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(Recommended)Popular Videos : [TEDx Talks] Why the majority is always wrong | Paul Rulkens | TEDxMaastricht

 

This time, I will review the popular YouTube videos.

These days, even if it's good to watch on YouTube, sometimes people skip it or don't watch it if it's too long.

When you watch Youtube, do you scroll and read the comments first?

To save your busy time, why don't you check out the fun contents, summary, and empathy comments of popular YouTube videos first and watch YouTube?

(Recommended)Popular Videos : [TEDx Talks] Why the majority is always wrong | Paul Rulkens | TEDxMaastricht

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VNGFep6rncY

 

 

Playtime Comments : [TEDx Talks] Why the majority is always wrong | Paul Rulkens | TEDxMaastricht

Wo******:
@1:33 "What I am going to explain today ... and how you can use that, to get everything you can out of everything you've got." Sorry, but I am still missing this explantion. Nice speech, but too abstract, and finally nothing new under the sun.

An**********:
9:51 - And Ginni Rometty was in the crowd.. very interested, it seems.

Jo************:
2:23 how did no one get the Energizer reference

Su**********:
2:40
"Think is a high energy activity".
Most aged people don't have high energy. Our government are full of aged people. Sad.

Mi**************:
6:43 - He missed the step where the bank prints 9 more notes for every note you give them, before giving all of it to someone else.

Lu*******:

2:25 If i wouldve been in that crowd
I wouldve had no chance of Holding myslef back


St*************:

Take-home remark: thinking is tiring 2:52 - 3:05


Ti*******:

6:43 that's what banking SHOULD be.


Re**********:

10:59 Oh sheep, sheeeeeep. The crowd is sheep. I'm trying to guess who else thought the whole talk was ridiculous.


dr*****:

4:07 very uncomfortable when that camera hits you


 


 

Top Comments : [TEDx Talks] Why the majority is always wrong | Paul Rulkens | TEDxMaastricht

li*********:
I like this combo-accent of dutch, way too posh british and a touch of german

Ha***********:

How relevant this is right now...


Je*******:
That was just like 97% of other TED Talks I've seen.

Ad*************:

The opener went down like a dead duck in a thunderstorm. However, he is right. The answers do change. The questions stay roughly the same.


Ro********:

2021:
Me gets to see Agent 47 giving ted talks(!)


ag*******:
I loved his speech but most importantly he was a great speaker. He never stopped his speech with awkward “uuhs” or “likes” but told it comfortably without hesitation. And he clearly masters pauses.

Sc**********:

Paul : The majority is always Wrong .
Majority : Paul is Right .
Paul : Turns out I'm Wrong too .


Fr********:
“Extraordinary people are ordinary people with an extra amount of determination”

“The thought that often drives me hazy is it I or the others that are crazy”

“Freedom’s just another word for nothing left to lose”

Ted talk over

Jo****************:

His speech reminds me of the "Think Different" campaign by Apple back in 1997.


Br***********:

I'm not following industry norms by watching this video at work instead of actually working


Ha***************:

The best part.... "the purpose of all thinking is not to think ”


al*****:

Everyone thinks they're in the 3%, ironically.


Di***********:

I love how he says that 97% of people work for the remaining 3% and then the one person gets the Applause from a hundred or maybe thousands of people.


Es******:

This was one of the most Ted Talk Ted Talks I've seen in a long while


Aa********:

“The crowd is untruth.”

- Soren Kierkegaard


Va***************:
I'm an historian and I would say that "change" comes from concrete conditions, nobody wake up a day (or watch a video on youtube) saying "I think out of the box" and change the world. Lavoiser was the founder of modern chemistry, he smashed previous alchemy and he did so because he was amazingly rich. Be out of the box it's a complex combination of knowledge, experiences and life conditions. We have to empower poor people and middle class people not selling ideas (for free of course), but improving their life conditions in a way they can be more free and have the quiet mind needed to develop themselves and not just survive day after day.
Pilot mind it's needed when you fight day by day, to not have it is just a privilege.

bl****:
if we could all get into those 3%, there wouldn't be 3% anymore, so we would be left with nobody to work for us. damn math

Fo********:
Choose to be the 3% of the industry who produce extraordinary results, or the 97% who works for the 3%.

Ha*********:

This guy is completely right,such a nice speach.


Ku****:

The majority of people believe the earth is round

The man is a flat-earther


fr*****:
Can you say "Survivorship Bias"?

Ch************:
Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it is time to pause and reflect
MARK TWAIN

te*****:
So i guess that was an 11 minutes speech to just say "think out of the box"... Nothing really innovative here.

da**:
What if the majority thinks that the majority is wrong

Ol************:

The answer promised in the title is not offered in the video.


Qu*********:

If that title had an “almost” it would be much more precise.


Bl****:

the thing is, we think being different is good. but there are MILLIONS of companies who did it differently, trying to innovate the market and failed. but because they weren't successful, their company was never known. and THAT is the true majority, this is the basic idea of something called "survivor bias" which is a bias towards the numbers that get counted and not the whole set. basically, you could have a thousand different companies with new innovation before only one is successful.


Mo********:
The majority of this comment section entirely missed the point of the video. The majority is always wrong in the sense that the majority isn’t ever extraordinary. If the practice is done by the majority then it won’t be successful it will yield average results. If the question is how can I make a successful business, following what everyone else does won’t get you there. The majority can never be successful only average. Yes he basically said think outside of the box but he explained how, something you rarely hear. He explained that you have to recognize your boundaries and think of ideas that exist outside of them. Honestly it was very inspiring and great advice.

Ch***************:
I swear after this video I'll be uncommon, that's a difference I choose, which means remarkable and rare, and I intend to be as uncommon as I can. I solved problems but people were scared of me before and angry every time I was different. If there's method in my madness I can solve the problem, e.g. by staying in the front yard not the back yard to keep away from problematic people, and by dressing to look great not like everybody else. Thinking outside the box, like getting a job to get more money, and knowing that the majority is always wrong because they have normal terrible lives, and because problems aren't solved by the norm. By wearing my dinner suit and knit tie I feel more at home with myself than other people's norms.

Be***************************:

The way I see it: being normal is overrated. We haven’t developed as humans by acting like everyone else, because innovation- as the speaker explained -occurs when we break the ‘norm.’ We grow closer as a people by abandoning our fear of being strange, and allowing ourselves to be unique, and human. Fear of appearing strange to others is proof enough that something is terribly wrong with our way of living. Fear of change is fear of living, for living is to be ever-changing. I personally believe we disregard the context of various scenarios; we think so much of the future, we forget the errors of the past, and grow blind to the wonders of the present. We aren’t grounded in reality, as we’ve been lost in our panicked efforts to shape it. I think that collectively, we need to take a step back (metaphorically, at least) and take a breather. Time waits for no one, so let’s not waste our own time with irrational fear.


 


 

[TEDx Talks] We gathered comments about popular videos and looked at them in summary, including play time, and order of popularity.

It's a good video or channel, but if you're sad because it's too long, please leave a YouTube channel or video link and I'll post it on this blog.

 

 

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