Date: 2006
"Back at Dayton Chaminade High, Weber had begun intellectual life as a confirmed Freudian--brain as hydraulic pipe for mind's spectacular waterworks--anything to confound his priest teachers."
preview | full record— Powers, Richard (b. 1957)
Date: 2006
"He knew the drill: throughout history, the brain had been compared to the highest prevailing level of technology: steam engine, telephone switchboard, computer."
preview | full record— Powers, Richard (b. 1957)
Date: 2006
"Now, as Weber approached his own professional zenith, the brain became the Internet, a distributed network, more than two hundred modules in loose, mutually modifying chatter with other modules."
preview | full record— Powers, Richard (b. 1957)
Date: 2006
"He stumbled through an answer that had once been automatic: The brain was not a machine, not a car engine, not a computer."
preview | full record— Powers, Richard (b. 1957)
Date: 2006
"More generally, the amygdala acts as a radar for the brain, calling attention to whatever might be new, puzzling, or important to learn more about."
preview | full record— Goleman, Daniel (b. 1946)
Date: 2007
"Cognitive scientists sometimes make the analogy that the brain is like a computer’s CPU, or hardware, while the mind is like the programs or software running on the CPU."
preview | full record— Daniel J. Levitin (1957 - )
Date: May 20, 2008
"So when you call I'm pressin' seven / Don't wanna hear your messages messages / I'm tryna erase you from my mind."
preview | full record— McCartney, Jesse (b. 1987); Ezekiel Lewis, Balewa Muhammad, Candice Nelson, Brian Kennedy, Sean Smith
Date: 2008
"In a sense, the mind works like a flashlight: When you point a flashlight at an object in a dark room, that object emerges from the darkness, as if coming into existence."
preview | full record— Somov, Pavel G.
Date: July-August, 2008
"When the mechanical clock arrived, people began thinking of their brains as operating 'like clockwork.'"
preview | full record— Carr, Nicholas (b. 1959)
Date: July-August, 2008
"Today, in the age of software, we have come to think of them [our brains] as operating 'like computers.'"
preview | full record— Carr, Nicholas (b. 1959)