Inner Cosmos with David Eagleman

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Neuroscientist and author David Eagleman discusses how our brain interprets the world and what that means for us. Through storytelling, research, interviews, and experiments, David Eagleman tackles wild questions that illuminate new facets of our lives and our realities.

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    • May 19, 2025 LATEST EPISODE
    • weekly NEW EPISODES
    • 45m AVG DURATION
    • 116 EPISODES

    Ivy Insights

    The Inner Cosmos with David Eagleman is an exceptional podcast that captivates listeners with its ability to share complex information and research in an accessible and engaging way. Dr. Eagleman's presentation style leaves a lasting impression, and after each episode, I find myself saying, "Wow, that was so good!" The topics covered are diverse and thought-provoking, and the sound quality is top-notch. It is truly a must-listen podcast.

    One of the best aspects of this podcast is Dr. Eagleman's ability to inspire a sense of openness, awe, and curiosity in his listeners. He encourages us to ask questions and challenges us to break free from the illusions of security that blind us. This sense of wonder permeates throughout the episodes, making them not only informative but also inspiring.

    Dr. Eagleman's passion for science and the human experience shines through in every episode. His enthusiasm is infectious, and it is evident that he genuinely loves what he does. His ability to explain complicated concepts in a layman's way makes the podcast accessible to all audiences. He has a talent for storytelling that keeps listeners engaged without sacrificing the educational aspect of the content.

    However, one small drawback of this podcast is that some episode titles may seem strange until you listen to them or read the descriptions. If you want to know the subject matter before diving into an episode, it might be better to read the descriptions first.

    In conclusion, The Inner Cosmos with David Eagleman is an awesome podcast that combines scientific knowledge with a love for learning and exploration. From his eloquent explanations to his relatable examples, Dr. Eagleman has created a show that appeals to both science enthusiasts and those seeking to broaden their understanding of the mind and human experience. I highly recommend this podcast for anyone with a thirst for knowledge!



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    Latest episodes from Inner Cosmos with David Eagleman

    Ep105 "What if AI is not actually intelligent?" (with Alison Gopnik)

    Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2025 70:09 Transcription Available


    Is AI an intelligent agent, or is there a different way we should be thinking about it? Is it more like a piece of cultural technology? What in the world is a piece of cultural technology -- and how would re-thinking this change our next steps? What does any of this have to do with the myth of the Golem, printing presses, Socrates, Martin Luther, or the story of stone soup? Join Eagleman this week with cognitive scientist Alison Gopnik for a new take on a new tech.

    Ep104 "What is your internal world really like?" (with Russell Hurlburt)

    Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2025 42:29 Transcription Available


    If you had to give a detailed description of what flits through your mind, how good would you be at it? Might you be surprised at how many of your thoughts don't involve language? Are your thoughts changed by paying attention to them? What does this have to do with getting surprised by a random beep and immediately writing down what you’re thinking? Join Eagleman this week in conversation with Russell Hurlburt, a clinical psychologist who developed a new method to probe inner life.

    Ep103 "Could you ever know what it's like to be someone else?" (Part 2)

    Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2025 39:21 Transcription Available


    What would it take to get inside someone else's head, and could new brain technologies ever help us get there? Will there be dream celebrities, in which uploads go viral? What does consciousness feel like from the inside, and why do movies always get this wrong? Why don't you see your own blinks? What would it be like if exactly 1/2 of your brain was numbed to sleep? And what would it be like to become a horse?

    Ep102 "Could you ever know what it's like to be someone else?" (Part 1)

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2025 35:49 Transcription Available


    What does it mean to stand in another’s shoes—and when are the gaps between us too wide to cross? This week, Eagleman explores bats, kicked robots, Helen Keller, empathy, storytelling, and the phrase “I know exactly how you feel.” We'll weave through neuroscience, philosophy, literature, and technology to ask: Can we ever truly understand another’s inner world?

    Ep101 "Why do people walk away from bad events with different outcomes?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2025 59:55 Transcription Available


    What enables some people to keep going when everything falls apart? We all know someone who’s been through hell and comes out standing. This episode is about resilience. Join Eagleman with guest Dr. Jonathan Downar to discover what happens in the brain when we face adversity. Is resilience something you’re born with, or is it something your brain can develop? What does any of this have to do with The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, using magnetic fields to zap the brain, the less famous partner to the reward system, or what seemingly unrelated disorders in psychiatry all have in common?

    Ep100 "Why do brains love slow motion video?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2025 43:52 Transcription Available


    What does The Matrix tell us about the brain and time perception? And what does that have to do with champion bicyclists, hidden data, elementary particles, secret murderers, or time machines? Today’s episode is about slow motion: what’s going on in the brain, and why we are so mesmerized by it. Whether watching a sword battle, basketball dunk, or sprinters, we're pulled to slow motion like moths to flame... but have you ever wondered from a neuroscience perspective what that’s all about? Me too, and hence today’s 100th weekiversary episode.

    Ep99 "Why do brains sometimes make things up?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2025 40:40 Transcription Available


    Your brain occasionally cooks up falsehoods that you believe entirely, but why does this confabulation happen, and how frequently? What does this tell us about memory, truth-telling, and your life as a story that drifts? And what does this have to do with a paralyzed Supreme Court judge, a blind person who insists she can see, whether Nelson Mandela did or did not die in the 1980s, or whether Curious George had a tail?

    EP98 "What's the future of AI relationships?" (with Bethanie Maples)

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2025 48:39 Transcription Available


    How many people are having relationships with artificial neural networks? Should we think of AI lovers as traps, mirrors, or sandboxes? Is there a clear line between relationship bots and therapist bots? And what does this have to do with Eliza Doolittle, a doll cabinet in your head, loneliness epidemics, or suicide mitigation? Join Eagleman with guest researcher Bethanie Maples to discover where we are and where we're going.

    Ep 97 "Can we rewrite the human code?" (with Trevor Martin)

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2025 46:05 Transcription Available


    You're defined in part by the genome you arrive with -- so what does it mean when you can edit it? What does this have to do with viruses, copy-pasting, and whether we will modify the story of our own species? Join Eagleman with guest Trevor Martin, CEO of Mammoth Biosciences, for this week's episode about the remarkable situation we find ourselves in, now that we know how to read and write our biological inheritance.

    Ep96 "What's the future of education in an AI world?" (Part 2: Sal Khan)

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2025 52:14 Transcription Available


    Now that we’re careening into our AI future, what are the most important things for our students to learn? Do we keep teaching as we always have, do we drop our heads on the desk, or are there clever ways to steer and optimize education? What would Sal Khan, founder of Khan Academy, say about all this? Find out in this week's episode.

    Ep95 "What's the future of education in an AI world?" (Part 1)

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2025 46:47 Transcription Available


    How can we rethink schools to meet the future? What does this have to do with the invention of the printing press, the prevalence of desk calculators, or the spread of Google? And how is this connected to the writer Goethe, a digital replica of the philosopher Aristotle, or the two lasting bequests that we should give our children? Join Eagleman this week for surprises about what AI means for the next generation.

    Ep94 "How does the brain construct reality?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2025 67:40 Transcription Available


    Do you perceive red the same way I do? What is wrong with the textbook model of vision? Why do brains have so many internal feedback loops? And what does any of this have to do with Plato’s cave, Ernest Hemingway, or artificial neural networks that perceive dogs everywhere? Join Eagleman with guest Anil Seth, author of “Being You”, to explore the scientific problem of consciousness.

    David Eagleman on Joy A Podcast. Hosted by Craig Ferguson

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2025 50:40 Transcription Available


    Meet David Eagleman - neuroscientist, author, and more. He is best known for his work on sensory substitution, time perception, brain plasticity, synesthesia, and neurolaw and is currently a neuroscientist at Stanford University. I thoroughly enjoyed picking his brain and I hope you enJOY too!

    Ep93 "Will AI kill our creativity or enhance it?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2025 34:14 Transcription Available


    How will creative people make a living in a world with AI? Is there a different way to think about the economy of the future -- and how might it involve mystifying and elevating humans? What does the term “data dignity" mean? Join Eagleman with guest Jaron Lanier -- computer scientist, artist, futurist -- as they discuss AI's boundless creative output and how we might thoughtfully navigate into the future.

    Ep92 "Why is it so hard to keep a secret?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2025 42:41 Transcription Available


    What is a secret in the brain? What does this have to do with Abraham Lincoln, chimpanzees, companies, political hierarchies, the formula for Coca-Cola, or whether AI in the near future will be keeping secrets from you? Join Eagleman this week to learn why secrets in our neural networks weigh on us, shape our relationships, and sometimes grow into tangled webs we never meant to weave.

    Ep91 "What is love?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2025 49:18 Transcription Available


    What are we talking about neurobiologically when we talk about love? What does it have to do with how you were raised, the symmetry of someone's face, or the smell of their underarms? What do we learn from heartbreak, rom-coms, and little rodents called prairie voles? And what is the future of love & AI? Join Eagleman for a Valentine's Day special to learn what unseen sparks in the skull set the heart ablaze.

    Ep90 "What's the future of connecting our tech to our brains?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2025 56:12 Transcription Available


    A brain's 86 billion neurons are always chattering along with tiny electrical and chemical signals. But how can we get inside the brain to study the fine details? Can we eavesdrop on cells using other cells? What is the future of communication between brains? Join Eagleman with special guest Max Hodak, founder of Science Corp, a company pioneering stunning new methods in brain computer interfaces.

    Ep89 "Why do you love some flavors and not others?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2025 35:42 Transcription Available


    Why do you like the taste of things that your friend doesn't? Why do kids not like coffee but adults do? What does any of this have to do with smelling people’s armpits, whether women really synchronize their menstruation, whether your culture eats a lot of spicy foods, and how animals sense the world? Join Eagleman this week to understand why there's no accounting for taste.

    Ep88 "Might there exist very different kinds of minds?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2025 47:17 Transcription Available


    Why is it so difficult to define intelligence? What does this have to do with being a fish in water trying to describe water? Might we humans possess one kind of intelligence in a constellation of many other types? And what does this have to do with empathy, AI, and our search for extraterrestrial life? Join Eagleman with guest Kevin Kelly as they dive into whether there might exist very different kinds of minds.

    Ep 87 "How do we operate in the present when we perceive the past?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2025 34:41 Transcription Available


    Because visual signals take time to process, we live slightly in the past. So how do we ever catch a baseball? And what does this have to do with certain visual illusions, or the view in New York City, or the things you were never taught in school, or the warp drive in Star Trek? Join Eagleman this week for a mind blowing look at the strange relationship between vision and time.

    Ep86 "What are emotions?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2025 50:07 Transcription Available


    Are emotions something that happen to you, or are they bodily signals we interpret? Does everyone show emotions in the same way -- that is, are there particular markers of the face or the body that always mean anger, sadness, or joy? And what does this have to do with Charles Darwin, the truth about facial expressions, or the movie Inside Out? Join Eagleman with this week's guest, neuroscientist Lisa Feldman Barrett, author of hundreds of papers and "How Emotions are Made", for a deep dive into the truth about our feelings.

    Ep39 rebroadcast "What is the future of AI relationships?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2024 37:42 Transcription Available


    Why are our brains so wired for love? Could you fall head over heels for a bot? Might your romantic partner be more satisfied with a 5% better version of you? How does an AI bot plug right into your deep neural circuitry, and what are the pros and cons? And what will it mean when humans you love don’t have to die, but can live on in your phone forever? Join Eagleman for a deep dive into relationships, their AI future, and what it all means for our species.

    Ep10 rebroadcast "Why is it so hard to spot a counterfeit bill?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2024 36:12 Transcription Available


    What do charlatans have to understand about human perception? Why are you so bad at recognizing a real penny among fakes? What did Eagleman have to do with the redesign of the Euro, and why did he campaign to the European Central Bank that all their bills should be blank with a single hologram in the middle? In this episode, explore the crossroads of perception and deception. Brief appearance from special guest Adam Savage.

    Ep85 "What is a Thought?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2024 36:48 Transcription Available


    Brains bear thoughts like a peach tree bears peaches. Even for meditators it's almost impossible to stop the firehose of words and images and ideas. But what in the world is a thought, physically? How can you hear a voice in your head when there's no one speaking in the outside world? And what does any of this have to do with a small marine animal who eats its own brain? Join Eagleman for this week's deep dive into our inner life.

    Ep84 "Why do brains love music?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2024 46:54 Transcription Available


    How can we understand music's effect on human brains? Is music universal or does it rely on your experiences? How is music similar to a language? Can music be leveraged to help anxiety, dementia, or Parkinson's disease? What does any of this have to do with Stevie Wonder on the high hat, or the relationship between music and color? Join Eagleman with guest Daniel Levitin -- neuroscientist, musician, and author of This Is Your Brain on Music and I Heard There Was A Secret Chord.

    Ep83 "Why Do Your 30 Trillion Cells Feel Like a Self?" Part 2

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2024 61:45 Transcription Available


    Does our sense of self emerge from our brain's skill at lumping things into unchanging categories? What can we learn watching a caterpillar brain transition to a butterfly brain? Can we think of a memory as a pattern that stays alive and has its own life? Does an ant colony have a sense of self? Join Eagleman and biologist Michael Levin at Tufts – one of the most energetic and original thinkers in the field -- to dive into new territories of the self.

    Ep82 "Why Do Your 30 Trillion Cells Feel Like a Self?" Part 1

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2024 29:29 Transcription Available


    Every cell in your body changes, so why do you have a sense of continuity of the self – as though you're the same person you were a month ago? What does this have to do with the watercraft of the Greek demigod Theseus, or the End-of-History illusion, or why you go through so much trouble to make things comfortable for your future self, even though you don't know that person? And if there really were an afterlife, what age would your deity make everyone for living out their eternities? Join this week for a two-parter about the mysteries of selfhood.

    Ep 81 "How close are we to longevity?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2024 52:42 Transcription Available


    Two certainties are death and taxes; a third is that people will work hard to avoid them both. But why is it so difficult to extend our lifespan? We know how to do it in worms and mice; why is it tricky in humans? Why do so few companies study longevity? What does the near future hold? What would it be like if everyone lived a much longer life? Join Eagleman this week with longevity expert Martin Borch Jensen to discuss the hopes and challenges of longevity science.

    Ep51 rebroadcast "Why do brains dream?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2024 52:13 Transcription Available


    Why do brains dream, and why are dreams so bizarre? Why doesn't your clock work in your dreams? And even though you spend much of your working day looking at your cell phone and computer – why do they almost never make appearances in your dream content? Is dream content the same across cultures and across time? Are dreams experienced in black & white, or in color? Are dreams the strange love child of brain plasticity and the rotation of the planet? What is the relationship between schizophrenia and dreaming? In the future, will we be able to read out the content of somebody's dream? Join Eagleman this week to learn why and how we spend a fraction of our sleep time locked in different realities, swimming in plots which aren't real but which compel us entirely nonetheless.

    Rebroadcast Ep48 "Why do brains become depressed?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2024 54:28 Transcription Available


    What is depression? Why are brains able to slip into it? Is depression detectable in animals? Do animals have options beyond fight or flight? And what does any of this have to do with measuring depression medications in city water supplies, reward pathways in the brain, the prevalence of tuberculosis, and zapping the head with magnetic stimulation? Join today's episode with David Eagleman and his guest -- psychiatrist Jonathan Downar -- for a deep dive into the brain science behind depression and what new solutions are on the horizon.

    Ep31 rebroadcast "Why do we see #TheDress differently?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2024 54:40 Transcription Available


    Why can you hear some sounds two different ways, depending on which word you're looking at? Why do electrical outlets sometimes look like a face? How can you have rich visual experience with your eyes closed? Are some crosswalk buttons fake? Why are some pictures interpretable only once you've been told what to look for? And although brains are often celebrated for their parallel processing, what should they really be celebrated for? Tune in to learn what happens when the raw facts of the world collide with your expectations.

    thedress
    Ep1 rebroadcast "Does time really slow down when you're in fear for your life?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2024 30:42 Transcription Available


    When he was a child, Eagleman fell off a roof and time seemed to run in slow motion. When he became a neuroscientist, he grew curious about the experience and collected hundreds of similar stories from others. But is it true that your brain can actually see in slow motion, like Neo in the Matrix? And how would you test that? Hear how he dropped volunteers from a tower to put the science to the test, and what the answer reveals about our perception, memory, and experience of the world.

    Ep80 "What's it like to never forget?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2024 42:40 Transcription Available


    What would it be like to have a vastly better memory than you do now?  What if you could remember what you were wearing on any day a dozen years ago? Or who you were with, what the conversation was, and whether it rained? Would it be a blessing or a curse? And if you're forgetting a lot of your life, what might you do to better remember it? Join Eagleman with actress Marilu Henner, one of only dozens of people in the world diagnosed with highly superior autobiographical memory.

    Ep79 "Does everyone have different mind's eyes, mind's ears, and mind's tongues?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2024 39:26 Transcription Available


    When you imagine something -- like the sun peeking over a mountain during an early morning rainstorm -- do you see it with rich visual detail, or instead with very little internal picture? In an earlier episode we tackled the spectrum of visual imagination, from hyperphantasia to aphantasia -- and in this episode we dive even deeper with guest Joel Pearson to surface the most surprising differences between people's internal lives. How does your experience differ from other people's, and how does your brain cobble together the skills you have to accomplish what you need?

    ears tongues joel pearson
    Ep78 "Does your brain have one model of the world or thousands?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2024 52:30 Transcription Available


    Why do you see a unified image when you open your eyes, even though each part of your visual cortex has access to only a small part of the world? What is special about the wrinkled outer layer of the brain, and what does that have to do with the way that you explore and come to understand the world? Are there new theories of how the brain operates? And in what ways is it doing something very different than current AI? Join Eagleman with guest Jeff Hawkins, theoretician and author of "A Thousand Brains" to dive into Hawkins' theory of many models running in the brain at once.

    Ep77 "What is Life?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2024 50:41 Transcription Available


    How do you define what things are living and dead? You might look at a sprinting cheetah and say it's clearly alive, whereas a chunk of rock is not -- but where do we draw the line? What might we expect extraterrestrials to look like, and would we even have the capacity to recognize them? And what does any of this have to do with Frankenstein, ancient Greek philosophers, or the possibility of finding a cell phone on Mars? Join Eagleman with guest Sara Walker, theoretical physicist at Arizona State University and author of the book “Life as No One Knows It”. 

    Ep76 "How do you decide?" (Part 2)

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2024 41:58 Transcription Available


    Do brains time travel? What is a prediction error? What does any of this have to do with the 2008 crash of the economy, how we keep internal price tags, or a rational approach to drug addiction in society? Join Eagleman to learn how your 3-pound universe spends its whole existence nailing down choices.

    Ep75 "How do you decide?" (Part 1)

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2024 32:27 Transcription Available


    When you make a decision about what food to order, what's happening in your brain? How do you clinch long-term decisions, like hitting the gym instead of doomscrolling? And what does any of this have to do with the ancient Greeks, alien hand syndrome, and constraining a president who wants to launch a nuclear bomb? Join Eagleman this week and next to discover how your brain weighs alternatives and nails down decisions.

    Ep74 "Why do we laugh?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2024 42:38 Transcription Available


    From the brain's point of view, what is humor? When something is funny, why do we breathe in and out rapidly? Do other animals laugh? Why do most jokes come in threes? What do mystery novelists, magicians, and comedians have in common? Could AI be truly funny? Join Eagleman this week to appreciate the tens of reasons and millions of years behind the tickling of your neural pathways.

    Ep73 "How do we fool ourselves in the stock market?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2024 50:24 Transcription Available


    What does neuroscience have to do with investment, and what does that have to do with Isaac Newton, the Dutch East India company, Kodak, the way zebras herd, our emotions, and almost 200 cognitive biases? Join Eagleman with guest Mark Matson, whose new book The American Dream dives into the cognitive illusions we face when trying to make investments.

    Ep72 "How do you put yourself in other people's shoes (and can AI do it)?"

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2024 42:15 Transcription Available


    You know that moment in the horror movie where the monster is coming closer, but the movie star doesn't see it? Why does that drive you crazy, and what does that teach us about brains? What is theory of mind, and why is it so important for everyone from poker players to conmen to stage magicians to novelists? Join us this week to dive into a fundamental skill of human brains -- and the question of whether current AI has any ability to simulate other people's minds.

    Ep71 "Why do our memories drift? Part 2: Misremembering yourself"

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2024 34:13 Transcription Available


    Is your notion of yourself built on narrative that may or may not be accurate? If someone told you an entirely false story about yourself, could you come to believe it? What does that have to do with six people who spent over a decade in prison together for a crime they didn't commit? Join Eagleman for part 2 of some mind-blowing conclusions about your account of your own life.

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