Date: May 19, 2014
"I asked if she thought scientists would ever really be able to write the pain out of a patient's mind."
preview | full record— Specter, Michael (b. 1955)
Date: September 1, 2014
"Lakoff argues that the brain understands sentences not just by analyzing syntax and looking up neural dictionaries, but also by igniting its memories of kicking and picking up."
preview | full record— Chorost, Michael (b. 1964)
Date: December 30, 2015
"He explained how they reached tumors that were lodged deep in the brain, which is, very loosely speaking, crumpled up like a sheet of paper, and therefore full of folds and ravines that you can push aside and move through."
preview | full record— Knausgaard, Karl Ove (b. 1968)
Date: June 30, 2017
"In this sense, a forgotten memory is a lot like an old file on your computer. While the document still exists, you don't have a good way of getting to it, and today many memory researchers don't even use the word 'forgetting.'"
preview | full record— Boser, Ulrich
Date: June 30, 2017
"Or consider living with an unending library of easily recalled memories. It would be overwhelming: Dates, names, phone numbers -- they would all be constantly top of mind."
preview | full record— Boser, Ulrich
Date: May 4, 2018
"In this labyrinth, Nietzsche detected the handwriting of envy everywhere, observing, 'Envy and jealousy are the private parts of the human soul.'"
preview | full record— Marino, Gordon
Date: May 28, 2023
"It's like we have an internal whiteboard in our minds ... If I'm working on one task, I have all the info I need on that mental whiteboard. Then I switch to email. I have to mentally erase that whiteboard and write all the information I need to do email."
preview | full record— Klein, Ezra (b. May 9, 1984)
Date: May 28, 2023
"And just like on a real whiteboard, there can be a residue in our minds."
preview | full record— Klein, Ezra (b. May 9, 1984)