Date: March 7, 2014
"For Kaku, the brain is a computer made of meat, and understanding the mind is just a really, really hard engineering problem."
preview | full record— Frank, Adam (b. 1962)
Date: March 7, 2014
"If we treat minds like meat-computers, we may end up in a world where that’s the only aspect of their nature we perceive or value."
preview | full record— Frank, Adam (b. 1962)
Date: February 28, 2014
"Imagine you could pry off the back of Wes Anderson’s head as if it were a vintage TV set and rummage around inside."
preview | full record— Itzkoff, Dave (b. 1976)
Date: May 19, 2014
"These days we tend to think of memory as a camera or a video recorder, filming, storing, and recycling the vast troves of data we accumulate throughout our lives."
preview | full record— Specter, Michael (b. 1955)
Date: May 19, 2014
"Like a text recalled from a computer's hard drive, each memory was subject to editing."
preview | full record— Specter, Michael (b. 1955)
Date: May 23, 2014
"What he had demonstrated was that the nervous system was like a computer terminal through which you could deliver commands to stop a problem, like acute inflammation, before it starts, or repair a body after it gets sick."
preview | full record— Behar, Michael
Date: August, 22, 2015
"Partial images slide through my mind, a scattering of words spoken. Neurobiologists say that memory isn’t the replay of a video camera, but instead a pastiche of neuronal fragments gathered from here and there, wandering smells, oddly cut visual scraps, translucent experiences laid on top of one...
preview | full record— Lightman, Alan (b. 1948)
Date: September 22, 2015
"You can shun obscene books if you like, but you can't scrub erotic fantasies from the mind's hard drive."
preview | full record— Schillinger, Liesl
Date: November 7, 2015
"As Daniel Kahnemann so beautifully demonstrates in his book 'Thinking Fast and Slow,' the human mind has all sorts of wired-in cognitive shortcuts that can feel an awful lot like thinking."
preview | full record— McIntyre, Lee
Date: November 14, 2015
"The venerated political strategist David Axelrod once described a presidential campaign as 'an M.R.I. for the soul.'"
preview | full record— Bruni, Frank (b. 1964)