Your Brain Doesn’t Work the Way You Think

你的大脑并不按照你的想法运作

Freakonomics Radio

社会与文化

2024-12-23

47 分钟
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单集简介 ...

David Eagleman upends myths and describes the vast possibilities of a brainscape that even neuroscientists are only beginning to understand. Steve Levitt interviews him in this special episode of People I (Mostly) Admire.
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单集文稿 ...

  • Hey there, it's Stephen Dubner.

  • Today, a holiday treat, a bonus episode from people I mostly Admire, one of the other shows we make here at the Freakonomics Radio Network.

  • It is an interview show hosted by Steve Levitt, my Freakonomics friend and co author, who is an economics professor emeritus now at the University of Chicago.

  • On this episode, Levitt interviews David Eagleman, a neuroscientist, entrepreneur and author of several books, including Live Wired the Inside Story of the Ever Changing Brain.

  • It is a fascinating conversation.

  • You are going to love it.

  • To hear more conversations like this, follow people I mostly admire in your podcast app.

  • Okay, that's it from me.

  • Here is Steve Levitt.

  • I love podcast guests who change the way I think about some important aspect of the world.

  • A great example is my guest today, David Eagleman.

  • He's a Stanford neuroscientist whose work on brain plasticity has completely transformed my understanding of the human brain and its possibilities.

  • The human brain is about three pounds.

  • It's locked in silence and darkness.

  • It has no idea what, where the information is coming from because everything is just electrical spikes and also chemical releases as a result of those spikes.

  • And so what you have in there is this giant symphony of electrical activity going on.

  • And its job is to create a model of the outside world.

  • Welcome to people I Mostly Admire with Steve Levitt.

  • According to Eagleman, the brain is constantly trying to predict the world around it.

  • But of course, the world is unpredictable and surprising.