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  • 00:00

    Vsauce!

  • 00:01

    Kevin here.

  • 00:02

    At the Metropolitan Museum Of Art in New York City.

  • 00:05

    Visited by a record 6.3 million people last year to look at a rotating collection of over

  • 00:11

    1.5 million pieces ranging from Mesopotamian cylinder seals to King Henry VIII’s personal

  • 00:18

    armor.

  • 00:19

    20% of the total collection, 306,353 items were collected by one person, Jefferson Burdick.

  • 00:28

    But why would he do that?

  • 00:31

    Why do people collect things?

  • 00:33

    Autographs, Barf bags, Cards, Dolls, Erasers, Fabergé Eggs, Gum, Hair, Ink, Jokers, Knives,

  • 00:40

    Lunch boxes, Miniature Chairs, Nails, Oil, Perfume bottles, Quilts, Rocks, Soap, Toothbrushes,

  • 00:47

    Umbrella covers, Video Games, Wine labels, X-men, Yo-Yos, Zippos.

  • 00:52

    What is a collection?

  • 00:53

    Is it just acquiring stuff, or is it a carefully selected, curated assembly around a particular

  • 01:00

    theme?

  • 01:01

    Is your memory a collection of thoughts?

  • 01:03

    Is living just collecting memories?

  • 01:05

    Are your thoughts a collection of you?

  • 01:09

    Well, maybe.

  • 01:11

    But Psychoanalyst Werner Muensterberger defined a collection as, “the selecting, gathering,

  • 01:15

    and keeping of objects of subjective value.”

  • 01:18

    For Jefferson R. Burdick, it was cards.

  • 01:22

    Born in 1900, Burdick grew up with the dawn of photography and mass-printed illustrations,

  • 01:27

    with halftone printing technology allowing for the reproduction of complex images.

  • 01:33

    Picture cards were inserted into consumer products, like pouches of tobacco, to bolster

  • 01:37

    brand awareness.

  • 01:39

    A generation before television beamed moving pictures into the living room, Burdick and

  • 01:43

    his friends were captivated by the brilliantly colored chromolithographs printed on thin

  • 01:48

    cardboard stock . Saying, “Practically every small boy saved these kinds of cards.

  • 01:53

    We made our dads use certain brands whether they liked them or not.”

  • 01:58

    The most popular icons to grace product insert cards came from baseball, a game that took

  • 02:04

    the United States by storm in the wake of the Civil War.

  • 02:08

    By the 1900’s, America’s cities fielded teams to play a game that helped unify a divided

  • 02:13

    country.

  • 02:14

    From Boston to St. Louis, regional competition was channeled through sports, and advertisers

  • 02:20

    leveraged the popularity of the game and its stars to promote their products.

  • 02:24

    In 1889, kids in Boston fought over the Old Judge Cigarettes picture card of the Boston

  • 02:30

    Beaneaters’ Mike “King” Kelly, and in 1909 boys in Pittsburgh watched their fathers

  • 02:35

    open pouches from the American Tobacco Company to see if their favorite Pirate -- Honus Wagner

  • 02:40

    -- would emerge.

  • 02:41

    Wagner, who reportedly didn’t want his picture associated with marketing cigarettes to children,

  • 02:46

    pulled his card from production.

  • 02:48

    With fewer than 60 known to exist, one of them sold at auction in 2013 for $2.1 million.

  • 02:55

    But during Burdick’s lifetime, all of these cards were basically worthless, and a 1933

  • 03:01

    Goudey Babe Ruth that could sell for $250,000 today was not significantly more valuable

  • 03:07

    than an 1891 Allen & Ginter Golden-Pencilled Hamburgh chicken.

  • 03:11

    In 1961, two years before his death, Burdick valued that Holy Grail T-206 Wagner card at

  • 03:18

    just fifty bucks.

  • 03:20

    But wasn’t about the money, it was about the collection.

  • 03:24

    He spent a lifetime amassing not only 30,000 baseball cards, but hundreds of thousands

  • 03:29

    of postcards, tobacco and baker cards ranging from champion women swimmers to perilous occupations

  • 03:37

    and depictions of jokes.

  • 03:39

    In the developing era of cheap mass-production, Burdick collected and cataloged virtually

  • 03:44

    every type of card printed -- centuries before, the Marind people of South New Guinea were

  • 03:51

    collecting human heads.

  • 03:52

    They believed skulls, along with other objects, contained a sacred life-force known as mana.

  • 03:58

    Invisible power capable of soothing insecurity, anxiety and feelings of vulnerability.

  • 04:04

    Mana is the magic that human belief imbues in objects, whether it’s a religious relic

  • 04:09

    embodying the power of a deity, a dreamcatcher to filter nightmares, or picture cards that

  • 04:15

    could teleport Jefferson Burdick back to his youth.

  • 04:18

    Humans add meaning to objects and search for solace, safety and security in them -- which

  • 04:24

    might just come with the territory of being born.

  • 04:27

    Carl Jung, the founder of analytical psychology, believed that collecting stems from a collective

  • 04:32

    unconscious “nut and berries” behavior inherited from our hunter/gatherer ancestors.

  • 04:38

    Father of psychoanalysis Sigmund Freud believed that collecting originates in an infant’s

  • 04:42

    trauma associated with bowel control, holding onto one’s poop then becomes holding onto

  • 04:48

    one’s objects.

  • 04:49

    Werner Muensterberger, the author of “Collecting, an Unruly Passion,” believed collecting

  • 04:54

    to be a relief from the shock and uncertainty felt when an infant realizes they’re a separate

  • 04:59

    entity from their mother.

  • 05:01

    They're alone, and an object helps fill that void.

  • 05:07

    Psychoanalyst Donald Winnicott describes a comfort object as something that substitutes

  • 05:11

    the mother-child bond.

  • 05:13

    Often a physical object like a teddy bear or security blanket, it’s the first possession

  • 05:18

    of the child that’s understood to be not the mother and not me.

  • 05:23

    Like thumb sucking replacing the comfort of breast-feeding, the teddy bear becomes a source

  • 05:28

    of emotional security.

  • 05:30

    Collecting is when this protection becomes a passion.

  • 05:33

    But being a collector requires access to and the availability of objects.

  • 05:38

    Historically, only the elite had access - Bishops like Abbot Suger collected religious relics

  • 05:44

    such as splinters allegedly taken from the Holy Cross; alchemists during the reign of

  • 05:49

    Rudolf II gathered artifacts from around the world, with the hopes that somewhere within

  • 05:54

    the collection lie the Philosopher's Stone, believed to be capable of teaching humanity

  • 05:59

    the alphabet of creation; and Tsar Peter the Great turned an inherited cabinet of curiosities,

  • 06:04

    furniture designed to store magical objects like bezoars and unicorn horns, which were

  • 06:10

    actually narwhal tusks, into a collection spanning thirty rooms that was eventually

  • 06:15

    opened to the public in 1714.

  • 06:18

    The availability of items to collect blossomed during colonization and the expansion of trade.

  • 06:24

    A generation before Burdick, Sir Thomas Phillipps set out to collect one copy of every book

  • 06:29

    in the world, but it wasn’t until mass production that a set could reasonably be completed.

  • 06:34

    You couldn’t exactly collect a complete set of Greek sculptures.

  • 06:39

    Burdick lived in the first era in which an average person could build an extensive collection

  • 06:44

    of goods -- and then he lost control of his hands.

  • 06:48

    By age 33, chronic arthritis -- likely exacerbated from his job assembling electrical parts -- reduced

  • 06:55

    Burdick's mobility.

  • 06:57

    Living alone in Syracuse, New York, he renewed his childhood interest in cards and made it

  • 07:02

    his mission to collect every single one before he died.

  • 07:06

    And he did it the hard way.

  • 07:09

    Burdick's collection was built by trading with collectors he met through magazines and

  • 07:13

    by going to libraries, small store exhibits and auction sales.

  • 07:17

    Unfortunately for him, eBay, which today has over 800 million items listed and boasts $82

  • 07:23

    billion dollars worth of items sold in 2015, was sixty years away.

  • 07:29

    With Burdick, as with any true collector, there was no saturation point.

  • 07:33

    Just as eating food provides temporary hunger fulfillment, so does obtaining a new object.

  • 07:39

    Collector Paul Wallraf said he would “manger avec ses yeux” - “eat with his eyes”

  • 07:44

    -- A sentiment Burdick shared when he said, “Card collecting is primarily an inherited

  • 07:49

    love of pictures.”

  • 07:51

    The hunt to obtain a new object sparks a collector’s seeking system, defined by neuroscientist

  • 07:57

    Dr. Jaak Panksepp as a basic impulse in animals, including humans, “to search, investigate,

  • 08:03

    and make sense of the environment.”

  • 08:05

    It’s the same biological need that drives a dog to investigate a noise, or the curiosity

  • 08:09

    that influenced you to watch this video.

  • 08:13

    For a collector, the satisfaction from attaining a new piece quickly subsides... and the hunt

  • 08:18

    resumes.

  • 08:19

    Collecting as a form of preserving the past confirms our belief that there must be an

  • 08:24

    infinite truth.

  • 08:25

    Life existed before me and it will exist after me, and “Here’s the proof.”

  • 08:32

    Collecting as a form of inspiration influenced artists like Rembrandt, who made paintings

  • 08:36

    of his antique sculptures of Homer, Aristotle and Socrates.

  • 08:40

    Or writer Umberto Eco, who when asked if he had time to read his huge collection of literature

  • 08:45

    and poetry said, “It is not indispensable to read a book - it’s enough to touch it

  • 08:50

    and by a mysterious fluid, you absorb it.”

  • 08:54

    Whether it’s Eco’s mysterious fluid or a tribal belief that objects carry mana, it’s

  • 08:59

    the reason an X-ray of Elvis Presley can sell for $3,500 and an X-ray of your cousin Larry

  • 09:05

    was probably thrown away.

  • 09:07

    And collecting as a form of establishing one’s identity is a celebration of individuality

  • 09:13

    because no two collections are the same.

  • 09:15

    Your button, coin or card collection creates a conceptual circle of magic that wards off

  • 09:21

    uncertainty and chaos, helps define you, and proves not only that you exist, but that you

  • 09:27

    are unique.

  • 09:28

    A collection is a secure micro world of order entirely controlled by you in a macro world

  • 09:34

    of chaos… but that becomes a problem when the toy trains control the conductor.

  • 09:41

    In 2013, Hoarding Disorder was split off into its own entry under Obsessive-Compulsive and

  • 09:47

    Related Disorders in the DSM-V. It’s defined as persistent difficulty discarding or parting

  • 09:53

    with possessions regardless of the value others may attribute to them.

  • 09:57

    The American Psychiatric Association estimates that two to five percent of the population

  • 10:01

    suffer from Hoarding Disorder, which creates fire hazards and health hazards for themselves

  • 10:07

    and family members.

  • 10:09

    Some people are incapable of letting their objects go.

  • 10:12

    But as Burdick’s health deteriorated, letting go of his collection became a personal crusade.

  • 10:19

    When Sir Hans Sloane donated his massive collection of coins, books and dried plants to The Royalty

  • 10:24

    Society in 1759, The British Museum was born.

  • 10:28

    Jefferson Burdick was determined to leave his legacy here at The Met - and curator A.

  • 10:33

    Hyatt Mayor accepted the offer under the condition that Burdick organize it all.

  • 10:38

    He spent the next 16 years cataloguing all 300,000 cards, and eventually moved to New

  • 10:44

    York City to work on the project full-time at a small oak desk here in the Print Department

  • 10:50

    of The Met.

  • 10:51

    Along the way, he developed The American Card Catalog, a classification system for organizing

  • 10:57

    old cards that’s still used today.

  • 11:00

    Burdick was determined to immortalize his collection in the face of his progressing

  • 11:03

    illness.

  • 11:04

    It became a race against time; he took cortisone shots that made him sick just to briefly dull

  • 11:11

    pain so bad that it took a full minute of agony just to put on his hat.

  • 11:16

    He’d often tell Mayor, “I might not make it.”

  • 11:20

    But he did.

  • 11:22

    When the final card was glued down into history, he stood up, painfully twisted into his coat,

  • 11:28

    and said, “I shan’t be back.”

  • 11:31

    The very next day, Jefferson Burdick checked into University Hospital and never checked

  • 11:36

    out.

  • 11:37

    He died two months later.

  • 11:39

    According to Mayor, the cause of his death was an exhausted heart.

  • 11:43

    But he didn't die from collecting.

  • 11:46

    He lived from it.

  • 11:48

    And in his collection lived the dream that a nobody like Jefferson Burdick, a nobody

  • 11:54

    like me, a nobody like you, each in our own unique way has a chance to leave a lasting,

  • 12:04

    positive mark on this world.

  • 12:07

    And as always - thanks

  • 14:06

    for watching.

All

The example sentences of SUBSIDES in videos (6 in total of 6)

for preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner collector noun, singular or mass , the determiner satisfaction noun, singular or mass from preposition or subordinating conjunction attaining verb, gerund or present participle a determiner new adjective piece noun, singular or mass quickly adverb subsides verb, 3rd person singular present . . . and coordinating conjunction the determiner hunt noun, singular or mass
as preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner intensity noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction it personal pronoun subsides verb, 3rd person singular present for preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner lot noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction people noun, plural , probably adverb for preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner majority noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction people noun, plural ,
and coordinating conjunction it personal pronoun was verb, past tense due adjective to to something noun, singular or mass called verb, past participle carrier noun, singular or mass subsides noun, plural , which wh-determiner is verb, 3rd person singular present an determiner important adjective concept noun, singular or mass to to
the determiner only adverb way noun, singular or mass to to see verb, base form its possessive pronoun floor noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present by preposition or subordinating conjunction doing verb, gerund or present participle nothing noun, singular or mass until preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner cloudiness noun, singular or mass subsides noun, plural and coordinating conjunction
especially adverb in preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner evenings noun, plural , when wh-adverb the determiner day noun, singular or mass 's possessive ending heat noun, singular or mass subsides noun, plural , and coordinating conjunction the determiner temples noun, plural and coordinating conjunction pagodas noun, plural are verb, non-3rd person singular present illuminated verb, past participle by preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner lights noun, plural .
so preposition or subordinating conjunction we personal pronoun 're verb, non-3rd person singular present going verb, gerund or present participle to to melt verb, base form two cardinal number sticks noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction butter noun, singular or mass over preposition or subordinating conjunction medium noun, singular or mass heat noun, singular or mass until preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner foam noun, singular or mass subsides noun, plural and coordinating conjunction the determiner fats noun, plural have verb, non-3rd person singular present solidified verb, past participle ,

Use "subsides" in a sentence | "subsides" example sentences

How to use "subsides" in a sentence?

  • Great men, unknown to their generation, have their fame among the great who have preceded them, and all true worldly fame subsides from their high estimate beyond the stars.
    -Henry David Thoreau-
  • Friendship may, and often does, grow into love, but love never subsides into friendship.
    -Lord Byron-
  • Pleasure, that immortal essence, the beauteous bead sparkling in the cup, effervesces soon and subsides.
    -Amos Bronson Alcott-
  • The flood subsides, and the body, like a worn sea-shell emerges strange and lovely.
    -D. H. Lawrence-
  • Love is a temporary madness. It erupts like an earthquake and then subsides.
    -Louis de Bernieres-
  • Our health is what we make of it - give it attention and it improves, give it none and it subsides.
    -John Frederick Demartini-
  • If the ego rises, all else will also rise; if it subsides, all else will also subside.
    -Ramana Maharshi-
  • The wrath that on conviction subsides into mildness, is the wrath of a generous mind.
    -Johann Kaspar Lavater-

Definition and meaning of SUBSIDES

What does "subsides mean?"

/səbˈsīd/

verb
To become quieter or less strong.

What are synonyms of "subsides"?
Some common synonyms of "subsides" are:
  • abate,
  • moderate,
  • calm,
  • lull,
  • relent,
  • recede,
  • lessen,
  • soften,

You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.

What are antonyms of "subsides"?
Some common antonyms of "subsides" are:
  • intensify,
  • worsen,
  • rise,

You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.