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[Intro]
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Hello and welcome to SciShow. Our goal here is to excitedly and enthusiastically share
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the marvelous peculiarity of the world and give people the opportunity to know more about
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themselves and their universe.
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Recently, we were talking to some people at Google about this goal and they were like,
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“What if, like, we gave you the most asked questions in the world?”
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That seemed like a really good idea to us, so they did that. And then after filtering
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out the ones about Kim Kardashian, we were left with a list of ten of the most googled
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scientific questions ever. This is the World's Most Asked Questions.
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Answering questions is what science is all about, and we love it. So let’s start out
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with the first one: What is the meaning of life?
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Yeah, it doesn’t necessarily sound like a question for SciShow, but it kinda depends
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on your definition of “meaning” and your definition of “life.”
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The person asking is probably wondering what the purpose of THEIR life is...which I’m
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not going to weigh in on. And probably, Google isn't the place to look for that answer.
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But the purpose of life itself? That's actually a question that science has come a good long
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way to understanding.
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The biggest idea in understanding the history of life on earth, and probably everywhere,
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if there is life elsewhere, is evolution.
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Once upon a time, one thing made a copy of itself...creating a kind of immortality for
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that thing. Though, of course, not really, because the thing died. But the instructions
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for making it were passed on.
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Because the second thing had the instructions, it was able to make more of the things in
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the image of the first thing. The things themselves kept dying, but the instructions lived on...and
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there we have the bizarre and occasionally upsetting meaning of life, biologically...to
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pass on the instructions for creating more life.
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Those instructions, these days, are DNA, or, for some simple organisms, RNA -- molecules
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that contain segments that code for different proteins, and those proteins do the majority
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of the constructing of the actual organism.
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In a weird way, the life of an individual organism is just a system for keeping the
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genes goin'.
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Genes that don’t contribute to that task, or especially if they interfere with it, won’t
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get passed because the organism will die before it has a chance to do any breeding.
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And there we have the primary mechanism of evolution.
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So, yeah, in a somewhat gritty sense, the biological meaning of life is to live long
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enough to pass your genes on to the next generation. So, basically...don’t die...and have sex.
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But simultaneously, there is a much more pleasant way of saying that. The meaning of life is
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to create life. To perpetuate life. To sustain and grow this marvelous and astouding complexity
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that is unique in the known universe.
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As for the meaning of your own life...that’s up to you to figure out.
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Leading up to this project, we did a little SciShow viewer survey where we asked you,
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our viewers, a bunch of questions, including whether you felt like you knew roughly what
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you were doing here on earth. In other words, whether you had some idea of the meaning of
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your life. And the results of our very unscientific analysis of this survey were fascinating.
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A full two thirds of you feel like you know roughly what you’re doing here on earth,
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but those who didn’t were were substantially more likely to suffer from chronic hiccups...so
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either knowing your place in the world decreases your likelihood of getting hiccups...or getting
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hiccups increases the chance that you will feel aimless. Or possibly there’s some completely
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different effect going on, or our completely non-scientific survey is not actually very
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good at predicting things.
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People who had some idea of their purpose were also more likely to have beards, be religious,
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and have fallen in love.
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And people who didn’t feel like they knew what their purpose was were 26% more likely
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to hold violet as their favorite color of the rainbow. So that’s just WEIRD!
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Of all the fascinating questions in the world, what question do you most want answered? Let
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us know on Facebook or Twitter or in the comments down below, and we will answer the best questions
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in a new video at the end of the month. Don’t forget to use the hashtag #WMAQ and stay tuned
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for more questions answered here on SciShow.