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The Immortal Mind: A Neurosurgeon's Case for the Existence of the Soul

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Is there scientific proof of the soul?

Many scientists and doctors believe that there is no such thing as the soul. That there is no part of us that persists beyond death. We are not spiritual in any respect. We are made up of cells and tissue, and completely controlled by a material organ in our the brain.

In this groundbreaking book, Dr. Michael Egnor, practicing neurosurgeon, neuroscientist and Professor of Neurosurgery at Stony Brook University, makes the case—based on 40 years of practice and over 7,000 brain surgeries—that science has gotten it all wrong. The human brain is incredible, mysterious, and powerful. But it’s not what makes us who we are. The soul does that.

Drawing on the most important research studies in neuroscience, Dr. Egnor presents evidence that the brain alone does not explain the mind. He explores, using modern neuroscience and his vast surgical experience, how inside every damaged brain there is a thinking, feeling person with a spiritual soul that transcends the brain. He argues that scientists can locate the parts of the brain that control the body or sensations or emotions, but they can't find the seat of reason or free will. He uses fascinating case studies to show how cutting-edge brain surgery on patients who are awake, how research on conjoined twins who share parts of their brains, on patients in deep coma who are still able to communicate with people around them, on near-death experiences, and on artificial intelligence all make a scientific case for the existence of the spiritual human soul.

Engaging, thought-provoking, and groundbreaking, The Immortal Mind shows here that some aspect of who we are is spiritual and immortal, transcending the physical body. Using science, he proves the existence of the human soul.

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Published June 3, 2025

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Michael Egnor

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Displaying 1 - 28 of 28 reviews
Profile Image for Bharath.
946 reviews633 followers
April 1, 2025
As the views of a neurosurgeon, I was looking forward to this as I find the subject fascinating.

Having performed many surgeries and observed the behaviours of many patients with various brain conditions, Michael Egnor is categorical is saying that there are clearly capabilities humans have which do not come from the brain. He has seen people operated on for seizures, those with a split brain who still have cohesion of thought. There are many instances of people with parts of their brain removed who function normally or almost so. He is convinced that brain plasticity does not explain this. There is also a personal anecdote (a very odd one) of him hearing a voice when he was at a chapel with fears of his youngest son being autistic. His son later developed well and he regards this as a miracle. He has observed comatose patients and those who have had near death experiences. He also makes a strong pitch for free will.

While evolution suggests we acquired our powers over time with a large measure of luck, Michael thinks otherwise – strongly separating humans from animals (with no evidence which I entirely disagree with). He points out that though many neuroscientists seem to be moving towards a view that we have no free will, there is not enough evidence to reach this conclusion (I agree). He goes on to suggest how meaningless such a world would be since none of us will be responsible for our actions – neither good nor bad. This is also discussed in detail in Robert Sapolsky’s book “Determined” and I am inclined to agree with his view that truth must stand on its own even if we are uncomfortable with it. Sapolsky also discusses the positive aspects of this, and that we can always find a way to cope. The lesson I most take from my own observations and reading is how vital it is to keep young away from material which will prejudice them one way or the other and instead encourage them to embark on their own quest keeping universal values in mind.

This book is quite different from all other accounts I have read from neuroscientists. In that, it looks like Michael holds an independent and brave opinion. I appreciate that, as with lot of things unknown about our universe, brains & behaviours, it is important to be open to possibilities. There is a lot of speculative content based on his life experiences, but the book does a fairly decent job of providing a diverse set of viewpoints. I found the book interesting though there in many cases Michael seems to jump to conclusions based on his own beliefs. Nevertheless, a book with interesting content which is thought provoking.

Thanks to Netgalley, Worthy Publishing and the author for a free electronic review copy.
Profile Image for annie cusack.
143 reviews36 followers
June 29, 2025
I really hate to give this book a low review — I was very excited for it. I will not go into specific details; however, I will say, this author’s religious beliefs and political opinions tainted many of these chapters, and their arguments. I have read plenty of papers and some books on the philosophy of consciousness/awareness, and one’s religious/political views are unnecessary to make valid claims.

Thank you Netgalley, the author, and the publisher for a free ARC of this book.
Profile Image for Daniel Thurston.
136 reviews5 followers
October 2, 2025
It was hard to assign a rating to this book. I liked most of it, and the neuroscience and philosophy aspects were interesting. The religion was palatable on the whole, but a few spots rankled; for example, when Egnor in the early chapters prays for his infant son to be "miraculously saved" from the horrible fate that is autism and turned into a child "capable of knowing and loving his parents", which seemed like limited thinking for a neurosurgeon and rather insensitive. I also had a hard time with some of his jumps to conclusions regarding political topics like abortion.
Profile Image for Grayson VanDyke.
39 reviews
October 19, 2025
While I'm actually sympathetic to the dualist idea that the mind and brain are separate from each other, this book didn't do much for me.

I felt the introduction was really bad. It at least succeeds in giving a strong indication of where the author is coming from, but I was unimpressed with his logic, skeptical of his personal story, and frankly didn't like the tone-deaf way he talked about autism.

The anecdotes about what the brain could perceive under various and extreme conditions were easily the most compelling part of the book. However, that's only the first third of the book. The rest makes very weak arguments for the immortality of the mind/soul. Then it becomes a sermon on why there's a God and regurgitates a bunch of christian apologetics that I've heard a thousand times. Nothing new. He finally makes some very political statements at the end which he says he arrives at through his conviction that humans DO have souls. But I don't even think his conclusions track even granted with the assumption that humans do have souls. Overall, I was very unimpressed.
6 reviews2 followers
June 24, 2025
A wonderful eye opening Book

The word of God, the Bible has revealed this truth in a narrative matter of fact way. The authors of this book proved it by scientific facts. Bravo!!
Profile Image for Bob Perry.
26 reviews1 follower
November 4, 2025
Soul Searching

Dr. Egnor is not speculating, philosophizing, or engaging in wishful thinking (pun intended) when he claims that there is more to being human than the materialists dismiss by presupposition. Human beings are integrated bodies and souls. He offers compelling scientific evidence to support the claim. And the implications that accompany that claim are powerful … and, yes, eternal. A fascinating read and a convincing solution to the mind-body “problem.”
Profile Image for Cee.
385 reviews
May 23, 2025
A little bit scary as in the ‘fear of the unknown’ is scary. Some well accepted scientific theories are presented and then proved false. To me it reinforces that science is fluid and that what once was thought to be true may not be entirely true today. A very interesting book that also answers some questions about immortality and the existence of God. Then there’s the chapter on AI and conscious computers which made my head spin. This book definitely made me think. Although I do agree with much of the authors’ beliefs, in the Conclusion there were a number of topics that I do not agree with and don’t feel they gave any rational for. All in all a very interesting book.
1 review
June 5, 2025
Great book

This book is one of the best I’ve ever read in philosophical anthropology. I’ve read many books in philosophy. This book should be required reading for anyone serious about knowing the relationship between the soul and the brain.
208 reviews4 followers
December 1, 2025
The Silenced Minority

It is a disgrace that in modern scientific circles your credibility is endangered if you dare to depart from a presumptive materialistic worldview, no matter the evidence otherwise. This is Darwin’s great curse upon scientific inquiry. Dissent must be silenced. Fortunately, there are a few courageous people in the scientific community who are true to the pure scientific method of following where the evidence leads. Accomplished neurosurgeon Dr. Michael Egnor is such a person. In his excellent book, “The Immortal Mind”, Egnor examines the factual evidence thoroughly and without limiting preconceptions to arrive at a conclusion that the existence of a human soul best explains what can be observed, and that is the essence of objective scientific investigation.
Drawing on his own extensive experience in neurosurgery as well as that of colleagues, Egnor shares remarkable stories of the differences between materialistic brain function and the independent human mind. These cases will be unfamiliar to most readers and astounding in the evidence they reveal. The fact that they are not otherwise well known seems to be an outcome of the way the predominant materialist worldview has suppressed successfully anything that points beyond materialism.
Egnor is a believer and not reluctant to bring his beliefs, including beliefs in Scripture, into his conclusions, but his conclusions stand up rigorously to objective scrutiny and are not derived from presuppositions, unlike so many from the materialistic scientific worldview. His conclusions support his beliefs and are not forced to fit them.
This is an excellent book for believers who are made to feel by a dominant materialistic worldview that their faith is not supported by facts. And it is excellent for those of a materialistic predisposition who are unafraid to explore objectively all the evidence.
Profile Image for K.C. Phillips.
63 reviews
July 19, 2025
I thought this was going to be a doctor's scientific exploration on the nature of consciousness/meaning of life, a la "breath becomes air", "man's search for meaning," or "being mortal", all of which I've adored. But there is a difference between reading about someone's supernatural experiences and being preached at.
My sus alarms started going off very early on when he kept dropping mentions of Christianity like it was the only religion that existed... and in skimming through some later chapters, I found confirmation of the religious bait and switch via several passages, including a firm assertion about life and conception and Egnor's argument that "breaking God's moral law has grave consequences," and that this is "an absolute scientific truth".

It was supposed to be neuroscience, but it's propaganda, and that freaking sucks, man, cause consciousness is such a cool topic! I would love to read the experiences in the book, but those assertions I've already read make me skeptical about Egnor's scientific rigor and fully disillusioned about his intentions in conveying them.
Profile Image for Mary.
61 reviews6 followers
October 7, 2025
I read this book hoping for an open minded scientific approach to the concept of souls but it ended up being heavily religious. The author made jumps in logic and sometimes got bitchy. He included Christianity in his reasoning, making it so I could no longer trust that ANY of the information he gave wasn't cherry picked or coerced. He lapsed into cult-speak, especially in the conclusion, where he dog whistles with what could be construed as anti racism and equality but turns out to be dogmatic agenda pushing. He outright condemns gender affirming care as 'mutilation of their God given bodies,' he calls a scientist brilliant DESPITE being atheist, and he declares life at conception to be a scientific fact though he NEVER ACTUALLY PROVED IT beyond religious input.

This book can FEEL like scientific proof of a soul, but it only is for those seeking an echo chamber.
Profile Image for Mike Lisanke.
1,447 reviews33 followers
December 13, 2025
Here's another science book for those of us who think about the "science fringe" (according to the materialists). IMO there's nothing more fascinating than the observations which can Not be explained by the Scientists with their mainstream science. Spiritualism/religion and science often overlap at the chicken-and-egg conditions of abiogenesis and cosmology and life before and after death etc... those subjects which ask, if the Universe has everything And was not eternal then what happened before it began. I know a little about set theory and know when cataloging books the authors of the catalogs got into a big problem with where to catalog the catalogs. Math is suppose to be exact but when it gets into logic/reason there are muddy areas. And we know from Godel that math is incomplete because depending on you axioms (base assumptions) you can prove Anything. QED
276 reviews5 followers
Read
July 11, 2025
Excellent book. Does a good job of making his thoughts readable and understandable. He does not take us too deep into neuroscience that we get lost and I appreciate that.

2 things I take away from this book:
1) we have no idea what consciousness is. So programming this into a computer looks very far off if able to be done at all.

2) The mind is not the same as the brain. We have been told for decades now that we are just meat machines. The brain is the hardware and the mind is the software. This book does a good job of blowing that logic up. For one thing now one can really locate the mind. Massive parts of the brain can be missing and the mind is not terribly affected.
41 reviews1 follower
June 28, 2025
Fascinating! The author makes a strong case for the mind being something spiritual and much different from the brain. My 4-star rating is reflective of the book starting much stronger than its conclusion although the chapter on AI was interesting. The point that AI has hallucinations because it treats all data it is fed as equally authoritative regardless of its origin is hugely important for future development of AI.
139 reviews
September 1, 2025
I found the reviews almost as interesting as the book. For those who have already made up their mind that evolution explains it all, nothing they read or hear is going to change their mind. If this book doesn't give them pause, then they are not ready for any further "conversation" on the subject.
At any rate, Dr. Egnor gives a pretty thoughtful and interesting argument for the "mind" (soul), and I hope others will approach it with an open mind.
Profile Image for Julio A Borges.
16 reviews1 follower
October 23, 2025
razon y fe unidos

Este libro explica de manera sencilla y fascinante distintos ejemplos neurológicos que nos llevan a la convicción que más allá de los aspectos biológicos y anatómicos hay una unidad humana por encima de la materia que es digna,racional y libre. El materialismo positivista se queda muy corto en sus explicaciones. Muy buen libro.
Profile Image for Andrea.
13 reviews
August 17, 2025
I found the topic of this book fascinating. Some chapters were more dense and felt a little slower-moving but the last 3 tied it all together excellently and were page-turners. I highly recommend this book to everyone.
Profile Image for Mark Stacy II.
115 reviews
July 15, 2025
This book is fairly devastating to materialism. It falls off the tracks at the end though where it veers into Gnosticism.
Profile Image for Sammie Bryant.
397 reviews5 followers
September 21, 2025
Very interesting premise but ultimately the writing was super choppy for a lot of the middle bit. I learned lots of interesting information and I'm glad he wrote this to get his opinion out there!
Profile Image for TC Carter.
81 reviews
October 28, 2025
Great medical science to help show that the mind is not the brain, that our consciousness is independent of the brain, which is backed by medical tests and surgeries
92 reviews
October 3, 2025
This book captured my interest immediately. It is well written, researched, and informative. The author gives numerous examples that prove your mind has nothing to do with the synapses or chemicals in your brain. Every human mind is spiritual immortal soul with immaterial powers for creativity, intellectual reasoning, abstract thinking and free will. Recommended.
1 review
Read
July 11, 2025
Unnecessarily Repetitive and

While I believe in the concept of a soul and while there are some interesting points about the brain functionality, near death experiences, and the origination of reasoning and abstract thinking, this book needs an editorial review to tighten up the writing. The author repeats the same things multiple times throughout the book. He attempts to represent unsupported conclusions as logical fact in a way that isn't compelling. I do think that the concept of the soul can and should be another support pillar for the arguments of Stephen Meyer in the Return of the God Hypothesis (Biology, Physics, Cosmology) but it needs more rigor and tightening of the logic and arguments to make it more compelling.

Profile Image for Matt.
135 reviews
August 20, 2025
Michael Egnor has given us a thorough and well written analysis of his case for the human soul. Egnor is a neurosurgeon, so the mind is, in a sense, his expertise. The diversity of topics with which Egnor approaches the subject, which includes philosophy, anthropology, and modern technology, is impressive, but the strength of his argument is in the medical field, particularly his recounting of documented cases of near-death experiences. The evidence doesn't answer all of the questions that the reader will have, but Egnor's goal is not to answer every question. His purpose is to point to a spiritual, eternal component to human existence. His case is pretty strong.
16 reviews
August 18, 2025
Mind and brain

I just finished reading God‘s crime scene and had learned a lot about the difference between the mind and the brain, but this book really increased my understanding of the difference between the two and how they are different things with evidence to back up each as a different thing entirely. The author got the points across clear and concise and clearly has plenty of experience as a neurosurgeon to be able to speak on these topics. Highly recommend.
2 reviews
July 6, 2025
where does the soul go after people dies?

Nice try to explain mechanical basis of soul.
This has been my personal interest - where does the soul go after people dies.
Am reading it and might share more.
Profile Image for Neh.
178 reviews
July 24, 2025
Such a good book.

A neurosurgeon's thorough examination of the evidence...

the butchering of those of us putting too much faith in the AI..

all so astutely/insightfully, beautifully, and clearly written.

praise God for the authors
Displaying 1 - 28 of 28 reviews

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