An evolutionary history of the human brain, in 7 minutes, Lisa Feldman Barrett
Plato and Carl Sagan were wrong about the human brain, says a top neuroscientist. Subscribe to The Well on YouTube: Up next: Finding the worlds next hidden genius, AlbertLászló Barabási Plato famously described the human psyche as two horses and a charioteer: one horse represented instincts, the other represented emotions, and the charioteer was the rational mind that controlled them. Astronomer Carl Sagan continued this idea of a threelayer triune brain in his 1977 book The Dragons of Eden. But leading neuroscientist Lisa Feldman Barrett challenges this idea of the brain evolving in three layers, instead revealing a common brain plan shared by all mammals and vertebrates. The development of sensory systems led to the emergence of the brain, and hunting and predation may have initiated an arms race to become more efficient and powerful predators. Despit
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