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NNadir

(36,813 posts)
Sun Oct 26, 2025, 09:33 AM Sunday

Have you ever been to a lecture where the speaker is so smart people are afraid to ask a question?

I went to this lecture on Wednesday:

The Natural History of Reality: An Introduction to Complexity Science

The speaker was David Krakauer, President of the Santa Fe Institute. There were maybe 200 or so people there.

It was an amazing talk, 90 minutes, traveling through the history of science to identify areas of "emergence," where interdisciplinary thought is greater than the sum of its parts, to put it in an overly simplistic way.

Now the topic was a little arcane, out of the box.

Afterwards the host asked if there were any questions. No one raised their hands. This was Princeton University.

The host said, "Let's take a break and come back with questions." Most of the audience left without coming back; there were maybe 30 or 40 of us who stayed, whereupon some questions were finally asked, sophisticated questions overall, but I had the feeling that the initial questioners were still somewhat intimidated. Maybe I'm wrong about that, but that's what I thought.

I managed to ask one linking the Uncertainty Principle and orbital symmetry, to which he politely replied satisfactorily and briefly.

Very cool. I love going to talks like that, where the brilliance is overwhelming, where I feel like the dumbest person in the room.

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Have you ever been to a lecture where the speaker is so smart people are afraid to ask a question? (Original Post) NNadir Sunday OP
I doubt if you are ever the dumbest person in the room! biophile Sunday #1
Wise of the speaker to give people some time to formulate thoughts enough to come up with questions biophile Sunday #2
Yes PJMcK Sunday #3
I am every time... surfered Sunday #4
This makes you a very wise person. NNadir Yesterday #8
Sounds like an interesting lecture. Do you know if there is a recording or transcripts of it? erronis Sunday #5
I looked, but no, regrettably. NNadir Sunday #6
Some related material usonian Sunday #7
that's why those who make people comfortable asking questions are so popular Skittles 20 hrs ago #9

biophile

(976 posts)
1. I doubt if you are ever the dumbest person in the room!
Sun Oct 26, 2025, 09:46 AM
Sunday

I frequently ask questions- I’m not shy to express a desire to learn more! There are lots of intelligent people who are not well educated ( through not fault of their own). It does no harm to continue expanding knowledge from those who know a subject more extensively.

biophile

(976 posts)
2. Wise of the speaker to give people some time to formulate thoughts enough to come up with questions
Sun Oct 26, 2025, 09:48 AM
Sunday

Many times I’ve been to a talk and later thought of something to ask.

PJMcK

(24,330 posts)
3. Yes
Sun Oct 26, 2025, 09:50 AM
Sunday

I attended a lecture by Lawrence Krauss when he was promoting his book, “A Universe From Nothing.” I’ve been a fan of his for years and it was enlightening to hear his discussion and his answers to the audience’s questions. He’s a really smart scientist who communicates his field clearly and understandably.

NNadir

(36,813 posts)
8. This makes you a very wise person.
Mon Oct 27, 2025, 08:36 AM
Yesterday

The more you are the "dumbest person in the room" the harder it is to be that person in the next event.

That's been my experience.

Happily I've had lots of opportunities to be that person in a long life.

erronis

(21,733 posts)
5. Sounds like an interesting lecture. Do you know if there is a recording or transcripts of it?
Sun Oct 26, 2025, 12:40 PM
Sunday

usonian

(21,944 posts)
7. Some related material
Sun Oct 26, 2025, 05:30 PM
Sunday
SFI Press announces "The Complex World" (2024) Book announcement
David C. Krakauer
https://www.santafe.edu/news-center/news/sfi-press-announces-the-complex-world

Discussion:
David Krakauer reflects on the foundations and future of complexity science
In his book “The Complex World,” Krakauer explores how complexity science developed, from its early roots to the four pillars that now define it—entropy, evolution, dynamics and computation.
14 JANUARY 2025 | by PAUL MIDDLEBROOKS
https://www.thetransmitter.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/BI-203-transcript-proof.pdf

Using complexity science to search for unity in the natural sciences. (PDF/proof)
https://lweb.cfa.harvard.edu/~ejchaisson/reprints/ASUessay_revised_for_CUP.pdf
published in Complexity and the Arrow of Time, edited by
Lineweaver, Davies, and Ruse, Cambridge Univ. Press, 2013.

Skittles

(168,296 posts)
9. that's why those who make people comfortable asking questions are so popular
Mon Oct 27, 2025, 07:40 PM
20 hrs ago

like.....Dr. Neil DeGrasse Tyson, for example

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