Chris > Chris's Quotes

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  • #1
    David Eagleman
    “There are three deaths. The first is when the body ceases to function. The second is when the body is consigned to the grave. The third is that moment, sometime in the future, when your name is spoken for the last time.”
    David M. Eagleman, Sum: Forty Tales from the Afterlives

  • #2
    David Eagleman
    “Since we live in the heads of those who remember us, we lose control of our lives and become who they want us to be.”
    David M. Eagleman, Sum: Forty Tales from the Afterlives

  • #3
    David Eagleman
    “It is only through us that God lives. When we abandon him, he dies.”
    David M. Eagleman, Sum: Forty Tales from the Afterlives

  • #4
    David Eagleman
    “Imagine for a moment that we are nothing but the product of billions of years of molecules coming together and ratcheting up through natural selection, that we are composed only of highways of fluids and chemicals sliding along roadways within billions of dancing cells, that trillions of synaptic conversations hum in parallel, that this vast egglike fabric of micron-thin circuitry runs algorithms undreamt of in modern science, and that these neural programs give rise to our decision making, loves, desires, fears, and aspirations. To me, that understanding would be a numinous experience, better than anything ever proposed in anyone's holy text.”
    David Eagleman, Incognito: The Secret Lives of the Brain

  • #5
    Steven Pinker
    “It's natural to think that living things must be the handiwork of a designer. But it was also natural to think that the sun went around the earth. Overcoming naive impressions to figure out how things really work is one of humanity's highest callings.

    [Can You Believe in God and Evolution? Time Magazine, August 7, 2005]”
    Steven Pinker

  • #6
    Steven Pinker
    “Just as blueprints don't necessarily specify blue buildings, selfish genes don't necessarily specify selfish organisms. As we shall see, sometimes the most selfish thing a gene can do is build a selfless brain. Genes are a play within a play, not the interior monologue of the players.”
    Steven Pinker, How the Mind Works

  • #7
    Steven Pinker
    “Sex and excretion are reminders that anyone's claim to round-the-clock dignity is tenuous. The so-called rational animal has a desperate drive to pair up and moan and writhe.”
    Steven Pinker

  • #8
    Steven Pinker
    “Nature is a hanging judge," goes an old saying. Many tragedies come from our physical and cognitive makeup. Our bodies are extraordinarily improbable arrangements of matter, with many ways for things to go wrong and only a few ways for things to go right. We are certain to die, and smart enough to know it. Our minds are adapted to a world that no longer exists, prone to misunderstandings correctable only by arduous education, and condemned to perplexity about the deepest questions we can ascertain.”
    Steven Pinker, The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature

  • #9
    David Eagleman
    “All creation necessarily ends in this: Creators, powerless, fleeing from the things they have wrought.”
    David M. Eagleman, Sum: Forty Tales from the Afterlives

  • #10
    David Eagleman
    “We open our eyes and we think we're seeing the whole world out there. But what has become clear—and really just in the last few centuries—is that when you look at the electro-magnetic spectrum we are seeing less than 1/10 Billionth of the information that's riding on there. So we call that visible light. But everything else passing through our bodies is completely invisible to us.

    Even though we accept the reality that's presented to us, we're really only seeing a little window of what's happening.”
    David Eagleman

  • #11
    David Eagleman
    “...you are battered and bruised in the collisions between reminiscence and reality.”
    David Eagleman, Sum: Forty Tales from the Afterlives

  • #12
    David Eagleman
    “Among all the creatures of creation, the gods favor us: We are the only ones who can empathize with their problems.”
    David M. Eagleman, Sum: Forty Tales from the Afterlives

  • #13
    David Eagleman
    “Instead of reality being passively recorded by the brain, it is actively constructed by it.”
    David Eagleman, Incognito: The Secret Lives of the Brain

  • #14
    David Eagleman
    “There is a looming chasm between what your brain knows and what your mind is capable of accessing.”
    David Eagleman, Incognito: The Secret Lives of the Brain

  • #15
    David Eagleman
    “Evolve solutions; when you find a good one, don't stop.”
    David Eagleman, Incognito: The Secret Lives of the Brain

  • #16
    David Eagleman
    “We believe we're seeing the world just fine until it's called to our attention that we're not.”
    David Eagleman, Incognito: The Secret Lives of the Brain

  • #17
    David Eagleman
    “Although we credit God with designing man, it turns out He's not sufficiently skilled to have done so. In point of fact, He unintentionally knocked over the first domino by creating a palette of atoms with different shapes. Electron clouds bonded, molecules bloomed, proteins embraced, and eventually cells formed and learned how to hang on to one another like lovebirds. He discovered that by simmering the Earth at the proper distance from the Sun, it instinctively sprouted with life. He's not so much a creator as a molecule tinkerer who enjoyed a stroke of luck: He simply set the ball rolling by creating a smorgasbord of matter, and creation ensued.”
    David Eagleman, 生命的清单

  • #18
    David Eagleman
    “A mere 400 years after our fall from the center of the universe, we have experienced the fall from the center of ourselves.”
    David Eagleman, Incognito: The Secret Lives of the Brain

  • #19
    David Eagleman
    “The missing crowds make you lonely. You begin to complain about all the people you could be meeting. But no one listens or sympathizes with you, because this is precisely what you chose when you were alive.”
    David Eagleman, Sum: Forty Tales from the Afterlives

  • #20
    David Eagleman
    “Since you always lived inside your own head, you were much better at seeing the truth about others than you ever were at seeing yourself. So you navigated your life with the help of others who held up mirrors for you. People praised your good qualities and criticized your bad habits, and these perspectives - often surprising to you - helped you to guide your life. So poorly did you know yourself that you were always surprised at how you looked in photographs or how you sounded on voice mail. In this way, much of your existence took place in the eyes, ears, and fingertips of others. And now that you’ve left the Earth, you are stored in scattered heads around the globe. Here in this Purgatory, all the people with whom you’ve ever come in contact are gathered. The scattered bits of you are collected, pooled, and unified. The mirrors are held up in front of you. Without the benefit of filtration, you see yourself clearly for the first time. And that is what finally kills you.”
    David Eagleman

  • #21
    David Eagleman
    “Love was not specified in the design of your brain; it is merely an endearing algorithm that freeloads on the leftover processing cycles.”
    David Eagleman, Sum: Forty Tales from the Afterlives

  • #22
    David Eagleman
    “Every atom in your body is the same quark in different places at the same moment in time.”
    David Eagleman, Sum: Forty Tales from the Afterlives

  • #23
    David Eagleman
    “Constant reminding ourselves that we not see with our eyes but with our synergetic eye-brain system working as a whole will produce constant astonishment as we notice, more and more often, how much of our perceptions emerge from our preconceptions.”
    David Eagleman

  • #24
    David Eagleman
    “I came here for the same reason doctors wear uniforms of long white coats...They don't do it for their benefit, but for yours.”
    David Eagleman, Sum: Forty Tales from the Afterlives

  • #25
    David Eagleman
    “Societies would _not_ be better off if everyone were like Mr Spock, all rationality and no emotion. Instead, a balance - a teaming up of the internal rivals - is optimal for brains. ... Some balance of the emotional and rational systems is needed, and that balance may already be optimized by natural selection in human brains.”
    David Eagleman, Incognito: The Secret Lives of the Brain

  • #26
    David Eagleman
    “Death... The moment, sometime in the future, when your name is spoken for the last time.”
    David Eagleman, Sum: Forty Tales from the Afterlives

  • #27
    David Eagleman
    “When we're in a human body, we don't care about universal collapse - instead, we care only about a meeting of the eyes, a glimpse of bare flesh, the caressing tones of a loved voice, joy, love, light, the orientation of a house plant, the shade of a paint stroke, the arrangement of hair.”
    David Eagleman, Sum: Forty Tales from the Afterlives

  • #28
    David Eagleman
    “And in this form, they find themselves longing to ascend mountains, wander the seas, and conquer the air, seeking to recapture the limitlessness they once knew.”
    David Eagleman, Sum: Forty Tales from the Afterlives

  • #29
    David Eagleman
    “Humans have discovered that they cannot stop Death, but at least they can spit in his drink.”
    David Eagleman, Sum: Forty Tales from the Afterlives

  • #30
    David Eagleman
    “If an epileptic seizure is focused in a particular sweet spot in the temporal lobe, a person won´t have motor seizures, but instead something more subtle. The effect is something like a cognitive seizure, marked by changes of personality, hyperreligiosity (an obsession with religion and feelings of religious certainity), hypergraphia (extensive writing on a subject, usually about religion), the false sense of an external presence, and, often, the hearing voices that are attributed to a god. Some fraction of history´s prophets, martyrs, and leaders appear to have had temporal lobe epilepsy.

    When the brain activity is kindled in the right spot, people hear voices. If a physician prescribes an anti-epileptic medication, the seizures go away and the voices disappear. Our reality depends on what our biology is up to.”
    David Eagleman, Incognito: The Secret Lives of the Brain



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