TEDxHouston - Dr. David Eagleman

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 11. 10. 2010
  • Dr. Eagleman holds joint appointments in the Departments of Neuroscience and Psychiatry at the Baylor College of Medicine. His areas of scientific expertise include time perception, vision, synesthesia, and the intersection of neuroscience with the legal system. He directs the Laboratory for Perception and Action, and is the Founder and Director of Baylor College of Medicine's Initiative on Neuroscience and Law. Dr. Eagleman has written several neuroscience books, including Wednesday is Indigo Blue: Discovering the Brain of Synesthesia (co-authored with Richard Cytowic, MIT Press, 2009) and Dethronement: The Secret Life of the Unconscious Brain (Pantheon, 2010). He has also written an internationally bestselling book of literary fiction, Sum, which was named a Best Book of 2009 by Barnes and Noble, New Scientist, and the Chicago Tribune. Dr. Eagleman has written for the New York Times, Discover Magazine, Slate, and New Scientist, and he appears regularly on National Public Radio to discuss both science and literature.
    About TEDx, x = independently organized event
    In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized. (Subject to certain rules and regulations.)
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 353

  • @kathytorpie1037
    @kathytorpie1037 Před 6 lety +25

    I LOVE this guy! A scientist with curiosity, wonder, excitement AND humour! Imagine how we would see and interact with the world we are part of if every scientist - and science teacher - had those qualities!!

  • @marklupton8982
    @marklupton8982 Před 10 lety +44

    This is so wonderful. David you're a top human.

  • @akshrikant
    @akshrikant Před 9 lety +6

    Indeed, It’s an ‘old wine in a new bottle’. Just superb! Being a Professor of Neuroscience myself and intellectually positioned in the center of two extremes, it was easy for me to connect. I would call it an era of reawakening. You, Sam Harris and many more like you, the new generation thought provokers, have arrived not a moment too soon! Reawakening was to take place anyway, but it’s precipitous arrival is set off by the global events of death and destruction in support of Faith. Whilst, America remains the final bastion of religiosity, Europe has rapidly moved toward the secular ideals. And yet, persons of your ilk are there to make the difference. This could only happen in America. Kudos to you guys!

  • @sandeegeorge921
    @sandeegeorge921 Před 11 lety +5

    A light in the darkness of ignorance to be openly discussed - thank you David amazing research and life journey chosen

  • @timothyhowson2775
    @timothyhowson2775 Před 2 lety +3

    Reading a book by David Eagleman so it is nice to actually see and hear him speak.
    WOW,what a speech,very inspiring.

  • @teebox6
    @teebox6 Před 5 lety +5

    I watch his PBS special over and over again. Always learn something new.

  • @pilarplumed4043
    @pilarplumed4043 Před rokem +2

    Seeing the Dr surrounded by stars and planets, I remembered Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's book "The Little Prince" !!! ❤️. I love listening to the Dr with his sense of humor, essential in an intelligent person!

  • @Creativehealing444
    @Creativehealing444 Před 5 lety +7

    Thank you David. Discovered you through Sadhguru. Big respect.

  • @BadWillHunting
    @BadWillHunting Před 12 lety +2

    I've read Eagleman's book on neuroscience and enjoyed it greatly. This speech compliments the book's respect for wonder and mystery and the possibilities unravelled by the scientific method. Good work Dave.

  • @TheMagmarunning
    @TheMagmarunning Před 4 lety +1

    This is amazing talk. Absolutely loved the logic or the possibility of it.

  • @faiqaahmad3040
    @faiqaahmad3040 Před 4 lety +2

    I love his smile during the the Talk

  • @kiwimac
    @kiwimac Před 11 lety +1

    Excellent talk about a simply fascinating topic.

  • @golflessons
    @golflessons Před 8 lety +1

    The next conversation or talk needs to be about examples of how science discovered all these important things that can now point us in a better direction that will lead us to the next proper discovery; away from stories based on opinions based on assumptions that we would have the gaul and ignorance to use violent acts to defend. Loved this talk and the quality of speaking is tremendous!

  • @leehilborn8118
    @leehilborn8118 Před 10 lety +8

    Spot on

  • @VogonJ
    @VogonJ Před 12 lety

    His consepts on consciousness and the subjective illusion of self and understanding of what really drives our brain is beautiful (for me). Se other videos with him. This lecture is a popular take on his ideas and as many comments here indicate it is worded as so.
    I had a thought experiment that gave me a vision of why we believed. I had 5 hours contemplating and then started searching for philosophic thoughts, finaly found David and he resonated with me, I know excatly what he is talking about.

  • @nativelearner
    @nativelearner Před 8 lety +1

    It is both entertaining and fascinating that people post comments here that underscore the perspective Dr. Eagleman is describing without realizing that they are doing so. Oversimplified, he espouses abandoning singular dogmas that attempt to explain creation, or any aspect of life, and commit to remaining open to the truth since all of the overview of what is and how it is structured is beyond being fully described. To limit the possibilities of understanding what is and how it works, is to limit our perspective to only that which someone has dogmatized or that we currently are aware of. He clearly says the most essential attitude in seeking knowledge and awareness is "I don't know", meaning there is more to know than I am currently understand. I believe that gives credence to the widest reception of concepts and information, and as such is the perception with the greatest possibility of being of service to experiencing what is.

  • @ExposingTheism
    @ExposingTheism Před 12 lety +1

    A great lecture by a wonderful writer and scientist.

  • @alrachwani
    @alrachwani Před 6 lety +1

    Great talk!

  • @HALLBARBARA11
    @HALLBARBARA11 Před 4 lety +1

    I've always said the points he makes, but he does it with such charm and humour.

  • @robertdourado7737
    @robertdourado7737 Před 4 lety

    Brilliant ! you speak on lines with what OSHO spoke in Oregon years back !

  • @pradyotrai8717
    @pradyotrai8717 Před 2 lety +1

    Very impressive topic on thinking & deciding!
    “… doubt is a uncomfortable position, but certainty is an absurd position.” - Voltaire

  • @anupamaa.acharya288
    @anupamaa.acharya288 Před 5 lety +1

    Off the charts!

  • @GetMeThere1
    @GetMeThere1 Před 13 lety

    @RiCorr : So glad that someone has made this point--and that it's gotten so many thumbs up!

  • @BookshelfJourney
    @BookshelfJourney Před 7 měsíci

    If you're even remotely curious about the mysteries of the human mind and how it influences our daily lives, this video is a must-watch. Eagleman's insights will leave you with a profound appreciation for the incredible organ nestled inside your skull.

  • @lc91324
    @lc91324 Před 2 lety

    let's make this even more popular!!!

  • @deekshakeshri3565
    @deekshakeshri3565 Před 2 lety

    Oh, this is engaging, so much engaging.

  • @sooryamsuss4565
    @sooryamsuss4565 Před rokem

    Insightful😍

  • @captainstubbing1
    @captainstubbing1 Před 2 lety

    You wouldnt believe the rabbit hole that hot me here.. Yet it feels so right

  • @MrTwoGuess
    @MrTwoGuess Před 12 lety

    So, I agree with David Eagleman, and love the example of the puking up the world theory. It is pretty easy to be a possibilian.... but at some point a comittment at certain levels will be necessary if you need science in your life. Most enjoyable listen/watch though.

  • @simplejacko
    @simplejacko Před 12 lety +1

    just wow, finally theres a position, i can relate to. a couple of years ago, ive read karl popper. poppers idea of critical rationalism coherent with possibilianism perfectly.

  • @Mortaryan
    @Mortaryan Před 12 lety +1

    I have had both O.B.E. and transcendental and trans-personal experiences, that have had profound transformational impact on my life, and using specific and precise techniques have repeated those subjective experiences, that have been objectively validated. I speak from my experiences, you can take it or leave it, but I speak from knowledge and understanding, mystical, scientific and acedemic.

  • @lisaengelbrektson
    @lisaengelbrektson Před 11 lety

    !!! FINALLY - I have a little more concrete of a reason, but this is the grand idea!

  • @StruckScene
    @StruckScene Před 11 lety

    Good speech. See also - Robert Anton Wilson: "Maybe Logic" (which "possibilian" reminds me of). Also, anything by Alan Watts. The CZcamss is teeming with his lectures and clips. I suggest the full lecture: "Our Image of the World". It's roughly an hour-long, but breezes by.

  • @danemason2301
    @danemason2301 Před 11 lety +2

    Best. Video. Ever.

  • @doraknop
    @doraknop Před 5 lety

    great!

  • @hackeroo13
    @hackeroo13 Před 5 lety

    first video I didn't watch in incognito mode and was impressed by...

  • @RemingtonLongstreth1
    @RemingtonLongstreth1 Před 6 lety +3

    I find it fascinating that most comments under any media online is overwhelming negative.

  • @akashchandra8298
    @akashchandra8298 Před 5 lety +1

    Awesome

  • @andreasdrg
    @andreasdrg Před 12 lety

    I love Eagleman's brief and matter-of-factly dismissal of all the worlds' religions. That's all the attention they deserve and all that should be needed to convince a rational and open mind that they are indeed absurd.

  • @danieldrehmer
    @danieldrehmer Před 12 lety +1

    Mr. Eagleman, would you please address the criticisim from sam harris?

  • @TheMidwestsk8ter
    @TheMidwestsk8ter Před 12 lety

    @2LegHumanist Where can i find this? is it a video?

  • @usquir
    @usquir Před 12 lety

    Dr.E! Underway residing &/or @ your service, sir (reading publication"INCOGNITO" when found this video)!

  • @willmpet
    @willmpet Před 4 měsíci

    “Beyond the end of the pier”!

  • @janakjodhan7982
    @janakjodhan7982 Před 4 lety

    Sir Eagleman, how does the human [fore]skin, when it is painfully or pleasantly provoked, communicate with the mind of the brain?

  • @vicksoma
    @vicksoma Před 13 lety

    @TheHardProblem The reason i said 'all' was because throughout human history there have been many ideas that people never considered and were later confirmed, like time and distance being relative instead of absolute. If Einstein thought it was too ridiculous to consider ideas that seemed to go against everything he had experienced, he wouldn't have discovered time dilation and length contraction.

  • @vicksoma
    @vicksoma Před 13 lety +1

    Basic lesson: Be open-minded, think critically, and never reach certainty.
    That translates to considering all ideas, EVALUATING all ideas, and accepting ideas in proportion to the evidence that supports that idea, asymptotically approaching certainty, but never getting there.
    I think the problems most people have is that they don't evaluate ideas properly (especially their own), and they reach certainty on little evidence. The world would be a much better place if this didn't happen.

    • @DisNugguhRiteHer
      @DisNugguhRiteHer Před 7 měsíci +1

      Sounds like a phrase I heard once that goes: “Trust, but always verify!” And if you can’t verify then you shouldn’t be expected to trust.

  • @RiCorr
    @RiCorr Před 13 lety

    @RiCorr typo "100 billion planets each containing over a billion stars" is hardly possible! For 'planets' read 'galaxies'.

  • @ForgottenSoul2012
    @ForgottenSoul2012 Před 9 lety +7

    I'm now a possibilian. :)

  • @Zaetix
    @Zaetix Před 10 lety

    Didn't this guy answer a Q and A in the 12 Piers theater in Houston after everyone watched Waking Life? Very interesting day that was, I'm almost certain it was him...

  • @2LegHumanist
    @2LegHumanist Před 12 lety +1

    Sam Harris has just released a rebuttal to the Eagleman, specific to this TED talk, on his blog page.
    Apparently Eagleman agreed to debate him but never responded to Sam's initial rebuttal. Sam got tired of waiting and published his opening remarks today.

  • @hasserl
    @hasserl Před 13 lety

    @moondazed Well moondazed, if you've got another example of a person predicting his death and resurrection, who spent a couple of days in the grave after his execution, who exited the grave though it was guarded by a squadron of Roman guards, I'd be happy to hear all about it. Also, you seem to be a bit confused regarding the methods of execution. Hanging and crucifixion are very different. You might want to check into that. Nobody survived crucifixion.

  • @RiCorr
    @RiCorr Před 13 lety

    @rhyfelur Interesting. Can you please give a few specific examples where their attitudes are "arrogant and condescending," Thanks!

  • @MsDamosmum
    @MsDamosmum Před 6 lety +6

    Why do 90% of commenters want to just argue about everything?
    The guy's done nothing wrong and is only trying to do good!

  • @gobbo241
    @gobbo241 Před 13 lety

    @magnusjsolberg I think you have not understood the same message as me from this video. Eagleman was saying that we should be more comfortable with not knowing, how is this a judgement? Did you watch this till the end?

  • @carahamelie
    @carahamelie Před 6 lety +1

    This is why his book SUM was so good.

  • @vicksoma
    @vicksoma Před 13 lety

    @TheHardProblem I agree.

  • @JavierPerez-md3ho
    @JavierPerez-md3ho Před 8 lety +1

    science is ever changing but always limits it self by disbelief it cannot explain what it does not know

  • @vicksoma
    @vicksoma Před 13 lety

    @TheHardProblem Didn't really mean ALL, but virtually all. For example, if someone was to argue that the earth was flat, you could consider this position and it would take you less than a second to evaluate it as incorrect beyond reasonable doubt. So ideas would move along a confidence spectrum with evaluation. In essence, it's all about evaluation of ideas, and the time we spend evaluating certain ideas over others. Part of it is knowing when further evaluation is reasonable and when it isn't.

  • @KathyMatay
    @KathyMatay Před 5 lety

    what happens if you put toast on a cat's back and drop it, would it land with the cat on its feet or the toast butter side down.

  • @sebastian6736
    @sebastian6736 Před 10 lety

    A contraction is two words becoming one new word. "Don't" is one word.

  • @FreakFromEarth82
    @FreakFromEarth82 Před 11 lety +9

    finaly somone who thinks like me :)

  • @TheOmegaPointProject
    @TheOmegaPointProject Před 11 lety

    Alan Watts, Robert Anton Wilson and Terence McKenna have talked about this view a lot before; Except that David now has a name for it.

  • @johnmartin2813
    @johnmartin2813 Před 3 lety

    Keats called it 'negative capability'. Coleridge called it 'the willing suspension of disbelief'. I call it creative ambivalence.

  • @mj81000
    @mj81000 Před 13 lety

    I described my self as agnostic before this... I think I've found a better way of describing what I believe now.

  • @Shadow9392
    @Shadow9392 Před 13 lety

    Why does this only have 862 views?

  • @NetIncarnate
    @NetIncarnate Před 12 lety

    @discipleoftheteapot He didn't say that he came with this new term up against agnosticism. He said, that many people started seeing agnosticism as an uncertainty between existing dichotomy(ies), so he felt like naming his POV on the matter with a new term.
    Anyway, I think eventually this word will just end up being a more precise synonym for atheism and agnosticism for those cases,when you want to be really sure that your opponent gets you right to elim. p. misunderstanding.

  • @mrmelkor1
    @mrmelkor1 Před 13 lety

    An opened minded life free from dogma, I'd thumb that up twice, we can dream!

  • @campfiretalesau
    @campfiretalesau Před 8 lety +1

    Seems like he is quoting or taking ideas from Carl Sagan's Cosmos. Just about everything he discussed is in that book, or in the series if you're that way inclined.

  • @2LegHumanist
    @2LegHumanist Před 12 lety

    @TheMidwestsk8ter Not a video, it's on his blog. The name of the article is "Wither Eagleman?".
    "I recently posted a TEDx talk by the neuroscientist David Eagleman, author of Incognito: The Secret Lives of the Brain and the subject of a recent profile in The New Yorker. While I admire much of what Eagleman has to say, I wrote that his espousal of “possibilianism,” in lieu of atheism, was intellectually dishonest. I then invited him to discuss the matter with me on this page."

  • @nagabhushanabhushana6341

    Refreshing talk on religion, Science, human society and human perception which is always limited. I too became possibillion !

    • @jeu198
      @jeu198 Před rokem

      Or possibilian. With one "L" 😂

    • @mler
      @mler Před rokem

      @@jeu198 LOL

  • @amitgurung8739
    @amitgurung8739 Před rokem

    Please sir upload video about law of attraction

  • @GregConquest
    @GregConquest Před 13 lety

    GC2 The possibilian will try out new beliefs like a suit, while the new atheist maintains uniforms are unneeded. But "belief" is fundamentally morphed in this change. No longer is belief something you hold long-lasting loyalty to. It can no longer keep other plausibilities away. Changing the metaphor, possibilianism is like the desire to wear varying sets of eyeglasses. Sometime, if you're operating from a particular perspective, you might see something no one noticed before. It takes belief.

  • @2LegHumanist
    @2LegHumanist Před 12 lety

    @TheMidwestsk8ter You can find it on samharris dott org

  • @susanzammit401
    @susanzammit401 Před 10 lety +2

    I have hopetimism that the theory of possibiataianism inspires ALL to at least explore the vastness of mysterianism....~and wouldn't you like to be a possibilian too?~

  • @thirumalaisamy.superwordss4343

    We want Tamil speach
    Are book

  • @TitidaKacaradusty
    @TitidaKacaradusty Před 5 lety +1

    He is true original from of DNA

  • @evadnie100
    @evadnie100 Před 13 lety +1

    When you die your dead. Enjoy this life. Don't think you get a second chance. I don't want to spend my time assuming there might be another life.

  • @RiCorr
    @RiCorr Před 13 lety

    @justforwatchingcraps "a sentient living thing that created everything" is certainly an interesting hypothesis. I'm quite sure honest doubters everywhere would be thrilled to have evidence confirming the existence of such a being, one who created over 100 billion planets each containing over a billion stars (and over 400,000 species of beetle on earth alone!). It would be the most awesome scientific discovery of all time. But in considering the possible we should not lose sight of the probable.

  • @NaturalismOutreach
    @NaturalismOutreach Před 11 lety

    I can just imagine what those people that sent him emails were all about - unfortunately I've probably stumbled across most of them on t'interent. They are the ones when you correct their misunderstanding of a principle in physics, they accuse you of scientism

  • @GregConquest
    @GregConquest Před 13 lety

    GC4 I think, though, it is actually *plausibility* that is the key, not *possibility*.
    If I flip a coin and hold it hidden, is it possible that it is heads? I would say we don't know if it is possible. The answer has already been determined. It is impossible that the bottom side is up at that moment, but it is plausible. "Plausible" is our mental world -- the only world we perceive. "Possibilianism" is about the non-mental. Plausibilianism is about all the ideas we can imagine and explore.

  • @red1980
    @red1980 Před 13 lety

    @mobart I disagree. I think there are certain things we DO know that can make one possibility much, much less likely than another. Take the knowledge you have available to you. When we gain new knowledge and it proves something is highly improbable, we should accept that and look for new theories. Admitting you don't know, but you're pretty sure it's not x is not an absurd stance.

  • @Mortaryan
    @Mortaryan Před 13 lety

    More people need to watch this...especially all those angry Atheists.

  • @miguelvaldez3913
    @miguelvaldez3913 Před 7 lety +8

    I'm a possibillionaire!

  • @wokemorty727
    @wokemorty727 Před 13 lety

    @RiCorr I mean that idea isn't mine, I think that's what most people mean when they say "god." losing sight of the probable was never happening, not for me nor for Eagleman. But, according to him (and I agree), losing sight of the possible in light of the probable is something the loudest yet not representative voices of the "honest doubters" do all the time. The result is that a large chunk of "honest doubters" have their thoughts fed to them by these loud voices and become the "neo-atheists."

  • @KingMe1220
    @KingMe1220 Před 12 lety

    @DyzLecticus 10:41

  • @moondazed
    @moondazed Před 13 lety +1

    @hasserl Real? Faith has an interesting influence on logic.

  • @renatob9909
    @renatob9909 Před 2 lety +2

    I am also a possibilian 😁

  • @MusicMustache
    @MusicMustache Před 12 lety

    Occam's Razor anybody?

  • @owenstv
    @owenstv Před 12 lety

    How are there dislikes??

  • @Mortaryan
    @Mortaryan Před 12 lety

    @vjohn82 NO I am not guessing, it is my empirical experience, it is the empirical experience of those I have instructed, who have followed my modality, who have validated my own empirical experience, with their own empirical experience. One cannot embrace what they have already rejected, and you (and those of your paradigm) will cease to exist like every other red herring of evolution. Hence the necessity of the Possibilianism.

  • @and4all706
    @and4all706 Před 5 lety

    Got news for you. " I don't know" is 4 words, not 3!

  • @Avarice_au
    @Avarice_au Před 11 lety

    In the spirit of this video, I would like to point out to you that; it is in fact a possibility and he is not wrong in asserting his suggestion of possibility. There may not be any evidence for it, our universe is huge, to us at least. We may in fact be a universe inside a much larger one, WE will never know.
    ~Nothing is entirely impossible, but can be highly improbable!~

  • @pussyhammer6969
    @pussyhammer6969 Před 2 lety

    Lol possibilianism, this guy's a champ. >.

  • @vijaypunia8474
    @vijaypunia8474 Před 3 lety

    You shoul also read about
    Guru Granth Sahib
    And about hindu philosophy
    Vedas, puaranas etc
    They definitely would surprise you

  • @BlueCheeseCrumbles
    @BlueCheeseCrumbles Před 13 lety

    You realize that a possibility in the possibility space is that science is flawed.

  • @rhyfelur
    @rhyfelur Před 13 lety

    @RiCorr Im not saying they are wrong..Im saying that when you tell people that they are delusional, even if its true, they rarely agree with you...)

  • @wokemorty727
    @wokemorty727 Před 13 lety

    @RiCorr if these new atheist authors say with confidence that there is no god, which would be what makes them atheist, then David Eagleman's description of them is just caricatured, but still accurate. His main argument is that they are the polar opposite of those who subscribe to any one particular religion because they say with confidence that there is no god.
    basically, Eagleman is saying he isn't ready to say there is no god, but he can definitely say that organized religion is false.

  • @spanked84
    @spanked84 Před 11 lety

    Liked this. Still, I can't help but think Carl Sagan said all this already. Maybe it's just me. I'm willing to be wrong.

  • @jamie-sims
    @jamie-sims Před 12 lety

    @DannyPhantomBeast but I don't define myself entirely by my atheism - only when the question of religious belief comes up - it makes sense when religion is the dominant force in society - in the same way that when there was conflict over slavery it made sense to call oneself an abolitionist even if that is defining yourself in opposition to something.