Inner Cosmos with David Eagleman – Détails, épisodes et analyse
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Inner Cosmos with David Eagleman
iHeartPodcasts
Fréquence : 1 épisode/7j. Total Éps: 128

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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Apple Podcasts
🇨🇦 Canada - science
13/08/2025#96🇺🇸 États-Unis - science
13/08/2025#95🇨🇦 Canada - science
09/08/2025#97🇨🇦 Canada - science
08/08/2025#84🇨🇦 Canada - science
06/08/2025#88🇬🇧 Grande Bretagne - science
06/08/2025#96🇨🇦 Canada - science
05/08/2025#54🇨🇦 Canada - science
04/08/2025#77🇨🇦 Canada - science
03/08/2025#57🇨🇦 Canada - science
02/08/2025#38
Spotify
Aucun classement récent disponible
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Ep74 "Why do we laugh?"
Épisode 74
lundi 2 septembre 2024 • Durée 42:38
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?"
Épisode 73
lundi 26 août 2024 • Durée 50:24
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.
Ep64 "Why do familiar things lose their shine (& what can we do about it)? "
Épisode 64
lundi 24 juin 2024 • Durée 51:14
If you could get a kiss from your favorite celebrity, how long would you want to wait before receiving it? And why do things seem less meaningful or joyful over time than they were at the beginning? What does any of this have to do with Netflix releasing all the episodes of a new show at once, or why companies come out with new and improved products every year, or why French revolutionaries wanted to make a week five days long instead of seven? Join Eagleman and cognitive neuroscientist Tali Sharot to find out why everything dulls with time and what we can do to recover the shine.
Ep63 "Why do brains love faces?"
Saison 2 · Épisode 63
lundi 17 juin 2024 • Durée 36:18
Why do we have so much circuitry in the brain devoted to faces? Why does your electrical plug seem to look like a little face? Did aliens plant a signal for us on Mars, or are we looking at a quirk of our own brains? What is face blindness and what is a super recognizer? What does any of this have to do with looking at a magazine upside down, or why computer algorithms sometimes think a jack-o'-lantern is a person? Join Eagleman for a deep dive into something so fundamental as to be typically invisible.
Ep62 "Is it possible to rehumanize the enemy?"
Épisode 62
lundi 10 juin 2024 • Durée 59:59
The brain easily forms ingroups and outgroups – and shows different responses when viewing one or the other. At the extreme, the brain stops seeing outgroup members as people, but more like objects. But are there ways to rehumanize? And in this context, what do heroes look like? In this episode, Eagleman talks with two men -- Maoz Inon and Aziz Abu Sarah -- one Israeli and one Palestinian. The two men, full of pain and sorrow, are fighting. But they are fighting side by side. They are fighting to repair the future. Learn what peacebuilders are, how they function, and what this has to do with the neuroscience of dehumanization, ingroups, outgroups, and the possibilities -- both political and neural -- for rehumanization.
Ep61 "When should you (not) trust your intuition?"
Épisode 61
lundi 3 juin 2024 • Durée 39:42
Why do you sometimes feel that you trust this person but not that one -- for reasons you can't quite put your finger on? What signals does the brain vacuum up in your daily life, and what fraction of those does your conscious mind have access to? When does intuition steer us wrong? And what is the future of intuition, as we build new technologies to take the myriad signals racing around in the dark of our brains and bodies and bring them to light? Join Eagleman and his guest, cognitive neuroscientist Joel Pearson, to unpack when to trust and when to ignore the signals of intuition.
Ep60 "Can we think better by wrestling with conflicting ideas?"
lundi 27 mai 2024 • Durée 55:55
Why do we believe our own truths so strongly? What is steel-manning, and why is it so important? What does any of this have to do with F. Scott Fitzgerald, John Keats, or the future of our society? This week's episode deals with polarization and what we might do about it. Join Eagleman and his guest Isaac Saul, who works to represent different points of view in his newsletter Tangle -- all in the name of the intellectual humility that can blossom from grappling with conflicting ideas.
Ep59 "Do you visualize like I do?"
Épisode 59
lundi 20 mai 2024 • Durée 55:11
How do brains picture things internally, and how might you and I imagine differently? How have recent discoveries completely changed the debate and the way we understand internal experience? What does this have to do with Disney's Fantasia, or Pixar's aphantasia? Strap in for some very wild surprises today about our internal experiences, with guest Ed Catmull, founder of Pixar Studios.
Ep58 "What do brains teach us about whether AI is creative?"
Épisode 58
lundi 13 mai 2024 • Durée 42:44
From a neuroscience point of view, what is creativity? How does it shine light on the current lawsuits over large language models and whether they produce anything fundamentally new... or are simply remixing the old? How do the arts expose something important about what's happening in the human brain? What do we know about the cultural evolution of ideas? And what does any of this have to do with how cell phones got their names, and why koala bears don’t write novels? Join Eagleman and his guest, composer Anthony Brandt, as they uncover the surprises about creativity.
Ep57 "When should new technologies enter the courtroom?"
Épisode 57
lundi 6 mai 2024 • Durée 40:34
Can we measure a lie from a blood pressure test, or pedophilia from a brain scan? And how should a judge decide whether the technology is good enough? What does this have to do with Ronald Reagan, or antisocial personality disorder, or how the television show CSI has impacted courtrooms? Today’s episode lives at the intersection of brains and the legal system. When are new neuroscience techniques allowed in courts, and when should they be?