When one of the founders of cognitive neuroscience is helping you plumb the mysteries of consciousness, the self, free will, and the two minds that coexist in our skulls, it helps every now and then to touch your nose. To understand why touching your nose is such a profound experience, check out my talk today on bloggingheads with Mike Gazzaniga.
(And if you want to see what Mike was like as a young post-doc 50 years ago, check out this video from the early1960s about his split brain research. It's also evidence of how much science documentaries have changed...)
- Log in to post comments
More like this
Moshe Pritsker and I first met at Scifoo, then shared a panel at the Harvard Millennium Confreence and finally met again at the Science Blogging Conference two weeks ago. Moshe is the Editor-in-Chief of Journal of Visualized Experiments, the innovative online journals that publishes videos…
Last week, my SciBling Jason Goldman interviewed me for his blog. The questions were not so much about blogging, journalism, Open Access and PLoS (except a little bit at the end) but more about science - how I got into it, what are my grad school experiences, what I think about doing research on…
Jonathan Katz's "Don't Become a Scientist" has bubbled to the surface again, turning up at P.P. Cook's Tangent Space a few days ago. I can't recall what, if anything, I said about this that last time it came around, but I'll make a few comments here, in light of the recent discussions about jobs in…
tags: encephalon, brain, behavior, cognition, neurobiology, neuroscience, blog carnival
The last frontier: The brain.
Image: Orphaned. Contact me so I can provide credit and linkage.
Welcome to Encephalon! This is the blogosphere's neuroscience blog carnival that focuses specifically upon the…
Watching the first video, I'm sitting here thinking "They'd never show animal surgery to a general audience today."
Cool video. Now off to the bloggingheads.
Oh honey, don't be mad at me for saying so, but your "umms" drove me absolutely batty. If you're going to keep doing this, please please put some serious speaking practice in. I love reading your blog but listening to you stammer through that interview made me want to damage my own brain!
<3
I found this diavlog really interesting, and I posted a short comment on my blog . The power of brain imaging to sway jury opinion was tremendously interesting to think about, especially for someone like me who spends so much time trying to construct convincing images to teach people medical and anatomy topics.
I greatly enjoyed the interview.
One thing I didn't get -- and it looked like Carl didn't get it either -- is Gazzaniga's explanation of free will. This clearly is a difficult issue. Gazzaniga's answer wasn't clear to me. The example that Carl gave -- does a kid raised in Nazi Germany have free will? -- seemed close, but Gazzaniga rejected it. Can someone explain?
I also need explaination to that. jkubie you said right.