 Should get a start and I'm very lucky because it's a very small group. So we might be able to actually talk, right? What I would actually like to do is not do this kind of formal introduction that I'd planned. We've been together for two days. I probably between us we've covered most of the sessions. Personally, I'm exhausted with this much information. But what I want to talk about with you today is that we can't actually make any progress in our work unless we've got a good grasp on the nature of the problem we're dealing with. So if we think about the talks we've heard over the past two days, I've noticed a number of things. Nobody, at least in the talks that I've been to, has been talking about what's called problems of simplicity, where you've got one or two variables. Like you go in a bank and you say, okay, I'll sort out the credit and debit. No one's talking about that kind of thing. I think it's because we know how to do it. I've not heard anyone talk really about what's called problems of disorganized complexity. Which are problems of statistics and probability. I think it's because we know how to do it. We can do the math. So we can help a health company on death statistics or certain illnesses. Now I just came from a talk given by Linda where this was brought up. But the issue was not our ability to do the calculations. It was our inability to be real about ourselves, which is a very different problem. So in the last two days, I'm not seeing people talk about this. Either one of those simple problems or disorganized complexity problems. What I am seeing is incredible talks, actually all of the ones that I've been to, where what we're talking about are problems of organized complexity. Where, and these are, if you want, these are the biological problems, the life sciences problems. How does something grow? How does aging work? How does an organization adapt and evolve? We're talking about those kinds of problems. The words I've been hearing the last few days are organic, complex, emergence. There was a talk on self-organizing.