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Neuroscience
"Nobody expects a computer simulation of a hurricane to generate real wind and real rain," writes neuroscientist Anil Seth.
Many, from neuroscientists to philosophers to anesthesiologists, have claimed to understand consciousness. Do physicists? Does anyone?
In nature, business, and life, survival doesn’t belong to the optimized — it belongs to those with a built-in buffer.
Locked inside their minds, thousands await a cure. Neuroscientist Daniel Toker is racing to find it.
A look inside Mindstate Design Labs' effort to design drugs that reliably produce specific states of mind.
A powerful psychedelic long used in African rituals shows surprising promise for treating traumatic brain injury and PTSD.
A fresh view of intelligence — spanning living systems from bacteria to human civilization — challenges the idea that it’s merely problem-solving.
The nature of “the mind” is always vast and clear no matter how swamped by information we feel — and leaders can learn to embrace this space.
"Personality isn't based on what we say we'll do. It's rooted in what we actually do, which becomes what we think about."
Cognitive neuroscientist and AI researcher Christopher Summerfield explores the differences, and similarities, of how AI and humans make meaning of the world.
“Can we push these cells to do something other than what they normally do?" asks developmental biologist Michael Levin. "Can they build something completely different?”
Neuroscientist and author Anne-Laure Le Cunff discusses the lasting benefits of uncertainty, curiosity, and the experimental mindset.
Delirium is one of the most perplexing deathbed phenomena, exposing the gap between our cultural ideals of dying words and the reality of a disoriented mind.
Could AI develop true intelligence without sentience? Philosopher Jonathan Birch explores the boundaries of artificial and evolved minds.
Ethan Kross, psychologist and author of "Shift," explains how negative emotions help us live safely and well.
"The amount of interest is enormous," says anesthesiologist Boris Heifets. "People are dropping in and coming out of the woodwork, trying to understand how to do this."
"I think it's about time we stop allowing every male generation bang their frontal lobe through its most developmental stages."
Hawking’s refusal to upgrade his communication system preserved a voice that became iconic, not just for its sound, but for the profound identity it conveyed.
Participants’ brains revealed they were doing a kind of “neural replay” of the game they had been manipulated to win.
Welcome to The Nightcrawler — a weekly newsletter from Eric Markowitz covering tech, innovation, and long-term thinking.
If atoms are mostly empty space, then why can't two objects made of atoms simply pass through each other? Quantum physics explains why.