91³Ō¹Ļ thinkers deliver big ideas at TEDx Toronto
When 91³Ō¹Ļ undergrad Calvin Rieder was just a kid, he went camping with his family. During the night, dew condensed on the inside of his tent, rolled down the fabric wall and made his pillow wet.
To most, this event would mean minor discomfort. But to Rieder, that tiny rivulet of water inspired a design for an atmospheric water condenser ā a portable device that pulls clean, drinkable water out of thin air.
Since waking up that morning in his tent, Riederās passion for developing sustainable solutions to address the urgent need for clean, potable water in developing nations has led him to become a member of the World Youth Parliament for Water, and was recently named in Plan Canadaās Top 20 Under 20. Now, his drive to promote universal access to clean water has put him centre stage on the famous TEDxToronto red carpet.
āWe have to make changes that have sustainable impact ā if we donāt, we wonāt survive,ā he told an audience of more than 1,000 attendees at the October 26 event, organized on the theme of āSymbols + Signalsā. āI wanted to get clean water to where itās needed, with no negative impact on the environment.
āI didnāt want to create one problem while trying to solve another, so I thought about three things: accessibility, affordability and sustainability.ā
The first morning he went to check on his prototype, he was thrilled by the macabre scene: āThe collecting basin was full of drowned flies, and I was delighted that there was enough water in there to do that.ā
Today, Rieder is a second-year engineering student in the department of mechanical and industrial engineering, where he's also working on a solar-powered still that purifies dirty water of both physical and bacterial contaminants. His vision is not only to supply drinkable water to rural, remote and developing nations where water treatment infrastructure is scarce or nonexistent, but to supplement overtaxed urban water resources.
Rieder was one of 18 thinkers, artists, researchers and inventors invited to speak and perform at TEDxToronto, an independently organized event dedicated to the core TED concept of sharing āideas worth spreading.ā
Besides Rieder, six other 91³Ō¹Ļ professors, researchers and alumni shared their unforgettable ideas from the big red carpet.
Aled Edwards, professor in the department of molecular genetics, on the importance of open science:
āMuch of Canadian science, indeed much of global science, is redundantā¦ Iām an irrelevant cog in the machine. Imagine if we could use our resources more efficiently ā weād see massive global benefit.ā
Nick Saul, alumnus, on our misguided food charity ecosystem:
āWe have to find a way to recognize that when people are struggling, itās not because they donāt have enough to eat. At the root of hunger is povertyā¦ whatās needed is not charity, but solidarity.ā
Marcel Danesi, professor in the department of anthropology at the Faculty of Arts & Science, on the significance of emojis to the evolution of human language:
āWhen weāre communicating informally, and even not so informally, we need to feel as well as think.ā
Ryan Janzen, PhD candidate in The Edward S. Rogers Sr. Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering, on engineering transportation systems that redesign our world:
āRomans built the aqueducts. What can our civilization create or build that will last? What be our aqueducts, for generations to come?ā
Sarah Barmak, alumna, on pervasive misunderstanding of female anatomy and sexuality:
āFemale sexuality canāt be fixed with a pill. Thatās because itās not broken ā itās misunderstood. If more than half of women have some kind of sexual dysfunction, maybe itās our understanding of female sexuality thatās broken.ā
Helene Polatajko, professor in the department of occupational science and occupational therapy in the Faculty of Medicine, on helping patients learn to overcome inabilities, rather than correcting what were perceived as errors:
āIt was heretical at the timeā¦ We asked āWhat are they doing differently?ā not āWhat are they doing wrong?ā ā different and wrong are not the same thing.ā