Eagleman Quotes
Collection of top 100 famous quotes about Eagleman
Eagleman Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Eagleman quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
Is there any reason to believe that it's not possible to have both racist and nonracist parts of the brain?
— David Eagleman
Platoons and plays and stores and congresses do not end - they simply move on to a different dimension.
— David Eagleman
Of all the Programmers' planets, ours is the supercomputing golden child, the world that inexplicably provides enough power to light up the galaxy.
— David Eagleman
The emotional and rational networks battle not only over immediate moral decisions, but in another familiar situation as well: how we behave in time.
— 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
Man is equally incapable of seeing the nothingness from which he emerges and the infinity in which he is engulfed.1 Pascal
— David Eagleman
Consciousness is the smallest player in the operations of the brain.
— David Eagleman
Through practice, repeated signals have been passed along neural networks, strengthening synapses and thereby burning the skill into the circuitry. In
— David Eagleman
Visual cortex is fundamentally a machine whose job is to generate a model of the world.
— David Eagleman
unconscious self-love
— David Eagleman
My lab and academic work fill my day from about 9 am to 7 p.m. Then I zoom out the lens to work on my other writing.
— David Eagleman
there is more than one way to lay down memory. We're not talking about a memory of different events, but multiple memories of the same event - as
— David Eagleman
We believe we're seeing the world just fine until it's called to our attention that we're not.
— David Eagleman
Your brain is built of cells called neurons and glia - hundreds of billions of them. Each one of these cells is as complicated as a city.
— 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 Eagleman
We don't really understand most of what's happening in the cosmos. Is there any afterlife? Who knows.
— David Eagleman
Finding genetically distant partners is useful.
— David Eagleman
The conscious mind is not at the center of the action in the brain; instead, it is far out on a distant edge, hearing but whispers of the activity.
— David Eagleman
a virtuous person,
— David Eagleman
In each of us there is another whom we do not know.
Carl Jung
found in David Eagleman's book: Incognito — C. G. Jung
Carl Jung
found in David Eagleman's book: Incognito — C. G. Jung
(known as the mesolimbic dopamine system)
— David Eagleman
Odor carries a great deal of information, including information about a potential mate's age, sex, fertility, identity, emotions, and health.
— David Eagleman
Who you are depends on the sum total of your neurobiology.
— David Eagleman
We're trapped on this very thin slice of perception ... But even at that slice of reality that we call home, we're not seeing most of what's going on.
— David Eagleman
As an undergraduate I majored in British and American literature at Rice University.
— David Eagleman
I always bounce my legs when I'm sitting.
— David Eagleman
The enemy of memory isn't time; it's other memories.
— David Eagleman
It appears that repeated social rejection perturbs the normal functioning of the dopamine systems.
— David Eagleman
Think about the brain as the densest concentration of youness. It's the peak of the mountain, but not the whole mountain.
— David Eagleman
This is what consciousness does: it sets the goals, and the rest of the system learns how to meet them.
— David Eagleman
Even though the outside world has not changed, your brain dynamically presents different interpretations.
— David Eagleman
Humans have discovered that they cannot stop Death, but at least they can spit in his drink.
— David Eagleman
Our brains were simple enough to be understood, we wouldn't be smart enough to understand them.
— David Eagleman
Serotonin - are critical for who you believe yourself to be. If
— David Eagleman
tetrachromatic women.
— David Eagleman
Scientist and baseball fan Mike McBeath set out to understand the hidden neural computations behind catching fly balls.
— David Eagleman
I think the first decade of this century is going to be remembered as a time of extremism.
— David Eagleman
Delaying gratification is difficult.
— David Eagleman
Everything that creates itself upon the backs of smaller scales will by those same scales be consumed.
— David Eagleman
There is a looming chasm between what your brain knows and what your mind is capable of accessing.
— David Eagleman
You were all these ages, they concede, and you were none.
— David Eagleman
One of the most impressive features of brains - and especially human brains - is the flexibility to learn almost any kind of task that comes its way.
— David Eagleman
My dream is to reform the legal system over the next 20 years.
— David Eagleman
Just like a good drama, the human brain runs on conflict.
— David Eagleman
You are part of a complex social network that changes your biology with every interaction, and which your actions can change
— David Eagleman
Among all the creatures of creation, the gods favor us: We are the only ones who can empathize with their problems.
— David Eagleman
So modern neuroimaging is like asking an astronaut in the space shuttle to look out the window and judge how America is doing.
— David Eagleman
Because vision appears so effortless, we are like fish challenged to understand water.
— David Eagleman
Once you begin deliberating about where your fingers are jumping on the piano keyboard, you can no longer pull off the piece.
— David Eagleman
The brain runs its show incognito. So who, exactly,
— David Eagleman
Vision is more than looking.
— David Eagleman
People wouldn't even go into science unless there was something much bigger to be discovered, something that is transcendent.
— David Eagleman
It is only through us that God lives. When we abandon him, he dies.
— David Eagleman
Our internal life and external actions are steered by biological coctails to which we have neither immediate access nor direct acquaintance.
— David Eagleman
Evolve solutions; when you find a good one, don't stop.
— David Eagleman
Political persuasion emerges at the intersection of the mental and the corporal. Traveling
— David Eagleman
Behavior is the outcome of the battle among internal systems.
— David Eagleman
Every atom in your body is the same quark in different places at the same moment in time.
— David Eagleman
Conscious you believes it without question. And not merely believes it but experiences it.
— 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
Everybody knows the power of deadlines - and we all hate them. But their effectiveness is undeniable.
— David Eagleman
If you are a carrier of a particular set of genes, your probability of committing a violent crime goes up by eight hundred and eighty-two percent.
— David Eagleman
The majority of human beings live their whole lives unaware that they are only seeing a limited cone of vision at any moment.
— David Eagleman
All activity in the brain is driven by other activity in the brain, in a vastly complex, interconnected network.
— 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
Parts of the brain were making decisions well before the person consciously experienced the urge.14 Returning
— David Eagleman
The main thing known about secrets is that keeping them is unhealthy for the brain.46 Psychologist James Pennebaker and his colleagues studied what
— David Eagleman
No one is having an experience of the objective reality that really exists; each creature perceives only what it has evolved to perceive.
— David Eagleman
Just give the brain the information and it will figure it out.
— David Eagleman
If you ever feel lazy or dull, take heart: you're the busiest, brightest thing on the planet.
— David Eagleman
All creation necessarily ends in this: Creators, powerless, fleeing from the things they have wrought.
— David Eagleman
the brain doesn't care how it gets the information, as long
— David Eagleman
To my mind, that's a bigger and brighter idea than sitting at a lonely center surrounded by cold and distant astral lamps.
— David Eagleman
But our brains are always crushing ambiguity into choices.
— David Eagleman
is able to resist that temptation.
— David Eagleman
There are an infinite number of boring things to do in science.
— David Eagleman
When the men were choosing the most attractive women, they didn't know that the choice was not theirs, really,
— David Eagleman
We spend our lives on a thin slice between the unimaginably small scales of the atoms that compose us and the infinitely large scales of galaxies.
— David Eagleman
Part of the scientific temperament is this tolerance for holding multiple hypotheses in mind at the same time.
— David Eagleman
I think what a life in science really teaches you is the vastness of our ignorance.
— David Eagleman
seeing has very little to do with your eyes.
— David Eagleman
What we find is that our brains have colossal things happening in them all the time.
— David Eagleman
alerting the system to contradictions relies critically on particular brain regions - and one in particular, called the anterior cingulate cortex.
— David Eagleman
Remove the world and the show still goes on.
— David Eagleman
Change blindness highlights the importance of attention: to see an object change, you must attend
— David Eagleman
For some, the new addiction reached beyond gambling to compulsive eating, alcohol consumption, and hypersexuality.
— David Eagleman
Nothing is inherently tasty or repulsive - it depends on your needs. Deliciousness is simply an index of usefulness.
— David Eagleman
The brain runs its show incognito.
— David Eagleman
There are always wonderful mysteries to confront.
— David Eagleman
Neuroscience over the next 50 years is going to introduce things that are mind-blowing.
— David Eagleman
advantageous decision making.
— David Eagleman