits, your job... all yours to invent!
It is a great speech to encourage some of the best that they have higher goals to achieve.

However, how to achieve it?

We know Green and Eco, the principal is the environment, it demands more investment, even after investing much, subsidized by nations, we still have immense self-sacrifice - this cannot propagate, even sustain. This is a narrow minded approach, it is scientific and there can be measured on segmental achievement, but cannot cross link with other disciplines, cannot point out direction.

However, if we know how to rally more forces from nature, how to inspire the insatiable nature of man to do constructive work - constructive work as of integrating with others, man, nature, machines...

We find we can do more with less, time, space, energy.
We can also do it faster, more frequently.
This is proposed to Singapore's remaining Founder Lee Kuan Yew in a draft form in 2006 05 18.
It was announced latter by the Prime Minister of Singapore at Davos.
2009 01 22 shared with MIT Energy Team (Comprising architects and city planners) led by Prof Susan Hockfield

It is now ready to be published and shared with ASCE President recently.
the key is how to integrate....

"The Gold - Beyond Green and Eco"
the cover can be downloaded at
http://www.box.net/shared/eeh2bzyhng

Knowing the only constant is change is feeble.
It is knowing there is sky without knowing it is sunny, stormy.

The Only constant for civilization
is to integrate with greater diversities, deeper, broader faster more frequently.
Solvere@Global Entrepolis
2006 10 31

Industries that promote this integration, e.g. locomotive, telegraph, telephone, automotives, radio, TV drives world economy.
Computer without network would not change the world so much.
Solvere
2009 Autumn
Post Industrialization Dynamos
ISBN 9810 833558

Goals that bring better life, that beautify environment, mother nature is the only one that last.

Solvere Lim
SM(MIT) MBA(Law)
www.cts-ideas.com

this is great..thanks Chris for posting this.
Very inspiring. Made me pause and think.
Thank you, Chris Anderson!
this is one of the most soulful talks i have ever come across so far ... simple, direct and straight from experience ... we have circulated it within our campus at Srishti School of Art , Design and Technology in Bangalore.
..brilliant speech ... so inspiring.
As a 2003 GSD grad, I was very moved by this. I especially appreciate the very human approach to taking our ideas forward, done with knowledge, discipline and generosity. And to this I would add the nearly obvious imagination and clear language. Thank you so much for sharing these words with us.
Hi Chris, inspiring. Would it be possible to post the video of your talk? Would love to share this around.
Awesome speech. I love the poem by Moshe Safdie
Wonderful words for those graduates, Mr Anderson!

Folks here might like to check out TEDx EQ ChCh http://tedxeqchch.com. This event on 21 May in Christchurch, New Zealand, was convened in the wake of the earthquake earlier this year that destroyed much of the CBD.

The citizens there are agitating for green, human scale development, and invited a number of architects, including TED prize winner and Architecture for Humanity founder Cameron Sinclair to speak. The recorded talks are just starting to go up on YouTube/Facebook.

Also invited was ecocity architect Paul Downton of Adelaide, South Australia (http://tedxeqchch.com/2011/05/paul-downton), who has spearheaded the creation of a living, breathing, inner-city example of all the things Chris talked about, now manifested in Christie Walk: http://www.urbanecology.org.au

The GSD is a collection of architects, landscape architects, urban designers, urban planners and design researchers - how about calling us designers and planners rather than architects? The other 80% of us feel a bit prickly getting lumped into a profession we don't practice. Our contribution is devalued when we are not named.
Fair point, anonymous adultdaypass. I meant the term in its broadest sense of "architects of the future" - and have amended the title to reflect that. Certainly the talk makes clear how key a role I see for tomorrow's urban planners and designers (and the new urban landscapes they will need to incorporate). Good luck with your future plans.
Chris - thanks for hearing my comment and making the change. Your talk certainly does incorporate the contribution of all GSD'ers and as a graduate from landscape architecture, it feels really good to be named in your vision.
Chris, your talk tells not to follow the passions but rather emphasizes on discipline. Your Posterous bio says "Passionate about ideas, innovation, imagination". So, don't you follow these passions directly. What kind of discipline do you undertake?
Ha, jatinshridhar, good one!  Are you a lawyer?  I guess the main discipline would be not answering smart-ass questions.  But seriously, when you're as old as me I think you do get to follow your passions a little more directly.  And having one of the wor'd's more interesting jobs certainly helps.  Would never have got to run TED, though, if I'd just set my heart on that aged 25 or 30. 

Chris Anderson  •  TED Curator  •  www.ted.com  •  "Ideas Worth Spreading"





Thanks for your response, Chris. And no, I am not a lawyer, not even remotely close to that. You know, I have always been inspired by Steve Jobs' Stanford commencement address and your talk comes as a huge contrast to that. I know "following your passions" can be easily confused with not doing anything challenging but I think you do have to keep doing the stuff you love side by side else things will get too boring. If we do not follow our passion at all, then I think it becomes more of a matter of luck or chance - you may get it or you may not.
Brilliant speech, Chris! There's key wisdom to learn for everyone who isn't so occupied by eagerness to present their view of the world, that they forget to listen and thus miss the point. Even the "wild" Steven Tyler says the same thing: controlled 'madness', is what makes greatness.
Knowledge, discipline and generosity: surely one should pursue these but within the broad domain of our markers: our talent, passion, and ambition. A passion is not one idea but an idea engine?
Beauty and radical generosity.
Great simple things that we all need enormously in any professional field. Not only Harvard Graduates of Architecture!
Beauty for our souls. And to elevate the soul of our communities in times of changes and crises.
Radical generosity for our souls as you say, and to let innovation comes, helped by the multiplication and dissemination of knowledge as happened to TED and so many others around the world.
Great talk.
Pandorathanks for your interest in my comments on that speech. where have you read it? you can use them and let me know which kind of paper are your writing. cordiallyGraciela 
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